kpge 4--Thursday, October 12, 1978-The Michigan Daily . , t E Eighty-Nine Years of Editorial Freedom Boom in low-skilled jobs undermining U.S. education Vol. LIX, No.,31 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan MSA and the new president N DECEMBER, University Presi- I dent Robben Fleming will retire, and sometime in the next year a -replacement will be named. The .Regents, as they have always done, Qwill choose that successor. They will ;.,listen to the : recommendations of .faculty and alumni groups, verbally .""pat them on the head, and then select -,whomever they prefer anyway. The Regents would like to appease the "students in the same manner they will appease the faculty and alumni, but Monday night the Michigan Student Assembly made it clear it won't be pacified and ignored. MSA voted to participate in the presidential selection process only upon written assurance from the Regents of the following: " a consolidated committee representing all three interested parties - students, faculty, and alumni - or formal collaboration amongst these groups; " access to resumes and biographical material of all potential candidates including those on the Regents' private lists; " personal access to all potential candidates. This plan would be minimally sufficient to warrant student participation. Anything less would make a mockery of the concept of student input in choosing the new president. After faculty members, students will be most affected by the new chief administrator, but under the Regents plan, students' input could easily be ignored. It comes down to the simple question of who is this University for, and we agree wholeheartedly with MSA that it is for the students. That is why we must play more than a cosmetic role in determining the new president, and thereby the future of the University. The only fault with the MSA proposal is that it doesn't go far enough; it still permits the Regents to throw everyone's work out the window at the last minute, and make an independent choice. Student and faculty interests cannot be fully met unless the Regents are bound to select the new president from a list jointly compiled by students; faculty and Regents. It is unlikely the Regents would accept such a plan, but it is difficult to understand how they can refuse the milder MSA proposal. Should the Regents fail to comply, MSA would be duty-bound to boycott the process. Ron Checchi is part of a national dilemma. A 34-year-old butcher at a large Safeway supermarket in San Francisco, Checchi learned his trade, after years of studious apprenticeship to his father, Hugo. Today, Ron Checchi runs pre-cut portions of beef through a saw and reflects on all the intricate butchers' skills he knows and never uses. "We were once judged by skills, but skills don't matter anymore," he says. "Anybody can be trained in seven or eight months to run meat through the saw." Across town, Hugo Checchi, 61, still works behind the meat counter for a small independent grocer. And he still carves by hand with almost surgical precision the huge carcasses of beed that hang in the meat locker. Hugo says he's more than a butcher; he's also the "public relations man" who sells the meat to his customers. "Less skills are required in a chain outfit," says Hugo. "They get equal pay, but they know less." YET MOST butchers, these days; are hired bytchain stores, not the small independents. And butchers are not an isolated breed in the labor market. Throughout America, the need for skilled workers is on the decline as jobs requiring little or no skills are on the rise. It is a result of radical and immutable changes occuring in the U.S. economy-changes which some economists and educators predict could lead to massive dissatisfaction and social upheaval across the board of the U.S. labor force. As American industry continues to automate and export both skilled and unskilled manufacturing jobs, service sector jobs continue to expand and fill the gap. The congressional Joint Economic Committee predicted earlier this year that by 1985, up to 80 per cent of the U.S. workforce would be employed in the service sector, where skill requirements are at a minimum and there are fewer labor unions to protect wages. The Bureau of Labor Statistics predicts that the fastest growing job slots for the years ahead will be for dental hygienists, flight attendants, computer programmers, teacher's aides and realtors - none of which requires a college education. Labor unions point to the increasing demand for secretaries and clerks "where paperwork is shuffled." By Al Goodman WHILE NOT all service sector employment is unrewarding or underpaid, the statistics show that in general these jobs are characterized by low wages, little or no security or benefits, and little room for career advancement. And, says Patrick Mason, research director of the California Labor Federation, "There is no incentive to stay on the job." The poor pay and lack of security or incentive has contributed to growing legions of migratory farm workers, drifting from one poor job to another, unable to put down roots or provide for a family, say economic observers. Columbia University economist Eli Ginzberg notes that although national weekly earnings averaged $176 in 1976, the average pay in service jobs was just $146 and the retail _what has happened, adds Pipho,- is that America has "created a lower level of jobs where no reading or writing skills are needed." The growth of this "lower level caste," in turn, is a contributing factor to the failure of schools to upgrade, or even maintain, educational achievement, some educators believe. "In the past, it paid to do well in school to get a better job," said Henry Levin, Stanford University education professor. "Today, there's the feeling that better jobs represent so few, you can't get them anyway." "I think (students) are aware that college won't do what it used to," said Rozanne Weissman, a spokesman for the National Education Association, the nation's second largest union. "Teachers have been telling us about less motivated kids." Federal projections indicate a surplus of some 950,000 college graduates in relation to the market for graduates during the current period of 1974-85. SOME EDUCATORS are convinced that the trend in the job market away from jobs requiringkskills and education has indirectly helped to lower overall educational standards by easing the pressure on the schools and on the government to improve those standards. In other words, if industry doesn't need skilled workers, why bother to produce skilled students? "There's a total lack of coordination between schools and the job sector," said the NEA's Weissman. "It's appalling. Weissman's observation applies as well to the other end o the educational spectrum, those college graduates who have acquired high skills in order t find satisfying, good paying jobs. Federal projections indicate a surplus of some 950,000 college graduates in relation to the market for graduates during the current period of 1974-85. - Th Joint Economic Committee labor sudy this year predicts that thi "clot" of highly educated graduates "will mean relatively few opportunities for new graduates through the year 2000. OF COURSE, what is happening is that these educated, skilled graduates are accepting jobs well below their skill levels as salesmen, secretaries and restaurant workers, creating a kind of educated proletariat. But at the same time, they are "bumping down" high school graduates and the less skille workers who normally fill suc jobs into what some ecomonist fear will be a permanen underclass with virtually n prospects for advancement. The result is a bleak picture fo those at both ends, but especiall for tae less educated minorit youths who are hit hardest by th crunch. By the end of this century predicts Stephen Dresch, director of the Demographic Studies Institute in Connecticut, the undermining of, the "traditional mechanism9u of social and econOmi advancement" will, if curren patterns hold, lead t "fundamental and sociaill traumatic disruptions... " The inexorable changes novW gong on, he told the Joint Economic Committee, will leave "very fewuntouched.' " Al Goodman writes o education for Pacific New Service. This article is part o PNS's continuing coverage o the trends reshapin America's economy. The PBB ads and Fitz POLITICAL CAMPAIGNS in this country seem to be run by persons who say at the outset: how far can we go without being accused of mud-slinging or dirty politics. The speeches they give their candidates to parrot are filled with glittering generalities, the "I'm just like you",' and "come on, everybody's jumping on the bandwagon", techniques of audience persuasion. But the most dastardly means of persuasion is an emotion-packed argument - the most effective device a politician has to win votes. Whether it is glittering generalities or emotion-based arguments, makes no difference; they are all bad. They are not based on logic; they do not demonstrate to the listener that a candidate is-qualified for the position she or he seeks. An emotion-charged speech or advertisement is hollow, which may imply something about candidates who use such techniques. State Sen. William Fitzgerald had been running radio ads which credited the toxic chemical PBB with a host of maladies. "Want to know the truth about PBB in Michigan," one ad said. "Loss of hair, memory loss, blindness, liver cancer, birth defects, the brain developing outside of the head," were all tragedies attributed to PBB. Then the ad states that everyone "is going to. get a taste of this stuff." And of course, Sen. Fitzgerald attributes the PBB debacle to Governor William Milliken. The problem is that no proof exists which attributes these maladies to PBB. The chemical is harmful, but we don't know enough about it to make statements which link PBB to brains growing outside of heads. The ads, which have since been taken off the air, after severe criticism from Gov. Milliken, were at best irresponsible. The ads were a plea for votes, based not on fact, but solely on emotion. The governor should be attacked for his mishandling of the PBB incident with effective factual evidence. The ads were sharp and effective, but they were wrong. They were all style and no substance, which may tell us something about the candidate. average only $114. And yet, he says, three out of four new jobs in the past 26 years have been in these categories. The decline in skill requirements has not only hit the high-skill areas, such as butchers, tool and dye makers and other machinists. Automation has also "de-skilled" jobs at the supermarket Checkout counters, retail stores and large commmercial chains. Employees at some McDonald's restaurants, for ecamply, now merely have to, push cash register buttons marked not by numbers but by pictures of hamburgers or french fries or milkshakes. The machine then does all the computing and tally up the change, an arithmetical task the employe once was expected to perform, ONE McDONALD'S manager explained that it leads to greater efficiency and service to the customer. But, says Chris Pipho, associate director of research for the Denver-based Education Commission of the States, "While the manager of McDonald's might go to the Kiwanis and talk about kids not reading or writing, in practice he hasn't done much to help them use these skills." THIS LACK of motivation - perhaps the result of the students' own awareness that most jobs are poorly paid and no longer require much in the way of skills - has produced just the sort of job seekers who fit the "lower level caste" of workers. The rate of "functional illiteracy" - not being able to read a newspaper or fill out a job application - is about 13 per cent of all 17-year old high school students (not counting the thousands who drop out annually), according to the federally financed National Assessment of Educational Progress, Functional illiteracy among blacks and Hispanics is believed to be much higher. And, while there has been some progress made on the functional illiteracy rates, overall educational standards, as reflected by the College Entrance Examination Board, have been steadily declining. Between 1962 and 1976, average acores on the verbal portion of the Scholastic Aptitude Test have declined from 478 to 429, a 12.9 per cent drop. Motivation for education has suffered so badly that many schools are now reporting an average daily absentee rate as high as 25 per cent. Letters to the Daily "WE- MUST A~PRCC IR~Et JCiGWv'CRISI AS -rHE MOC'AL EKONAL trOF WAR -- A.Zm~, g1 tl 'K .:__ peacekeepers To the Daily: In the course of the past few days I have watched alternately in shock and outrage as the Michigan Daily continued to refer to the Syrian troops occupying Lebanon as "peacekeeping forces." In light of recent events, to continue to describe the 30,000 man Syrian force as "peacekeepers" is a gross perversion of the term's true meaning. To portray Syria's systematic destruction of the Christian community of Lebanon as some type of peacekeeping mission is ludicrous. The Syrians are not pursuing peace, but rather they are pursueing their long-time dream of domination of Lebanon and creation of a greater Syria. To accomplish this, the Syrians literally do not care who or how many they must kill. I suggest that the editors of the Michigan Daily take a long hard look at the facts of the horror now being perpetrated in Lebanon and realize the true purpose and meaning of Syria's Lebanon involvement. It would have been interesting to see how the current editors of the Michigan Daily would have covered the actions of the Russian "peacekeeping" force in Czechoslovakia in 1968. would like to raise my voice in protest against the advertising by helicopter that occurs every football Saturday in this city. The incessant droning that invades my home for five solid hours on these dreaded days is distressing on two counts. It disrupts my concentration and affends my sensibilities in terms of energy conservation. } In an age of dwindling natural resources, I feel that this sort of action is grossly irresponsible. It would be better business not to waste fuel for five hours, to my mind. A far more admirable method of placing one's establishment in the public eye would be to allocate these ear- marked advertising funds to the Ecology Center or some other worthy cause. In doing this, the money would be utilized in a productive fashion, energy would be saved, and that annoying noise would be eliminated. In the event that business would adopt this alternative method of advertising, I believe that they could make it be known to the public and thereby accomplish the same goal. I would feel considerably more amenable to patronizing a business that assumed a responsible attitude in regards to this issue, and feel certain that I am not alone. recent folly with Gov. William Milliken. I don't really care if Mr. Canham is being had or not, but that my out-of-state tuition is being had. Mr. Canham is an employee of a public service institution, to which I pay plenty of hard-earned, taxed money. I think both he and the University should show a little more discretion in displaying their personal tendencies - especially when then try to associate these views with such a sacred institution as our Wolverines, -Robert Hayssen misuse of student funds To the Daily: The recent article in the Daily mentioning the use of Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) and LSA Student Government funds to finance a gay teach-in was quite revealing. The article said the group will use the funds to, among other things, examine "religious and ethical attitudes towards homosexuality." One can easily imagne the uproar that would result if MSA and LSA-SG funded Christian groups to examine homosexuality. Anyway, such is the dishonest nature of these fees that, Accounts Office they will giv you a slip o paper informing yo that student government fees ar mandatory this year. As for the note on the back o the bill saying one could ask pett. please for his money back, the will tell you with a straight fac "You don't expect us to waste al that paper, do you?" A interesting point: if suc economy is affected by sendin out unwanted old billing form then why couldn't they slip in small piece of paper rea~iing "Your freedom has bee cancelled by a majority vote o ten per cent of last year' students." So what one gets is a all or nothing deal: one c4nno know ahead of time how MSA o LSA-SG will spend one's mandatory fees. Students have not allowed their "governments" to have a blank check everywhere. For instance: * Earlier this year at: th University of Nebraska mandatory fees were used tofun gay political groups. However after a blizzard of mail protentin funding of such activities :with student fees, the Regents voted 6- 2 not to allow fees to be used for any political groups. Students at the University of Texas went one better and eliminated : the possibility of student government misusing their funds: they voted I