A Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Vague rumblings of a mass movement 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 News Phone: 764-0552 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1973 An untimely Nixon veto IN RECENT weeks, President Nixon has derided Congress for its inaction on many crucial domestic issues. It is time, as he would say, to get the "team" mov- ing. Yet, last week Nixon became the first President ever. to veto a minimum wage bill. In his veto message, he said the raise would increase inflation and lead to high- er unemployment, particularly among those groups already suffering from a high jobless rate. The vetoed legislation included new groups of workers, such as domestics and state and local civil servants, never be- fore covered by minimum wage stipula- tions. The basic minimum wage, had the bill been signed, would have risen to $2 this year and $2.20 next year. NE OF the President's chief criticisms of the legislature was its lack of a provision for a subminimum wa'ge 'for youth. Nixon would like to see a continuation of wage policies allowing the payment of lower wages, to young persons. He claims such a provision in the bill would reduce teenage unemployment. In fact, the practical effect of such a provision is one which many of us have experienced: working long hours for food establishments and the like at pay rates which are hardly enough to justify work- ing at all. Several labor leaders have attacked the Nixon veto for just this reason. It is, after all, hard to place as much stress-at least verbally, as Nixon does-on the "work ethic" when minimum wages keep one below the official poverty level of $4,200 a year. AFL-CIO President George Meany has noted that,, while food prices have risen 38 per cent since the last minimum wage hike, "the President branded a 25 per cent increase in the minimum wage as "too much." .The union leader, moreover, has figures which cast serious doubt on Nixon's con- tention that unemployment and inflation would increase as a result of a rise in the minimum wage. Almost every previous increase in the minimum has been accompanied by a sharp .increase in employment, and Meany's statistic$ showed that when the wage increase has been the sharpest "in- flation was the most modest." The Presidential veto may be overrid- den when the bill comes before the House again tonlorrow. Such an action would be completely justified. By CHARLES STEIN EVEN AS THEY sit, safe and secluded in their perch high atop the Administra- tion Building, the University's leaders can probably sense what SGC President Lee Gill has described as "the rumblings of something that might be big." Those rumblings are coming from the direction of the developing tuition strike- the first sign of student activism this sleepy campus has seen in nearly four years. The rumblings are certainly nothing like the violent tremors and upheavals t h a t threatened to topple the whole building in the late 60s, but the ingredients for growth are there. For one, in the tuition protest, students finally have an issue that can serve as a rallying point. It is an issue that cuts across racial and political lines and is unique in that it ffects all but those on complete financial aid. FURTHER, THE strategy strike leaders have adopted - namely the withholding. of the first tuition payment - carries with it a maximum penalty of a five dollar late fee - hardly a revolutionary sacrifice. The presence of a natural student leader at the forefront of the struggle also repre- sents a sharp break with the recent past. Though he is a black militant on a campus dominated by passive whites, Gill has al- ready demonstrated his ability to capture the students' imagination. His opening night address in which he first announced the strike to a group of in- coming freshmen was interrupted by bursts of vigorous applause. Academic Affairs Vice UFW sti By RICHARD LEVY how to .OPIN. TO visit and work with setting. the farmworkers and to learn TO S' about their strike in California, I underst spent a week in Lamont in mid- only att August with the United F a r m ings in Workers. free flo * - numero My time was spent on the picke the aud lines, attending the mass meetings, .tead and working with the UFW legal After staff doing a phone survey to help strikebr get a change of venue (location) arrests for the numerous trials of farm- tains, . workers. As such, the information eight t below should be seen as impression- of ther istic. who ha tions w At present, the UFW seems to the tab] be in a precarious o t did, in certainly not one of despair. The support Teamsters have attempted to de- whicht feat the UFW through both the f olde violence of their goons and their one-hal sweetheart contracts with the grow- ers. Combined with their relations It ist with the Nixon gang it seems that high le they have a good deal of strength to be t in the short term. strike Further, those growers who sign grapes with the UFW will have problems remain getting their produce to market. who ha This is one of the early signals of contrac the Teamster effort to monopolize cngacy the fresh food sector of the Amer- legallyh ican economy by holding the union brought leadership in the packing, canning, work n delivery, and hopefully picking as- sremp pects. nothing HOWEVER, the' Teamsters' NW strength is less than it might at NOW first seem. It has tread too heav- run out ily for its fellow big-time union havet bosses, thus bringing itself into jbS', b temporary opposition to the AFL- will co' CIO which has given the UFW $1.4 the grc million in strike funds and several There good organizers for the strike. the mo Only, of course, in coordination to acco with pressure to force the UFW ber of t maksconcesiosin the nego- with th tiations number coerced Significant rank and file Team- signing ster support for the UFW is evi- ' othersh denced not only by rank and file having demonstrations in California for the because UFW, but also by the suit-presently hiring being brought by three Teamsters The hi against the Teamster leadership for by theI misuse of funds used in the at- contrac tempt to break the UFW strike. Undert The Teamsters' racism is evi- were hi dent in their statement that demo- the lab cracy cannot be introduced into the workers farmworkers union until the job preferen has been "upgraded" and attract- the hiri ed more white workers because the ers hir Mexican workers "don't understand hiring h President Allan Smith, his mouth gaping, could ony look on with amazement. With a bundle of charisma and a veteran politician's sense of timing, Gill can be sure that when he speaks, people will listen. Even the men on the sixth floor. THERE ARE of course formidable ob- stacles lying in the path ready to trip up the nascent student movement. On a purely tactical level, the control "To challenge a powerful opponent like the University stu- dents must regain the kind of confidence in their own strength that their counterparts in the late 60s came to possess." mammeammesama-maammmm""Jn the kind of confidence in their own strength that their counterparts in the late 60s came to possess. The group psychology that allowed stu- dents to feel they would win - with im- munity from punishment - is an essential prerequisite for any mass movement. The resignation of Lyndon Johnson and t h e change in the nation's war policy served as proof to students of that earlier era that such confidence was justified. structure. Any attempt to organize the such lines will likely alienate of students. pate in a wholesale attempt to destroy the RATHER THE movement could a n d sho~ild be built on the more fundamental concept of student power. In its own secretive fashion, the Univer- sity has dropped a surprise tuition bomb- shell on its students. At the same time it has formed a residency committee that arrogantly refuses to explain its decisions. The sentiment 'that students are being abused by the University has been echoed by many at the meetings and discussions organized in the last two weeks. It is around this kind of sentiment that the new student movement can be organiz ed. Demands for a student Regent and a generally greater role in University af- fairs and information are among the kinds of goals that students can work, towards. THE TUITION strike is hopefully the first in a series of causes that will unite students in an effort to gain a more responsive Uni- versity. That kind of unity is, of course, the very thing that sends shivers up the collective spine pf the men in the Administration's -enthouse. And one can safety assume, that they will do everything in their power to stop it from developing. After all,' they remember the days when the penthouse was almost destroyed. Charles Stein is city editor of The Daily. strike along large blocs i parents exercise over tuition payments could significantly cut down the number of strike participants. While they are undoubtedly disgusted by the burdens imposed by the massive tuition hike, few parents are likely to show much sympathy for civil disobedience tactics di- rected towards the University. On a much broader and perhaps more critical level, the strike must overcome the barriers imposed by the campus history of the last three years. TO CHALLENGE a powerful opponent like the University, students must regain In retrospect we can also see that the Movement produced the' large-scale para- noia in the Nixon Administration that found its expression in tl4e Watergate affair. AS MIGHT BE expected, the old timers who took part in those major sprotests have been drawn like a magnet to the tuition strike. They attend strike <-meetipgs with visions of past glory in their eyes and Marx- ist analyses on their tongues. Yet those who see the present movement as a repeat performance of the 60s are engaging in a bit of wishful thinking. To- day's student is simply not about to partici- ., II 'I The planning shortage Shortage. datory all The word stares out from well - nigh ed. every front page these days. There is the "In the soybean shortage; the rice shortage; the policy, dis energy shortage. certain re And now it appears that last year's moderately mock oil shortage may turn into this A nation year's disaster. At least, that's the opinion sult from of a Congressional study issued Saturday: economicc Even under the best of weather and sup- paralleled ply conditions, localized fuel shortages At thisl can be expected this winter unless a man- federal go the fuel w gressional But the tion of th Editorial Staff ture ofc CHRISTOPHER PARKS and EUGENE ROBINSON President1 Co-Editors in Chief of measure ROBERT BARKIN.................... Fature tEditor DIANE LEVICK .......................... Arts Editor most of wl MARTIN PORTER....................Sunday Editor fect in the MARILYN RILEY......... Associate Managing Editor It seems ZACHARY SCHILLER .............. Editorial Director ERIC SCHOCH....... ............. Editorial Director these prop TONY SCHWARTZ.................... Sunday Editor' to thinkc CHARLES STEIN............ ............City Editor ghettoes h; TED 'STEIN .... Executive Editor fore. theya ROLFE TESSEM....................Managing Editor' cars must TODAY'S STAFF: traffic an ternative t News: Ted Evanoff, Chris Parks, Cheryl cussed. Pilate, Sue Stephenson, Rolfe Tessem It is imp Editorial Page: Ted Hartzell, Zachary tions to an Schiller, Charles Wilbur are sudden itself. Thu Arts Page: Diane Levick in advanc Photo Technician: David Margolick we be able . -\ a/ - ~~'7 ocation program is implement- absence of effective federal astrous shortages could strike gions" if the winter is only y cold, the report said. pwide fuel shortage could re- severe weather, causing "an crisis for the United States un- since the Great Depression." point, there is little more the vernment can do than allocate rhich is available, as the Con- study suggests. whole crisis is a good illustra- e careless and unplanned na- our decision-making process. Nixon has-proposed a number es to remedy the fuel shortage, hich will have little or no ef- months or even years to come. s that only when a, crisis of' portions strikes, can we, begin of ways to combat it. Urban ave to explode with riots be- are considered to be problems; choke the expressways with d the air with smog before al- transportation systems are dis- possible to reach equitable solu- ny of these problems when we ly confronted with the crisis s, only when we begin to plan e on all of these questions, will to find suitable answers. ruggle: operate in a democratic EE IF these people "don't and' democracy, one need end one of their mass meet- which there is open and )w of conversation from the us persons on the table to ience and back. the sheriffs shifted their eaking tactics from mass to arrests of picket cap-- who were arrested six or imes in five days, each picket captains and others d had to direct confronta- ith the cops were called to e to speak. And speak they ways which aroused the of most everyone there, ncludedra large proportion ;r workers and was about f women. this very democracy a n d vel of morale which seems he main strengths of th e at present. Although t hie has caused nearly half'.the to rot on- the vines (the der being picked by those ve accepted the Teamster t, by scabs brought in il- from Mexico, or by persons to the fields and put to ot knowing that they were reaking), itwas continuous- hhasized that the strike is without the boycott. THAT the strike funds have many of the strikers will to return to work in other but thetboycott must and >ntinue to put pressure on owers. are certain weaknesses in iement. One of them seems unt in part for why asnum- farmworkers have signed e Teamsters. Although large s of farmworkers have been and/or blackmailed into with the Teamsters and, have joined out of fear of no job, some have joined they don't like the UFW hall. iring halls were established UFW to replace the labor tor (boss) system of hiring. the latter system, people red by the growers through or contractor who hired on the basis of personal =ce, including kickbacks. In ng hall, however, the grow- e the workers through the hall which assigns the jobs View from the .4 fields THtE &-AAJ'GFAT14E& 4 4 according to seniority, not favor- itism. DISSATISFACTION with the hir- ing hall stems from several fac- tors. First, there are three types of seniority according to which as- signments are given outin the hir- ing hall: UFW seniority, senior- ity for the corporation for which one is picking, and seniority on a particular farm. Problems arise since there is no clear priority among these three seniorities. A second problem is that the ad- ministrators, being human, tend to Jlose their tempers and some become authoritarian, all of which leads to personality problems. (II ) / I . i 7,, ) t Letters to The Daily et le S 1 1 8LI.W A third is the contradiction be- tween those who need jobs to pay their dues and the fact that the union, which needs the dues to keep alive, requires that the dues be paid before assignments a r e given out. ONE PROBLEM of the hiring hall which won't disappear so fast, however, is that the growers, dis- liking the union and the hiring hall, and knowing exactly how it works, do everything they can to screw it up. They change the number of people requested . and the times and places workers have been re- quested for, after people have been dispatched, causing loss of income to the pickers and hostility to be. directed incorrectly at the hiring halls. Another problem seems to be the UFW's strong reliance of Cesar Chavez himself. When he is not around, very few important decis- ions are made. A third problem concerns or- ganizing and maintaining discipline on the lines. As the strike moved north both seemed to decline. FINALLY, the UFW is faced with a problem in that the boycott is aimed at hurting the profits of the growers. Many in the UFW feel that the growers, living high off the profits of the prior three-year con- tract, can absorb this year's loss without giving in, but by the se- cond and third years of the boy- cott they will begin to feel it and be ready to negotiate more ser- iously. The reasoning seems to have been successful in the past and holds forth as a good possibil- ity in the future. One must keep in mind, however, that the agri-business of California THERE IS some question as to what the ultimate goals of the strike and the union are. It clear- lv seems like more than a strike for wages, for it includes a defin- ite element of demanding dignity, self-respect, and workers control over the workplace. While there was no ideological discussion of strategy or of who we are fighting, there isno place that I have ever been where it is clearer to the participants, or even to an observer, who is the enemy and why. The cops with their backs to the field and their clubs fac- ing the farmworkers and the grow- ers whose scabs open fire on UFW lines make it very clear as to who is doing what to whom. Some in the union see the strike as a short-term economic and cul- tilral battle and some recognize that the goals of the movement cannot be achieved within the cap- italist system. BUT AS THE strike goes on and the farmworkers, every day, find themselves face to f ace with a united front ofacops, courts, grow- ers, and teamsters, all against them, more and more people see the "democracy" of the capitalist U.S. revealed more plainly in daily life for the farce and hypocritical oppressive society which it is. One should be wary of criticizing the ideology or lack of it too strong- lv, before one has seen the mutual development of the struggle and the theory. In sm, the UFW is in a strug- gle which can be won and which can educate people as to, the limits of "freedom" in a capitalist society. It is not a movement with- o1t its faults, many' of which it is / /1// knee-jerk To The Daily: . RECENTLY the "knee-jerk" lib- erals on campus havecome to crit- icize the coup which occurred in Chile. These left-wingers have crit- icized this military coup as an op- pression of the Chilean people al- though Chile's two largest political parties have come to the defense of the junta. The military, which has b e e n traditionally neutral in politics, overthrew Allende because of his inability to keep Chile on a stable path. Allende, in his fervor to bring socialism to Chile, threw the Chilean economy into rampant in- flation. Allende, out of either stup- idity or blind nationalism, tossed foreign industries (especially t h e cnmer inditrvi out of Chile in- Allende made the tragic mistake the rodeo had been sanctioned by of offering the Chilean people only the American Humane Association. two alternatives - socialism or Unfortunately, such a sanction is stability. Recent events have de- no guarantee that the animals will monstrated that the people of Cile not be brutally treated. I have seen preferred stability. rodeos in the Southwest that were also "sanctioned" by the Ameri- It has now become fashiomable can Humane Association where the on the part of The Daily, S.G.C., practices mentioned in the Way's and the rest of the campus radicals letter were much in evidence. It to blame the coup on the United just isn't enough to blandly assume States government. Unless these that all is A-O.K. because the AHA groups have documented proof of puts its stamp of approval on such this fact, they should apologize to an event and I am surprised that the University student body for The Daily didn't dig a little deeper insulting our intelligence with such crap. Why don't tae campus ra:i- i yisubject. cals protest such important issues If you had dugs'a little deeper, as the Russian wheat deel and you would have discovered that no Phase IV price controls? national humane society approves rodeo. The policing of a rodeo by -David A. Lambert, '76 humane agents means no less suf- Sept. 15 fering for the animals involved. C'r nnnn'ha c.- ...--..-. -" 19 as \Ll PNIUM a / /