f l4e SMiir4gn Dailit Eighty years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan halancing teacups The valentine as instrument of social change ndine cohoda_ 420 Maynord St., Ann Arbor, Mich News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michipan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1971 NIGHT EDITOR: DAVE CHUDWIN Protesting the A&P firn l'O e 1R 1'rins TWO YEARS AGO, the A&P store on. Huron was forced to stop selling California grapes when a boycott of the store reduced its total sales 20 per cent. Today, as the store attempts to oppress long-haired young people, a similar ac- tion is needed. The store has said that unless five of its employes cut their hair before the be- ginning of the week, they will be fired for violation of a company dress code which calls for hair that is "trimmed and combed, properly tapered above shirt col- lar" and "not below half-way down the forehead." The store's managers say enforcement of the dress code is necessary because those currently violating it are driving away customers. But the facts show quite clearly that this argument is false, and that the actual motive of the store man- agement is a prejudice against the em- ployes' appearance and the life style that appearance represents., In the first place, at least some of the workers being fired do not even work when the store is open and could there- fore not possibly have an adverse effect on the number of customers. Further- more, statistics show that the Huron St. A&P is doing an excellent business. The Huron A&P, for instance, is the only A&P store in the entire Ann Arbor area at which sales have increased rather than decreased during recent months. AS A DEFENSE, some of the workers have begun wearing wigs from which most of the hair has been cut. The wigs, according to the store manager, will sub- stitute for short hair. But this does not really eliminate the problem at all-it merely perpetuates it. For clearly, it is the freedom of the workers to determine the nature of their appearance th'at is at stake. The dress policy is not a new one for the A&P. About a year ago, for instance, the store attempted to fire one of the same workers whose job is in question this year. In that case, the union backed the worker and forced the store to back down. Unfortunately, thesame union backing may not be forthcoming on this occas- ion. For the union claims that a recent Seattle court decision upholding r e t a i 1 dealers' perogative to fire workers for the length of their hair has undercut any legal basis for their support. THE ONLY way to end the, store's dis- criminatory policy is therefore to fight it economically, as was done during the grape boycott. This could be done in many ways. Most obviously, students could cease to buy food at the A&P on Huron St. Such a course of action is of course problematic because the Huron St. store is the only food market within walking distance of many students. Since the store charges higher prices than most other markets, the existence of a captive consumer body is the only reason the store does so well in the first place. To circumvent this problem, students might well organize car pools to allow them to purchase food elsewhere. In addition, students have been urged by the workers under - attack to picket the store and to encourage customers to shop elsewhere. Finally, and most im- mediately, the workers have called for a peaceful protest at the store beginning at 1 p.m. today. THE WORKERS suggest that the protest might involve filling shopping carts, joining check-out lines, but walking out without actually buying the groceries. Al- though this should be executed peace- fully, the store must be convinced to end its discriminatory policies. The A&P should not make money from those whom it will not employ. -JIM BEATTIE VALENTINE'S DAY as we know it is for sending cards, candy, stuffed animals or any other kind of goodies to the One You Love. Usually this is confined to boy friends or girl friends, husbands or wives, aunts or uncles, grandparents and third grade teachers. But the custom seriously minimizes the possibilities for spreading joy and good cheer throughout the world every Feb. 14. Think, for example, of the local, national and inter- national tensions that might be eased if the powers-that- be sent valentiens to one another tomorrow. What if the leader of Laos sent a valentine to President Nixon? It might so something like this: I'm at a Laos without you-what more can I say? You make me quiver all through the day. I've felt like this right from the start- Face it, Dick, you've invaded my heart. Happy Valentines Day, Souvana Phouma Or if President Robben Fleming sent a valentine to FOCUS, one of the women's rights groups on campus? I've got HEW under my skin. I don't know where to begin, So my funny valentine, I'll try not to sob, But would you be mine if I give you a job? Love, Robben Or if Mrs. Laird sent her husband, Secretary of Defense Melvin, an original ditty? I can't get no satisfaction Until you stop protective reaction. Bri~arwood: A wishcs to head University negotiator James Thiry? AFSCMIE if I love 't. I know the question's rash. But I could be your valentine For the right amount of cash. God bless our union. Charlie Or if the President of South Vietnam sent a valentine to the President of the United States? I hear you knockin' But you can't come in Unless I give you the Ky. But you can't have the Ky Till you say you'll be true And promise to love me Thieu. Happy Valentines Day Nguyen Van Thieu Or if Ann Arbor Police Chief Walter Krasny sent a valentine to the people he has recently arrested on drug charges? I don't really like to bust you. It hurts my soul a lot. But how can I ever trust you When your life has gone to pot? I'd like you for my valentine, But goodness, what's the point? For when I send my love to you, You'll send me back a joint. Oh, dear .. . Chief Krasny So come on, Mel, get on the stick And give my Valentine a kick, Anxiously, Barbara Or if AFSCME leader Charles McCracken sent his b igge r, better A rborla ndP wS 4 By PAT MAHONEY PROBLEM: Residents of Wash- tenaw County are shopping at Westland and anotherhcenter in metropolitan Detroit. The local sales area has lost its competitive position. As a result, increases in local retail sales have not kept pace with the rise in family income and population growth. SOLUTION: Build a regional shopping center in a prime location that willaattract customers from Jackson and Brighton as well as Washtenaw County. That is the formula Hudson's, Penny's and Sears have come up with to solve a problem they have "discovered" in Washtenaw Coun- ty. Near the intersection of I-94 and State Road, the three major retailers plan to build a shopping center, to be named Briarwood, which will be three times the size of Arborland. Construction, however, is not automatic. First the city :rust change the current agricultural zoning of that section to commer- cial status before development can begin. The Planning Commission approved the zoning change Tues- day by a seven to one margin. City Council will hold its first reading on the question next Tuesday. Retailers backing the local pro- ject have spared no effort to make it a success. Over three years ago, they hired the Taubman Corpora- tion to analyze the proposed cen- ter. Of course, the Taubman study had one underlying goal. As the first sentence points out, "The pur- pose of this analysis is to estab- lish the desirability of locating a regional retail complex in the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti area." PROCEEDING ON this prenise, the Taubman Corporation made three assumptions. -Incomes in Washtenaw have risen faster than retail sales. -The population of Washtenaw County is great enough to support Briarwood. Arborland The mayoral primary MONDAY'S PRIMARY election for Ma- yor of Ann Arbor is a typical illus- tration of how the two-party system in this country has alienated so many young Americans from the electoral process. Though students make up nearly one quarter of the city's population not one candidate for mayor on Monday's ballot can be considered a "student's" candidate in any sense. The A n n Arbor Radical Independent Party has entered Doug Cornell as an al- ternative candidate for mayor. The par- ty's platform includes programs dealing with problems of racism, sexism, housing, ecology and other issues of great con- cern to both the student and street com- munity. But Doug Cornell's name will not ap- pear on the ballot Monday or in April's general election because or a state law that clearly and effectively discourages the formation of third parties. The law stipulates that any new party must pre- sent petitions signed by one per cent of the number of votes cast statewide for Secretary of State in the last election, in order to be placed on the ballot., The effect of this law is that any party which intends to nominate candidates for local offices must be a statewide party. This clearly explains why third parties have been rare in Michigan, and it has forced the local radical party to rely upon a write-in campaign for the April gen- eral election. THE DEMOCRATIC and Republican ranks, meanwhile, have not provided candidates acceptable to the student community. i layor Robert Harris is running unop- posed for the Democratic mayoral nomi- nation. Harris has attempted to appeal to both the student community and the larger Ann Arbor community by continually shifting his policy approaches from lib- eral to conservative and back again. Har- ris demands investigations of police bru- tality. but refunes to prosecute. He pro- poses making marijuana povsession a mis- Jack Garris is running on a platform of "law and order." Garris promises that if elected he will "help curb the commis- sion of crime" by asking judges to set bail bonds and impose sentences "commen- surate with the nature of the crimes so that they will be a deterrent to the com- mission of further crime. GARRIS IS THE founder and leader of the Concerned Citizens of Ann Arbor, a right-wing group dedicated to keeping Ann Arbor free of undesirables. Two years ago the group sent out letters warning Ann Arbor citizens that the White Pan- thers were advocating "a diabolical polit- ical philosophy, and that rock and roll was the medium through which t h e y could poison and destroy the minds of your children." Lewis Ernst is a 64-year-old retiree who is somewhat of an enigma in local poli- tics. On the one hand, he is sympathetic to students, opposes the war, and has cir- culated petitions to end the draft. But he also says things like "Ozone House has to go - we have to stop drugs! Like I said in October, we have to get Chief (Walter) Krasny and his staff right on the ball." Ernst speaks of appointing "specially Designated Officers," a sort of community vigilante group that would have the pow- er to hold suspects until police could be summoned. "That would chop off much crime, and I know it," he says. LOUIS BELCHER, who has the support of most prominent local Republicans, jumps on the ecology bandwagon, calling for the formation of an Environmental Impact Commission that would have a role in all city planning. "It would not be a commission providing lip service," he says, but he adds that he would not let the commission "interfere w i t h the growth of Ann Arbor in any way." In reference to the recent drug arrests in the city, Belcher says that police should "vigorously enforce the law e v e n if it means raiding the communes o n c e a week." He adds that he thinks Harris has been restraining the police, and says if elected he would give the police a free hand. -With recommended improve- ments, the current road structare will be adequate. In both 1958 and 1969, county resi- dents spent 13 per cent of their ef- fective buying income on general merchandise, furniture and ap- parel (GAF) in the county. The fact that the level of GAF buying in Washtenaw County has remained constant shows that growth in sales has paralled growth in income. Taubman claimed that "there were some indications" from 1967 Census of Business of data for 1967 and 1969 state tax reports that re- tail sales had increased more slow- ly than incomes. Washtenaw Coun- ty, however, is not a normal sales area. Incomes here are among the highest in the country. Last year. the median income per household was $13,435, up from $6,890 in cur- rent dollars in 1960, according to U.S. Department of Commerce. As the incomes rise, people spend a smaller percentage on Reneral me r- chandise, furniture and apparel. While underestimating local con-- sumers' use of Washtenaw County stores, Taubman exaggerated pop- ulation projections to support its contention that the county popula- tion will be great enough to support Briarwood. From 1960 to 1970. the annual population growth rate in Washtenaw County was three per cent. However, for the next decade Taubman predicts an annual in- crease of 4.75 per cent. The city planning department Arbor's grow th rate to be 3.53 per cent over the next 20 years. NO MATTER how much the county grows, Briarwood will at- tract shoppers from all over Ann Arbor. Taubman's plans call for road improvements only in the im- mediate area of the center. For ex- ample, under the plan State Road from I-94 to Waters Road will be widened to six lanes and Waters 'Road will become a six lane park- way 'from State to Main. The road changes are 1990 pro- jections. Nothing is said in the Taubman report about traffic jams that might develop between 1973, when the first stores open, and the time when new roads are co.n- pleted. The developer also ne- glected to, plan for thetraffic con- gestion likely to occur ini other parts of Ann Arbor as large nuin- hers of people try to reach Briar- wood by car. Other omissions in the Taubman report show its bias toward the de- veloper 's objectives of promoting Briarwood. What will happen to the entire downtown area if, the shop- ping center is built? Only this year, the city administrator's office hired an independent group of planners to conduct a market survey of the Ann Arbor area and the effects Briarwood would have on the cen- tral business district and Washte- naw County. Hopefully, this report will be completed by Tuesday. City assessor Wayne Johnson has estimated that at the current tax rate Ann Arbor would receive $439,350 in taxes from Briarwood in 1980. What both the developer and the city have not discussed is the possibility that Briarwood may build a tax base in one area while destroying it downtown. LAST NOVEMBER, Ann Arbor voters approved a $3 million bond issue to improve flood control and provide new water recreational ta- cilities on the Huron River by cre- ating a series of ponds. Briar- wood's three million square toot parking lot would threaten the quality of water in the river and reduce the recreational potential of the ponds. Gasoline, cil, lead and dangerous carbon compounds will ruin from the parking lot into a drain and eventually reach the Huron River. As the runoff moves through to drains and a creek be- fore reaching the river, it will also pick up sediment. Building a parking structure in- stead of a flat lot would substanti- ally reduce the runoff, but it would also be more expensive. In addition to causing this en- vironmental damage, Briarwood's parking lot may be obsolete before it is built. Between 1976 and 1980, the construction of ten office build- ings, 434 apartment units and a theater is anticipated as part of the Briarwood project. This devel- opment will be separated from the shopping area by the parking lot. Such an arrangement will only im- pede transportation in the Briar- wood area by dividing it into groups of buildings separated by parking areas. The developer anticipates that the parking lot will eventually be bought up for use for office and apartment buildings at some point in the future. However, when asked, the City _Planning Depart- ment could not show a single place in the United States where this has happened outside a central business district. "ONCE THE parking lots are there, it is difficult to ehange them. What we are getting is a shopping cente rout of date by 20 years," says Mrs. Ethel Lews, the only member of the City Planning Commission who voted against Briarwood. Northland's history provides an example of what is likely to happen at Briarwood. Since the original shopping area was opened in the 1950s, additional stores, office buildings and apai t- ments have risen on the outskirts of the development. The size of the parking lot surrounding the first group of stores has not been re- duced. But new difficulties have become evident. The Northland complex is so sprawling that transportation by foot is almost impossible. For example, the person in an office who wants to go out to lunch may have to drive three miles to find a restaurant. This reliance on cars only adds to traffic congestion and the need for more parking lots. Realizing these inconveniences, some developers are planning a new center farther from Detroit. "What we envision is a true re- gional center-a spinal column with additions radiating off the sides and a high rise complex at the core," says Paul Mason, whose real estate company is developing the new area. "Northland," says Mason, "is a planning abortion. It's a series of blops. Shopping here. A hospital there. Apartments over this way. Blop. Blop. Blop." IS THAT what Ann Arbor needs? r Letters to The Daily Military research To The Daily: I WOULD LIKE to take this op- poitunity toapplaudnthe action taken by Michael Knox with re- spect to his letter published in the Daily of February 9, and to lend support, as a faculty member of this university, to his view that the role of the University of Mich- igan in war research receive a frank and open examination. If, as Mr. Knox claims, our university is conducting research to perfect weapon systems which, are being used to kill and incapacitate hu- mans, then we must consider our- selves, as a community, guilty as accessories to such crimes against humanity. I would suggest that this sad and evil situation has been al- lowed to exist despite the guaran- tees contained in the charge to the Senate Assembly Classified Re- search Committee that their prime function is to repect just such re- search support. If Michael Knox's contentions are true then, clearly, the members of the Classified Re- search Committee have been dere- lict in their duty and have failed to uphold the trust which this un- versity community has placed in thet. Several courses of action would Classified Research Committee to a) make public summaries of clas- sified military research, and b) to reject research programs designed to provide systems whose purpose is to kill humans. Third, those con- cerned should insist that member- ship on the Committee be broad- ened to include undergraduates, as well as graduate students, selected by a procedure more democratic than the careful selection process presently used by the Committee. THE WELL-PUBLICIZED hor- rors which are part of our military escapades in southeast Asia, and elsewhere, provide ample proof that our military-executive branch of government will use almost any means to squash social revolutions which do not coincide with their distorted foreign policy. This uni- versity must no longer be allowed to lend its technical expertise to provide the death machines for such immoral uses. If the Univer- sity must lose the income from such contracts in order to get out of the death business, the ,the choice should be clear, shouldn't it? -Prof. Robert E. Beyer Department of Zoology Feb. 12 a student must first be accepted in LSA, and must state on their application that they are interest- ed in entering the Residential Col- lege. At this point, there is a random selection of students, the students covering the same range of academic interests as do the students of LS&A. In fact, the se- lections are made so as to deliver the same ratio of men to women as does LS&A. In other words, the Residential College is merely a distributional microcosm of LS&A. Second, there were in the fall term 74 teachers in the Residen- tial College, most of these being part time teachers and teaching fellows. Many of these teachers al- ready devote a good part of their time to teach in LS&A. Hence, the other 95 per cent of the LS&A stu- dents have the services of nearly all the teachers in RC. Third. let me point out that the Residential College is an experi- ment in higher learning. T h e smaller classes, pass-fail evalua- tions, and freshman seminars are all part of this experiment. By existing in this medium we are only following the guidelines set up by LS&A. FINALLY, allow me to invite Mr. Scott as well as anyone else confu~sed as to the objectives of #1 .7 7- _________ - ~ 2,