Page 4-Sunday, February 25, 1979-The Michigan Daily THE WEEK d IN REVIEW Cellar employees addressed the the Democrat's official Fourth Ward didate supported by the Ann Arbor reviews procedural complaints from 117 7,Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) at nominee after "beating" his primary Coalition for Better Housing. University faculty members, has ac-aem ly their meeting last Tuesday, discussing challenger Mel Grieshaber, who had cepted 12 cases since its inception 10 the new supervisory structure. At the withdrawn his name too late to be Of the eight instances it nmeeting, which was also attended by eliminated from the ballot. U gwhichnthey have voted in favor of e mward student members of the Cellar Board of The most excitig aspect of Monday enforcing the new management struc- p unch card voting in Ann Arbor. City ruling ture until after the board meets tonight. Clerk Al Vollbrecht commented that thenwvtntehiu"wnsu a ite r s o re But it is not entirely clear what will e new voting technique "went sur- orepo er"IF I COME to the conclusion that all happen after tonight's meeting. If the prisngly well for the first time." He The Senate Assembly moved closer Guidelines for revamping the Board of Directors decides to support said the process should be perfected for Members of the Senate Assembly I'm just flushing all these reports dwa to eventual disclosure of faculty employee structure at the University the management's structure again, the April election. ,Review Committee (SARC) last week the toilet, then I might seriously think salaries Monday gellar Bookstore sparked an outbreak some employees claim they will no But if neither Belcher nor Kenworthy blasted the group's lack of impact on of resigning myself," said committee of "Cellar flu" Monday among many of longer work at the Cellar. And Cellar can offer the voters what they want University deans and department member Prof. Lewis Cooper of the The Assembly voted 29 to 11 to direct its employees. management remains firm on its inten- there is another option. Louise J. Fair- chairmen. Several of the committee Music School. the Committee on the Economic Status The latest indication of the tension tions of revamping the employee person, a cardboard figure who stands members said they are considering of the Faculty (CESF) to create, by bIetween Cellar employees and the system. in the Michigan Union and speaks from resigning if the group's position isn't "None of the cases in which we have next fall, an outline for possible salary Gellar management, the "sick-in," was a tape recorder may be a viable alter- strengthened. favored the grievant have been listened disclosure. The approved resolution staged by 31 workers, leaving no one to .] native. Fairperson is a fictitious can- SARC, a last resort group which to by the University. In cases in which specifies that the disclosure proposal work in the Cellar's warehouse, and no K en worthy will we favor the University, they listen should not permit the identification of regular workers in the stock, trade, ,dsvery well," added SARC member individuals, thereby eliminating some sHifER 11 an'es eantseRobert Gray, a professor in the School members' fears that salary disclosure HOWEVER THE store was not shut f c Be h r nof Public Health, would result in loss of privacy. dbwn, and one estimate indicated that about 30 workers showed up. m ayor'sra eSARC members plan to present to the According to the resolution, the ex- The plans for, the reorganization were Senate Advisory Committee on Univer- tent to which salaries may be disclosed rawn up by the store's management. sity Affairs (SACUA) and the Senate will be left up to CESF. CESF could They then had to be approved by the After poking little holes in their punch syfr(C adh etAssembly some recommendations recommend that only departmental Cellar Board of Directors, a body made card ballots, city voters, in limited means and averages be Published or it nubrnmntdcniae odywhich would give SARC more clout masadaeae epbihd ri up of six members appointed by the numbers, nominated candidates Monday through pressure put on the deans and might outline a full disclosure of in- Michigan Student Assembly (MSA), In the mayoral primary former department chairman by these groups. dividual salaries, excluding names. three faculty members and one Univer- D . .derethiabteeop. vdaslexuign Sity administrator. Democratic Councilman Jamie Ken- THE GROUP WAS considering a plan it is not specified whether ad- The Board-backed structure has been, wory won easily over on- calling for binding arbitration between ministrative as well as faculty salaries pposed by many Cellar workers, for tgomery, a newcomer to city politics SARC and the University but aban- are to be revealed, although the veral reasons. The new set-up would Knworthyo 85 per ce of te doned it because it would require the resolution does state "the proposal evrlDemocratic votesrewhileondaestotal ofe onlysa fdke decision-making poweraway from,'. ..y acceptance of the University ad- should include staff categories beyond the body of employees, and give it to a 2,766 voters were cast in the city-wide dministration members of the University Senate." centralized supervising unit. Workers primary. plaim they would lose their incentive INCUMBENT Republican Mayor "' ,Political Science Assistant Prof. Joel bwhich would therefore slow down Louis Belcher ran unopposed in the SI Samoff, who has twice been denied t roducitivity. primary. tenure by the tenured faculty of his SOME WORKERS feel that the new In the Third Ward Republican Coun- department has asked SARC to con- itructure, which they claim will set cil race, the only other contest with op- sider his case, but it is yet unclear side as much as $2oooo to $50,000 more posing candidates, incumbent Louis Daily Photo by LISA UDELSON whether they are allowed to since his The Week In Review was written Wser year for running the store, would Senunas beat Gerald Curry. A happy Jamie Kenworthy smiles after he knocked off challenger John Mont- work was judged unfairly in his tenure by Editor-in-Chief Sue Warner, Co rise Cellar prices and remove student Former three-term Democratic gomery to win the Democratic primary for mayor. Kenworthy will face incumbent denial. He was unavailable for com- Arts Editor R. J. Smith and Night 1discounts. Councilman LeRoy Cappaert became Louis Belcher in April. ment. Editor Mitch Cantor. lE £tyrb ian Fr43IomQ 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mt 48109 Eighzty-Nine Years of Edit orialI Freedom Vol. LXXXIX, No. 123 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Fin n case~ THE DECISION made by University' officials that they're "satisfied" with the results of an investigation on Assistant Housing Director John Finn was made irresponsibly because they have kept the details of the report con- fidential. It may well be that the of- ficial is clear of any wrongdoings but keeping the facts secret does not allow the University community to make that decision for itself. Finn was under investigation for his year-long access to a furni hed North Campus apartment and University Regents and other high-ranking University officials are "satisfied" that a recent auditor's report; cleared Finn of any illegalities in connection with the apartment arrangement. Finn claimed he took the apartment off the market in the Fall of 1977 to of- fer housing to disadvantaged, mostly minority, University students. After a flurry or rumors in the Housing Office accused Finn of using the apartment for his personal purposes, Housing Director Robert Hughes ordered an in- vestigation. That investigation has now been completed. But no one, other than high-ranking University officials, including interim University President Allen Smith know of the content of the report. What did the investigation show? St111 cloudy University officials, including Smith and Johnson, vice president for Student Services, will only say Finn is a personnel matter" and are "satisfied" with the "judgments" they made after reviewing the report. However, Smith and Johnson have refused to take a stand and say whether the report showed Finn had used the apartment for personal pur- poses. University officials have too often covered up essential facts regarding the investigation of a staff member claiming these are "personnel mat- ters." While this incident may be a personnel matter, it is more connected with the University. The apartment arrangement, which Finn admits to, involves the use of University funds since the Northwood Apartment was taken off the market. The "personnel matter" label should only be applied to minor office matters, not involving the possible misuse of University funds. If University officials, as well as the Regents, are so confident of their decision, then why not make the auditor's report public and let Univer- sity students be satisfied too? Students should be able to decide whether Finn is guilty of any wrongdoing and the report should be released before the University's integrity is further questioned. Letters to the Daily Dail To the Daily: I have been reading the Daily for many years, and I have always believed the new editors should be given a honeymoon period of a month or so before they are severely criticized. This year, however, I can restrain myself no longer. Never have I seen such pom- posity, such self-importance, and such gratuitousness. I have always believed the purpose of a newspaper was to print news, and to comment about the news; I guess the new editors would disagree, since they seem more interested in making news about themselves. The Daily has been leaning in this direction ever sin- ce the inception of the Ramblings column in the Sunday Magazine.. Every Sunday we readers can look forward to some editor telling us about his or her apar- tment, or favorite gray dress, or fear of elevators-who cares? What makes you think the day-to- day events of your lives are im- portant to us readers, especially when no attempt is made in these ramblings to bring the reader in- to the story. The new editors have taken this one step further by running Ramblingeque columns on the editorial page several times a week. A few weeks ago, for example, we were treated to a transcript of a conversation bet- ween editors Mitch Cantor and Brian Blanchard on animals used in scientific experiments. Have the Daily editors become soin- fatuated with themselves that they honestly believe the very words they speak to each other are worthy of publication? Perhaps on clever editor willl turn on a tape recorder when he or she goes to sleep, and then-run the resultant mumblings on the editorial page as a piece of in- sightful social comment. Yesterday I began counting the number of times the word "I" appeared on the editorial page in the last week, but when I-ran out y staff- of fingers and toes I was too disgusted to continue. Today, for. example, Dennis Sabo's editorial used "I" no less than 35 times! He thus carefully avoided making his piece relevant to all students (who will someday be looking for a job, and might easily have been pulled into Sabo's piece if he had tried). Perhaps such a piece would not be so offensive if it were an ex- ception, but lately it has become- the daily fare. This "me" disease has infected the sports and arts staffs as well. First we were subjected to an en- dless string of open letters to famous sports figures, with each letter sounding more pompous and condescending than its predecessor, and then we were presented the gratuitous reviews of Owen Gleiberman (Moscow Symphony) and Mike Taylor (who could single out just one of his reviews for such criticism). If the daily lives of the Daily editors were so important to me, I would join the paper and listen to the gossip; it is probably less embellished than what we read in the paper. If you want to make media stars of yourselves, why not go into television where the news is all hype anyway? Or bet- ter yet, apply for Bob Talbert's job at the Detroit Free Press, you've all got credentials: -Dan Share (a Daily staffer in 1968) U' Cellar To the Daily: Because the Daily seems to be the forum in which the management and employees of the University Cellar are airing their grievances, I feel compelled to write and make a few com- ments myself. Despite all the rhetoric to the contraryr I cannot fine evidence of either side (or any of the supporting cast of characters including the Daily, MSA, and the Cellar Board of Directors) attempting to deter- looks i mine what the interest of the students is in the function of the Cellar. Mr. Kornbluh, in his letter of February 20, is correct in his statement that the Cellar "was created after a strong student protest demanded an alternative to the cut-throat exploitation of the student market prac- ticed by traditional Ann Arbor booKstores," but he goes on to say that "for this reason the Cellar has always offered alter- native prices as well as an alter- native style of doing business." I disagree with his implication that this "alternative style of doing business" is a necessary corollary to providing low prices to students. For this reason, I cannot sym- pathize with the statement "there is all this talk about profits, but no one is taking into account the human aspect of the Cellar" which occurred at the very end of the article on Cellar employees also in the issue of February 20. This statement by I.W.W. union organizer Eric Glatz seems to follow the pattern of thinking which is recurring more and more frequently in Daily editorials and its letters-that all disputes between management and em- ployees (or students and ad- ministration, or consumers and business, etc.) are simply that of profit vs. humanity and the boun- daroes of such a conflict are clearly demarcated. In the case of the Cellar dispute, though, I do not think that the students who the Cellar is supposed to serve are inclined to believe a grave social injustice is being done to the employees because their "alternative style of doing business" is being taken from them. If indeed the Cellar's function is to provide low prices to studen ts, I think that time should be spent determining the method of operating the store to achieve this aim, whether wholly run, or, if need be, otherwise. Just as any nward proposal for restructuring the store is pernicious if it is 'in- stituted solely with the intent to punish, as the employees allege the management is doing, so too is keeping the present system at the Cellar just to satisfy the em- ployees' desire to hold on to the power-they have accumulated. At issue is the ability of the Cellar to serve the students, and any at- tempt by either management or the employees to lessen ;this ability should be rejected. -Douglas B. Olds * Uncandidate To the Daily: Your article on the Uncan- didate's bid for mayor was in- teresting.bLouise J. Fairperson, the uncandidate, is right when she says that there is a housing crisis in Ann Arbor and that the actual candidates for mayor are not adequately addressing the issue. I have not heard Mr. Kenwor- thy, the Democratic candidate, propse anything to deal with the outrageous rents tenants are' asked to pay in this town or about the poor condition of so much of: the housing. Mayor Belcher has been in office a year, and he hasn't done anything about these problems. Former Mayor Wheeler ap- pointed a Fair Rental Practices Committee a few weeks ago. That committee found and reported that Ann Arbor's rental housing is among the worst in the coun- try. Maybe Mayor Wheeler lost the election last year because he didn't respond to that verdict with any action. It is good that someone is talking about the housing problem, even if it has to be a make-believe character. I hope the Daily will provide coverage to the only politician'in this city who seems to recognize there is a housing crisis - Louise J. Fairperson. -Michael Kludjian Powignores legalization T HE LATEST version of a marijuana improvement, passage of the proposal reform bill, which was introduced will only delay appropriate action in two weeks ago into the Michigan the legislature. Liberal legislators will Senate, is only a feeble attempt by the perceive this bill as a significant vic- Lansing lawmakers to satisfy con- tory and probably refrain from pur- stituents' pleas for more lenient suing more lenient measures for a few marijuana laws. It does not go far years. enough toward legalizing the substan- The only redeeming clause in the ce. proposal, sponsored by State Sen. The bill, similar to the one which was Jerome Hart (D-Saginaw), is the one narrowly defeated in December, would that allows marijuana to be used to call for a $25 fine for possession of less treat glaucoma and asthma, and to than 100 grams of marijuana as well as alleviate the nausea and vomiting that lessening penalties for possession of are side effects of chemotherapy. The larger quantities. The exception is that substance has already been proven to b Ai14. f ltf 1vt,.wlviny! ( ua 1inn arnme Af ... . -« . C - .. ...-4- .L AL nr+C~cA 5 ev(~ot3Nm r- r' n" IVPU$Tmr -At~ MfF6M&ITW~ PI-NC P- "~ V STRIRTFJ~Y~~. iu nA 716 -VA H6R W I0ETgSSA&GV6 cvR QEFEhbSE ARE ALMh- L5Aui=A9I tN) 7HAT THfq PcAl)T UIS-re I I I