iday, November 3, 1978-The Michigan Daily 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Eighty-Nine Years of Editorial Freedom. Workers differwith Carter on inflatior o. LXXXIX, No. 50 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan I - I S i ii N It, President Carter will have a difficult time convincing rank-and-file union workers that his new wage guidelines call for equal sacrifices from labor and management, union sources say. In most major industries, contracts negotiated by union leaders must be approved by majority vote of the membership. Even though Carter has picked up support from UAW and Teamster officials, his success in holding down wage increases in the 1979 round of collective bargaining will depend on overcoming rank-and-file suspicions concerning his program's fairness. Union sources say that workers may question the fairness of the following aspects of Carter's plan: The wage guidelines are calculated on a percentage basis-seven per cent increase per year-which provides larger pay increases for the wealthy. "A trucking executive who already makes ten times what a driver makes will be entitled to ten times as much pay increase," said Steve Early, spokesman for PROD, a rank- and-file Teamsters group demanding contract improvements in the 1979 trucking negotiations affecting some 450,000 workers.. "If you make $100,000 a year, you would be allowed an increase of $7,000, but if you make $10,000 a year, you only get $700." Percentages would also be used to calculate the tax rebates Carter promises if inflation runs too high. Under the rebate plan, the taxpayers would be financing wage increases which would normally be the employer's. responsibility. " For most firms, no guidelines are set for profits. William Winpisinger, president of the machinists union, said his members will not accept the seven per cent wage guidelines when, for example, the natural gas producers will be receiving at least $50 billion in added profits as a result of the Carter-backed energy package. Even if Carter's goal of six per cent inflation is met, prices for new gas will be allowed to rise nearly 14 per cent next year, and another ten per cent in each of the following five years, Winpsinger noted. Before endorsing these price increases, Carter, himself had labeled the added By Matt Wi revenues "an enormous windf profits such as these will not under the Carter inflation prog " While making up for inflti goal in bargaining, another is t of increased profits during t preceding contract. Carte allowance for workers in that s For example, United A members were recently rem union magazine that in par increased productivity, Gener Ford Motor Co. enjoyed u profits in 1977 totaling nearly $ members have received only 1 increases called for under th contract, and can be expected A variety of unio agreed that worker realize that they ar those hardest inflation, but said1 not mean they will with the Carter plan up for that fact in next year's b, No guidelines are set for c income, such as dividend primarily received by the citizens. While workers' fringe be limited, many typical executives would not. F executives could be comp increased stock options, trave company recreational facil which would count toward the pay hike limit. Health and safety on th reduced. "Carter says that workers u than a seven per cent increas tt agreeing to changes in work rules that save the company money," said one union health all profit." Yet and safety expert. "Knowing our members t be controlled can't make it on the seven per cent, the ram. companies will pressure them to go easy on on is one union certain health and safety protections, and our o claim a share people aren't going to be very happy about he life of the that choice. r makes no "At the same time," he added, "Carter is- ituation. setting new restrictions on government health uto Workers and safety regulations, although we don't inded in their know that those regultions contribute to rt because of inflation. No one has tried to figure out how al Motors and much we are reducing inflation by reducing nprecedented injuries and diseases which cause high 5 billion. UAW medical costs, absenteeism, and low the basic wage productivity." ieir three-year * The president did not adopt proposals to try to make from a new citizen-labor coalition which wants to concentrate on reducing inflation in four "basic necessities"-food, energy, health care, and housing. The coalition 1 sources argues that outlays in those four areas make s should up at least 70 per cent of household spending for four-fifths of the U.S. population. e among "We want a national health care system to control medical costs, a lowering of interest hit by rates to make housing affordable again, and this does new ways of controlling the huge profits of middlemen in the food industry," said a staff go along member for one of the unions in the coalition. "Carter said nothing concrete about any of -. these. And of course he couldn't mention energy because his whole energy program is built on raising prices, not lowering them." A variety of union sources' agreed that argaining. workers realize that they are among those hit ertain types of hardest by inflation, but said this does not s, which are mean they will go along with the Carter plan. most wealthy "Carter wants workers to tighten their benefits would belts," said PROD's Early. "But it looks like benefits for those who are the fattest already are or example, supposed to tighten the least. I don't think ensated with Teamster members or anybody else is going 4, or access to to buy it." f It~ I 1 I I nil1 !,' f#1 .5r 'a AiKA I IYIV LZ ities, none of seven per cent e job may be vho want more e can do so by Matt Witt, former editor of the United Mine Worker's Journal is a Washington, D. C. free* lance journalist. This article was written for Pacific News Service. i SLibrary and SYMPATHETIC HAND reached A down from the administration .building earlier this week and created more study space for students who .,Ave' found themselves cramped into the University libraries this semester. The action, apparently spurred by concern of Literary College Dean .- Frye, after: a single complaint by a studeit, was commendable. it is only a stop gap solution to a 14irge problem that involves the 6kanging attitudes of students, the cal austerity of the University Iministration, and the stinginess of b state legislature. tudents need to study in a library f is not overly crowded and noisy. lassrooms fill two-thirds of this ed, but they simply are not a I-rary. In classrooms there is no acess to reference materials. Students attending as fine an iistitution as the University expect to W able to work comfortably in a diversity library. Students who, ang with their parents, pay the ennially escalating tuition costs at t University deserve the facilities. Tot only is there no room for sudents to study in the University l raries - particularly the dergraduate Library - but 1 rarians are finding increasingly less ace for books. niversity administrators say that ause of an austere budget more 1 rary space, in the form of a physical ansion of the current plant, is only long range goal. Dean Frye has study space visions of the UGLI and West Engineering ultimately being connected in some manner after the Engineering College moves to North campus sometime before 1985. The University points, and rightly so, to the state legislature's role in the funding process. The University currently has several plant expansion requests or "capital outlay requests" before the legislature for approval. Some of the projects have been waiting in Lansing since 1975. The taxpayers want to limit taxes and the legislators approve small outlays for higher education. The University complains but the wall of stinginess in Lansing is hard to crack. So it would appear they need help. When problems with state funding of this institution hit so close to home that they affect the very space students are allotted for studying it is time for the elected student representatives to take an active role in getting revenue for the University. Student representatives have travelled to Washington in the past to plead the students' case for more financial aid; Lansing, Michigan is much closed. The Michigan Student Assembly should appoint an active, full time committee to lobby state legislatures for money for student concerns. When students vote MSA representatives into office they assume their representatives will take an active role in protecting their interests. When the next state budget is approved it is our hope that students will be heard in Lansing. Letters to the Daily Capitalist press Tothe Daily: The October 18 Daily carried an editorial entitled "Clericals get another chance.. . And GEO DOES TOO ,(sic)." In this editorial the Daily's budding young journalists of the capitalistic press declare their support for the OCC and GEO. Fine. Nobody in the labor movement is going to object to liberal journalists endorsing union organizing drives. But the labor militants have learned from 150 years of experience that liberal journalists, like liberal politicians, can be trusted about as far as they can be thrown. Sure enough. Having briefly patted campus labor on the head, the Daily editors then mount their pulpits and fulminate against the evils of letting union members - mere workers! - discuss and debate the issues facing their -runions. "Factionalism!" the student editors thunder from their rickety pulpits. Implicit in this denunciation is the view that discussion and debate are all right for the hired mouthpieces of the capitalists - the journalists and politicians - but not for workers. The Daily editors don't mind at all when the Democratic tweedle-dees and Republican tweedle-dums puff themselves up and proclaim their truly insignificant differences to be profaound differences "of principle." The political differences between the militants and the bureaucrats within the labor movements are, however, quite profound. While the squabbles between the twin parties of capitalism are only a show to deceive the workers, the political struggles in the unions are for real. In a way they can't possibly understand, the Daily editors are right when they credit UM management with having "consistently and effectively promoted factionalism" within the campus unions. This "factionalism" is the fight of the union rank-and-file for militant and democratic unionism, a fight which must be waged against the promanagem ent labor bureaucrats. The Daily editors and other intellectual representatives of the capitalists are instinctively leaders. Hence, the Daily editors hail the Democrat Regent Waters as GEO's "ray of hope." Nonsense! In defending their ,leavohe- thinking- o-us line, capjt LJ} a journalists and politicians never hesitate to trample on the truth. Thus, the Daily editors make the outrageous accusation that CDU - the only organized force actively fighting decertification over the summer of 1976 - "worked to dissolve Local 2001." The experience student journalists get on the Daily staff should prepare them well for future jobs with the New York Times, helping the Democrats cover up the next Vietnam or the Republicans the next Chile. No, liberal journalists and politicians have nothing to offer the labor movement. Workers must rely on their own thinking, their own organizations and their own leaders. Pleas from student journalists and promises from capitalist politicians will not halt management's anti-labor offensive. But campus labor, relying on the power of 12,000 campus workers to shut UM down, can stop management dead in its tracks through a campus-wide strike when the AFSCME Local 1583 contrat expires in March 1979. -Clericals for a Democratic Union Concerned women To the Daily: In regards to the Nov. 7th election, it is very distressing to note that a major concern of all women has been consistently downplayed not only by the media, but by the candidates themselves. Here in Michigan, the question is not whether abortion is legal (the Supreme Court in 1973 ruled that abortion is a legal option forwomen), but whether a specific proportion of the population - the poor - should be denied this right. The proposed Medicaid bill now before the state legislature appropriates but a token $1.00 to cover the funding of nontherapeutic abortions. As Governor Milliken has so accurately stated, "To appropriate the grand sum of one dollar for 'nontherapeutic' abortions is a cruel hoax on a of whether the poor should be denied a declared right, he interjects his own personal bias and attacks the issue of abortion in general. The Supreme Court has struggled long and hard on this issue and the decision has been made. Governor Milliken has consistently shown his support for the poor; he has twice vetoed the bill appropriating but one dollar's worth of Medicaid funds. Fitzgerald, if elected, has promised to endorse the restrictive, legislation. Since Medicaid funding will continue to be an important issue in the state legislature as well as the federal government, we urge you to vote for the following candidates: William Milliken for Governor Edward Pierce for State Sena- tor District 18 Thomas Kaas for State Rep. District 52 Perry Bullard for State Rep. District 53 Carl Levin for the U.S. Senate -Concerned University Women Democrat's morale To the Daily: Some weeks ago the Daily printed a background article on Democratic party activities in Ann Arbor. As Chair of the Ann Arbor Democratic Party, I would like to offer to you readers my opinion on some of the matters touched on that article. There is an often expressed assumption by the public that the losses sustained by the Democrats in the 1978 City election have caused morale problems. While I too thought last April.that this might be the case, I can hinestly and happily report that morale is exceptionally high. The April election was decided by a fraction of one per cent of the vote in both the mayor's race and the fourth ward council race. It is indeed hard to lose by such a small margin, but we Democrats were very pleased to increase our vote by an over 30 per cent from 1977. (We also had the advantage of the campus registration and political activity of the Coalition for Better Housing.) After analyzing the vote, Democrats realized that the Republicans were far closer to their maximum vote than were the Democrats. This fact plus the rash and brazenly expedient go to state senate candidate Ed Pierce and his staff. Dr. Pierce has again assembled an exceptionally qualified and active staff that has informally assumed the leadership of the Democratic effort. The voters in November, and- then again in April, will decide if the Democratic campaigns have succeeded. Local Democrats are committed to succeed in both elections and are proud to say they are Democrats. -Victor Adamo, Chair * Questionable letter To the Daily: It is unfortunate that the genocide of Christian Lebonese that is still going on in Lebanon today is often misrepresented by the media as a "civil war." For it is not. The Syrian armyis obviously today an occupatioh force in Christian Lebanon. Over the past few months, the so-called Syrian peacekeepers have completely destroyed the Christian neighborhoods of Beirut - homes, school, hospitals, and churches - devastating apartments, and turning one-half of the Christian population of Lebanon into refugees within their own country. The Lebanese are today looking forward to the liberation of their lands, all their land, from Syrian or other occupation. The military groups of the Lebanese Front, whose members are Lebanese patriots of all ages, from all social backgrounds, of the two sexes, and from all the Christian communities of Lebanon, have so far demonstrated their willingness to resist the occupation of their land at any cost and to achieve its liberation from Syrian nazi occupation and terror. In particular, they will oppose all attempts by the Syria n regime to occupy and annex Lebanon permanently. (In an interview with the German magazine Der Spiegel, September 6, 1978, President Assad of Syria did not deny his intent to "absorb" Lebanon in spite of the resistance of the Lebanese people.) We were very surprised to read in your issue of October 20 a letter claiming that the Christian militias (which is the name commonly given to Christian Lebanese popular resistance) do \ \I GUA}IfDIAN INDUY N ''/- 1 '' .S) V .. Q v ., Gbe -THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL DIST. FIEtONEWSPAPER SYNDICATE, 197$ iiiii r iiiiiiiii %%%MMM I x- --