I Striking state farmers close livestock exchange The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, January 10, 1978-:,Page 5 After summer off the hook, Switchboard is back By United Press International Striking Michigan farmers braved bitterly cold temperatures and driv- ing snow yesterday as they succeed- ed in closing a southwestern live- stock exchange for several hours. The tractor blockade at the Michi- gan Livestock Exchange terminal in Cassopolis came as somewhat of a surprise. Although such activities were planned, a spokesperson for the farmers said earlier in the day blockades would not be staged until later in the week. CASS COUNTY authorities said the farmers blocked all traffic to and from the Cassopolis terminal during the morning hours but agreed in the afternoon to let a few trucks through. The striking farmers, primarily from nearby Buchanan, remained outside the terminal throughout the day despite temperatures in the teens and heavy snow, whipped by strong winds, that closed many roads in the area. Authorities said the demonstration was peaceful. At the same time, a group of farmers converged on a livestock ex- change terminal in Washtenaw Coun- ty in hopes of convincing more farmers to join their ranks. LOUIS SAUNDERS, an official at ... the American Agriculture Move- ment's state office in Coldwater, said farmers from Lansing, Coldwater and Tecumseh gathered at the Manchester site. Saunders said the farmers planned demonstrations each day this week. "We plan blockades this week but first we want to talk with more farm- ers," Saunders said. "We will shut them (the exchanges) down after we talk some. "We'll visit one every day and talk. First Manchester, then Battle Creek, Vandalia and Coldwater. Then we'll close them." THE BLOCKADES were aimed at halting livestock sales in southwest- ern Michigan. The farmers reportedly were an- gered by Gov. William G. Milliken's failure to meet with federal officials on farm issues. A spokesman for Milliken said the governor never promised to attend such a meeting but did appoint two Michigan farmers to attend meetings with Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland. % By R. J. SMITH In the late Sixties, a multi-purpose source of information for city resi- dents was founded on the corner of William and Main. Called Commun- ity Switchboard, it supplied citizens with information about films, plays, concerts and lectures in the area and provided aid to people with legal and medical problems. For a long time, the service seemed to be doing well; but last summer the program faltered, then eventually closed, after several of the Switchboard's programmers moved to California. Now the Switch- board is back, with a new location and some pretty ambitious goals. "WE'RE GOING TO try and get the People's Yellow Pages back together in Ann Arbor . . . it will contain organizations that we feel are beneficial to the community," said Switchboard operator Kathy Prochnow. "We're not going to put organiza- tions in who rip people off," she said. "It's just a place where people can go and get help. It's not like the regular Yellow Pages; it's a phone book but it's different." Now located at 608 N. Main Street (in the same building that houses Drug Help and Ozone House), the Switchboard is reached by dialing 663-1111. The program is staffed by ten students and seven community members, and is non-profit, as it has always been. ONCE IN FULL swing - that is, once things get organized again after vacations - the Switchboard also plans to add several new services to the ones it used to provide. "We have a ride exchange, and an in action animal exchange," said Prochnow. "If you have a pet to give away, you fill out a card and put it on file; if you then, say, want kittens, we can arrange a trade with someone who ha§ kittens." A learning exchange file is also being collected; information on how to do such things as winning at canasta, playing deck tennis or knitting can be taken from the file or exchanged with people who have such skills. Snow doesn't cross -m - i Farm secretary says 'no~ to 1 00% Parity Sc fa to of at eq $4 cross-country skiers (ContinuedfromPage) ehneider's Sport Shops. "Quite a few Washtenaw County Parks and milies have been coming in lately, Recreation Commission is conducting a o-although there's a broad mixture program offering county residentsan people, not one exclusive group." hour and a half of out-in-the-snow ski Most local sporing goods stores stock instruction for a $3 fee. Though the least one line of cross-country program's January sessions are filled, iuipment. Skis cost anywhere from places remain open in the February 0 to $125, boots run between $30 and classes, which are held Tuesday and 0, poles are $8-$16 and bindings $7-$8. Wednesday nights at 6:30 and 8:30 p.m. - Three 'new LSA-SG suits filed By STEVE GOLD LSA Student Government (LSA-SG) Election Director Ted Yemen, who is already being sued for $100 as awresult of alleged improprieties in last month's LSA-SG election, is now under fire on a second front. Three new suits have been filed against Yemen by candidates in the Literary College election. While the first suit is directed at Yemen as elec- tion director, the new suits charge Yemen personally and make no refer- ¢ence t4 fisrtitle. The sits, filed by can- dd't i th9-last electio, due process aand afedom of speech and that he ac- ted to discriminate against students on the basis of their political beliefs. IRVING FREEMAN, Jasper DiGiuseppe and Mike Spirnak filed their suits with the Central Student Judiciary (CSJ),edemanding that Yemen and Assistant Election Director Michael Harwood each pay fines of $50 and make both public and written apologies to the defendants. CSJ Chief Justice Tom Potter said he did not know when the suits would be heard, but expressed a desire "to avoid some hassles" by delaying a hearing until after the first suit, which is before the LSA Academic Judiciary, is settled. That suit, in addition to dealing with the broad issues of freedom of speech and due process, also deals with the specific question of whether or not Yemen and Harwood violated the LSA- SG Election Code by removing cam- paign posters belonging to the Bullshit and Forces of Goodness and Niceness parties. It also charges several technical violations regarding the date of the election and the wording of the ballot. Yemen and Harwood claim that the candidates gave "implied consent" for the election officials to use their disgression in removing campaign materials they felt were excessivley posted or libelous. At least one other person who was at the candidates' meeting agrees that this consent was given. LSA-SG President Dick Brazee said that the technical violations resulted because last term's exam schedule for- ced the election to be held closer to the filing deadline than is normally allowed. He said it was an "oversite" that all of the relevant Election Code provisions were not officially waived by LSA-SG. ADVENTURE MOVIE NEW YORK (AP) - Metro-gold- wyn-Mayer recently announced that Bob Rafelson Will produce and direct "At Play in the Fields of the Lord," based on the novel by naturalist and explorer Peter Mattheissen. "Fields" is a drama of high adven- ture set in the Amazon jungles. Mat- theissen is also the author of "Blue 'Meridian" which was filmed under the title of "Blue Water, White Death." I A Lua... HOUSTON (UPI)-Family farming could be virtually destroyed if the government gives striking farmers a guaranteed floor of 100 per cent of parity under farm prices, Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland said yester- day. The program could be operated only with a government-run marketing con- trol system that would be "an ad- ministrative and bdreaucratic mon- strosity," Bergland said in a speech prepared for the annual convention of the American Farm Bureau Federation. THE PROPOSED guarantee of high supports would be "Politically unac- ceptable" to most Americans because of high costs, and "such a program would drive already high farm land prices to astronomical heights and vir- tually eliminate farm family agriculture itself," Bergland added. The secretary said he supports the constitutional right of a farm strike movement to protest low prices. He praised strikers for focusing public at- tention on the plight of many farmers and said farmers are entitled to a "fair return." But in one of his bluntest rebuttals to the strike movement to date, Bergland said that while the nation has a respon- sibility to keep the farm economy productive and strong, the Carter ad- ministration "stands by its policy . -. . that it is not possible and not the role of the federal government to guarantee all farmers a profit year after year." The full parity prices demanded by the strike movement would give farm commodities the same purchasing power they had-in comparison with the cost of things farmers buy-in the 1910-14 period more than 60 years ago. BERGLAND ALSO urged the Farm Bureau to recognize the "political realities," which he said make it necessary for farmers to cultivate con- sumer allies in order to maintain farm political influence in Congress. The Agriculture Secretary said some critics charge he has made his depar- Cment too consumer-oriented. But, he replied, "reality demands that farmers and their organizations must learn to count in Congress . . . what better political allies do we have than the con- sumers." Bergland said the administration is pushing a variety of programs aimed at expanding overseas sales, of American farm products. He added the ad- ministration and the big farm organization, which had been a frequent critic of farm policy under past Democratic rule, agree on op- posing any future embargoes on farm exports except in cases of "genunine national emergency." Mvany Ann Arbor stores otter package deals, including skis, boots, poles and bindings, for $75 to $135. Rentals are also available in a number of stores. FOR THE FIFTH year in a row, the HOUSING DIVISION~ RESIDENT STAFF APPLICATION FORMS FOR 1978-79 ACADEMIC YEAR Available Starting January 16, 1978 In Ms. Charlene Coady's Office, 1500 SAB POSITIONS INCLUDE: Head Resident, Resident Director, Assistant Resident Director, Resident Advisor, Head Librarian, Resident Fellow, CULS Counselor and Graduate . Student Teaching Assistant Advisory positions require the completion of a minimum of 55 credit hours by the end of the'1978 Winter term for the:Resident Fellows in Residential.College, Resident Advisor and CULS Counselor positions: Graduate status for Graduate Student Teaching Assistant in Pilot Program, Heid Librarian, Head Resident and Resident Director positions. However, qualified undergraduate applicants may be considered for the Resident Director positions. QUALIFICATIONS: (1) Must be a registered U. of M. student on the Ann Arbor Campus during the period of employment.'(2) Must have completed a minimum of 55 credit hours by the end of the 1978 Winter term. (3) Preference will be given to applicants who have lived in residence s halls at University level for at least one year. (4) Undergraduate applicants must have a 2.5 cumulative grade point average and graduate applicants must be in good academic standing at the end of the 1977 Fall term in the school or college in which they are enrolled. (5) Prefer- ence is given to applicants who do not intend to.carry heavy academic schedules and who do not have rigorous outside commitments. (6) Applicants with children will not be considered. (7) Proof of these qualifications may be required. Present staff and other individuals who have an application on file must come to the Housing Office to update their application form. DEADLINE FOR APPLICATION: Reapplying Staff-January 20, 1978 New Applicants-January 27, 1978 A NON-DISCRIMINATORY AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EMPLOYER Would-be skiers may register for'the classes by picking up a registration form at the County Building, City hall or the public library. I STEVE'S LUNCH 1313 SO. UNIVERSITY HOME COOKING IS OUR SPECIATY Breakfast All Day - 3 Eggs, Hash Browns, Toast & Jelly-$1.55 Ham or Bacon or Sausage with 3 Eggs, Hash Browns, Toast & Jelly-$2.15 3 Eggs Rib Eye Steak, Hash Browns, Toast & Jelly-$2.45 Egg Rolls i M e k EVERYDAY SPECIALS Home-made Soups, Beef Barley, Clam, Chowder, etc. Home-made Chill Vegetable Tempuro (served after 2 pm) Hamburger Steak Dinner Fresh Sauteed Vegetables with Brown Rice Baked Flounder Dinner Delicious Korean Bar-b-q Beef (Bul-ko-gee) on Kaiser Roll Fried Fresh Bean Sprouts Kim)Chee TUESDAY-FRIDAY 8-7 SATURDAY 9-7 SUNDAY 10-7 MONDAY 8-3 769-2288 1313 So. University THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SPEED READING Cut your reading time. Get out from under the pres- sure of heavy reading assignments. This class offers the benefits of both individual atten- tion and group interaction. Class fee includes 10 hours of supplementary instruction through the Individualized Learn strategies that help you focus on the most im- portant points while reading for general information. Most participants have found that they can at least double their reading speed while maintaining or im- proving their comprehension. WHEN HOW MUCH? WE Registrat $20.00 Wed. & Th (We follow U. of M. Jan.11 8 Learning Lab. Enrollment is open faculty, staff, and students. to all University Classes meet six consecutive weeks. Days and times available at registration. WHERE9 1610 Washtenaw Ave. Ann Arbor (near Hill St.) t 1 L I