4 Page 2-Wednesday, March 2,1983-The Michigan Daily Steelworkers ag 1J From AP and UPI PITTSBURGH - The United Steel- workers Union yesterday ratified an historic 41-month contract with troubled steel producers, swapping a temporary pay cut and other con- cessions for the industry's commitment to use the money to modernize mills. The agreement, covering 266,000 basic steelworkers, was the first to give up gains the USW won during the in- dustry's boom years. THE GRANTING of substantial wage reductions by so large a union is un- matched in modern labor history. The United Auto Workers union accepted wage freezes, but not cuts, to help keep, the struggling U.S. automakers afloat in recent years. USW local presidents, who rejected concessions twice last year, voted 169- 63 in favor of the new pact just in time to meet an unoficial March 1 settlement deadline set by big steel customers. "The industry badly needs the in- terim relief provided in the new agreement," said J. Bruce Johnston, U.S. Steel Corp. vice president and chief negotiator for the steel industry's coordinated bargaining group. "WHILE THE agreement is not a permanent answer to the industry's competitive problems," Johnston saidf, "it is an important and urgenty needed contribution to our recovery." ree topf Union officials said the contract was+ the best they could hope for, given the depressed state of the steel industry. Steelmakers lost a record $3.3 billion in 1982, their worst year since the Depression, and indicated they would take a strike this year if they could not lower labor costs. "HOPEFULLY it's going to create jobs and hopefully it demonstrated unity," said USW Vice President Joseph Odorcich, filling in for ailing USW President Lloyd McBride as chief union negotiator in top-level talks that began Feb. 15. Even though local issues remained to be settled at the plant level, Odorcich said, "there will be no steel strike." GET THE WORD OUT* BY PLACING AN AD IN Summer Sublet Supplement u-------------- ----- I I *~ I " Mail or bring in person ' this clipping and payment to 420 Maynard Street. " Make checks payable to.:- The Michigan Daily. ' (Actual Size of Ad) s Plase prio r e leiby n te ;,ad to appear. I mmmmmmmmmI O COST: ONLY $14 before 5:00 PM March 2,1983 (Cost is $16 from March 3 to March 18) Absolutely No Ads Will Be Accepted After March 18 -No Refunds- Supplement Will Appear on Saturday, March 26, 1983 ty cuts "This type of agreement is not pleasant to negotiate, but it is ab- solutely necessary in these economic conditions," said Paul Rusen, director of USW District 23 in Wheeling, W. Va. The contract replaces the current three-year pact set to expire Aug. 1. It cuts wages $1.25 an hour, or about 9 percent, and eliminates some vacation time, but repays most of the givebacks in stages over the life of the agreement and includes an industry commitment to spend labor savings on plant im- provements. The pact also requires a temporary freeze on cost-of-living allowances - the issue that gave bargainers the most trouble and threatened to stall the pact at the last minute. FIR GIM alleges political attack (Continued from Page 1) Rampson points to a campus group organized last fall to protest PIRGIM's funding process as a guise of local College Republicans despite denials from the protest group and the College Republicans. THE STUDENT Committee for Reform and Progress launched a petition drive last month to prevent groups like PIRGIM from having the donation slip attached to the SVF. Group members argue against the University's favoritism toward PIRGIM, the only group given the privilege to solicit donations on the registration form.- SCRAP chairman Dan Baker denies any formal connection with the local Republican club, but admitted that several of the group's members are College Republicans. Baker said he only heard of the memo last week, long after SCRAP's organization last fall. Moreover, Democratic, Libertarian and other politicalaviews are represented in the group, he said. BUT SCRAP follows "almost ver- batim" strategies used by other College Republican-organized groups operating throughout the nation, Rampson said. While SCRAP may involve students with various political orientations, Rampson said she though it was- probably the College Republicans who set "the ball rolling." Not so, says College Republican President Karl Edelmann. "We decided not to make ( fighting PIRGIM) one of our major goals," said Edelmann, who added that he has not seen the memo yet. "While College Republicans may be working with SCRAP, College Republicans as a whole are not." But Rampson asserted, "It's hard to believe that (SCRAP) is spontaneous.'' Rent a Car from Econo- Car we rent to 19 YR. OLD STUDENTS! Choose from small economical cars to vans. Special WEEKEND rates Pick up services upon request We accept cash deposits OPEN 7 IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Congress stalls agreement on natural gas deregulation WASHINGTON-President Reagan's plan to accelerate the deregulation of natural gas appeared headed for the congressional back burner yester- day, with leaders claiming strong opposition from consumers fearful of higher prices. Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker (R-Tenn.), said there was little chance of expediting the measure, particularly in the filibuster-prone, albeit Republican-dominated Senate. The bill was sent to Capitol Hill from the White House on Monday. "We've got to do that some day. We've got to face the issue. But if the Reagan plan will have a difficult time in Congress, especially in the Senate," Baker told reporters. The battle over then-President Carter's plan to partially deregulate natural gas prices snarled the Senate for months in 1977. Many of the Democrats who participated in that earlier filibuster say they are ready to wage the same kind of battle against the Reagan proposal. Salvadoran minister rejects truce proposed for Papal visit SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador-Defense Minister Jose Guillermo Garcia yesterday rejected guerrilla calls for a cease-fire during Pope John Paul I's visit and vowed the army would stop fighting only if the rebels surrendered. "To bring peace to El salvador, I call on (the rebels) to prolong their truce indefinitely-this would be the means to bring peace," Garcia said. The leader of the rebels' political arm, Guillermo Ungo, Monday offered the truce to coincide with the papal visit. Asked if the army agreed to a cease-fire during the pontiff's nine-hour visit Sunday, Garcia said the military would continue to fulfill its task. "We are only reacting to their violence and fulfilling our duty to defend the country," he said. Israelis nab Palestine youths Armed Jewish settlers stormed two Palestinian schools on the Israeli- occupied West Bank yesterday, fired over students' heads and abducted two youths, a Palestinian news agency said. Israeli officials said two boys who had stoned passing cars were taken to a police station. The Palestinian Press Agency, based in East Jerusalem, said the inciden- ts involving the Israeli settlers took place at the al-Faruk School in Nablus and a school in Yatta near Hebron. The press service said Jewish settlers burst into the two schools and fired shots above students' heads before abducting two of the youths. An Israeli military spokesman said he had no information about the repor- ted attack in Nablus. But he said passengers in an Israeli car that came un- der a barrage of rocks in Yatta, fired in the air and "took two boys to the police station." The spokesman said no one was hurt in the Yatta incident. In Khalde, Lebanon, the Beirut government charged Israeli negotiators with "intransigence" after the 19th round of U.S.-sponsored talks on the withdrawal of foreign forces from Lebanon. OPEC nears price accord PARIS-The most powerful member of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and the 13-nation cartel's mediator indicated yesterday that an agreement may be near on lower oil prices they hope will stave off a costly price war. "The solution is imminent," said Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani, Saudi Arabia's oil minister, in an interview in Riyadh with French television. "We are on the verge of reaching an agreement on this subject." The chief mediator in a week of long-distance negotiations, Venezuelan Oil Minister Humberto Calderon Berti, also said it appeared an agreement oi prices was in sight. He added that further talks among the oil producers were necessary. OPEC's official benchmark price of Arabian light crude of $34 a barrel might be cut. OPEC member Nigeria cut its base price to $30 after non- members Britain and Norway lowered the price of North Sea oil to $30.50. At meetings in December and January, OPEC faled to agree on a new price schedule or on production quotas to keep.,the price up, leaving the car- tel without a joint policy in the face of a worldwide oil glut that is forcing prices down. Average American weight increasing, study shows NEW YORK-Average Americans are heavier today than they were in 1959 but it's no cause for alarm, the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. repor- ted yesterday. The company's new weight tables indicate that as the weight of Americans increased over the 24 years, so did the weights recommended by the com- pany 's experts for longest life. But that emphatically does not mean heavier is better, according to the publishers of the tables and an American Heart Association doctor. "FATTER PEOPLE are able to live longer because other risk factors are being reduced. But that doesn't mean they wouldn't live even longer if they were thinner," said Dr. Virgil Brown, chairman of the heart association's nutrition committee and professor of medicine at Mt. Sinai Hospital in New York. Brown said many factors influence health and length of life. The ideal weight for many people could be higher or lower than the weight ranges specified in the new study. Vol. XCIII, No. 117 Wednesday, March 2, 1983 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Sub- scription rates: $13 September through April (2 semesters); $14 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mor- nings. Subscription rates: $7.50 in Ann Arbor; $8 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Ar- bor, MI 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syn- dicate and Field Enterprises Newspaper Syndicate. News room (313) 764-0552, 76-DAILY. Sports desk, 763-0375; Circulation, 764-0558; Classified Advertising, 764-0554; Billing, 764-0550. 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