| Show MU 2A The Salt Lake Tribune Friday September 1987 18 Ford UAW Settle Issue Job-Securi- ty - DEARBORN The Mich (UPI) United Auto Workers and the nation's current most profitable automaker Ford Motor Co reached a tentative agreement Thursday on a historic contract that will give about 104000 US hourly workers vastly greater job security over the next three years The settlement announced shortly k before noon EDT after intense - round-the-cloc- negotiations at Ford's plants world headquarters in suburban Detroit also includes higher wages and improved benefits but job security was the UAW's top priority in the talks that began July 28 The new three-yea- r pact averted a walkout by the UAW against Ford which it selected as its strike "target” last month The union's strike deadline which was originally set for midnight Monday was extended on a " basis as the negotiations continued and an agreement was in sight The centerpiece of the U S agreement is an unprecedented Guaranteed Employment Numbers (GEN) job security program The plan will bar Ford from laying off workers except when sales are depressed due to The Canadian Auto Workers union announced the proposed set- tlement shortly after meeting with the company whose Canadian workers walked off the job at four assembly and parts plants in Onr tario province when their contract expired at midnight Montwo-yea- day Chrysler's Canadian subsidiary said some employees could return to work by late Sunday if the tenta "day-by-day- Ail Apology to Ford's tendency to replace a domestic vehicle or component line with a foreign-mad- e vehicle or parts line Chrysler Reaches Canada Accord TORONTO (UPI) Chrysler Corp and union negotiators agreed Thursday on a new contract that could send some of the company's 10000 striking workers back to the assembly lines by the weekend and head off more layoffs at US market conditions When sales improve the company must recall laid-of- f workers before putting active workers on overtime The program allows for employee basis attrition under a e Japanese-Amcrica- labor pact is tive three-yea- fied at weekend meetings r The contract further provides a 3 percent raise in the first year and lump-subonus payments of 3 percent in the second and third years adjustments are fully maintained and 81 cents of the curCOLA payment becomes rent part of the base wage rati- by the rank and file Chrysler Canada Ltd and union negotiators reached agreement on a new labor pact after the auto- maker presented its third money offer Bargaining subcommittees had met through the night on issues break The in g g There was no mention of in the union's overview of the settlement however indicating the UAW may have made no gains in that area the stalemate came earlier when union President Robert White and senior Chrysler officials verbally agreed to a scheme a first among major industrial unions — to meet the key demand for indexing pension increases to inflation rates for future letirees sources said If approved - meaning that for every two jobs - re- er leaders said the GEN also protects against job losses resulting from Ford President Harold Poling labeled the tentative agreement "historic" adding that company workers "should be proud of what has happened these past few days" U S General Wants ns Utah Democratic Congressman that he dis- agreed with the evacuation order at the time although he was then flying combat missions against Japanese forces in the South Pacific One of the chief sponsors of the bill was Rep Norm Mineta who was 10 years old when he and his family had to leave their San Jose home and were sent to a makeshift camp at the Santa Anita racetrack "Those of us who support the bill want not just to close the books on the sad events of 1942 We want to make sure that such blatant constitutional violations never occur again” Mineta said in an emotional appeal The bill would authorize $20000 payments to the approximately 60000 internees still alive Congress still would have to approve a separate bill to provide the money Wayne Owens voted “yes" on the internment compensation bill Republi- can Reps Howard Nielsen and James Hansen voted “no” At the time of the evacuation the government promised to manage or take care of the internees’ property but many suffered substantial economic losses 243-14- by the union's National Ford Council as expected Friday the pact will be submitted to the rank and file for a ratification vote It will cover 104000 blue-collworkers at the No 2 85 plants and facilities in 20 states car-make- duced through retirement resignation or death the GEN would be reduced by only one worker Union The speaker recalled House Speaker Jim Wright of Texas noting the bill was considered on the 200th anniversary of the signing of the Constitution described the forced evacuation and internment as "perhaps the most egregious violation of our Constitution" By approving the bill "We are voting to redress a longstanding wrong" he said David Puttnam Sarah Ferguson Norman Mailer profit-sharin- House Says Repay WWII Internees WASHINGTON (UPI) The House acting to correct "a longstanding wrong” voted Thursday to authorize $125 billion in compensawho tion for Japanese-American- s were sent to military internment camps during World War II 1 The bill approved and sent to the Senate includes an apology "on behalf of the people of the United States" to the approximately 120000 individuals forced from their West Coat homes and farms during the war The relocation was authorized under executive orders signed by President Franklin Roosevelt in 1942 and carried out by the Army The move just months after the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor Dec 7 1941 was prompted by fears of possible disloyalty by those of Japanese ancestry Spotlight NATO to Get Aging B-5- Bombers 2 - WASHINGTON (UPI) The head of the Strategic Air Command said bombers Thursday that 150 headed for retirement in the early 1990s should be retained and used to strengthen NATO’s conventional forces to help deter a Soviet attack in the Air There are 169 Force arsenal some of them built in 1958 and most have been converted to carrying cruise missiles with nuclear warheads instead of nuclear bombs The conversion was made so the aged planes can launch the missiles at great distances from their targets to help them survive an attack The SAC commander Gen John Chain Jr said the Joint Chiefs of Staff was considering not retiring the in the early 1990s as scheduled and using them to reinforce NATO’s conventional forces is suffering from writing pains for him is too lonely The Pulitzer Prize winning author says writing his new endeavors in and getting tougher but it has prepared him for Norman Mailer directing films Mailer’s first mainstream film "Tough Guys Don’t Dance starring this week and is based on Ryan O’Neal and Isabella Rossellini opened Cod novel T hate the solitude of writing more his Provincetown-Cap- e and more” Mailer 64 told The Boston Globe "It gets harder physically There’s nothing more tiring than writing I believe writing is analogous to coal mining You’re squeezing your insides all the time trying to pump up the system” Mailer said there’s one good thing about directing There are always people around saying "Yes Mr Mailer" Andrew’s wife sobbed for 15 minutes at overcome was she by the moving death scene in a when a charity gala new play by author Jeffrey Archer "You’ve managed to ruin my mascara” she told the cast 10 curtain calls The "Beyond Reasonable Doubt" took Sarah Ferguson Prince play "It was a great performance I loved it" Sarah the Duchess of York told Archer actress Wendy Craig her leading man Frank Finlay and the rest of the cast who defends Craig portrayed the wife of a lawyer acted by Finlay himself when he Is accused of her murder Archer 47 won record libel damages of $800000 this summer over a newspaper story linking him with a prostitute The previous October he resigned his post as deputy chairman of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher’s Conservative Party amid reports of the incident He wrote "Beyond Reasonable Doubt” in the weeks following his resignation ’ : David Puttnam head of Columbia Pictures Corp has agreed to step down after a year at the helm of the film company that has been battered by management turmoil for a decade Co in New Puttnam’s decision was announced by the Coca-Col- a York Columbia is part of Coke's Entertainment Business Sector Earlier this month Coke announced it would merge its Entertainstudio of Pictures Inc a ment Business Sector with Tri-Stwhich it owns 293 percent Chairman Victor Since the merger was announced and Tri-StKaufman was put in charge of the combined operation there has been ' speculation about Puttnam’s departure Puttnam a British producer previously made such movies as “Char iots of Fire" "The Killing Fields” and “The Mission” for Warner Bros ' ' Sean Penn was unpenned Thursday released early from a Los Angeles jail for good behavior after serving 32 days the minimum sentence possible for a y Penn 27 wore dark glasses as he hurried out of the front door of the Central Jail shortly after 1 a m He was accompanied by his brother Christopher and an unidentified man 60-da- —Complied From Tribune Wires bv David Noyce Suspected Terrorist Caught Brought to United States Continued From Save on electronics through Saturday 1988 5999 recorder Mini cassette Reg 6999 tciturcs IM AM 1M stereo radio recording two i" chnamie speakers AC IK' and shoulder strap A RX-lMl- i one-touc- 9999machine Answering KXTI t2i has plavhack tone remote control message memo call screening toll stur and main more features B Reg 11999 one-touc- the military in international waters or airspace" said a Pentagon official The Amal militia for which Younis is said to work is is considered to be more moderate than the Iranian-backe- d Hezbollah an organization which is believed to hold some of the U S hostages being held in Lebanon The hostage-takin- g statute passed in 1984 provides long-arjurisdiction over offenses committed outside the United States where US nationals are among those taken hostages Younis is accused in an indictment unsealed Thursday of conspiring with others in the June 11 1985 hijacking of the Alia Royal Jordanian Airlines plane a Boeing 727 with 74 people aboard The indictment says that Younis and four boarded the plane armed with AK-4- 7 assault rifles The indictment alleged that one of the conspirators assaulted a crew member The hijackers "repeatedly assaulted and beat several Jordanian sky marshals who were discovered on board the aircraft” during the two-daodyssey the indictment alleged l CLIP y & SAVE 5K05 two-w- one-touc- with want sports siores have a news story or feature you im t tn Ik about? 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