The Michigan Daily Vol. XCI, No. 54-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, August 4, 1981 Ten Cents Sixteen Pages Reagan talks tough with EIIEEM air controllers Daily Photo by PAUL ENGSTROM Long and winding road Sun-speckled paths lead travelers into the depths of Nichols' Arboretum. Violence in Iran continues; bomb blasts kill 14 people From AP and UPI WASHINGTON-Air traffic con- trollers illegally walked off their jobs yesterday and crippled commercial flights in the first nationwide strike of federal workers. President Reagan called them lawbreakers and a federal judge imposed accelerating fines that would reach $1 million a day by Thur- sday. Reagan, taking a hard line, sought imprisonment of the strike leaders, but U.S. District Judge Harold Greene refused to grant a government request that he imprison Robert Poli, leader of the striking Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization, and 10 other union leaders. REAGAN GAVE thousands of striking members of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization 38 hours to return to work or face loss of their jobs. The administration moved to im- pound the controllers' $3.5 million strike fund and to remove the union as the bargaining agent for 15,000 of the 17,000 federally employed men and women who operate the nerve centers of America's airways. FBI agents and U.S. marshals were dispatched to dozens of airports to gather lists of striking controllers for criminal prosecution under laws barring walkouts by government em- ployees. AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland yesterday labeled Reagan's threat of government action against striking air traffic controllers as "harsh and brutal overkill" and pleaded for a resumption of negotiations to end the walkout. Kirkland told a news conference following the opening session of the AFL-CIO Executive Council's mid- summer meeting that the government should address the problems that caused more than 90 percent of con- trollers to vote for the strike. "Those problems should not be smothered and surpressed by what I regard as threats of action that would constitute, in my judgment, harsh and brutal overkill directed against a relatively small number of loyal and responsible American citizens," Kirkland said. THOUSANDS OF vacation and business travelers sat waiting in air- ports across the country Monday as hundreds of flights were canceled or delayed by the air traffic controllers' strike. Some passengers went scurrying to the nearest train or bus station. Others suffered only brief inconveniences. P-ol ... fined $1,000 aday BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - A booby- trapped car exploded 200 yards from the Iranian prime minister's office in Tehran yesterday and a bomb detonated in a Kermanshah square, of- ficial statements said. At least 14 people were reported killed. Tehran Radio said gunmen killed Hojatoleslam Abdul-Karim Dehkadian, of the "militant clergy" in front of his house in the southwestern city of Beh- bahan. The broadcast did not elaborate. IN BONN, West Germany, 100 op- ponents of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's regime forced their way in- to the Iranian Embassy, broke win- dows, damaged offices and injured 10 people before they were ejected by police, German authorities reported. The two bombs in Iran went off hour- after Mohammad Ali Rajai was sworn in as president, replacing ousted Abolhassan Bani-Sadr. Reports said Rajai probably would appoint Hojatoleslam Mohammad Javad Bahonar to replace him as prime minister, consolidating the power of Iran's Moslem fundamentalists. THE STATE-RUN Pars news agency said 13 people were killed when a blast ripped through crowded Enghelab Square in the western Iranian city of Kermanshah at midday, causing serious damage and setting several cars afire. A spokesman for the prime minister's office, who declined to be named, said the car-bomb blast in Tehran shattered window glass at the ministry but caused no casualties inside the building or the nearby presidential compound. Pars said at least one person was killed and 15 were injured outside the ministry. Casualty reports still were incomplete and a reliable, but an unof- ficial source said at least four were killed in Tehran. "All these strikes are a little too much," said Judy Beightol of Berkley, Mich., trying to go from Detroit Metropolitan Airport to Fort Lauder- dale, Fla. "First the baseball strike, then the postal workers who threatened to strike, but did not, and now this." FIVE SUPERVISORY personnel and one controller were on duty in Detroit, compared to the normal shift of 15 or 16 controllers. At Hartsfield International Airport in Atlanta, the world's busiest, six of 26 controllers due at work showed up, and 17 supervisors filled in. Supervisory personnel took over air traffic controls as picket lines formed outside airports and Federal Aviation Administration facilities from New York to San Francisco. There were no reports of violence. But pickets were heckled in Miami, where one woman yelled, "I hope you all lose your jobs!" JUDGE GREENE, who took over the case from a colleague earlier in the day, fined Poli $1,000 a day for the strike's duration, but took no action against the other 10. Finding the union in contempt of court for ignoring an earlier back-to- work order, Green said that to allow such strikes "would be to invite chaos." The Federal Aviation Administration is using 2,500 supervisory and non-union controllers and several hundred military air controllers to maintain air traffic at a reduced level. Transportation Secretary Drew Lewis said that safety is government's major concern. "We're not going to jeopardize the public lives," he said.