OCR Text |
Show 4A I' The Salt Lake Tribune, Wednesday, April 29, 1978 Spiro Urges Elis to Fire Yales Chief w r izs:m37Mm Washington Post Service HOLLYWOOD BEACH. Vice President Spiro T. Agr.ew T ueav n:ght urged Yale University alumni to seek the dismissal of the school's president, Kingman Brewster. Agnew also called for immediate expulsion of students for serious violations of campus rules and demanded an end to the era of appeasement of university radicals. proAgnew condemned more gressive preachers interested in fighting pollution than fighting evil. Brewster came in for criticism when he sad it would be difficult for a black revolutionary to obtain a fair trial in the United States. Yale and New Haven face demonstrations later this week against the trial of Black Panthers on murder and kidnaping charges. FLU r i i i r D V efk V Criminal Left Q vtr , x v E7 wiilhjinj'fj'ijjh i Wwtfrw Associated Prest Wirephoio 'Ilant ctiVWD,aiiiia:er 9 limam wwj & rout demonstrators guard sprays Mace to In Honeywell's main facility in Minneapolis. Hundreds appeared at plant to protest Honeywell war goods while stockholders gathered. Commented Agnew: . . The spawning ground and sanctury of The Movement is the American univerinstitutions are sity. Few more vital to a free society: None is so susceptible to capture and destruction by the radical or criminal left. Agnew's appearance at a Republican fund dinner here had raising considerable advance interest because warring factions of the Florida GOP are gathering for the e Aiitiwarriors attracted U.S. Labor Unrest Spreads Walkout at Goodyear Idles 23,000. Disrupt Stock Meet MINNEAPOLIS. MINN. (UP1) - Antiwar demonstrators Tuesday broke up the annual stockholders meeting at Honeywell, Inc., here and special police units were needed to control the 1,500 protesters in the parking lot outside. Board chairman J. H. Bing-e- r was forced to adjourn the meeting after 14 minutes. Bingcr attempted to main-lai- n order for several minutes but then gave up and sat stone-faceas the demonstrators screamed call off the pigs. Object to Product d Th.e protesters, who had bought stock and obtained proxy rights, were out to force the company to stop making war materials, espe- cially fragmentation bombs. A Honeywell guaid tossed a canister of Mace as outside demonstrators stormed the entryway at the start of the meeting. was One demonstrator atifesled, apparently after a clash with a police officer. A glass door was shattered. Later all protesters joined forces on the parking lot and convened a people's shareholders' meeting. Seek a Voice The corporation, first in war production in Minnesota, lias been the object of the Pi oject, an organization in which a group of ministers, piofessional people, students and workeis have systematically purchased shares in wider to have a voice at corporate meetings. The rompany screened shareholders and proxy holders cosely before the meeting. and by the time it started, many persons who said they laid proxies had not been Honeywell admitted. In the crush outside, the large plate glass doors into the mam lobby were shattered bv rocks. Washington Post Service At least 10 PITTSBURGH people wore at rested and half a dozen more ejected from the hull at the annual sharchoid-pi- s meeting of Gulf Oil Coip. acre Tuesday Those arrested, mostly students end faculty from the - University of Pittsburgh he the street from meeting hall, were picked up for scuffling v' ith police in the street or refusing to heed management's request that they give up microphones. Those inside the hall were blasting the company for its oil interests in the Portuguese African colony of Angola and Its sale of jet aircraft fuel to the Defense Department for use in Vietnam. Despite the anger that flared both in and out of he hr 11 during the meeting, the dcdionstration broke up before the meeting did and the students split into groups ta march through the city and its suburbs, past the offices of Gulf Oil, Aluminum Co. of America. Hoppers Corp. and all the Mellon Bank Mellon interest. as grouped acro-- s By Associated Press Tlie strike against the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., the nation's largest rubber producer, went into its second week Tuesday, idling some 23,000 members of the United Rubber Workers at 15 plants in 12 states. for a new Negotiations fhree-yea- r contract broke down at midnight April 20. Contracts expred on the same date with the three other members of the rubber Fireindustry's Big Four stone Tire & Rubber. B.F. and Uniroyal, Inc. but workers for those firms have remained on the job on a basis. fecting 2,200 en- employes, tered its sixth day Tuesday. The walkout began Wednesday when 16 electrical workers in Baton Rouge refused to cross picket lines set up by the iron workers. By Friday the walkout had spread to Beaumont, the company's against the Bath Iron Works went into its second day in a contract dispute. Members of Industrial Local 6, AFL-CIUnion of Marine and Shipyard Workers, are demanding a across-the-boar- d headquarters. wage hike over three years plus improved fringe benefits. Current pay is $3.28 an hour. Meanwhile, about 700 supervisory employes, plus workers in some Texas and Louisiana towrs and cities, have been keeping service in operation. At Bath, Maine, a strike In Washington, D.C., Postmaster General Winton M. Blount pressed for Congressional action on President Nixons postal reform bill 1o forestall more widespread mail strikes. top-rate- d Goodrich, day-to-da- y Bow to Request In New York City, police bowed to a court order prohibiting a sick call at midnight over salary demands. They decided to put the matter off until Saturday. The Patrolmens Benevolent has based its Association wage raise demands on a contract clause calling for maintenance of a ratio to those of sergeants, vv ho received a pay boo,t in February. Current pay for a first class patrolman is $10,950 a year. Although a national contract has been readied between the Teamsters Union and the trucking industry, providing r for a wage hike, wildcat strikes have developed in scattered areas. In Critical Slate Cleveland. Ohio, the Greater Cleveland Growth Association said the city's smallAt er manufacturing plants are in a critical state, many on the edge of tailing, because of the wildcat walkout by truck drivers. The associaestimated production tion losses at $13 million daily. Also in Ohio, there were several repoits of truck windshields hit by bullets as they Medina Faces 3 Witnesses In Closed Formal Inquiry ft. ga. McPherson, (UPI) Capt. Ernest Medina hours and 43 minthree spent utes before Col. James II. Mobley Tuesday in a closed formal inquiry to determine whether he is ta stand court martial in the alleged My Lai massacre. Mobley is handing the in- vestigation being conducted under Article 32 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, similar to a grand jury proceeding. The army was officer accompanied by Capt. Mark Kaddish, one of his twe military attorneys, and Gerald Alch, a civilian lawyer. Alch, an associate of noted lawyer F. Lee Bailey, said three witnesses appeared at first time since rejected Supreme Court nominee Judge G. Harrold Carswell said he would run for the U.S. Senate against Republican Rep. William Cramer. Campus Guidelines laid The vice president down a series of guidelines for dealing with campus dissent: The era of appeasement must come to an end. A concise and clear set of rules for campus conduct should be established, transmitted to incoming freshmen with immediand enforced ate expulsion the penalty for serious violations. Universities should not patently unqualified adopt students." No negotiations under threat or coercion. No amnesty for lawlessness or violence. Any organization which publicly declares its intention to violate the rules of an academic community and which carries out that declaration should be barred from campus. A O V E RTISEMENT the hearing. Medina has been charged with the responsibility for the aieged mass killing on March 16, 19CS. He has told newsmen the Army has accused him of murdering not less than 175 Vietnamese. Open Mon. thru At horn in minutes fixes broken Amazing new Quik-Fi- x plates. fills in the cracki and replaces teeth like new. Fait Eaiy to use I No special tools needed. r,A Worke every time or lutari Repair M your money back. flfCYe Thurs. 1 0-- 1 vn G i5S30aS!BB SsOO to a first-floo- Md?S A PMdes ei Sw S. S. Kreeft Cempwy 0QG O m ItSHlP tfe 1 1 drove along highways. None of the drivers was injured. In Cincinnati, a bomb Monday night caused damage esti- mated at 0(3020 0, Fri., Sat. 91 0 asisura r office at Teamsters headquarters. No in jui if s resulted. Truik dm pis. under the contract which expired March 31, cain $4.15 an hour. A Bin Same Boost Teamsters local in North N.J.. obtained a contract adding up to $1.65 an hour. Some Chicago truckers earlier won the Brunswick. three-yea- CHSMIEKB r same increase. In Texas and Louisiara, a strike by ironworkers against the Gulf State Utilities Co., af i&ptffft VASH H WEAR WIG Reg. 17.88 4 Days O' Charge It lie fiber never Stretch wig of 100 needs setting. Wide range of colors, including blondes, and frosted. Adjusts to ell head sizes. Save Si! mo-aer- protest Mtllmrnj, Handbag and FilMrrrm yr ( aamr U 14 Ci m Department 80 SQ1 1 fflSilii dUMM: |