Page 4-,-Satourday, August 15, 1981-The Michigan Daily Judge urges stripping of In Brief Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports PATCO From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - An administrative law judge recommended yesterday that the striking air traffic controllers union be stripped of its rights to bargain on behalf of the air controllers because of its involvement in the illegal air con- trollerwalkout. Judge John Fenton urged the Federal Labor Relations Authority to "revoke the exclusive recognition status" of the union and that it be ordered to "cease' and desist from call or participating" in its walkout of nearly 12,000 air con- trollers. THE RECOMMENDATION was a major victory for the Reagan ad- ministration, which has asked the labor authority to decertify the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization for engaging in an illegal strike against the government. If the three member authority goes along with Fenton, the union would no longe be recognized as representing air controllers in bargaining with the Federal Aviation Administration and would be deprived of automatic dues checkoffs. Pleading for its life as a labor union, the striking Professional Air Traffic Controlles Organization asked the judge to reject the governm,ent decer- tification move, saying that would be "punishment for punishment's sake." rights PATCO LAWYER Richard Leighton, in a brief filed with Federal Labor Relations Authority Judge John Fen- ton, said the public interest would not be enhanced by decertification. He said unless the underlying labor- management dispute is settled, "neither air traffic safety nor efficien- cy will return to normal within a reasonable time, if ever." PATCO President Robert E. Poli, declaring "We are still alive and still well," said he expected the law judge's recommendation and that the union in- tends to argue strongly before the labor authority to reverse it. IF THAT FAILS, Poli promised an appeal through the federal courts. He noted that the union has a separate complaint before the labor authority accusing the government of unfair labor practice in the way it hegotiated during contract talks earlier this nion- th. Looking at the broader issues of the strike, Poli told reporters that the con-_ trollers were prepared to continue their walkout for months if necessary and said, "We're prepared for as long as it takes." Meanwhile, thousands of airline em- ployees are being laid off and others are accepting pay cuts as their industry, already pinched by high operating costs and slack demand, is sent reeling by the air traffic controllers strike. Forein students find temporar home at 'U' (Continued from Page 3) Williams of the University's Housing student could have signed up in June Administration and Counseling office. and the incoming foreign student (Freshpersons are guaranteed arriving in August wouldnothave had a housing.) chance because by the time he signed CURRENTLY the housing situation up he would be at the end of the list. is "very tight" in the dormitories Keith Meade, now a resident advisor Williams said, whose office is now for the incoming foreign students, said assigning dorm rooms from the housing he believes newly arrived foreign cancellations it has received. students should be guaranteed a per- Now students looking for dorm rooms manent place to stay as University must phone in each day to be placed on freshpersons are now. Meade is from a waiting list for cancelled room reser- the tropical islands of Trinidad and vations. Starting Aug. 24 the housing of- Tobago. fice will shift to a walk-in system, He was an incoming student twc Williams said, whereby students have years ago at the University and said h, to sign up in person to get on the waiting stayed in, the "really deplorable' list. barrack-like room on the ninth floor of The ones who come early and put South Quad. their names on the housing list first will "IT WAS NOT the sort of situation get first crack at the open rooms for the you'd like to arrive to," Meade said. If day. For example, if five rooms are you arrived over the weekend you wer< available that day, then the first five "sort of literally stranded," he said. students on the list will be placed. The Now, largely through the concern of list is updated each day, since the list the Michigan Student Assembly and from the previous day is discarded. some staff members of the University's THIS WAY, the most persistent International Center, the problem o students seem to have the advantage temporary housing for foreign students and the foreign students are not placed is largely resolved. Not only do they at a disadvantage. A foreign student have their private dorm rooms, bu arriving late in the month has as much they also have the services of two live chance as a transfer student who has in resident advisors and the counselorr been here all summer but has failed to over at the International Center. search for a room. If, for example, the But as for permanent housing-wel Housing office kept a permanent they'll have to scramble like everyonf priortized. list, th e ansf e , hel,'eW has tsigned ea4." Inflation hits three-year low WASHINGTON- Inflation at the wholesale level rosea moderate 0.4 per- cent in July, with only a surge in pork prices spoiling what would have been the best month since last fall, the government reported yesterday. The Labor Department said wholesale prices-as meausred by the Producer Price Index for finished goods-increased just 8.8 percent in the 12 months ended in July, the lowest 12-month rise in more than three years. In addition, private economist Donald Ratajczak said the 1.5 percent jump in wholesale food prices last month was "a blatant aberration," raising hope that the relatively low increases in overall national inflation in the past several months may continue. But Commerce Secretary Malcom Baldrige warned, "this is no time for complacency ... the anti-inflation battle must continue." Union celebrates first year; Brezhnev, Polish leaders talk WARSAW, Poland- Summoned to urgent talks, Poland's top leadership met Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev in the Crimea yesterday as Polish workers triumphantly celebrated the first anniversary of the strikes that gave birth to the independent Solidarity labor union. In Moscow, diplomatic sources said the Soviets gave the West formal notice of large-scale military maneuvers to begin around Poland Sept. 4. Notification, compulsory under the 1975 Helsinki Accords, meant the maneuvers would involve more than 25,000 troops. However, Secretary of State Alexander Haig said in Washington he saw no reason to be alarmed by the maneuvers. North Carolina man convicted of enslaving eight teenagers WINSTON-SALEM, N.C.- A man described as a deacon of the Church of God and True Holiness was convicted yesterday of holding eight teen-age church members in involuntary servitude and was sentenced to 20 years in prison. Jimmy Conyers, 39, who was also convicted of conspiracy, received four consecutive sentences of five years each. He faced a maximum prison term of 45 years and a fine of up to $85,000. In the trial, several young people testified that Conyers enslaved them between 1974 and 1978, forcing them to work and pocketing the money they earned. In closing arguments, Richard Roberts, one of two special Justice Depar- tment prosecutors handling the case, told the jury that Conyers helped hold the youths in "child slavery ... all in the guise of working in the name of the Lord." Roberts said leaders of the church, which had congregations in Durham, Wilson and Florence, S.C., relied on fear, beatings and public rebukes to deprive members "of their normal life force" and of more than $100,000. Anti-Khomeini commandos hijack gunboats near Spain MADRID, Spain- Anti-Khomeini commandos reportedly led by the late shah's former naval chief attacked three French-made gunboats off the coast of Spain Thursday and sailed away in one of them, Spanish officials disclosed yesterday. The gunboats, which were being delivered to Iran, were carrying no am- munition at the time. The gunmen boarded the gunboat with the help of the boats' crew mem- bers and without firing a shot, then forced it toward Tangier, Morocco, across the Gibraltar Straits, the Spanish navy said. The official Pars news agency said the Iranian Foreign Ministry was taking measures in connection with the seizure, but did not specify them. Claiming responsibility, a group calling itself Azadegan Movement of Iranian Liberation said in Paris the attack marked the "start of direct ac- tion" against the Islamic regime of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. Pope released from hospital VATICAN CITY- Pope John Paul II, looking pale and drawn, left the hospital yesterday, waving to well-wishers and embracing his doctor. He returned to a warm Vatican welcome after three months' recuperation from gunshot wounds. Doctors said he has completely recovered from the wounds suffered May 13 in an assassination attempt but still needs six weeks of convalescence. "Welcome home, Pope Wojtyla!" Vatican Radio said, using the pontiff's Polish surname. The Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Romano said in a front-page com- mentary: "With the return of the Holy Father to the Vatican, the time of fear and trembling hope is concluded, and one savors again the taste of nor- malcy." 4 I 4 i e t 3 r d n y a d 0 e f n If e ff d Is A S ,y it "s 11 to . g_" f