he Michigan Daily Vol. XCI, No. 56-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, August 6, 1981 ' Ten Cents Twelve Pages Five jailed as Reagan fires air controllers Doily Photo by KIM HILL Razing the roof A pile of shattered slate shingles lies in front of Tappan Hall after construc- tion workers tore them off of the 88-year-old roof to clear it for new asphalt shingles. Even after several efforts of concerned faculty and citizens to save the historic slate tiles, the University stuck to its decision to replace them with less expensive asphalt. County ambulance service may be cut, Fontana-Taylor says From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - The Reagan ad- ministration began firing striking air traffic controllers yesterday and federal judges sent five union officials to jail for their roles in the controllers' strike. The Administration declared itself determined to police the nation's flight- paths without them even though the flying public will have "no cakewalk" for the next year or two. NEITHER THE government nor the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization budged from their hard- line stands after Monday's walkout by some 13,000 union controllers. The union, with comparatively few defec- tions, persisted with the strike despite. the jailing of the local officials and the passage of President Reagan's 11 a.m. deadline yesterday for a return to work. The administration then unleashed notices of dismissal and vowed no second chances. Justice Department spokesman Art Brill said U.S. District Judge Dale Saf- fels in Kansas City; Kan., ordered four union officials imprisoned yesterday for contempt of court. He found they had violated a temporary restraining order he had issued against the strike. BRILL IDENTIFIED the jailed union leaders as George Fuston, David King and Donald Tuttle, all identified as of- ficials of locals of PATCO, and Gary Eads, central region vice president of the National union. The four were taken to the Wyandotte County, Kan., jail where they will, remain until they either agree to stop picketing or are fired from their jobs. Saffels also imposed a civil penalty of $100,000 on Local 304 of the union. EARLIER YESTERDAY, the president of a union local in Virginia became the first person to be jailed for his role in the strike. Brill said U.S. District Judge Oren Lewis ordered Steven Wallaert, president of PATCO Local 291 in Nor- folk, Va., jailed for 60 days for contem- pt of court. Reagan has taken the position that the controllers, in effect, quit their jobs when they decided to carry out an, illegal strike. "I'M SORRY and I'm sorry for them," Reagan said of the firings late in the day. "I certainly take no joy out of this . . . I was hoping more of them, would recognize the obligation they have. Our position has to be irrever- sible." The union's president, Robert Poli, said an afternoon survey by his organization showed that less than three percent of the membership was working despite the administration's action, which he termed "the most blatant form of union-busting I have ever seen." He vowed: "It will not end the strike." Transportation Secretary Drew Lewis said the air traffic control system can operate "relatively well" for the year or two it would take to bring the workforce back to normal with new trainees. But "there is no question we are in trouble ... this is no cakewalk," he said. LEWIS SAID he knew of 470 con- trollers who returned to work during the day and, while conceding he had no firm figures, estimated that 38 to 40 percent of the entire workforce was on the job. But that figure apparently in- cluded supervisory and other non-union personnel who did not strike in the first place. The Federal Aviation Ad- ministration, meanwhile, said that up to 72 percent of the regularly scheduled flights were taking to the air yesterday. But the agency still was limiting takeof- fs from the 23 largest airports to half the normal number. Many of the planes were only par- tially occupied as would-be passengers chose to avoid the delays. Airlines say the strike is costing them tens of millions of dollars a day. Poli maintained that no more than half of the regular air traffic was noving. THE FIRST dismissal letters from the FAA went to controllers in Hawaii who failed to show up for shifts starting at 6 a.m. local time - one hour after the 11 a.m. EDT deadline initially imposed by President Reagan. George Miyachi, the FAA spokesman in Honolulu, said "a number" of letters were sent. Tom Blank, a Transportation Depar- tment spokesman in Washington, said local chiefs of air traffic facilities were told to send the dismissal notices, by registered mail, yesterday afternoon. In Chicago, AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland marched the picket line at O'Hare International Airport with cheering air traffic controllers yester- day and warned the strike "cannot be solved by brutal force." Kirkland and nearly all of the 27 federation vice presidents attending the mid-summer meeting of the AFL-CIO Executive Council took a 40-minute bus ride from their downtown hotel to O'Hare in a show of solidarity with PATCO. By MARK GINDIN Daily staff writer Fontana-Taylor, the ambulance-ser- vice contracted by Washtenaw County, has warned county officials that it will not be able to continue servicing the area unless it can eliminate costs in- curred by indigent customers. Nancy Fontana, owner of the service, said yesterday that unless the county agrees to reimburse the service $180,000 for in- digent and other patient costs or unless Fontana-Taylor can reorganize its finances to cut costs internally, it can no longer fulfill its contract with the county to provide full ambulance ser- vice. THE SERVICE has asked for a change in its present contract with Washtenaw County to allow for $180,000 in indigent expenses each year, rather than the $50,000 stipulated in the present contract, Fontana said. The request was made at yesterday's meeting of the county's Law and Justice Committee, said David Hun- scher, Washtenaw County ad- ministrator. "Fontana-Taylor said they could not operate under the present contract," Hunscher said. The board said that it will not allow the contract to change, and that it is up to the ambulance company to recover its costs through internal restructuring or by negotiation with its lending in- stitution, Hunscher said. IF FONTANA-TAYLOR cannot maintain the level of present service, it must notify the county in writing that service would be affected within 60 See AMBULANCE, Page 9