2
Monday, May 10, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
S.F., Newark strikes end
Cable cars are rolling again in San Francisco and beer is brewing more at a Budweiser plant in New Jersey, but building service workers are still picketing in the city.
About 1,800 city building trade workers in San Francisco struck March 31 over a proposed $5.2 million pay cut. The 1,900 municipal railway worker honored the picket lines, hailing the system's more than 1,000 buses, trolleys, streetcars and cable cars.
The strike ended early Saturday when labor and city officials reached an agreement to turn the issue of pay cuts over to an 11-member committee to discuss it.
The Anheuser Busch strike in Newark, N.J., ended Saturday when members of Teenagers Local 102, accented a three-year contract.
A tentative agreement was reached early Saturday in the five-week strike of 1,700 technicians and newsletters at the National Broadcasting Co., where they were called to protest.
In New York, 20,000 members of the Service Employees International Union continued their week-end strike of apartment buildings. The doormen, porters, elevator operators and security guards are seeking a $50-a-week raise and a one-year contract. Current salary ranges from $180 to $20) a week.
The walkout by 60,000 members of the United Rubber Workers Union goes into its fourth week on Tuesday against the big four of the rubber industry—Goodyear, Nike, Ray-Ban and Air.
Good luck, Mr. Jacobs and the lawyers.
The principal issues of the strike are salaries and cost-of-living clauses.
Quakes hit two countries
UDINE, Ilay—Two more powerful earthquakes shook northeastern Italy and western Venezuela yesterday, leveling houses and a 18th century cathedral.
No new casualties were reported, but the official death toll from last Thursday's devastating crash reached 817.
oeVaisingon quote release 7.132
Public officials said they expect to find at least 400 more bodies buried under the seaport, with fell ships likely exceeding 1,000.
In Washington, the U.S. Agency for International Development announced it had made $531,000 in aid for available international earthquake victims.
Rain hampered search and rescue operations yesterday and authorities requested tents to shelter thousands of homeless victims still lacking temporary shelter.
Health Minister Luciano del Falco said an inoculation campaign against typhoid fever was progressing satisfactorily and supplies of serum were arriving regularly.
West Bank Jews to leave
JERUSALEM--The Israeli cabinet yesterday decided against allowing Jews to settle in the heartland of the occupied West Bank, but offered to relocate them.
The government declared flatly that the settlement established by Jewish nationalists near the West Bank city of Nablus must be evacuated.
The emerald was established last December in defiance of official orders. Israel took the West Bank from Jordan in the 1967 war. Seven Arabas have died there since then.
The settlement issue has become a major test of strength for Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, who has been pressured by growing rightist influence in favor of annexing the West Bank, and by American criticism of Jewish settlement in the heavily populated regions of West Jordan.
A cabinet statement said Israel would continue to settle the West Bank with Jews according to its past decisions. These had allowed settlement only in the Jordan Valley, where Israel had been planning for a new settlement.
Gettu will give to charity
LONDON-J. Paul Getty, 83 years old and reputedly the richest man in the world, will leave most of his fortune to charity, according an interview published
The copyrighted interview in the Sunday People said Getty, the American oil tycoon wanted to give the greatest benefit to the largest number of people. But he
Gets's secretary, Norris Bramlett, reached by telephone at Gets's Sutton in the midst of the interview, was accurate but that Ggets wasn't available on a interview. It was deemed further unsuitable.
Getsy's fortune has been estimated at $2 billion, and other estimates go as high as $4 billion, but Ggetsy himself always professes not to know the extent of his
Ford wins caucuses; Carter stays strong
By The Associated Press
President Ford was victorious this weekend in Kansas caucuses receiving 11 of the 14 elected delegates. All three Reagan delegates came from the Third Congressional District, which includes Lawrence.
State caucuses in Kansas and four other states boosted the total number of delegates committed to former California governor Ronald Reagan to 398, thus giving him more than one-third of the 1,130 delegates needed for the Republican presidential nomination.
A Newsweek survey of the 90 states and
territories predicts that Reagan will
(within a decade) be president (96).
*
On the Democratic side, former Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter picked up 9 delegates yesterday at the state Democratic convention in Maine. Rep. Morris Udall, D-Ariz., won four delegates; and six uncommitted delegates were elected.
delegates, Ford with 778 and another 453
delegates will be uncommitted.
Democrats in Wyoming Saturday gave Carter, Udall and California Gov. Edmund G. Brown one vote each. The state's other candidates did not vote, the national convention will be uncommitted.
With the Maine andny delegates included, Carter had 969 delegates. Sen. Henry Jackson had 199 and Udall had 187.5. Democratic delegates have been elected.
"But," he said, "I'm sure the child-care billed veted by President Ford was not even a judge."
it's the middle class as well as the poor who bear the burden.
"We are in a strangle hold by the
manufacturing complex. The people are
irrritated."
From page one
PAULING SAID the budget request
for B-1 bomber was $2.4 billion.
Pauling he thought the President's promise to keep the United States the most powerful country in the world was only asking for trouble.
"The rational thing to say is why don't we try to improve the lot of our people. If we took the initiative to decrease our military I'm sure Russia would follow our lead."
Pauling said he was also opposed to the large space exploration program, which he described as "exhaustive."
Pauling said that, even though the United States had twice as many nuclear warhead devices as Russia, both countries had the capability to destroy each other and with most of the world.
"For the amount of money spent on every piece of interesting information gotten from your research, it pays to pay."
"We spend billions of dollars fiddling with these systems," he said, "and as they become more complex, the chance of a technological or psychological mishap
Planning called for ...
PAULING SAID he was opposed to make power generator plants because they required a fissionable material in 50 to 100 years and because their efficiency could be as low as 5
C B R A D I O S A T 20 % OFF
"I think we should put a proper amount of effort and money into achieving an economically effective measure of directly connectedness by using tidal and wind power." Pauling said.
He said that there was a lot of interest in using solar energy.
Pauling said that science would continue to change the world over the next 100 years, but not as drastically as it had in the past century.
"I DON'T BELIEVE full employment causes a sacrifice for our nation. It's unemployment that causes the sacrifice," he said. "Chemists and other trained people have problems of human need, if a proper systems system was set up to allow for this."
"If we want to do justice to future generations, then we must look at the imminent threat."
"In short, man should be able to lead a good life and express his personality."
Pauling said it wasn't really possible to predict the future—and therefore possible to change it. But he said, that shouldn't stop us from trying to improve our present situation.
Pauling also discussed the nation's unemployment problem and said that one of the greatest ways the government had failed was in not setting up a system that
everything in the world, have a special
job to help educate their fellow
citizens," he said.
"If the world is to be saved," Pauling said, "then we all have to fight for it, against the evil course the leaders of the world have been following."
"If we go ahead using petroleum supplies at the present rate, it will all be gone in 50 years," he said. "This is robbing our children of their birth right."
"WE ARE VERY prodigal in our use of energy in this nation," he said. "Much of our electrical power is wasted on oil and gas because we don't pay the right price."
"Scientists, because they affect
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But he said he thought such a system would probably restrict some freedoms.
provided full employment.
Pauling said that if oil companies' operations were charged proportionally to the amount of damage they instilled in humans, fuels would be more judiciously used.
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