e 4an a Eighty-one years of editorial freedom Edited ard managed by students at the University of Michigan 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. ""i"""""""rus mS aX11u1s World-shaking decisions from SGC by lindsay ehaney FRI DAY, OCTOBER 8, 1971 NIGHT" EDITOR: MARK DILLEN Another bid for child care RE-EMERGING AFTER a- temporary lull, the issue of child care is once again being raised - and this time with the backing of a top University admin- istrator. Vice President for S t u d e n t Services Robert Knauss recently released a proposal recommending that the Uni- versity provide a $250,000 loan to estab- lish a child care corporation on campus. For over two years now various wo- men's groups have pressed the adminis- tration to provide money and space for a permanent child care center. However, this is the first time that someone in the administration has actively supported a child care proposal. The current proposal was formulated by Laura Taub, an Office of Student Serv- ices (OSS) assistant for program devel- opment. It recommends that a number of small day ;care centers be established open to children of students, faculty, staff and community. The plan further pro- poses the formation of a non-profit cor- poration to coordinate the centers. The OSS plan also, recommends that the University provide the existing Child Care Action Center with a permanent site and facilities and assume the costs of rent, maintenance and other services for two years. After this time, the center would become self-supporting. THE OSS CHILD CARE proposal is not the first attempt at establishing day care centers at the University. Rather it is the latest in a series of efforts by women to awaken the University to the needs of working mothers. The initial move for child care w a s sparked by members of Women's Libera- tion seeking ways to help working moth- ers at the University find adequate care for their children. Joining together with other women to form the ad hoc Child Care Group in February 1970, the wom- en requested a meeting with President Robben Fleming to discuss a proposal for a center. After several attempts, the group met with Fleming, and a commit- tee headed by Wilbur Cohen, dean of the education school, was formed to study the proposal. Editorial Staff ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ Editor However, after several months in the committee with none of its goals met, the child care group began looking else- where for possible facilities. The group also talked- with several Regents at this time, but no formal action was taken on their requests. Turning to John Feldkamp, director of University housing, the group toured sev- eral dormitories and residence halls which were not in use over the summer hoping to set up a temporary center un- til school started. After surveying several buildings, the women decided to open a small center in Markley Hall, and con- tinue the search for permanent facilities for the fall. Although the University did provide some toys and furniture, most of the center's expenses were covered by charging mothers a small fee, and by us- ing volunteer help. When school started in the fall, no permanent location had been found and the center was shifted to another temporary location in one of the University's apartment buildings. TIRED OF MOVING and sensing a lack of commitment on the part of the administration, the child care group re- quested a hearirfg with the Regents. Last year at this time the Regents heard a second request for a child care center. Al- though the child group had hoped to discuss their proposal with the Regents and answerhany questions board mem- bers might have, no dialogue took place. The Regents refulsed to answer questions raised by the group and other people in the audience. The next day, after con- sulting only with President Fleming, the Regents rejected the child care plan. Although the Regents said they agreed with the concept of child care they ar- gued that the University lacked the mon- ey needed to fund the proposed center. Not once did the Regents ask to speak to any women in the child care group who had been researching the child care plan for over six months. ALTHOUGH THE child care g r o u p continued operating in the limited space given to them by the University, they kept up their efforts to secure a permanent center. In February - spark- ed by student demands to end classified research on campus - child care and five other long-standing University issues were submitted to the Regents for recon- sideration - and once again rejected. Since last February, pressure for a University-funded child care center has abated but the recent proposal from OSS will certainly revitalize the issue. The University must take some posi- tive steps towards meeting its responsibi- ties to women employes, faculty and stu- dents. IN THE UNIVERSITY community, wo- men are employed as hospital work- ers, clerks, office secretaries and kitchen help - and the money they earn is not enough to pay for full-time babysitting help. Women can not be expected to assume full responsibility for child-rais- ing and housework in addition to c o n - tributing to the family income. The University as an employer has a responsibility to the community which it can no longer shun. The OSS proposal for child care provides a concrete action pol- icy. The time for the University to act is now. -HESTER PULLING The story you are about to read is damn close to the truth. Only the names have been changed to protect the innocent. The scene is the legislative chambers of the Student Government Council. The time is Thursday night. ADMINISTRATIVE Vice President Jay Flack strides into the room with a pile of papers under one arm and a briefcase in the other hand. He puts it all on the council table in front of his chair and sits down. "I've got some real neat shit on refrigerators," he announces happily. "It looks like great shit, Jay," says Rick Piggins. "I don't need any wise comments from a Fascist," replies Flack dryly. "Anyhow, the deal is this: We rent refrigerators from this guy I was talking to for $24 a year, then we re-rent them to students and provide a real service." "Are you suggesting that SGC go into the refrigerator- renting business?" asks the president. "Well, basically yes," answers° Flack, sounding some- what surprised. "What kind of demand is there for refrigerators?" asks Jeff Bluing, pragmatically. "From talking to the people at the 'U' Cellar, I understand there's a tremendous demand in the dorms," replies Flack. "They said they rented a thousand re- frigerators in the first two days of the semester. They said they could have rented twice that many, but their insurance policy only covers the first thousand." "BY THE WAY, what kind of insurance comes with this deal we're talking about," asks Art Deductible, the treasurer. "It's called triple phase natural disaster exemption liability," says Flack simply. "What does that mean," someone asks inevitably. "Well, basically it means that if someone steals the refrigerators, we have to pay for it, but if the dorm .burns down, the insurance pays for it." "I see," says Piggins. "So if someone steals a refri- gerator, we burn down the dorm, right?" "You catch on fast," says Flack. "I say we should invest in drug companies," says Mailer. "I say you're retarded," yawns Karen Moss, to no one in particular, and everyone in general. "I've just about had it with you Fascists," says Flack angrily. "What makes you think I was talking to you, Jay?" asks Moss sweetly. "For once ... "Let's have some order around here," shouts the president, banging on the table. "Now, Jay, we were talk- ing about how much money we can make." "Right," says Flack. "How much money we make de- pends on how much we charge for the refrigerators. Since we're doing this as a service to the students, we don't want to make too much, just enough to cover expenses." "Has anyone checked the market for stoves?" inter- rupts Piggins. "I'll ignore that remark,'' says Flack heatedly. "STAY CALM, Jay. The Fascists are just trying to needle you," Pines says pointedly. "That's not true," says Piggins. "I just thought that people might want stoves to go along with their re- frigerators." "As I was saying," Flack continues, "we could rent the refrigerators for $28 a year and make $4 a year. "If we rent out 500 refrigerators, that's $2,000," some- one says. "Four dollars per refrigerator doesn't sound like it would cover the distribution costs," says Deductible. "Be- sides, I don't like refrigerators anyhow." "Let's vote," someone says. (The motion to set up a refrigerator business is de- feated.) "What am I going to do with all this refrigerator liter- ature?" asks Flack. "GIVE IT to me," says Mailer. "I think I'll go into business for myself." "Capitalist pig." 4 Al "I don't understand this at all," cbmplains Marnie Pines. "Why are we talking about refrigerators when there are more important matters like war, racism and poverty in our own backyard?" "I agree," says Mary Helker. "The government is get- ting bigger by the hour and threatening to stifle freedom with its free handouts. We have more important things to do than talk about refrigerators." "But maybe we can make some money from the refrigerators," says Brad Mailer. "What will we do with the money?" asks Bluing. "I SAY WE should raise the officers' salaries," says the president. "I say we should use it to improve the community," says Pines. "I say we should buy guns to protect ourselves.from the pigs," says Joel Goldstein. Letters to The Daily JIM BEATTIE Executive Editor DAVE CHUDWIN Managing Editor Voter registration To The Daily: LAST WEEK voter registration was ended at the Fishbowl and the Union despite a steady stream of more than two hundred peo- ple per day waiting in line to re- gister. Workers in the Democratic Party, RIP, SGC the Ecology Center, and the Coalition to Re- gister the Student Vote, as well as faculty members and President Fleming, have requested that regis- trationacontinues on campus and be expanded to dormitories and other locations. No adequate reason has b e e n given for the discontinuation of registration on campus, nor the unwillingness of the city to al- low registration in dormitories. on the street corner, and in com- munity centers around the city. In the cities of Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Detroit, deputy re- gistrars are permitted to work at any time and any place' t h e y choose, and may solicit new vot- ers by going door to door. In Ann Arbor, deputies may work only at the times and places selected by the clerk's office. Reasons for the tight registra- tion policy in Ann Arbor have run the gamut of non-reason: "forms will be lost," "if they won't bother to come down to City Hall to re- gister they won't vote anyway,"' 'the cost of processing aylarge number of new voters will be as- tronomical to the taxpayers," "we don't have the people to do the work." and "the registration pro- cess should change incrementally." Some of these excuses are bas- ed upon undocumented facts and the remainder on unconstitutional judgments. Most outstanding is the claim that insufficient workers are available to handle expanded voter registration drives. There are more than thirty young depu- ties who are willing to go into dormitories and to other locations around the city and campus to conduct registration. Many more people would be available if further training ses- sions for deputies were scheduled in the coming few weeks before registration closes for the Novem- ell #R rte-. l J: " ... "n n.*a . aL 'Trtnc tom. STEVE KOPPMAN .. Editorial Page Editor RICK PERLOFF .. Associate Editorial Page Editor PAT MAHONEY ... Assistant Editorial Page Editor LYNN WEINER .. Associate Managing Editor LARRY LEMPERT Associate Managing Editor ANITA CRONE ... .... . ...... . Arts Editor JIM IRWIN Associate Arts Editor JANET FREY..............Personnel Director ROBERT CONROW .. .... .. Books Editor JIM JUDKIq...............Photography Editor Business Staff JAMES STOREY, Business Manager RICHARD RADCLIFFE ....... Advertising Manager SUZANNE BOSCHAN ...... Sales Manager JOHN SOMMERS.............Finance Manager ANDY GOLDING .. Circulation Director DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Bill Abbott-Display Adv.; Rebecca Van Dyke-Classified Adv.; Fran Hymen -National Adv.; Harry Hirsch-Layout. ASSOCIATE MANAGERS: Alan Klein, Donna Sills, Judy Cassel. ASSISTANT MANAGERS: Paul Wenzloff, Steve Evseef, Ashish Sarkar, Dave Lawson. Sports Staff MORT NOVECK, Sports Editor JIM KEVRA, Executive Sports Editor RICK CORNFELD .. ..... Associate Sports Editor TERRI POUCHEY ....... Contributing Sports Editor BETSY MAHON .. ........ .... Senior Night Editor SPORTS NIGHT EDITORS: Bill Altermnan, Bob An- drews, Sandi Genis, Joel Greer, Elliot Legow, John Papanek, Randy Phillips, Al Shackelford. Givinga Th*al thought for the day By ART LERNER THE PHONE rang. I answered it, even though it was only 8:00 a m. "Michigan Daily," I said cheerily. "Michigan Daily?" It was an operator's voice. "Yes, this is The Daily." "Go ahead, sir," the voice said and it really was an operator's, "Hello. Michigan Daily?" a new voice said. "Yes sir, this is The Daily," I replied. "Is this the newspaper for Michigan State University?" "No, it is the student paper for the University of Michigan," I said. Applecrap, it's only eight o'clock, I thought. "Well, yes. I've got a thought here. Would you like to hear it?" the voice asked. "Pardon me, you said you had a thought?" I was playing for time. "Yes," the voice responded. "Sure," I said, "because thoughts are always- nice at eight o'clock." "FOR THOSE who know them- selves, it is much easier to be themselves than to be what they "That's all?" "That's all." I knew it was my move. "That's very interesting," I said. "I was just going to leave it at, :;'::.." ::.> It is much easier to be oneself than to be what one thinks one ought to be,' but I decided it only goes for people who know them- selves. You know, like Socrates and Plato said. Descartes, too I think." "I'm with you," I said. "But then I decided that it ought to be plural anyway. Be- sides, most people don't talk about 'one' and 'oneself,' do they?" "No, I guess they don't" I said. "~You know what I mean?" "I think I do," I said, and maybe I did. "SO," the voice said, "can I give that to you?" "Give what?" "The thought." "The thought? . . . You just did." "I mean for the newspaper." "Oh, you see, sir, it's only eight o'clock, and the people who could discuss that with you don't come in till around noon," I said, em- barrassed and feeling copped out. "I see," he said after waiting a moment. "But, well,' did you like it? I mean, did you think it was funny?" "No it "wasn't funny," I said. I didn't think it was funny. "It was sort of a 'thought for the day' kind of thing," I continued. "But you say I can call back later?" "Yes you can," I said, wondering who would answer the phone. "WELL THEN, good-bye. Oh yes, do you know where Yale Uni- versity is?" "Pardon me," I said, bringing the phone back to my ear. "Yale University." "Oh, Yale's in New Haven, Connecticut." "New Haven, Connecticut. Yes, well good-bye then." 4 ber 30 election. The only conclusion which can be drawn from the current situa- tion is that City Hall is obstruct- ing the registration of students. There are probably some elements in City governments as well as the community who feel threaten- ed by the prospect of forty thous- and student voters. Perhaps some major changes may be effected in city and county government. Since the city will not come to the campus to register, it appears necessary that we go to the city en masse to register to vote. On October 13, there will be a march beginning at noon to City Hall to register people to vote against the war in Viet Nam. At the same time we should ask the city to again initiate registration on Cam- pus so that it will not be neces- sary to repeat marches on City Hall. -William Kopper Oct. 5 Abortion To The Daily: I'M GLAD TO SEE that you finally printed something on one of the activities of the Ann Ar- bor Abortion Coalition. However, defense of Shirley Wheeler is not the Coalition's only activity. I think it's only fair to first inform your readers that the Ann 'Arbor chapter of Women's National Abortion Action Coalition, WON-, AAC, was just recently formed. We projected a number of activi- ties at our first meeting. An ac- tivity of immediate concern is the teach-in on abortion that we are sponsoring. Other organizations, such as Zero Population Growth, Center for Population Planning, the Women's Health Collective, N.O.W., Committee on the Status of Women, the abortion commit- tee of H.R.-R.I.P., etc. have been asked to sponsor this teach-in. The Coalition will also be working 'on the Michigan Wo- men's Abortion Class Action Suit. We are in the process of arrang- ing transportation to Detroit on Oct. 15, which is when the hear- ing on the suit is being held. On Nov. 20 there will be mass demonstrations in Washington and San Francisco to demand the following: Repeal of all abortion laws, no forced sterilizations, and repeal of all restricting contra- ceptive laws. This demonstration has the potential to reach mil- lions. We are ordering buses to take Ann Arbor women to Wash- ington. I'd like to correct The Daily for printing "the Nov. 20 march on Washington for abortion re- form". The Coalition and the demonstration are clearly for to- tal repeal of the laws. There is a distinction between the two. V O~'U GO SHO-' PI&J6 N~ CAQADA - FUVYTHIW"S l HAVO&I(K) Af-4RhCAN.6 l YOKUG051 I Q(K) 1AHE P(CA - )Ot (30 SHOP- T6 (K ,W A6LJ P - t~' (BADE (W AMEICA. YOU 60 FI0i (K 5 OP~i. /' b " :;;" a x m : a. 9 N A AHUE1CA. 5HOP 6VUtRYTh1IS HAVE (K) IF M~ORof U5 6c OVW 5uy OOR owo tJuJO&T 1 COUD&HAVE? HAPMY A(SE TH{($ '-WAR . i 1 i