Page 2-Tuesday, January 10, 1978-The Michigan Daily I' RAPHIC °RTS NT. NION 289 City to decriminalize public drunkenness i\ T~~©I7 WELCOMES YOU TO ANN ARBOR'S FIRST UNION COPY SHOP The employees of Accu-Copy belong to G.A.I.U. local 289 and won their first union contract for job security on December 11, 1977. The union workers of Accu-Copy unanimously ratified their contract which contained the main objectives of the strike, job security and a union shop clause and are anxious to provide their expert services to you. Show the world you are in support of the betterment of (Continued from Page 1) disturbance" was left conspicuously undefined. Councilman Earl Greene (D-2nd Ward) was voted down when he moved to eliminate any reference at all to intoxication from the criminal code. "I'm really concerned with people not being arrested simply because they're intoxicated," Greene said. "We've come a long way to deal with intoxication in such a manner." Councilman Louis Belcher (R-5th Ward) expressed concern that under the new ordinance police would have no legal means of intervening if they see a drunk unconscious on a public street 'even in freezing weather.'' ACTING CITY ATTORNEY Bruce Laidlaw informed Council that any amendment to deal with such an in- stance was prohibited under the new state law. Council also passed the first draft of a human rights ordinance that bore little resemblance to the one proposed at the beginning of last night's debate. Most complaints criticized the or- dinance as either too all-inclusive o too vague. Councilman Roger Bertoia (R-3rd Ward), who referred to the ordinance as "a laundry list," complained that "when it got beyond race, color, religion, sex and national origin it was reduced to an unworkable document." THE HEAVILY-AMENDED ordi- nance that finally passed omitted two clauses outlawing discrimination on the basis of personal appearance and party affiliation. An ordinance passed at first reading goes into a working session and is amended and brought before the public before it comes up for second reading. Lesbian appeal heard, (Continued from Page 1) friend of the court and a child psy- chologist recommended that the girl stay with her mother because of their emotional attachment. BURGOYNE SAYS she is fairly op- timistic about the appeal. Miller, however, admits she is apprehensive because she had thought she had' a strong case when she appeared for the original trial. Miller's ex-husband refused to comment on the case. working people by REMEMBER TO... supporting our local union shop. AND ASK FOR T HE ANION b2 ABEL o0o e rDNSE Ry, v G 2 _ c C> zNO a Is. ./1 LOCAL 289 ACCU-COPY:-524 E. WILLIAM Street !!! You will receive the finest quality copies at low prices, reproduced by union workers who " have been in the photo-copy business longer than any employees at any other copy shop in Ann Arbor. Experience and the pride of union workers makes the difference in the good service you will receive at ACCU-COPY. .For union made OFFSET printing KOLOSSOS printing at 310 E. Washington can serve your offset needs. PROJECT OUTREACH Department of Psychology Experimental learning in over 40 different Com- munity settings-mental institutions, hospitals, community services, schools, geriatrics, day care facilities, etc. Attempting to shield himself from yesterday's vicious weather, student Pat Gardner makes his way across a frosty campus. Winter wind, cy cold swepthroughste (UPI)- Thousands of school chil- dren throughout Michigan got an un- expected break from classes yester day after snow, high winds and bitter cold temperatures moved into the state and created havoc on roads and highways'. In many areas, visibility was poor on ice-slicked roads due to blowing snow and numerous accidents were reported. Authorities said drifting snow made M-28 impassable in some sec- tions and a portion of the highway be- tween Marquette and Munising was closed for several hours. MARQUETTE WAS hit with three inches of new snow in six hours, bringing the ground total to 26 inches. Detroit and other areas in southeast- ern Lower Michigan received about two inches of new snow. Bone-chilling cold was widespread. In Alpena; the wind chill reading early today was 37 below zero while in Lansing the index plummeted'to minus 29. By 8 a.m., the warmest tempera- ture. in Michigan was 15 while the coldest spot was Sault Ste. Marie at nine below zero. If interested: Come to' ACCU-COPY: phone 769-8338 !!! FOR QUESTIONS YOU MAY HAVE ON YOUR RIGHTS UNDER LABOR LAW TO ORGANIZE WITH YOUR FELLOW EMPLOYEES AND SECURE UNION REPRESENTATION; or for any other information you may need: CALL: G.A.I.U. local 289, Ph. 345-5965 (area 313) a 0 CD E. y CCU- COPS Ia m 3c . one block west of the Uof M central campus DIAG. Outreach Mass Meeting Wed., Jan. 11,7:30 pm Hill Auditorium QUESTIONS? Registrovion Information and Procedures? Come to Corner House (introductory Psychology Building) 554 Thompson St. (Corner of Thompson and Madison) or Call 764-9279, 764-9176 HELP OTHERS TO HELP THEMSELVES PSYCHOLOGY 201 d1 U averts possible federal fund cutoff cn CD (Continued from Page 1) cern is that we don't monitor our affir- mative action program from the cen- tral office," Fleming said. "We leave it to the departments and colleges. We Rose Bowl 1978 Michigan vs. Washington The Most Beautiful Air View Ever Token Full Color 16" x 20" Poster ONLY $3.50 rN. I -wabpmm-m--, r III- I -1 READ and USE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS University k CELLAR of Michigan- Bookstore I in 1 / Does iaking extra money sound like music to your ears? give them a set of instructions and then rely on them to carry them out. But they (OCR) say that we have noway of knowing that the plan is being adhered to if it isn't monitored from the central office. So," he concluded, "I suppose we'll have to give more attention to it centrally." BERNARD ROGERS, who headed the team that visited the University, agreed with Fleming that the major problem was a procedural one. "We're not saying that the University has not operated in good faith;" he said. "We're only saying that we found some deficiencies." Rogers also said that yesterday's meeting went extremely well and that he was "very happy with the agree ment." Although details of the agreement were not available, Rogers did say the changes the University will make are "mostly changes in how to go abouf promoting affirmative action." Accord- ing to Rogers, there were no real changes in basic questions such as goals or timetables. 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