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- BUSINESS, Page 41Business NotesCOAL STRIKEFirst the Calm, Now the Storm
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- The 14-week-old strike by 1,900 mine workers against
- Pittston Coal in Virginia, West Virginia and Kentucky began as
- a model of genteel labor relations, with strikers staging
- peaceful sit-ins and picketing politely. But last week the
- increasingly bitter standoff, which has grown to include more
- than 37,000 wildcat strikers throughout coal country, turned
- into an old-fashioned, ugly war. A car bomb exploded at a
- Virginia coal company, and strikers hurled rocks at
- coal-carrying trucks near the entrance to Sydney Coal in
- Kentucky.
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- In West Virginia, where battles have been especially
- fierce, nearly 300 strikers were arrested for blocking thre road
- to a nonunion mine. Two employees at Hampden Coal were hit by
- shotgun pellets. Said a spokesman for A.T. Massey Coal: "There
- is a total state of chaos. The state (of West Virginia) is out
- of control." Mining-company executives have urtged West Virginia
- Governor Gaston Caperton to call out the National Guard, which
- he has so far refused to do.
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- The battles erupted during a weeklong work stoppage that
- was authorized by the United Mine Workers. Richard Trumka,
- president of wthe U.M.W., said he ordered the shutdown in order
- to "calm the volatile situation." When miners return to work
- this week, tensions will be high. Trumka has accepted an
- invitation for the U.M.W. to return to the negotiating table,
- but Pittston has not yet commented on the proposal.
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