Page 6-Sunday, November 18, 1979-The Michigan Daily The Michigan Daily-Sunday, P Books Mailer on Gilmore: An American nightmare Leashing runaway pl By Eric Zorn into their new house in Dexter last April, they were excited about the coming years. They looked forward to raising their three sons in their long-dreamt-of country home. Their daughter was getting married in the fall, and they were awaiting the years when she would be star- ting her own family in the area. But rumors of a massive lay-dff started flying at Sycor, Inc., the Ann Arbor computer firm where Wen- sel worked as a production supervisor. In July the newspapers came out with reports that 600 employees would be laid off by next March. And in September, the month of his daughter's wedding, Wensel learned from the company that his job would end Feb. 28,1980. Sycor was offering its salaried workers a bonus if they stayed until their lay-off date, and at first Wensel planned to remain with the company until February. But he grew anxious about being able to find another job close by and decided to start looking right away. "I'm a very nervous type, I guess," he says. "The more I thought about it, the more difficult it became for me to stick it out. I found trouble trying to sleep at The jobs of600 Sycor employees are in limbo By Sara Anspach largest employers, are just starting to form groups of concerned citizens to help ease the pain of a plant closing, and governments, too, are beginning to tussle with the problem of workers who are left behind. Reports that Sycor officials were planning to lay off at least 600 employees took Ann Arbor by surprise last July. From its formation 11 years ago, Sycor had grown to become the city's largest private employer. Computer terminal systems were big business during the seventies and Sycor's growing profits had meant more and more jobs for the city. In 1976, a grateful Ann THE EXECUTIONER'S SONG By Norman Mailer Little, Brown & Co., $16.95, 1,056 pp. HE LIFE STORY of Gary Gil- more is not the tragedy of a man's death in front of the firing squad, but it is the tragedy of life itself. The Executioner's Song, a vivid; enormous account of the life of the celebrated killer who insisted upon his own execution, attempts not so much to come to terms with this tragedy as to present the details for inspection. There is no message, no central philosophical point to be ferreted out. The book tells a true story-a story that fascinated the country-and the plain facts are all that exist. They are enough. The staggering load of infor- mation is heaped on for more than 1,000 pages, broadening the story and filling it out, until the reader is left to put the truth together as he or she wills. Norman Mailer does not go beyond unadorned presentation to think for the reader. The reader's labor is like the labor of being alive-that is, to fit together the pieces and try, try, try to make some sense out of senselessness. This extended, awesome salute to the labors of mankind is only as easy to take as pain, loneliness, anger, frustration, and despair. It is the sound of the howl- ing Western wind cutting through the windowpanes of one-story houses in narrow, dirty towns; it taps the tales and tears of men, women, and children living in a world they cannot under- stand. The story rings in the voices of those who lived through it. The language Mailer uses to tell his tale is as varied, as the characters who pass through the book, from lawyers to car dealers. Gilmore's story is held together by a simple, hard narrative that echoes the straightforward, uneducated language of the principals. It reads like the great White Trash epic of the Southwest until, due to the sheer weight of detail, the characters are fleshed out and begin to take on a fascinating yet very or- dinary depth. There are no heroes, because the reality offered no heroes. Convicted felon Gary Gilmore, 35, was paroled from prison in May, 1976, and set up with relatives and friends in Spanish Fork, Utah, near Provo. Having spent 90 per cent of his adult life behind bars, he was pitifully inadequate adjusting to the demands of freedom. Even as we are drawn to pity him, he repulses us with his cheating, vulgar behavior and huge disregard for the feelings of others. As he sinks into his stormy love affair with young Nicole Baker, the truth about Gilmore becomes agonizing: Though he is a sensitive and intelligent man, has never grown up, and is gover- ned by monstrous passions. Hatred and Eric Zorn is co-editor of tIle Daily arts.pqge. . pity are emotions too simple for Gilmore to feel. He requires understan- ding, but is it possible to give it to him? Can most of us understand the twisting, ripping confusion and anger tearing at a man who is unprepared to handle a civilized life? The reader becomes as lost as everyone else in the book, for there is no way in and no way out. There is no one to blame for the vulgar and cheating behavior of a character we want very much to like. He beats and abuses the only person who offers him love, and when she leaves him, murders others to avoid murdering her. She asks him, "Are you the Devil?" For if the burning, brutal evil in Gilmore wasn't sent straight from Hell, from where did it come? Raised primarily by his mother, he was in trouble early and often. His budding malevolence was evidently fostered by reform school and the prison of his early days. Once started down that road, there was no turning back. He killed two men in two nights, drilling bullets point blank into their heads with an automatic pistol, then robbing them. The image burns in the. reader's mind-the young Mormon service station attendant lying face down in a pool of his own blood on the restroom floor while Gilmore checks in- to a motel with his girlfriend's younger sister. The rules were different for Gilmore. Life and death were as muddled for him as everything else, and his over- whelming, frustrated selfishness kept his scope down to a minimum. Of course he was captured: He didn't care enough to cover his tracks. Judgment seems senseless in the face of the enormous horror of the fact: These murders were inevitable and, to an extent, a necessary fact of Gilmore's life. He fought the only way he knew. In fact, the entire Gilmore saga is a study in the hopeless knot of right and wrong. There are more and more characters added to the bill until the book swells with faces and lives, each with their own histories, opinions, and ways of getting by. There is a fascinating richness to the depth of this account, a richness that serves to enlight as well as to confuse. The more that is known about the life of Gary Gilmore and the events surrounding his execution, the less any clear truth comes out. Sentenced to death, Gilmore chose not to contest the order. "We all die, it ain't no big deal," he said. At every turn he was fought by civil libertarians and flooded with unseemly, cheap publicity. All he wanted, he said, was to die with dignity and rbt face the years of prisons spreading endlessly in front of him. The desperate love between Gilmore and Nicole Baker looms over the ac- count,.at opce giving the.killer a reasn.. to live, nd a e al to diet for.,etried twice to kill himself. He convinced Baker to try the same, and his reasons were twofold: To ensure that they would be together in death, and to prevent Baker from having sex with other men. Gilmore was that selfish. Some thought Gilmore should die, and others insisted he must be saved. Mailer carefully outlines the legal struggle to effect the first execution in the United States. in more than nine years, and that tangle becomes thicker and thicker. T IS CLEAR that nothing is clear. The Executioner's Song would be a much easier book if it made some choices for us, but it does not. As the book inexorably leads up to the time of Gilmore's execution, the conflicts that the characters cannot resolve also shatter the reader. The man wanted to die, but we know him too well to want to see him shot. The polemic screams in our heads: He is a lividly vengeful, contemptuous killer with no promise of rehabilitation, but he is a man who loves and labors and fights, in his way, that which we all fight; no matter how you feel about capital punishment, part of you wants Gilmore to die just as part of you wants him to live. The issue becomes too large and too close. We know too much to know anything at all, demonstrating, if nothing else, that ignorance sometimes is bliss. How can we rejoice and agonize at once when the bullets rip Gilmore's heart to shreds? The tragedy has not been Gary Gilmore; nor has it been Nicole Baker. The tragedy is that there really are no answers, though everyone searches deeper and deeper for them. And what good, you ask, is a huge book that boasts as its only truth the rather unpleasant notion that.life is too complex and wicked for truths? It is painful and destructive, but, then again, it is real. The Executioner's Song must be heard, for it is deep, rich, and overall, an intensely human cry. The story is not about Gary Gilmore any more than Moby Dick is about a whale. It is about people fighting again- st life because they are unable to go with it. It is about survival just as much as it is about death, and the tragic, blind search for the light of truth as the dawn approaches when Gary Gilmore is to die. The death of Gary Gilmore was neither an end nor a beginning. It was just another thing that happened. It didn't protect us or save us or answer any of our questions. For now, in the end, when Gilmore's ashes are scattered over Spanish Fork, Utah, there are thousands of young men like him everywhere. To learn what truth there is about this tragic life brings us a little closer to another horrible, horrible truth: We all of us share, in some way, in what was Gary Gilmore, and we are no better or worse. Only luckier. proximately 600 of the off and about 100 man when the plant was con' tion facility. Plant closings or par unusual. In fact, the nu to close, relocate, or r creasing, especially in Mid-Atlantic states, w high. Often, a company where the climate is w where special tax incen NTSC spokesman Bri where the company p manufacturing jobs, bu be sent to plants in Island, and Greensb4 workers who have been that the pay scale there bor's competitive pay s Other factors also m cold at times. Taxes plants have to contenc wages paid by the aut wages are high withir company finds that m by the wages, at nearby "People, when they h on the waiting lists at t they get called there, t When we lost people lik severe problem," says "we" and "us" when ployer. Whatever the reason who feels the brunt of panies often make m giving them scant nol deliberately misleading job as long as possible. Sycor employees say off was when it came c Morale plummeted ne workers congregated i the only source of infor after Labor Day that t the coming lay-offs a employees, who make i be laid-off, were told w HE APPROX still have no "Nobody kno worst part, Bruce Kennedy. "Most off today so they could mal fashion." "People's incentiv production tester Sara] for the ax to fall. It's ki Although lay-offs we month, no one at Sycor estimate that over 100 that the company is si temporaries. "If the with the way people a cold, short of the notice pany has nobody to bla sel. "They flat refused the employees, to tell t ner what they're going do it." Many union employ their jobs, waiting to se has been laid off yet, there won't be a lay-off the rest of them," say tion employee who h three years. Kennedy speculates out early so that peol and the company woi ployment benefits. In a stay in his job as long a Other rumors hin operation will be especially, fear this s tments have already le stable. sycor (Continued from Page 3) NRSC spokesman Murphy discredited the numerous stories, saying, "There are always going to be rumors." He claims the company still plans to lay off 600 employees, but that "there is no schedule" for when they will be let go. The plight of the victim of plant closings-the unemployed worker-didn't interest too may people until recently. "There hasn't been, in the past, much concern for the, workers," says Louis Ferman, co- director for research at the Univer- sity's Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations. Ferman has been studying the effects of plant closings on workers for the past 25 years, and has found that the emotional and physiological effects of unemployment can be as severe as the economic consequences. "The'unemployed lay themselves open to all kinds of ailments," says Ferman. Lifelong stress, strokes, and heart attacks can follow a job loss. Depression and anxiety are common symptoms. And occasionally, the reac- tion is even more severe: Following the. 1973 closing of a Detroit bearing plant, eigbtworkers-committed suicide.., It is the.older, workerwho is-hit 'har-. dest by a plant closing. Says Ferman, "When you're 40 in our society, you are considered very old." Older workers discover that the years of experience with their former employer mean little when competing with young, healthy workers in tight job markets. In the aftermath of a plant closing a "ripple effect" often spreads though the community. A single lay-off of 600 Sycor workers would not have a large effect on Ann Arbor's economy, but when the closing plant is the town's major employer, the results can be drastic. When Youngstown Sheet and Tube closed in Youngstown, Ohio, 5,000 workers lost their jobs immediately. A recent study indicates that more than 11,000 additional jobs in the surroun- ding area were lost when the burden of 5,000 unemployed workers fell upon the community.- Cities are now starting to explore what can be done to make life easier on both the workers and the rest of the community during a plant closing. And both the federal government and in- dividual state governments are con- sidering legislation which require a See SYCOR, Page 8 ti 1 l i t i l i 'The more I thought about it, the more difficult it became for me to stick it out. Ifound trouble trying to sleep at night, worrying about what's going to happen in February... night, worrying about what's going to happen in Arbor granted Sycor a $30,000-a-year, 12-year tax February, and not wanting to have to relocate." break for providing the city with entry-level manufac- Wensel was lucky. He received two job offers from turing jobs. nearby companies, quit his job with Sycor, and now There was some fear for Ann Arbor jobs in May, works as an engineer with Control-O-Mation in Dexter. 1978, however, when Montreal's Northern Telecom Unlike the probable fate of many of his former co- Ltd.-North America's second largest telecom- workers, he won't have to try to pay this winter's bills munications firm-purchased Sycor. The company set with unemployment checks, and he won't be forced to up a parent firm, Northern Telecoms System Corp. move his family from the home it loves in order to find (NTSC), in Minneapolis and told Ann Arbor residents a decent job. not to worry. If anything, the change would mean Since 1966 over one million workers have lost their more, not less, jobs for the city. And in April, 1979, NT- jobs after their corporate employers decided it would SC officials reaffirmed their commitment to the city be more profitable to produce somewhere else. Those during the dediction of their new research and who have invested a large part of their lives with a firm development facility. Gov. William Milliken attended find themselves cut off with short notice, and seeking the ceremony and praised the company for its con- another job in a market where seniority at a previous tinued loyalty to Ann Arbor. job means next to nothing. Of the workers who do find Several months later, Milliken met with company of- jobs after a plant closing, about half earn less money ficials again. But this time it was to try to persuade the and have a lower status than before. firm with a "commitment" to Ann Arbor not to take 600 It's a paradox that the same free enterprise system jobs from Michigan's ailing economy. which encourages industrial growth and brings jobs to NTSC officials announced in July that they had com- cities also encourages the quick exit of employers pleted a rationalization study" showing Ann Arbor when more profitable locations are found. Com- was not the most efficient place to produce computer munities, often bewildered by the exodus of their terminal systems. They told local newspapers they would be phasing out the major portion of the manufac- Sara Anspach covers University turing function, leaving intact the other parts: Field research for the Daily, services, data center, and research functions. Ap- tAo