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May 21, 1985 - Image 4

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1985-05-21

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Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, May 21, 1985
Airline negotiations begin again
CHICAGO (UPI) - Negotiations a"two-tier" wage scale under which federal mediator in northwest subur-
resued or he irs tie ystedaynew pilots would he paid substantially ban Arlington Heights.
yesterday less than veterans.
in efforts to resolve a strike by United "There's a chance (for settlement) United said it operated at 14 percent
Airlines pilots that has drastically any time in negotiations," said of its normal capacity Sunday and
curtailed service by the nation's Samuel O'Daniel, a United captain plans to continue at that level for the
largest carrier. Neither side predic- and a pilots union spokesman. "But remainder of May before adding ser-
ted an early settlement. with management being totally in- vice in an effort to return to more
transigent, I don't see them moving normalnlevels.
The airline's 5,200 pilots, represen- mUnted spokesman Joseph Hopkins The airline is losing $8 million to $10
went on strike Friday after rejectin' agreed there was no, end in sight as million during each day of the strike,
talks resumed under guidance of a O'Daniel said.
AFSCME members want to see audit

IN BRIEF

(Continued from Page 1)
the audit, but he confirmed that there defeated her for the local's presidency
will be a complete published report of a year ago. Newman is now in his
the union's finances. eighth year as head of the union.
"At this point we're waiting to see "Sure we've been blamed for split-
the report which should be presented ting the union," said union member
at the June meeting," said Levy. "In Carl Levine. "But people won't rally
the meantime I will continue to call around the union unless the finances
the auditor in hopes of seeing the are straightened out."
original copy of the audit." Morgan said he first became aware
Levy is the leader of one faction of of some financial problems while
the union, and Newman narrowly working with the union asa custodian.
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After viewing many of the records,
Morgan made copies of several
checks which he feels were an im-
proper use of union funds.
Morgan was fired from his custodial
job last month after 18 years of
working for the union. He said he was
released after an altercation with
Newman over the distribution of the
copied checks to other union mem-
bers.
7 HAIRCUTTERS
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Course Syllabus
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The Colony: 731 Packard,
The Madison:
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Course Objectives:
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is to live close to campus
in comfortable and
affordable surroundings.
The offered material will
demonstrate to the student
the convenience of its
efficiency, 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments.
Fees:
Less than you'd expect.

Inmates exchanged
ISRAEL-Israel swapped 1,150
Arab prisoners-including some of
its most notorious convicted
terrorists-for three captured
Israeli soldiers yesterday in a
daylong exchange that spanned
three continents.
The International Committee of
the Red Cross said Kozo Okamoto,
37, a pro-Palestinian Japanese
terrorist and the lone survivor of a
three-man squad that killed 26
people at Israel's Lod Airport in
1972, was among the prisoners
freed.
In return for the 1,150 prisoners,
most of them Palestinians and
Lebanese, Israel received three
Israeli soldiers captured during
the 1982 invasion of Lebanon.
Blast kills 9 in
Youngstown
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio-An ex-
plosion yesterday ripped apart a
fireworks storage shed, killing
nine people and blowing a huge
crater in the ground, authorities
said.
"It appears to be a fireworks
storage area," said Mahoning
County Sheriff Ed Nemeth. "It ap-
pears five to nine people are
dead."
The explosion occurred in a
metal shed behind a house in
Beaver Township, an area of 5,000
residents about 20 miles from
Youngstown. It was not im-
mediately known if the fireworks
also were manufactured in the
shed.
"I could hear the pieces falling,"
said Ken Leskosky, an eyewitness.
"We started finding bodies and
parts of bodies.aIwas hoping
somebody was alive hut there
wasn't."
Officials await
disease results
DETROIT-Health officials said
yesterday they were awaiting
results of tests conducted into a
suspected outbreak of Legion-
naire's disease involving 30 people,

including an elderly minister who
died during the weekend.
Bishop Green Moore, 76, died
Saturday night after a three-week
battle with heart and lung failure.
Cause of death was "car-
diopulmonary arrest," Detroit
Osteopathic Hospital
spokeswoman Lee Ann Courter
said ina statement.
30 die in Beirut
BEIRUT, Lebanon-Palestinian
guerrillas fought fierce battles
.yesterday against Lebanon's main
Shiite Moslem militia, turning
three refugee camps into a bat-
tlefield and leaving at least -30
people dead and 130 others woun-
ded.
While fighting raged in the cam-
ps, rival Christian and Moslem
militiamen clashed along the
Green Line, a strip of bombed-out
buildings in the heart of Beirut
that separates Moslem west Beirut
from the Christian east.
Fighting broke out late Sunday
around the Palestinian camps of
Sabra, Shatila and Bourj Barajneh
and raged for 18 hours, spilling into
nearby Moslem neighborhoods and
onto the highway leading to Beirut
airport.
Anti-abortionists join
Upjohn boycott
LANSING-Right to Life of
Michigan yesterday joined a
national boycott of Upjohn Co.
because of the Kalamazoo firm's
involvement with drugs capable of
inducing abortions.
The anti-abortion group said it is
demanding that Upjohn withdraw
a drug used to induce abortions in
the second trimester of pregnan-
cies and not seek federal approval
for one that could be used for first-
trimester abortions.
Barb Listing, president of Right
to Life of Michigan, referred to
Upjohn's involvement with
prostaglandins as "a so-called
chemical warfare against the un-
born child." Prostaglandins are
drugs which artificially reproduce
a chemical found naturally in the
body.

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Vol. XCV - No. 3-S
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