The Michigan Daily-Saturday, June 13, 1981-Page 11 Teamsters' head pleads innocent to bribery. CHICAGO (UPI)-Teamster President Roy Lee Williams, fresh from a White House meeting with President Reagan, pleaded innocent yesterday to charges he tried to bribe a U.S. senator. Four other suspects named with Williams in federal conspiracy indic- tments also appeared before U.S. District Judge Prentice Marshall and pleaded innocent. The five are slated to go to trialin January. WILLIAMS, THREE other Teamster officials and a reputed Chicago organized crime figure are accused of offering Sen. Howard Cannon 5.8 acres of Las Vegas property at a bargain price in return for help in defeating a trucking deregulation bill. The defendants each face a maximum penalty of 55 years in prison and a $29,000 find if convicted on all 11 counts. ASKED IF publicity surrounding his indictment last month would hurt Teamster recruiting, Williams said: "We come from a tough breed. Since I've been indicted three times before and there have been no convictions, I have great faith in the judiciary system of this country." Williams, elected to a full term as head of the Teamsters after the death of previous union president Frank Fit- zsimmons, has eqlled the bribery charges "a damn lie." HE WAS elected overwhelmingly despite his indictment and triumphan- tly exercised his dominion over the union's recent Las Vegas convention. Williams, 66, sat across from Reagan Thursday during a White House meeting in the Cabinet Room with other union officials who have endorsed the president's economic recovery program. AP Photo Rookie firefighter? Twenty-month-old Sean Parish is more interested in his reflection than wat- ching his dad, Jack Parish, fight a brush and junk fire a few yards away. The senior Parish, a firefighter near Jackson, was off-duty and visiting his in- laws when he saw the smoke and rushed to the scene with his son. State senator seeks to limit office terms Williams ...'a tough breed' Both the White House and the other union leaders attending the session defended the face-to-face meeting bet- ween Reagan and Williams. . Acting White House press secretary Larry Speakes said the controversial union leader "has been indicted and not convicted, and he deserves his day in court." Don't wait for o little birdie to tell u SUBSCRIBE TO THE MICHIGAN DAILY LANSING (UPI)-All elected of- ficials in the state should be Iunced from office after their current terms and those selected in their place given but one term, Michigan's longest ser- ving senator said yesterday. Sen. Basil Brown, a veteran of 25 years in the state Senate, proposed during a news conference a con- stitutional change which would prohibit elected officials from seeking re- election and thus prevent them from spending their public service time campaigning. "ALL THE politicians I have met have in common is the ability to get re- elected and many have little besides that," said Brown, a Highland Park Democrat, referring to the Seante as "a squirrel cage." "I have also observed that the political gamesmanship and manipulation involved in the re-election process usually serves to frustrate the very serious objectives, deliberation and final problem solving of important public issues." WHILE HE believes his own district has been "well served" because of his seniority, Brown admitted "I play games as much as anybody else." "When there's 148 of us playing games, the process grinds to ahalt." Brown, who said he is leaning against running for another term, said many important issues have been placed on the back burner when lawmakers con- tract re-election fever. "WE ARE constantly taken apart by reporters because of lobbyists and slush funds. If nobody has to get re- elected, you lose all that," he said. His one-term plan would hit all elec- ted officials from the governor and Michigan Supreme Court justices to local school board and city council members. Michigan's congressmen and U.S. senators are not included in the plan. ELECTED officials would be allowed to run for higher or lower offices, he said. Brown's plan needs the support of two-thirds of the state House and Senate to be placed on the November 1982 ballot. If newly elected one-term officials "knew the legislative process" coming in,-they could easily begin their work on important issues, Brown said. 'WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?' Psalm 2:1 and Acts 4:25 The heathen rage because they are the enemies of The Kingdom of Heaven, the King of Eternity! "Oh God, the heathen are come into Thine Inheritance; Thy holy temple have they defiled-"-Psalm 79:1. They can sing and pray "Hallowed be Thy Name, Thy Kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it is heaven," and apparently enjoy doing so, and think they mean it. However, when it comes to literally obeying and establishing The Heavenly Kingdom Laws, The Moral Law, The Ten Commandments, and observing them in our daily conduct and commerce, frequently, if not most of the time, men are aroused to raging against them! God is not pleased with such an offering of worship! "I hate, I despise your feast days ... Take thou away from Me the noise of thy songs; for I will not hear the melody of thy viols. But let judgement run down as waters, and righteousness as a mighty stream."-Amos 5:21-24. "Why call ye Me, Lord, Lord, and do not the things which I say?"-Luke 6:46. "The great desideratum in the council-chamber of the infernal king has always been how man's innate refigious feeling should be satisfied, and yet God not be served. How could the heart be kept from God, the clamors of conscience be silenced, and yet the demands of any instinctive religious feeling be answered? The arch enemy of man's immortal hopes solved the problem. The solution appears in the cunning devices he has sought out to beguile unwary souls. He has varied his plans to suit times and circumstances, the condition of man, the progress of society, the character of human governments, and the condition of the human mind."-Whoever it was that said that surely "knew his way around" in the spiritual world. And he goes on to point out the devil's strategy down through the ages in solving this problem with remarkable success until he gets to the place where God says: "Thus far, but no further." Luther, the great man of God of the 16th century, said that if he had the gift of miracles, yet it were better to testify of his faith by obedience, ttan by working miracles! P.O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031