inside: editors: laura berman dan borus contributing editor: mary long SufldGay mcagazrne page four-books page five-john wilhelm page six-week in review Number 21 Page Three March FEATUR 123, 1975 ES Jobless and s Singing those collar, By DAN BORUS JT WASN'T DOING without vaca- tions and country clubs that bothered Bill George about being laid off from his research and de- velopment job at a local auto sup- ply firm. It was the meager gift he gave his wife for his thirty-fifth birthday. "All I could afford was a small trinket and a card," he said, stav- ing off tears. "I felt like dirt. She's been so great and ... " If a picture is worth a thousand words, then America's images of hard times constitute a library of despair . and anguish. Bill George's speechlessness in the un- employment office, like the Thir- ties' Dust Bowls, soup kitchens, and apple sellers, symbolizes the transformation of the Great Amer- ican Dream of Success into a vio- lent nightmare of failure. Small successes to the contrary, signs that more and more execu- tives are going to face the harsh economic, realities of unemploy- ment lines and meager meals are just being sighted. NO ECONOMIC FORECASTER or employment counselor is suggesting that today's hard times will banish masses of trained and highly educated people into bare- ly subsistence occupations as the Great Crash and Depression did. But they are cautioning about hard times ahead. Economist Gardner Ackley sees a downward trend in employment for the next six months at least. And though recession and depres- sion wound working class families harder and earlier financially, the psychological devastation of bad times knows no class barriers. The White Collar Pink Slip Blues, with its tension and depression, are part and parcel of today's social por- trait. * ITEM - The automobile in- dustry, a keystone to economic health, is not hiring new execu- tives. Ford and General Motors have cancelled all their interviews at schools through out the coun- try. Chrysler went through what some sources termed "massive" layoffs last winter and have not called everyone back. Just last week the Supplemental Unemploy- ment Benefits (SUB) for 5,000 white collar workers ran out. Mor- ale at all four auto firms is a touchy subject and is certainly not healthy. * ITEM - The Michigan Em- ployment Security Commission, which h a n d I e s unemploy- p ink sli cared: white- p blues hair that is still jet black at forty. "Just angry." "Look, I received an excellent education, did well at the com- pany, was liked by many of my clients. And now I can't find any work at all. It's just not right. It simply isn't right. My family and I deserve better than this." It is his family that is George's greatest concern. The medical bills, shopping bills, and orthodon- tist bills are piling up and he ment benefits, is handing out more to white collar workers than last year. This is a rough ballpark esti- mate by a local branch manager since the Commission does not classify its recipients by collar hue. The MESC office here parcels out an average of $75,000 to $80,000 a day in benefits, with the high- est award $106.00 a week. 0 ITEM -Local management employment agencies are carrying slightly heavier case loads in the "Look, I received an excellent education, did well at the company, was liked by my clients. And now I can't find any work at all. It's just not right. It simply isn't right. My family and I1de- serve better than this." last six months. A considerable number of these clients are execu- tives seeking a second or third ca- reer as a. result of layoffs or the threat of layoffs. Owen Porterfield, owner of Career World, estimates that a good fifty per cent of the clients he sees are currently unem- ployed. " ITEM - Though public and private therapists hesitate to draw conclusions from their limited and as yet uncodified data, they do agree that the poor economic situ- ation has increased the number of depressed patients they see. Clinics are overburdened, and pri- vate practices are not suffering from the recession. There is sturdy statistical proof that there exists an inverse rela- tionship between economic cycles and the number of schizophrenics admitted to mental institutions. When the economic indicators fall, admissions rise. * ITEM - Middle and upper class alcoholism has increased. * * * THE MESC OFFICE in the Maple Shopping center is never a pleasant place to stand and wait. It's floor is just barely institution- ally clean, nothing more. The counters are tinny and worn. The walls are painted in an atrocious off-white. When it is crowded in the morning with people who look as depressed and helpless as you feel, it's even a worse place to be. This Friday morning Bill George (not his real name) is going out to Maple Village to pick up his $106.00 a week check. "I wouldn't say I am embarrassed to be here," he says, rubbing his hands through doesn't know how far his savings can go. It's more than the luxuries he's sacrificing now - its new clothes, small repairs, some food items. Possibly the comfortable Ann Arbor home is next. "-XPLAINING THESE things to my daughter has been the roughest thing. She's fourteen years old and has only known lux- ury. Curing affluent buying habits are really very difficult. "The first month was the hard- est of all. We were sort of addicted to things like good meat and play- ing indoor tennis. It was also the month with the most quarrels. I was shot. I couldn't take it. I kept asking 'why me?' "I'd buy things, little things really inexpensive to cheer myself un. I had to stop it and we had to stop all the luxuries at once. I guess it's like cold turkeying." Cold turkeying was something William George never thought he'd have to do. He graduated from a Midwestern college in 1956.and went to work for Chrysler that year. After two years with the au- tomakers, he left to join an auto supply firm. Ironically 1958 was a recession year, yet George doesn't remember the hardships at all. "WHEN I WENT to school I al- ways believed that I was en- titled to good things if I worked hard and did well. I don't think I ever questioned whether or not they would be there. It was silly to think they wouldn't be. Those peo- ple who did were the left-wing fringe people. "You know," he reflects, "some- times I think those guys I called An unidentified white collar worker applies for employment office. kooks were right and I was the kook." Majorie George didn't marry a kook sixteen years ago. She mar- ried a man she fell in love with at the library where she worked - a man whom she wanted to share life's joys and sorrows. "Bill was what I'd guess you'd call a hard charger," she says. "He knew what he wanted from life and knew he could get it. Some- times these days I wonder if he's lost a bit of that confidence." "He'll mope a bit. Then he'll get angry. We have not had any major fights that I can think of. But lit- tle things keep cropping up. "It's not just the economics that are causing such problems among the unemployed," University Hos- pital Walk-in Clinic psychiatrist Stephen Landau says, "It's a life crisis. People who find themselves either unemployed or under the threat of unemployment must re- solve the drastic role shift - from provider to dependent. At the same time, they must accept the way the family perceives them in that new role and resolve insecurities about the future . Economic bad times can aggravate pre-existing pathologies which might have re- mained unexpressed if the stress were not there. Those who deal "When I went to school I always believed that I was entitled to good things if I worked hard and did well. I don't think I ever questioned whether or not they would be there. Those peo- ple who questioned whether it was all worth it were left-wing fringe people. You know, some- times I think those guys I called kooks were right and I was the kook." . Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN benefits at a local un- also observing the stress of the un- employed. Sam Sarafa of Manage- ment Recruiters sees the effect in employment patterns. "The switch in careers goes beyond the present situation. People are moving in different directions and have been since 1970, the last great recession. They start thinking about the fu- ture and figure they don't want to be unemployed and in the same miserable position again. "WE MAKE SUGGESTIONS about new area and when we talk sales and marketing to engineers, they get very nervous and don't think much of the idea. But when they get through a couple inter- viewing experiences, they feel bet- ter. The initial dislocation is so strong and sometimes hurts so much. Landau sees the "recessional neurosis" affecting present college students as well. "The crux of the problem is not only being laid off but the threat as well. Sometimes that can be more debilitating," he says. "College students are coming out of school with little chance of getting that first job they want and theyhare worried. "We're seeing a helluva lot more of them and we expect even more." JIM KLEE at the University's Business School placement of- fice sees the story from a different angle. "I wish I could tell you something dark," he said. "But we're doing surprisingly well. We're holding our own. Banking, finance and accounting are very healthy; several students in the program have offers already. "We do have alumni placement operation and they have had a slight increase in participation since August. However it is hard to determine how much of that is because people are out of work, or concerned about their futures." Porterfield, who emphasizes that he works in a specialized market, sees the executive market now lev- eling off after some high times. He feels Ann Arbor has a normal job market. And Sarafa says that while the short term picture isn't excellent, he's optimistic about the future. "You always have to be," he says, "things always pick up." "I'll do my best to help him out. I try and listen to almost every- thing he says, even when I am bored. It's tough for him, when I am working at the library and he's waitings for calls or letters. I sug- gested he change fields and I think he will." RILL IS NOT SO sure he will go into marketing and sales as his wife suggested. "I don't have the right techniques -- I'm an auto man - and I certainly don't like sales. But I've got to do some- thing. I can't stand not working." "I think I am most worried about the kids',' George savs. "Marjorie and I will make it," he states with finality, reclining in an easy chair in their living room after he pinked un his benefit check and denofited it in the bank. "fiwi has been very cold and withirnwn You know sornPthinQ is bothpring her. hut she won't sv. T think s child needs to think of a successfully with such major stress are those who have a set of well developed coping skills." DR. SAUL FORMAN, a private practitioner in Detroit who sees patients from all economic strata, concurs that the economy is having an effect on the psycho- logical health of executives. He is quick to point out, though, that the maladies he sees daily are not confined to white collar unem- ployed. "Yes, I do see a lot of 'recession- al neurosis' - people who have no idea what to do with themselves, who are reiected, angry and who take to acting out their anxieties. Treatment is difficult in some cases since much of the problem is agegravated by what can't be provided-jobs." Not all stress problems end un-in n-vchiatrist's couches or thera- nist's chairs. Many people do not conciilt formal agencies. Many MKIMMIMM