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Show NATIONAL Standard-Examiner av. . 27 1992 3A xaminer Government-forced rail talks begin New York transit to ban cigarette acvertang ga S$ Union officials contend negowetions could destroy collective bargaining er on it” >ommer- ains and ine till being aid, and going to is a long shutdown. . But some union officials branded the new and untried approach “a crime” that will destroy collective bargaining byeffectively ending the right oflabor to strike. Railroad officials said the new procedure, in which an arbitrator is authorized to choose a winner from the best offers made by railroads and unions, is uncharted territory. But theysaid they hoped it would end stubborn labor disputes that have festered for more than four years. Congress, meanwhile, seem relieved to shed, at least for the moment, the onerous responsibility of intervening in railroad labor ide posis oond ightin od anal ase in thé airport. der siege than 2'2 ed in the ople were n a night ) erupted 1 Bosnia, id an un- ims and in TV re- nother om the Machinists When launchoa:a selective strike against CSX Transportation, a regional railroad, the industry re “sponded as one, shutting down all U S. t railroads arnd causing the stoppageof ak passenger trains that operate over tneir tracks. gress did was order an end to a four-year de- The eae was the arbitration lawPresident Bushed signed shortly after midnight Thurs- lay in the resolution of disputes that has been unfair to labor and management alike Although 95 percent of railroad employees have settled, some 20,000 machinists, maintenance workers and other rail employees have been without a contract and a payincrease since 1988. day “Experience has taught us that binding arbitration tacked on the end ofthe process doesn’t encourage bargaining, it discourages it,” Fleming said. “Congress has nowset a pattern that tells the carners they never have to bargain in good faith.” The AFL-CIO, speaking for other railroad unions including the Machinists, had much the same message in a statement released Fn- disputes and imposing a settlement itself. day: “No matter how irresponsible the rail- But labor said it was enraged. “Two crimes were committed this week,” said Mac A. Fleming, president of the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes. “The railroads blackmailed Congress and the nation by holding the economyhostage. And Congress murdered collective bargaining in the rail industry.” Fleming said the Maintenance workers union went out ofits way to avoid creating a national emergency of the kind that would force Congress to intervene. The union, he said, kept talks going beyond the midnight — roads are, Congress will always make sure that management gets its way and that railroad workers are denied their legal right to strike.” Jed Dodd, the chief negotiator for the Maintenance workers union for the Amtrak and Conrail talks, called the new process “a union-busting charade” that he feared would force him to make undue concessions that his members ultimately would reject. The unions’ strong dissent was evident as the proposal rocketed through Congress in 48 hours this week. WASHINGTON (AP) — Democrats on Friday named trio of keynote speakers for their national convention and said Texas Gov. Ann Richards, who gave a famous keynote speech in 1988, will preside over the four-day event next month. Richards’ appointment as convention chairwoman andthe selection of the three keynoters were announced in a statement issued by the Democratic National Committee. Richards and New Jersey Sen. Bill Bradley, one of the keynote speakers, had been mentioned as possible running mates for the ticket to be headed by Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton. A senior aide said Thursday their selection for convention jobs suggested they were no longer under consideration. But Clinton denied that Friday. “You can draw no inference ence, and rbian rehe domi7, smaller 1e Associssevic dee -d in the” osnia andy or coming e of earnoesn’t be-& iny more® Bush’rec- from their participation one wayor another. Absolutely not,” he said y his own while walking to his office in Little Rock. But Bradley said he believed a message was being sent. “The selection does mean that the idea of the vice presidency ... is no longer alive,” Bradleytold re“porters. “IT think people nowrealize I meant what I said.” Bradley said he did not know why he was chosen to address the convention, commenting, “I’m not known as a great speaker.” The other two keynote speakers at the July 13-16 convention will be Georgia Gov. Zell Miller and former Texas Rep. Barbara Jordan. All three will speak the first night. Miller helped Clinton win an important primaryvictoryin his state last March. Bradley and Jordan, whois black, often speak on the racial harmony themes that Clinton or’s policy y error. If omething » call 625m. week- is pub- . ch ' » . ’ police officer,” Whalen said. month O’Loughlin said Yanco often 14 as youth officer. In May, an investigation began gave such kisses to kids he worked into allegations by a womanthat_ with. sm. 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Se $2 PUBLIC AUCTION @ 7’x7’x4’6” @ Peak Fly 25-4210: 9S COrxaminer about a INVENTORY OF U.S. CUSTOMS SEIZED PROPERTY AND GENERAL ORDER MERCHANDISE. | INVENTORY OBTAINED FROM U.S. CUSTOMERS AUCTION. LOTS PURCHASEDAT U.S. CUSTOMS AUCTION WILL BE AUCTIONED PIECE BY PIECE PLUS OTHER CONSIGNMENTS WHICH CONSTITUTE THE MAJORITY OF THE INVENTORY OFFERED AT THIS AUCTION. THE MAJORITY OF OTHER CONSIGNMENTS INCLUDE: winze. “EAGLES POINT”. 5 p.m. ee ou ARCHERY Ju SALE ly The test will come if negotiators are unable to settle their differences themselves. ©7'6”x6’8"x4’ @ RAINFLY e RECOND. Uy Mm. = PRE-SEASON STOCK REDUCTION The process begins Monday when the two sides each submit the name of an individual who will, in the days following, appoint a single person to arbitrate the outcomeof negotiations. 3-Person HEX DOME 25-4230 * to core. 94-711: said John Cun 4 PARKING LOT to his mother, kissed him on the forehead and hugged him, saying Yanco had been with the police department in the wealthy Boston suburb of Wellesley for 21 years, 94-1671. . a “This is brand new,” he said. “I think the Congress is as curious as we are on howthis is going to work.” " 2 ymuter ra ANNUAL SUbWWH BR Yanco kissed her son on the mouth and spanked him with his pants down. The boy was being counseled by Yanco. The officer was still under invesof duty, although death came by tigation when he shot himself his own hand. Yanco, who specialized in work- Mondayas hetalked with a fellow ing with children, committed sui- officer in a phone conversation recide after a woman charged that he corded by police. “To listen to that tape is hearthad had kissed her 10-year-old son breaking. That poor man. The teron the lips. “No matter what I say, people rible pain,” said Wellesley Police will always be suspicious. I can’t Chief Thomas O’Loughlin. stand the way people are going to Yanco had not had a previous think of me,” Yanco, 43, wrote in a complaint made against him in his 14 years as youth officer, O’Loughletter to one of his two young sons. The case, and Yanco’s death lin said. But the charges wereseriMonday,stirred discussions about ous and had to be investigated, he protecting the rights of both the ac- added. cused and the accuser. Friends and O’Loughlin said Yanco met the family members have said that boy and his mother in May after Yanco loved children and was- the woman told school authorities deeply traumatized by the allega- she was concerned that her son was tions. having long conversations after “Bill was happiest when he was school with a man. with kids, giving them high fives. If O'Loughlin said the mother later a person could give too much or learned her son had lied about care too much, that person was meeting the man, and that she then Bill,” said Wellesley police Lt. D.C. told Yanco, who went to the home. Whalen, who eulogized Yanco at a According to O’Loughlin, Yanco Massat St. Joseph’s Church. said he gave the boy three smacks “Bill died in the line of duty as a on his behind, told him not to lie ays, or nds, 1.25 norther contracts expire, impinges on the right of unions to strike,” Harper said. Others named to convention posts included House Speaker Tom Foley, D-Wash., as honorarychairman, and four co-chairs: Sen. Barbara Mikulski, D-Md.; Rep. Patricia Schroeder, D-Colo.; Rep. Edward Roybal, D-Calif.; and Atlanta Mayor Maynard Jackson. MEDWAY, Mass. (AP) — Vetyeran policeman William H. Yanco wasSaluted at a funeral service Friday as a man whodied in the line rmonth r month b a nue a ists at the National Press Club, noted that the law Congress passed applies only the present situation and not to future disputes. “I wouldn’t drawthe implication that this is the wayit is going to be forever or that it has pressed throughout his campaign. It will be Jordan’s second keynote address and her second at Madison Square Garden in New York City. The former congresswoman, nowa professor and an ethics adviser to Richards, delivered her first at the 1976 convention. “These leaders represent not only the diversity of the Democratic party but a real commitment to economic and social change,” party chairman Ron Brown said in the statement. “The team is coming together.” Policeman’s suicies prompts rights-of-the-accused debates the sun ident will proposal,” m, call K rD L ng5 theeidi Ra Road and b boards after March 1994, when a Harper, speaking to transportation special- Bradley to speak at convention voted for 19-9611 44-5505 ekdays m. to pass the arbitration bill Edwin L. Harper, president of the Associ tion of American Railroads which repreesents Class Onefreight lines, said that what Con- aU 562-0093 ple have ce the-repats, who nt of the by the every bit of vigor they possessed,” saidi Re; John Dingell, D-Mich., a leader in the dr 2 sta Dan Ww » “The unions have opposed this thing w in Au - sudways 2 and WASHINGTON(AP) — Unions and railroads began Friday a neweffort to resolve their 4-year-old wage-and-work rule disputes under the pressure of binding arbitration imposed as the government ended a two-day rail n suDWwayS . -s Tra — AP) NEW YO RK $9499 oy 49%;<ROR DEPT. 10% OFF $17%| $15 BAIT! HOOKS! LURES! SINKERS! FLOATS! ETC. - 50% OFF COLEMAN COOLERS “34 QTS.” Reg $18.00 ALREADY LOW PRICE ty RAFT RENTALS 0% orF J 54 ‘Ors. Bb. umbia Reg. $30.00 SALE CALL FOR RESERVATIONS ECONOMY OUTDOOR $3999 me= $1399 butch ovEN «3 29%, COOKING DEMO ts SAT. 10:00-3:00 MW -10”- 12”- 14”- 16” PARKING LOT her 5 Why Pay Morel! 621-4662 West Riverdale Rd. 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