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Show Sunday, December I Unions Approve I Eastern Rescue MINIATURE OUTDOOR CHRISTMAS CHRISTMAS TREE LIGHTS LIGHTS mm MIAMI (UPI) - 35 Eastern's branch of the Union leaders IAM, said the plan should provide a perma- are confident Eastern Airlines employees will approve buying 25 percent of the company in a pro3fio million posed wage investment program designed to save the debt ridden carrier from bankruptcy. Under the proposal disclosed Thursday, Eastern's 39,000 employees would invest 18 to 22 percent of their 1934 salaries in the airline In return, they would receive 12 million shares of Eastern's outstanding common stock plus four representatives on the company's board of directors. The plan was worked out during 12 days of around-the-cloc- k nego- -' tiations in which leaders of the LIGHT SET nent solution to Eastern's grave money problems. "All attempts in the past were k long-rang- 355 CHRISTMAS $2.98 (UPI) - WASHINGTON (UPI) - From But angry minority and women's rights leaders, at a news conference Thursday, charged the administration won by breaking a promise. The administration insisted there was no promise to break. " said "I feel Kathy Wilson, Republican president of the National Women's Political Caucus. "The promises creating the new civil rights commission have been broken." "Mr. President, it looks like you have won the battle to pack the civil rights commission," conceded Ralph Neas, executive director of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights. "But that is all you have won And even that, double-crossed,- CHICAGO (UPI) - It's no treat for doctors to be considered infallible they say the resultant stress may contribute to high rates of drug abuse, anxiety, depression and eventually "burnout" among physicians. "For centuries, the physician has been viewed by his community as beyond reproach and virtually Infallible In his decisions which often involve matters of life and death," said Drs. Steven Dubov-sk- y and Robert W. Schrier of the University of Colorado. School of Medicine in Denver. "Such esteem has helped to create a mystique that, while reassuring to patients, can lead to great pressure on each new generation of physicians," they said Thursday in a Journal of the American Medical Association 110RTI1 STATE, OREM, CANDY TRAY 2 TIER CANDY CHROME PLATE 3 TIER & CAKE STAND KNIFE SET CANDY $6.98 REG. 0glG9 REG. STAND $22.98 069 99 r m7 c X II A DDI r A COLOR MATES CHEESE BOARD WITH SERVICE FOR WITH CADDY 3 COLORS 24-PIE- Vh" CUSS DOME COVER 0R69 57.98 6 $22.98 PIECE STAINLESS FLATWARE 2 DESIGNS 12" DIAMETER MAYBR00K OR MANSION PARK 099 flfl 99 REGULAR w $9.98 50 NORTHLAND LAZY SUSAN REGULAR 99 REGULAR MARUE $15.98 ' 2 QUART MARBLE SALT & PEPPER SHAKER SET RECULAR Qg49 $4.98 nV COPPER TEA KETTLE HEAT PROOF HANDLE AND KNOB LACQUER FINISH & PURE NICKLE LINING REG. 7 3 TIER CHEESE SLICER HANGING WIRE BASKETS A 049 r $8.98 . V v m It. m BRASS OR COPPER COATED $2.98 2V2 QT. STAINLESS STEEL 1 ROLLING PIN "At no time ... were any names agreed to and there were no names submitted to anyone in the White House and no Republican in Congress," Meese told wire service reporters in an interview. , REGULAR tfi W 9 IPG ) $0.98 0f)49 IU J merr 1 VaJVUQT. fUUJ ED REGULAR 099 A STAINLESS STEEL DOWLS PASTRY BOARD 18"X12"X COPPER CLAD BOTTOM iiiiliiiiiiiipiis MARBLE : TEAKETTLE 9 t J XT sfWliiiiiiiilil I r WITH WOOD STAKD AND HANDLE 'if 019 REGULAR i KIARDLE deal." $9.98 MARBLE REGULAR accomcommission panied an unusual agreement between the White House and Congress on legislation enlarging the and reshaping the commission. However, presidential counselor Edwin Meese Thursday reiterated his position that there was "no d 049 4 STYLES 5"x8' ersbelieved the unwritten promthat at least four of six ise members of the old civil rights panel would be reappointed to a M s BOWL SET REGULAR V $5.49 099 kO) life5 , provided absolutely correctly, leading the doctor in training to believe anything short of perfec- f I MARBLE tion is unacceptable, they said. Doctors expect excessive criticism whenever they make a mistake, which may make them reluctant to offer constructive criticism directly to colleagues and a tendancy to avoid confrontation. criticized,", Dubovsky and Schrier said. 0g69 SIR LAWRENCE 14 PIECE STAINLESS STEEL RECULAR you have won unfairly." The groups charged that the White House and Republican congressional leaders reneged on an unwritten bargain they thought had been struck over who would sit on the newly restructured antidiscrimination agency. Democrats and civil rights lead- "Helpful criticism is either withheld, suppressed or spoken in the absence of the person being WHS' 9 CHARMING TRAY CHROME PLATE The move seemed to have enhanced the power of chief of staff James Baker, who was "99 percent sure" to stay on, aides said. Aides said that in recent months Baker and Gergen, considered his protege, had a falling out over what Gergen considered to be a lack of information. commentary. Doctors are confronted with ill- ness and death, long hours and inadequate time with families, a prolonged period of apprenticeship, increasing complexities of medical technology, new frontiers in medical ethics and the burgeon- ing volume of medicai Knowledge. Teaching physicians should not assume medical care is always 224-099- CHROME PLATE CHROME PLATE Stress May Cause Physician 'Burnout' By SHARON RUTENBERG UPI Science Writer 11950 rivals. new-style- C-- 7'i LIGHTS C9V4 WHITE, NAVY OR YELLOW Reagan Wins Right To Pick Commission all appearances, President Reagan has won his battle with civil rights groups and Democrats over the U.S. Civil Bights Commission and will have a majority of his own choices on the traditionally independent panel. 03 LEAF TRAY Gergen's position as assistant to the president for communications would be abolished upon his resignation, which is expected to take effect next month. The move came amid reports that James Baker, Reagan's chief of staff and Gergen's immediate superior, was considering an offer to become baseball commissioner. White House aides said Gergen's resignation would not affect the duties of deputy press secretary Larry Speakes, who early in the administrastion shared duties with Gergen as chief spokesman. The two, at times, have acted like Presi- 489-53- 4 CHRISTMAS ALLEN'S SUPER STORE 0U 95 Gergen Resigns For Research Job WASHINGTON REPLACEMENT SOUTH MAIN SPRINGVILLE CHROME PLATE 11,500-membe- dent Reagan announced Thursday night his communications adviser, David Gergen, is resigning to take a job at Harvard University. The decision was not entirely unexpected and it foreshadowed no general shakeup in the White House staff, an administration official said. crowd of Reagan told a black-ti- e about 1,000 attending a banquet celebrating the 40th anniversary of the conservative American Enterprise Institute he was accepting Gergen's resignation after three years of "exceptional creativity, loyalty and dedication." He said Gergen would join, the Institute of Politics at Harvard University and work again with the AEI, a leading research organization, where he edited Public Opinion magazine before joining the administrastion. An administration official said 375-500- LIGHT SET REGULARft ALLEN'S DRUG 330 EAST PROVO TREE LIGHTS 50 600 SOUTH LIGHT SET S ALLEN'S DRUG MINIATURE DECORATIVE PHOTO ALBUM HURRICANE LAMP 10 W REGULAR $11.98 V v. ; I I 1 I SELF ADHESIVE PAGES tt kWK lis. I. - RECULAR0Q99 d e solutions. This is not a pay cut for our employees, but an investment vehicle to provide $360 million in 1984," Bryan said. The plan will give the airline $330 million in wage contributions, with the remainder of the $360 million coming from productivity improvements, Bryan said. Bryan predicted the proposal would satisfy Eastern's bankers as well. The airline's lending group threatened to revoke r Eastern's $400 million line of International Association of Machinists, Eastern's credit unless the carrier submits a largest union force, took the lead. plan of profitability the banks can Leaders of the Air Line Pilots approve by Dec. 31. The proposal calls for machinAssociation local, representing Eastern's 3,900 pilots, and the ists, flight attendants and nonTransport Workers Union local, union employees to contribute 13 percent of their wages, while the representing the company's 5,800 flight attendants, also initialed the higher-pai- d pilots would invest 22 percent. proposal. The money would be put into a Members of all three unions must still vote on the plan, but , pool of Eastern preferred stock at union leaders were confident it $6 a share. By the end of 1984, the will pass. employees would own more than "I anticipate the members will 25 percent of the company's voting stock and stand to earn up to $26 overwhelmingly pass it when they million profit a year, Bryan said. are fully aware of all the circumThe wage contributions should stances," said Larry Schulte, vice not be prohibitive to any employchairman of the pilots' contingent . Eastern officials also must ees because raises in January and July will not be affected, said grant approval, but management spokesmen had no comment on the Bryan. The employees have received wage increases totaling 24 plan Thursday. Charles Bryan, president of percent since April. By IRA R. ALLEN 25 Eto QirjiH? Sao measures that didn't generate any cash and had no Band-Ai- -- THE HERALD, Provo. Utah. 11, 1983 a.y REGULAR f1 CO Page 33 |