- --...- I Page 8-Sunday, November 18, 1979-The Michigan Daily children (Continued from Page 4) leads workshops, and offers advice to various groups around the country. She is also one of the three commissioners charged with preparing the final IYC report for Carter. In response to the international call to* help children, the University has allocated $30,000 under the direction of President-designate Harold Shapiro. A ten-member committee composed of faculty and students was formed last spring under Shapiro's suggestion. Last summer the committee reviewed proposals for projects involving children in the Ann Arbor area. Among the projects tentatively receiving University support are a "hands-on" museum, a New Games program, a conference, anda special course. The hands-on museum is planned for the old firehouse at Huron Ave. and S. Fourth St. The museum will be .designed so that a "person can handle the exhibits and see what changes are made by what he or she is doing to them," according to University Psychology Prof. Lorraine Newman, a member of the group working on the renovation. For example, Newman says, one possible exhibit is a hand- crank generator: "If a person cranks hard enough it will turn on a light which sows how our own physical effort can create mechanical energy, which will in turn convert to electricity." A student-run organization, in con- junction with the University's recreational sports department, is developing a New Games program. The program will emphasize how games can be both fun and strenuous without involving competition. Bill Kell, who heads the organization, cites volleyball as an example of a New Game. "The sy cor (Continued from Page 6) corporation to bear some of the respon- sibility for the workers they leave behind. "You're talking about a situation where you can't win. You can only be a success by making things less bad. It's a bittersweet kind of success," says Dan Sharp, an aide to Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor). Bullard has in- troduced plant closing legislation in the state House of Representatives and helped form the Sycor Crisis Commit- tee--a group designed to help those laid off find jobs and learn about the social services available to them. The Sycor Crisis Committee was modeled after the Lyons-Chrysler Community Council. After the announ- cement of the shut down of Lyons, Michigan's largest employer, a Chrysler trim plant, community ser- vice agencies formed a council to provide the 900 workers in the small town near Lansing with services they would need in the coming months. The council published a directory which helped workers contact social services agencies for unemployment and other benefits. In addition, the directory listed community colleges, classes in resource management, banks, and mental health services to help people deal with the stress of finding another job. . W The Lyons effort was considered suc- cessful by most parties involved, and this fall Bullard attempted to set up the same sort of committee to aid Sycor workers. After two meetings; however, the committee fizzled, and Bullard's aides put the blame on lack of par- ticipation by NTSC officials and the union. Employees who went to the meetings say ,they were disappointed hat no one flroxnhe comipany was threto answer object of the game is not to see which team can beat the other, but rather how long you can keep the ball in the air." A conference in April, 1980 on global malnutrition and a benefit concert by Harry Chapin next March are the projects of the faculty-student group, The Committee Concerned with World Hungry. According to Pat Gallagher, principal officer of the organization, "Some of the speakers at the conference will be discussing the politics of malnutrition in the hopes of motivating people to become involved. ... to inform them on the solution is a matter of political will." Other University-related events scheduled include a pilot study of the needs of families with cancer-stricken children; a new course, "Black Children in America;" and a conferen- ce on family violence. Detroit has adopted a plan to plant 1,000 trees. "Environment makes a great impact on children;" says Ann Arbor's Tice. "If kids don't have places to play with trees and shade, life is bleak. Trees are confidence in the future. They give children a relation- ship to nature and are important to growth. People are encouraged to respond in their own way ... Year of the Child is a grass roots effort." As groups in the United States have responded in their own ways, so people throughout the world, with the help of the IYC commission, have tailored the Year of the Child concept to their own cultures. In Third World countries, the focus is on addressing basic needs such as health, nutrition, and education. In Latin America, Africa, and in parts of Asia, the commission has developed a "child-to-child" program, which teaches older children in rural villages how to take care of their younger brothers and sisters. In developed countries, priorities are somewhat dif- ferent. Sweden, for instance, has ap- proved a law which penalizes parents who inflict physical or mental pain on their children, and has banned the sale of war toys. Despite the varied approaches to IYC world-wide, the central theme remains unchanged. "The problems and needs of children are neither new nor unknown," says Lim, a University alumnus. "Indeed, they have been scrutinized and debated through the years, but unlike in the urgency of typhoons or floods, the plight of children does not arouse this continuous and immediate response evoked by natural disasters. Yet the starvation, disease, and illiteracy that have destroyed or stunted millions of generations of children constitute a silent and continuing emergency whose presence and long-term consequences no less devastating than earthquakes." To ensure long-term follow-up on IYC efforts in the years ahead, Lim said she believes there is a need for fundamen- tal change. She stressed the "develop- ment of policies that will give children the same priorities and importance that planners and heads of state now give to armaments, plus a recognition that all development begins with children." 5undag ITl I - x I L questions. Many had hoped Bullard could do something to make NTSC keep the jobs in Ann Arbor. Others believe the committee was a good idea, though, and that it would be a bigger help once people were actually laid off. Although NTSC officials had said they would send a representative to the meetings, no- one from the company ever came, according to Bullard's aides. NTSC spokesman Murphy says company officials were asked to attend the meetings. They then asked whatthe purpose of the committee washe says, but received no answer and therefore did not send a representative. "That's a bold-faced corporate lie," snaps Sharp. He says a company of- ficial told him face-to-face that atten- ding such meetings was nt company policy. "Management can just say, 'No, we won't help.' " NTSC recently held a job fair for their employees. About 34 prospective em- ployers were brought into Ann Arbor to interview workers. Company officials paint a rosy picture of the fair, pointing to it as an example of how NTSC is helping its soon-to-be-laid-off em- ployees. But "farce" is the most apt descrip- tion of the fair that employees can give. Few report job offers from the inter- views and most say they felt the fair was just a formality. Many job fair in- terviews were cancelled with no reason given and -no attempt was made to reschedule them. "Some of the guys that came into town told the people they were interviewing that they didn't have any jobs," says Wensel. "People felt worse when they came back than before the meetings took place." About 450 Sycor employees are represented, by United Steel Workers Local 8579. According to union workers, the union has been advising employees to "hang in if you can, but if you have to work, find another job." Apparently there has been some antagonism bet- ween the union and government of- ficials. "United Steel workers have been telling workers this (Crisis Com- mmittee) is a waste of time," claims former Bullard aide George Smeltzer. Union officials say they feel the government could have done more to try to prevent the lay-offs. "I was a lit- tle perturbed that the government didn't do anything ahead of time," says Jim Hughes, district staff represen- tative for United Steel Workers. "What we need is some legislation which says a company has no right to leave." While proposed legislation wouldn't eliminate plant closings, it would require companies to consider their employees when they make decisions to move. Legislation currently before the state would mandate that major com- panies (those who hire at least 100 workers) notify employees of lay-offs two years in advance. "They do plan and they can give some notice," says Sharp. "If you just know the damn thing is going to happen, it helps enor- mously." The proposed legislation would also require that employers notify the community in advance of the potential impact of the closing. It includes provisions for employee severance pay and requires that the company provide leave time for workers to look for other jobs. Similar legislation has been proposed in Ohio, Massachusetts, New York, Pennsylvania, and Oregon. At the national level, bills with similar provisions have been proposed in both the House and the Senate. "Those bills are more contro'versial politically," explains Cornell University professor and plant-closings expert William Whyte. "Nobody expects them to pass." But for the Sycor workers who live day-by-day waiting to hear when they will join the ranks of the unemployed, talk of government help and plant closing legislation doesn't mean much. "They talked real good," said an em- ployee, after attending a Crisis Com- mittee meeting. "But I don't see what they can do to help." Sunday Co-editors Owen Gleiberman Associate editor Elizabeth Slowik Elisa Isaacson Cover photo by Lisa Udelson Supplement to The Michigan Daily. Ann Arbor Michigan-Sunday, November 18. 1979