--mm" SPEAKER AT WORKPLACE DEMOCRACY SERIES The Michigan Daily-Sunday, December 2, 1979-Page 3 UA W rep says firms need worker opinions Alfred Hitchcock's 1935 THE THIRTY-NINE STEPS The comic thriller that still sets the standard for fast-paced. ROBERT DONAT is the victim of every embarrassing circumstance imaginable. Hitchcock has him blamed for the murder of a stranger in his apartment, being mistaken for the main speaker at a political rally where he's gone to escape the police, and going handcuffedfor a night to a woman who can't stand him. With MADELEIN CARROLL. Mon.: INUIT FILM SERIES Jigging for Lake Trout & Alaska Films (free at 8) Tues.: MISSOURI BREAKS By LORENZO BENET One of the first things taught in Economics 201 is the yardstick for cor- porate investment is the expected rate of profit return. But because of its single-mifided search for profit, big business rarely takes into consideration the needs of (he community and work force when making investment decisions, accor- ding to Sheldon Friedman, a research director for the United Auto Workers (UAW) union. FRIEDMAN SPOKE Friday night to a crowd of 75 as part of a weekend "Work and Workplace Democracy Film and Lecture Series" held at the Residential College auditorium. The research director discussed the case of Youngstown (Ohio) Sheet and Tube Company, whose owners refused to reinvest in the firm because they found little or no return on the invest- ment. Consequently, he said, the plant deteriorated and eventually closed, leaving 5,000 workers jobless. Ira Arlook, a member of the Ohio Public InterestaCampaign, also spoke Friday night and said the owners of Youngstown Sheet and Tube owned other firms in other industries which yielded a greater profit return than Youngstown. This prompted them to take Youngstown's profits and reinvest them in other firms, leaving nothing for Youngstown Sheet and Tube, he added.. "IF THE owners of Youngstown Sheet and Tube lived in Youngstown and had no other business interests, the closing might not have occurred," added Arlook. The program was sponsored by the University's Institute of Labor and In- dustrial Relations, The Residential College, the University Resources Cen- ter, and the Collective Negotiations Program of the School of Education. Friday's event also featured a film entitled "The Fight Against Black Monday," an ABC-T.V. documentary which chronicled the closing of Youngstown Sheet and Tube, and community, union and worker efforts to reopen and run the mill. THE TOWNSPEOPLE, the documen- tary showed, attempted to harness per- sonal, community, private, and federal resources to achieve that goal. "However, President Carter did not provide the necessary federal long- term loans and thus the attempt failed," Arlook said. The effort needed a total of $500 million to succeed, not all from the federal government, he added. Friedman explained that workers rarely can come= up with the capital necessary to purchase and operate. a business of this size. "Evsifi'Ifwrkers coup -&iiiieup with the capital, I question whether or not they should be encouraged to invest in a deteriorated company," he stressed. "IT IS A very big risk, and the workers, who've already lost their jobs would be putting their savings and assets in jeopardy." Friedman suggested workers who in- vest their money in weak businesses should be protected by a federal in- surance policy that would reimburse them if they lost all their asstets in the venture. He also said the government should adopt a new national policy that would give workers the right to know why the company is closing, to see if the process can be reversed, to receive severance pay in the event of a closing, and to see if the ownership can be passed along to the community. "THERE IS presently a bill in Congress entitled 'the National Em- ployment Priorities Act which would give communities these rights," he said. The hill, which is sponsored by Michigan Sen. Don Riegle and Michigan Con. Willliam Ford, also would give workers the right to request a hearing on a firm's status if the in- dividuals feel the owners are letting the firm run down. The bill also establishes a national agency to find alternative products for financially strapped firms thinking of closing, added Friedman. He also said management could provide a mechanism for workers' voices, such as Chrysler did in naming UAW President Douglas Fraser to its board of directors. "We have no economic weapons to challenge big business," said Arlook. "But we do have electoral power to pressure the government into accepting our ideas." He said the process involves getting the right people into office and then utilizing the legislative and ad- ministrative actors to challenge cor- porate decision-making policies. CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:05 OLD ARCH. AUD. $1.50 THE EA Max Ophuls crea INEMAlj- PRESENTS y 1 -w IL 0 w- w. A -a =w s M M"-..L E, LRRINGS OF MADAME DE.. . Carter up in polls w" local Dems (Max Ophuls, 1953) ted his masterpiece with MADAME DE . . ricate His int still say. it's Kennedy in 1980 tracking camera work perfectly suits this story of love-and lovers, marriage and affairs around the turn of the century. "If the cinema had produced no other artists except Ophuls and (Jean) Renoir, it would still be an art form of profundity and splendor."-Andrew Sarris. With CHARLES BOYER, DANIELLE DARRIEUX, and VITTORIO DE SICA. French, with subtitles. (105 min) ANGELL HALL $1.50 7:00 & 9:00 M (Continued from Page 1) Despite the AP-NBC News poll, Holland said he thought Kennedy would be chosen by the Democratic Party for the 1980 election. "People arerreally down on the country right now and they see him as a savior," Holland said. In contrast to students interviewed yesterday, Democratic activists and party regulars have come out strongly in favor of Kennedy locally. At the state level, a draft-Kennedy movement in- cludes Speaker of the Michigan House Bobby Crim and state Attorney General Frank Kelley, who declared their sup- port for Kennedy in mid-September. THE MEMBERS of the Kennedy committee - among them University Professor Wilbur Cohen - began raising funds right after the senator declared on Nov. 7 so his campaign would qualify for federal matching campaign funds. The Kennedy effort at the state level has been paralleled by a Carter group whose members include Michigan's Secretary of State Richard Austin, state Senate Majority Leader William' Faust and Detroit Mayor Coleman Young. The state's Carter for President Finance Committee includes Univer- sity Regent Robert Nederlander as co- chair, and Regents Thomas Roach (D- Grosse Pointe), Sarah Power (D-Ann Arbor) and Paul Brown (D-Petoskey). KENNEDY SUPPORTERS said that since the senator formally declared his candidacy Nov. 7, local organizing ac- tivities for Kennedy have 1irtually ceased. But they also say the lack of publicity brought on by the Iranian crisis will not hurt Kennedy's campaign in the long run. Vivian said while Michigan is impor- tant to the Kennedy campaign because of the number of delegates the state will send to the Democratic National Con- vention, the senator is now concen- trating on states with early primaries. "The action is principally in places like Florida, like Iowa, like New Ham- pshire," Vivian said. UNIVERSITY LAW student and Democratic activist Marc Abrams suggested that even if people are behind Carter in Michigan's Second District, which includes Ann Arbor, it will not matter in the battle for the Democratic nomination in 1980. Abrams said Democratic activists locally are solid in their support for Kennedy, and since Michigan delegates will be selected through a caucus in- stead of a primary, the support of the activists is what counts in the state. Meanwhile, Kennedy, campaigning in California in his first cross-country sweep, criticized what he called the President's weak response to terrorist attacks on Americans, while continuing to support Carter's efforts to resolve the Iranian crisis. Kennedy criticized Carter's policy toward Chile, j saying that the president's actions in that country have been weak and ineffective. IN 1976 exiled Chilean Foreign Minister Orlando Letelier and his American aide Ronni Moffitt were assassinated on a Washington, D.C., street. Three terrorists were convicted of the murders, but the Chilean gover- nment has refused to give up the secret police agents who allegedly plotted the assassination. Earlier this week Carter temporarily 'recalled the American Ambassador to Chile, and the State Department in- dicated current foreign aid programs to Chile would not be renewed. Kennedy said yesterday Carter should order the Chilean Ambassador in Washington home, while continuing diplomatic relations with the South American country. He said all military aid should be cut off "now and completely." The State , Department has said it intends to let the current $6.6 million in military aid due to Chile simply run out, but that it would not be cut off. - I Tuesday: SAMBIZANGA . .. ! Guess Who's Back? 5th Avenue at Liberty St. 761-9700 Formerly Fifth Forum Theater THE $1.50 BA RGA INII NATIONAL LAMPOON@' ANIMWAL Sat, Sun-i1:50,.13:50, 6:00, 8:00,.10:00 Sot, Sun-Adults $1.50 til 2:15 (or capacity) Adults $2.50 til 4:30 (or capacity) Mon, Tues-6:00, 8:00. 10:00 Mon, Tues-Adults $1.50 til 6:30 (or capacity) starring JOHN BELUSHI Use Daily Classifieds Fresh winter snow blankets Ann Arbor GS SUNDAY FILMS Cinema Guild-39 Steps, 7,9:05 p.m., Old Arch. Aud. PERFORMANCES All Brahms recital, Jelinek-Gurt Duo with guest clarinetist David Shifrin, 8 p.m., Rackham Auditorium. MEETINGS Gay Discussion Group-"What Does Our Group Want to be When It Grows Up?", 6p.m., Guild House. MISCELLANEOUS Computing Center Open House, 1-5 p.m., Computer Center. Re-evaluation counseling-introductory lecture, 7:30 p.m., Friends Meetinghouse, 1420 Hill Street. "The Fleeting Estate," television program, Prof. Douglas Kahn, Univer- sity Law School, host, 6:30 a.m., WJBK-TV. MONDAY FILMS Ecology Center and Ann Arbor Public Library-Eat, Drink and be Wary, Can We Fish Again?, The Killing Ground, and A Place to Live, 7:30 p.m., meeting room, Ann Arbor Public Library. Wesley Foundation-Martin the Cobbler, 12:10 p.m., brown bag lunch, Wesley Foundation. r PERFORMANCES Women's Glee Club-In concert with Pioneer High School Women's Chorus, 8 p.m., Pioneer High School Aud. SPEAKERS Center for Social Concerns-Adult Foster Care Homes, Part III: Com- munity Response to AFC Homes, 7:30 p.m., Catacombs Room, Holy Trinity Chapel and Student Center, 511 W. Forest, Ypsilanti. Mary Ann Largen, speaking on sexual harassment, 8 p.m., Union Ballroom. Center for Near Eastern and North African Studies-Prof. Svat Soucek, llratrn Aci anlMnnnl. RHP -a Tmnrpccin frn aRnt iit "a (Continued from Page 1) Huron who found plenty of inexpensive ammunition. State Street-area shoppers had mixed -L feelings about the weather. "I like the snow," LSA freshman. Keith Terhall said, "but I don't like the cold that goes along with it." APRIL OJA, an Ann Arbor resident, found nothing objectionable about the snow. "I love the snow, it's picture post- card pretty," she said. Susie Mikolajewski, a junior in nur- sing and a Delta Delta Delta sorority member, was bell-ringing for the Salvation Army. She said, "I love it (the weather), it's the first really big snow. It's perfect for December first." Roger Lelievre, another Ann Arbor resident, enjoyed the first snowfall but said he felt he could only take the snow for so long., "I THINK it's great. I'm from the U.P. and I really miss a big blizzard," he said. "For a month I like it - then it can all melt," he added with a laugh. Local merchants said they were not bothered by the snow and Susan Siegel, owner of The Finishing Touch in the Nickels Arcade, said the snow even helped business. "Loads of people have been coming in. The snow has made people realize that Christmas is on it's way." CLIFF HOWLETT, assistant manager of Van Boven's clothing store in Nickels Arcade, said, "We have a good run of business. It'll take more precipitation than this to keep people away." Both the Ann Arbor police and the Michigan State Police said few traffic problems have arisen because of the snow. They said difficulties were not anticipated last night. For those people who hope to escape to the soputh - beware. The tem- perature in Jacksonville, Fla. Friday night was a record low 28 degrees. RESUMES THESES - DISSERTATIONS COVER LETTERS REPORTS SOFT COVER BINDING 24-HOUR TURN AROUND THE TYPING POOL 612 SOUTH FOREST ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN 48104 (313) 665-9843 OFFICE HOURS MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M. plw (;oun Invites You To Join Him For: Sunday: SANDWICH NIGHT 6pm-11 pm Monday: PIZZA NIGHT 6pm-12am Tuesday: SOUP & SALAD 6pm-12am Wednesday: PASTA NIGHT 6pm-11pm Thursday: PITCHER NIGHT Bpm-2am r ipasto 1140 S. University 668-8411 Mon.-Sat. 11a.m.-2a.m. Sun. 3p.m.-12a.m. The Office of Major Events Presents 3 h d nn rbor Folk Festival Sunday January 13 two shows Four acts each show with DAVID BROM BERG in each, others include: JOHN HAMMOND, JR at the Power Center 2pm & 7:30pm Tickets are 7.50 per show or 'N OWEN MC BRIDE MARY MC CASLIN JIM RINGER RED CLAY RAMBLERS LEON REDBONE 12.50 for both sale this Wedn at 11:30 at the Box Office, Scd Herb David Gui Elderly Inst rurr Lansing. For n call 763-2071. . They go on esday December 5 Michigan Union hoolkids Records; tar Studio, and 'ents in East pore information i