ANN ARBOR'S 1st Page 2-Sunday, March 25, 1979-The Michigan Daily Engineering students gather for Tech Day, City pays for Open Meeting Act suit By BETH PERSKY "A crowd of more than 500 pushed its way through the Chrysler Center on North Campus to take part in "Tech Day" yesterday. The event, co- sponsored by the. Engineering School, MSA, and the Engineering Council, in- W HAT: Top businesses offering their cluded a series of exhibits and tours designed to teach participants about merchandise or services at 50% off. engineering. While the program, an annual even, W H EN: April 10 am to 6 pm. is aimed specifically at incoming 8thengineering students and freshpersons in Engineering who are still undecided W HERE: u of M Track and Tennis build- abouta major, "Tech Day" also attrac- ted many upperclasspersons and mem- ing. bers of the community. THE EXHIBITS included everything from a set of waves projected on a TV 8 hours of/SALES MADNESS. screen for Computer Engineering to a model of a ship for Marine For show space contact Engineering. Children as well as adults Allan Goode at 663-5907. played with mechanical gadgets crowded the tours of the University's nuclear reactor and of the labs of the departments of Engineering Science, Chemical Engineering. A film shown on one floor demon- strated the difficulties of transporting nuclear wastes, while a video tape on the floor below which recounted the dif- ficulties in engineering during floods and earthquakes was illustrated with pictures of recent examples. CORPORATE EXECUTIVES dressed in business suits gave their pit- ches to undecided engineering students. Companies represented included Ford, Chrysler, General Motors, Proctor & Gamble, and Bechtel. Interested engineering students sat at exhibits representing their depar- tments, ready to hand out advice and literature. Representatives from the American Society for Civil Engineering, the American Nuclear Society, the Society of , Military Engineers, and the Michigan Metallurgical Society also attended. THE ENGINEERING Council, who coordinated the event, sent invitations to all high school seniors admitted to the Engineering School and to high school science teachers within a 100 mile radius of the University. Radio anO newspaper advertising encouraged the public as well. ' "It's an annual event, and has been going on for at least 15 years," said Craig Bloomer, Administrative Vice President for the Engineering Council. "I think it's improved since last year," said Engineering junior Larry Nowak. "Last year the exhibits weren't as swamped as they are this year. The majority of people have found them to be really interesting." By ELISA ISAACSON The local Democrats' Open Meetings Act suit against the city and Council Republicans - a thorn in the GOP's side since last June - finally came to rest when the city paid the plaintiffs $2,700 in court costs earlier this month. The money was paid by the city, rather than the individual Republican Council members involved, but Mayor. Louis Belcher said yesterday he is un- certain whether the city's insurance company will cover the costs. SVVERAL LOCAL Democrats said they resent the fact "the Republicans. were not made individually responsible' for the court costs. Councilman Ken- neth Latta (D-First Ward), one of the plaintiffs in the case, said he feels the GOP should not have been represented as the city of Ann Arbor, since "it was their (the Republicans') basic illegality that was the issue." Latta pointed out that the individual plaintiffs would have. been obliged to pay their own court costs if they had lost the case. According to plaintiff and Coun- cilmember Leslie Morris (D-Second Ward,) "We would have preferred to sue the individual Republicans," but because of the.,nature of the suit the defendants were listed as the city as well as individuals. Last May 23, Republican Council members held a closed caucus meeting at which, the Democrats alleged, changes in the city's 1978-79 budget were discussed. Budget reallocations of $328,500 were approved by the Republican-dominated Council shortly after the caucus meeting took place. CHARGING THE Republicans with violating the Michigan Open Meetings Act - which prohibits secret meetings in many cases - three Council Democrats, two private individuals, and the local chapteF of the League of Women Voters filed suit in the Ann Ar- bob Circuit Court asking the budget changes discussed at the GOP caucus be overturned. Plaintiffs in the case were Councilmembers Latta, Morris, Susan Greenberg (D-First Ward), University Economics Professor William Shepherd, University Law student Paul Pratt, and the League. Last September, after a summer of deliberations, a judge ruled that the May GOP caucus was illegal, and declared the budget amendments null and void. The local case served as the testing ground for Attorney General Frank Kelley's interpretation of the Open Meetings Act, which advised that local caucus meetings with a quorum prese- must be held in public places and open to anyone who wishes to attend. COUNCIL Republicans, however, argued in the court that their May meeting did not constitute a quorum, since only six members attended, with the sixth arriving near the end of the session. The Republicans also said that no vote was taken on the budget at the meeting. They said not enough infor- mation was known about the city's financial situation to make any decisions until the day after the meeting, when Mayor Louis Belcher discussed the matter with City Ad- ministrator Sylvester Murray. Don't be left out of your 1980 MICHIGANENSIAN Yearbook! Carter braces for Teamster walkout " o " " . Ft. . ,,, Sign up for an appointment TODAY by call- ing 764-0561, weekdays' from 7 p.m.-9 p.m. Or stop by our office at 420 Maynard (next to S.A.B.). These portraits will appear in the SENIOR TION of the 1980 yearbook. SEC- WASHINGTON (AP)-A worried Carter administration is quietly drawing up contingency plans for han- dling a national emergency it hopes won't occur-a nationwide trucking strike on April 1. The chances of a walkout by 300,000 drivers and warehouse workers depend on the outcome of contract talks bet- ween the Teamsters union and the trucking industry, who are bargaining under intense pressure from President Carter's inflation fighters. WITHIN THIS chilly climate, workers are voting at local union halls this weekend on whether to authorize union leaders to call a walkout if a set- tlement is not reached by midnight next Saturday, when the current master freight agreement expires. Vote totals won't be known until later this week. ' As they approach the deadline, bargainers are far apart over economic issues because of Carter's insistence that the nation's largest union settle within his "voluntary" 7 per cent wage guidelines. Industry proposals are within that range, but the union wants about double that. Government, union and industry of- ficials say it is too early to predict the outcome. They continue to express hope, at least outwardly, that a strike will be averted. BUT IF THERE is a walkout, the ef- fect on the economy will be swift and devastating, according to industry estimates. "After two weeks there would be a very serious crisis in the economy," said one official, who asked not to be named. The first shortages would occur among auto parts, clothing, drugs, machinery and processed foods, he said. "Many plants operate on day-to-day shipments," the official added. "Because of computers and interstate highways, trucks in many ways have become rolling warehouses." Fi Student Newspaper at The University of Michigan r---------- WRITE YOUR AD HERE! ----------- I----------- CLIP AND MAIL TODAY'---------iI USE THIS HANDY CHARlT TO QUICKLY ARRIVE AT AD COST Words 1 2 3 4 5 add. I1 I 0-14 1.70 3.40 4.60 5.80 7.00 1.00 Please indicate I 15-21 2.55 5.10 6.90 8.70 10.50 1.50 where thisad I 22-28 3.40 6.80 9.20 11.60 14.00 2.00 for rent 29-35 4.25 8.50 11.50 14.50 17.50 2.50 helpwaned 36-42 5.10 '10.20 13.80 17.40 21.00 3.00 room"mates 43-49 6.80 11.90 16.10 20.30 24.50 3.50 et Seven words per line. Each group of charaters counts as one word. Hyphenated words over 5 characters count as two words-This includes telephone numbers.I S Mail with Check to: Cl.sifiedh, The Michigan Daily \JJORKING ON A Term Paper.... Dissertation... Thesis...? THEN YOU SHOULD BROWSE THAT IS WHY Carter's aides are preparing internal reports on ways to keep essential services and cargoes moving and legal steps the president would have to take to order truckers back to work. The administration also is considering ways to deal with violen- ce that many officials fear could erupt. "You don't have to tell these guys how to be tough," said one government official. He added that a Teamsters' strike would make a recent violent strike by independent steelhaulers "look like a Sunday school picnic." Government officials refuse to discuss details of their contingency plans, other than to acknowledge that Carter almost certainly would invoke the Taft-Hartley Act to order striking Teamsters back to work for an 80-day "cooling off" period. But the union anticipates such a move. Consequently, some Teamsters' sources say, union President Frank Fitzsimmons might call for work slowdown or regional strikes rather than a national walkout. In that way, says one government source, Fitzsimmons could create economic chaos without causing the national emergency required for Carter to use Taft-Hartley. THE MICHIGAN DAILY (USPS 344-900) Volume LXXXIX, No. 139 Sunday, March 25, 1979 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morn- ings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Septem- ber through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer ses- sion published Tuesdaythrough Saturn day mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50.in Ann Arbor; $7.00 by-mail outs side Ann Arbor. Second class postage aid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POST- MASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. U} THROUGH OUR WRITING STYLE GUIDE REFERENCE AREA. WE FEATURE &, °TURABIAN S MANUAL FOR WRITERS OF TERM PAPERS, THESES & DISSERTATIONS °MLA HANDBOOK FOR WRITERS OF RESEARCH i PAPERS, THE SES & DISSER- TATIONS E AND TO MA KE THE A CTUA L EXECUTIVE ORDER 9066 March 6 - April 6 An exhibition produced by the California Historical Society. describing the experience of Japanese Americans during World War IH. Included-are rmany' photographs by Dorothea Lange. Opening Reception: March 16, 9:30 p.m. Symposium at 730 p.m. Speakers: Professor Harry H. L. TYPING EAS IER RESEA °BUDS EASY RCH I