Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Friday, September 6, 1974 News Phone: 764 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 Schuler 's h appy familIy? Editor's note: The following is an inter- view with Myra Wolfgang and Bob Alpert, v-0552 organizers for Local 24 of the Hotel, Mo- tel, Restaurants Employes, Cooks and Bartenders Union, about the upcoming we wanted to discuss the issues openly. We've challenged anyone in the manage- ment at Win Schuler's to a public debate, but we've received no response from them. II' 1' a I i i t t t i t 6 t c T t it j st x i unionization vote at Win Schuler's rest- WE COULD DISCUSS the labor move- aurant. The Daily welcomes all corres- ment in a vacuum, but I particularly want pondence about this issue, and we are to focus on Schuler's and student employ- most interested in hearing from other ment in Ann Arbor. There is a shocking Ann Arbor restaurant employes. Please number of students here who are working address submissions to "Letters to The in restaurants and not even being paid Daily." the legal minimum wage. I do not say this as a condemnation of students, but rather By MARNIE HEYN as a condemnation of employers who are taking advantag'e of the fact that many Daily: Next week there will be a union- students must work in order to live and ization vote at Win Schuler's restaurant go to school. Students in Ann Arbor readily in Ann Arbor. Why Schuler's, why Ann condemn landlords, and rightfully so, for Arbor, and why now? rents that are being charged, but they Myra: Local 24 of the Hotel, Motel, fail to see the point in condemning with Restaurant Employes, Cooks and Bar- equal venom employers who do not pay tenders Union has been petitioned by a them either a fair wage or even the legal group of employes at Win Schuler's res- minimum, who exploit them. taurant here in Ann Arbor to assist them Now, Schuler's has suddenly developed in organizing a union. We have given them the attitude of paternalism, and have taken that assistance, and a majority of em- all of their employes under their wing. ployes have signed cards authorizing a Things are happening there that have union to represent them, and the union never happened before. They have an- so notified Win Schuler's restaurant. Win nounced a health and welfare program, Schuler responded that if we have a they've put fans in the kitchen, they've majority, the majority should be proven said we have an open-door policy. It's in an election conducted by the National obvious that without a legal, binding con- Labor Relations Board. That election has tract, what the employer gives, the em- been scheduled for September 12 even ployer can take away. And as for Schuler's though we had petitioned early in July. open-door policy, employes tell us that it It's interesting --to note that since we consists of the classic reply, "If you don't received authorization cards over 90 em- like the job, why don't you find another?" ployes have quit there. However, the election is still on, and we decided that SO, ONE OF the most important things a union can do here is establish a griev- ance procedure so that problems can be handled in a systematic, organized way, and so that employes need not be fearful of taking up a grievance because they will, have a spokesperson to do it for them. On that particular question, Schuler's is trying to make a big issue out of "strang- ers" interfering in their big happy family. That's nonsense, because the union is the employes, and the employes are the union. And even though Schuler's speaks of the employes not needing anyone to speak for them, Win Schuler is one of the leading f mamare f taMirhaa h P.tigt S members or the mcngan tesauran n,, sciationand0doesn'theatetohaveth BUT THAT WASN'T the case at all; sociation, and doesn't hesitate to have the Michigan did pass a minimum wage law MRA speak for him. and the company did expand in Michigan. Getting back to the whole question of But before we had a minimum wage law, wages paid in Ann Arbor, the Michigan to answer Schuler's contention that he minimum wage law was passed without a knows what's best for his employes, when doubt as the result of the efforts of the the minimum wage in Michigan was $1.25 Hotel and Restaurant Employes Union. an hour, waitresses at the Stevensville And it wasn't an easy struggle. In fact it=restaurant were getting $1.25, and the finally required a sleep-in in the Senate waitresses at the Fort Wayne, Ind., res- in order to force some amendments to the taurant-hardly 40 miles away-were get- law so that it would become meaningful ting 75 cents. And the menu prices were for hotels and restaurants. the same in both cases. So we feel that AT THAT TIME, the law only applied to organizing Schuler's is very, very im- people of 13 weeks tenure. Because of the portant, we are here at the request of their kemployes, and if we are successful there, great turnover in the business, it meant we are planning a major campaign in Ann that the majority of the employes were Arbor to organize the hotel and restaurant not covered. And there was really no pro- employes, because we feel that the em- vision to prevent an employer from firing ployes here are being exploited, and the people before the 13th week to avoid com- only way that they .can overcome that is plying with the minimum wage law. We through organization. were able to get some strengthening amendments as a result of numerous hear- TOMORROW. Feeding The Hand ings held usually before a House com- That Bites You mittee, then a Senate committee, often a joint committee. I do not know of one single hearing that was held-and I attended all of them-that either Win Schuler. or one of his represen- tatives were not there to fight against any strengthening of the wage law-as a mat- ter of fact, they opposed the law entirely before it went on the books; and they op- posed it by saying that. if Michigan had a minimum wage law, they would not ex- pand in the state of Michigan, they'd gd to other states to build their restaurants. Actions speak louder .. . ON WEDNESDAY, August 21, the Senate voted on Defense Appro- priations for the fiscal year 1974. Not much was changed from the previous year (1973). We are still spending billions of dollars on defense, while thousands of people in this country are going hungry, homeless, and out of work. William Proxmire (D.-Wis.) pro- posed an amendment to the bill to reduce the military aid to South Viet- nam from $700 million to $550 mil- lion. This $550 million is the amount Congress allocated to South Vietnam in 1973. The Senator's rational for this was set down very eloquently in the Congressional Record for that date. ' According to the Defense Intelli- gence Agency, in 1973 the U. S. spent $5.3 billion on South Vietnam. The avowed purpose of U. S. involvment in Southeast Asia is to keep a bal- ance of power between the "free" and the "Communist" forces in the area. But according to the D.I.A., the U.S. S.R. gave North Vietnam only $175 million in 1973, and the Peoples Re- public of China only $115 million. In fact, the two Communist superpow- ers have been reducing their military aid to the North each year. This is a ratio of 8 to 1 on expenditures in In- dochina for one year, and while the U.S.S.R. and the P.R.C. are reducing military aid, the U.S. is raising theirs. n 7HY? The official purpose of our involvement in South Vietnam is to preserve peace, and that is where our money is. supposed to be going. But is it? Senator Proxmire said "The U.S. dollars go into the pockets of the corrupt bureaucracy in Viet- nam." According to the Senator, South Vietnam's 92 generals have been ordered recently to cut their personal staffs (chauffeurs and lac- keys) from 36 to 11 each. He went on to cite further abuses of power and U.S. m o n e y; blackmarketeering, "ghost soldiers, and incompetence at the higher levels. ' The Senator from Wisconsin stated that the only way that the U.S. can stop this in any degree is to limit the amount of money that goes to South Vietnam. If this was done the money would be limited, and the officials of South Vietnam would have to keep a tighter control of spending, and cor- ruption. Betty Ford, in her press conference on Wednesday told the American public that we would have to "tight- en our belts" in the next year. This is not new; Congress has been saying this for months now, and the Presi- dent has stated that inflation is our number one problem. Cutting back on aid to the corrupt regime in Saigon will not stop inflation, but it would help. WHEN THE AMENDMENT came to a yea or nay vote, the nays had it 47 to 44. The bill was defeated by 3 votes. The reason why it was defeated is that 8 senators were absent when the vote was called. Among them were such anti-war politicians as Kennedy, Gravel, McGovern, Case, Javits, and Percy. If any of them had been there the amendment might have passed, but for reasons unknown none of them were there. It is this kind of negligence on the part of leaders that is destroying public faith in government. In 1972 George McGovern, then a presiden- tial candidate, called for an end to U.S. involvement in South Vietnam, but last Wednesday he was absent. Actions do speak louder than words. -DAVID WARREN TODAY'S STAFF: MYRA WOLFGANG, right, confers with labor organizers from other unions after a Coalition of Labor Union Women session during their March conference in Chicago. Letters to The News: Gordon Atcheson, Dan Bill Heenan, Cindy Hill, Pilate, Judy Ruskin Biddle, Cheryl Editorial Page: Marnie Heyn, David Warren Arts Page: Ken Fink Photo Technician: Stuart Hollander Editorial Staff DANIEL BIDDLE Editor in Chief JUDY RUSKIN and REBECCA WARNER Managing Editors SUE STEPHENSON .......................Feature Editor MARNIE HEYN ............................Editorial Director CINDY HILL........................Executive Director KENNETH! FINK .................... ...Arts Editor STAFF WRITERS: Prakash Aswani, Gordon Atcheson, Laura Berman, Dan Blugerman, Howard Brick, Charles Cole- man, Barb Cornell, Jeff Day, Della DiPietro, William Heenan, Steve Hersh, Jack Hrost, Andrea Lilly, Mary Long, Jeff Luxenberg, Josephine Marcotty, Beth Nissen, Cheryl Pilate, Sara Rimer, Jim Schuster, Stephen Selbst, Jeff Sorensen, Paul Terwilliger. Sports Staff MARC FELDMAN Sports Editor GEORGE HASTINGS Executive Sports Editor ROGER ROSSITER ..................Managing Sports Editor JOHN KA LER .................Associate Sports Editor THERESA SWEDO ............. Contributing Sports Editor victims To The Daily: ALTHOUGH I AGREE entire- ly with the comments made in the editorial of the summer is- sue (2 August) concerning am- nesty, I was much disconcerted by the tone. I spent 1972-73 working as a pediatric consul- tant at a reconstructive surgery hospital in Saigon and various children's facilities in the South. What we need to realize is that the war rages on. F e w of us know that there have been more Vietnamese (North and South) killed in the first year after the "just and lasting peace with honor" than Americans killed during the twelve years of our military occupation. The true prisoners of war are not those who elected to bomb and managed to live through the horrors of their decision, nor are they the AWOL GI's or "draft-dodgers" secure some- what uncomfortably perhaps in Canada or Sweden, rather they are the millions of refu- gees, displaced persons - houseless, hopeless, innocently injured, stranded as prisoners in the mire of the war and the corruption. IN THE DAY and age of ecology and women's liberation and gay liberation let us return some of that vibrant anti-w a r sentiment which has been al- most entirely replaced by the various liberation movements, and force the U.S. foreign policy to change. The editorial spoke of Vietnam as a thing of the past, a subject no longer dis- cussed in these "post-draft" days. Only a political solution, Michigan will have an oppor- tunity to vote for union repre- sentation - a goal toward which many of us have been working for some time, and it is no time for apathy. Those of us who believe we are entitled to work under contract so that we will know how much our salary increases will be next year, and those of us who be- lieve that we are entitled to the dignity and respect of negotiat- ed working conditions must be at the polls at the appointed time to cast our ballots. Many of us have donated un- told hours trying to better the working conditions of all. We have Commissions for this and Commissions for that, all small groups working in different di- rections with no sense of unity and so many issues to argue there has to be resultant frag- mentation, we have wasted years discussing inequitable salary compression. For in- stance, a 5 per cent raise for a $5000 yearly employee amounts to $250, and a 5 per cent raise for a $15,000 yearly employee amounts to $750. An excellent example of financial juggling but little consolation for the lower level employee who has to pay the same for groceries as everyone else. Our inade- quate grievance procedures are regarded as unjunst by many authorities. The Promotional Openings Program is really not an opportunity at all but an ego shattering device designed to keep the lower level employees in the same old dead end jobs, since most of the applicants for the better jobs are hired by the supervisor before the posi- t;on is even nosed n th hill e ed for change, now is the time to cast your ballot for AFSCME. It is the only way to gain strength and cohesiveness and unity, and please don't stop there. Become involved, elect qualified people to represent you in your bargaining unit be- cause we have a wealth of po- tentially excellent people with- in thisnUniversity. If there is something you want to know about unionization and collec- tive bargaining AFSCME UM Organizing Committee ,will en- lighten you, if you will call 994- 4646. Join a committee. Learn with your co workers. Don't hesitate to ask questions. Now is the time to ask, please don't say you didn't vote because you didn't know - after the elec- tion is over. The structure of AFSCME, 700,000 public employees w i t h basically the same problems as we have, combined with our knowledge of the University is an ideal beginning. Most of us need to work, and the only way to maintain a measure of se- curity is to have the University contract for our labor. This is a commitment, we who have the opportunity to vote must make to ourselves and to our tempor- ary co workers who will not have the privilege of voting, some of whom have been tem- porarily employed since 1965. I HAVE served on the Com- mission for Women and its sub- committees and with the assist- ance of an excellent steering committee I was successful in the formation of the Women's Commission at University Hos- pital. I've walked the rocky roodofth di i ni', ,,i( -Pr. a AFSCME. I believe it's the only way. -Pat Freer Main Hospital running To The Daily: I HAVE decided to seek the Democratic nomination for the University of Michigan's Board of Regents at the state conven- tion. I ask for your support. I am a junior and a political sci- ence major at the university. I strongly feel there is a ne- cessity for a student regent. A student regent can best repre- sent the concerns of the student body and understand the prob- lems it faces. Most of the cur- rent regents have little person- al contact with the campus and Ann Arbor. I have criticized the regents' Committee on Student Govern- ance since its inception because the regents were looking for a weapon to weaken and possibly destroy student government on campus. I favor deferred tui- tion and deferred college loan programs. New scholarship and loan programs must be created in order to keep up with the steady increase in college tui- tion. I support full public dis- closure of salaries of the uni- versity's faculty and employees. I also want a teaching-train- ing requirement for teaching as- sistants. I AM FOUNDER and Presi- dent of Campus Coalition, which is the largest campus political party. As Administrative V i c e President and later President of the University Housing Coun- cil I helned cnntinue the TFW member and as its current Act- ing Coordinating Vice President, I and only a few others had charged SGC President Lee Gill with attempting to embezzle student government money last October. Gill mysteriously re- signed last January and disap- peared; the police are still searching for him on charges of embezzling $8000. Also,: I. have served on two student gov- ernment committees and three housing selection committees. I AM A College Young Demo- crat and I was a delegate to the Michigan Young Democrats con- stitutional convention. I was a block captain, high school co- ordinator, poll worker, and all- around volunteer for Senator Humphrey in the 1972 Pennsyl- vania Presidential Primary. I was later a dorm coordinator for McGovern for President, a precinct captain in 1973 for Ann Arbor Councilman Norris Thom- as and mayorality candidate Franz Mogdis, and have helped a number of other candidates. During the summer of 1972, I worked on the Democratic Tele- thon, participated in a registra- tion drive for Representative William Green (D-Pa.), and was a volunteer for Common Cause. I have led a successful peti- tion drive to name a school'in memory of slain Philadelphian civil rights leader and teacher Samson Freedman. Also, I have belonged to numerous environ- mental organizations, such as Defenders of Wildlife and the American Forestry Association. I AM CURRENTLY working on the state representative cam- paign of Marilyn Young. former