Iie SiritgDn Dait Eighty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Loo lz (706 10 -M6~ I ( 19 WR~t'6 'cvW a. 1)n-I I WOAS 0T RIGHTS, YOUR I was W6w i ,An0wrs I'!r!"f':1 W1{A7 CL-'; Friday, February 25, 1977 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan AFSCME needs our help. Let's not let them down 4-P~m I a Owl ;.. .;, ,1? I 'or 1 OAAT? CLOD. -flE R6Wf CLoB. AS THE AFSCME strike heads into its third day, it is disenchanting to see the nonchalant attitude of the University, and the repressive actions, of the. Ann Arbor Police. For some misguided reason, the administration seems willing to wait the union out, come hell or high water. But, at whose expense? The students', of course. The University is in the perfect situation --it's got' the students over a barrel, and the strike isn't costing them anything. As long as school re- mains open, and the cafeterias are serving food, we have to continue to attend class, ride scab buses, and eat food prepared and served by scab workers. Aid, if we try to join the picket lines, we are subject to the sort of violence that saw several stu- dents beaten by police officers with billy clubs outside East quad yester- day. And does the University care? Apparently not, since the administra- tion has not yet even considered mak- ing AFSCME a decent offer. And why should it? Not only are students capitulating to the Univer- sity's tactics, but each day that the workers are out, the University gets away without paying their salaries. So, what does the administration care if the strike continues if students won't complain, and AFSCME doesn't get paid? BUT WE, THE STUDENTS, can make the administration care. We have to let the University know that we want service workers to earn a de- cent wage, and that we won't tol- erate a "wait and see" attitude about this strike. There are several means of protest available to students: * Don't work as a scab. The Uni- versity is trying to convince students to work in cafeterias; clean bath- rooms and drive buses in place of striking workers - for little more than half the usual salary. Sure, we'd all like to make a few extra bucks, but not at the expense of AFSCME workers. If you don't presently work for the University, don't start. And if you usually do service work, part- time, don't accept any increase in your work load. Right now the Uni- versity is saving money by paying students a paltry $2.30 an hour to do AFSCME's work. By not helping the administration, you will be sup- porting the strike, and telling the University that you want some ac- tion taken. * WRITE, OR CALL the Regents, and have your parents do the same. If the Regents are flooded with letters and phone calls they could apply pressure on the administra- tion to get moving and end this strike by making a decent offer to the union. Let the Regents know you are fed up, and they will react. Here are the Regents' phone numbers and addresses: Deane Baker - phone, (313) 769-1551 address, 4944 Scio Church Rd., Ann Arbor 48103 Paul Brown - phone, (616) 347-3907 address, First National Bank Bldg., Petosky 49779 Gerald Dunn - phone (313) 422-1200, ext. 315 address, 15125 Farmington Rd., Livonia 48154 David Laro - phone, (313) 733-3310 address, Suite 101 Executive Plaza, G-3235 Beecher Rd., Flint 48504 Robert Nederlander - phone, (313) 905-5565 address, 1930 Buhl Bldg., Detroit 48226 Sarah Power - phone, (313) 994-4374 address, 527 E. Liberty, Ann Arbor 48108 Thomas Roach - phone, (313) 963- 3400 address, 2150 Guardian Bldg., Detroit 48226 James Waters - phone, (616) 726-. 4861 address, 1440 Peck, P.O. Box 27, Muskegon 49443 AND LAST, BUT NOT LEAST, come to the Diag at noon today for a rally sponsored by AFSCME Student Support Committee, and join those picket lines. AFSCME needs our help. Let's not let them down. L97 M ~c, PO 7 C COR3AT(U WHOkl IAR6 meN RtHr C~kTACTS. sexsWYt AcOC ~yr ACCID't' I Prr AFSCME To the Daily: February 16, 1977, the LSA Student Government Executive Council endorsed the contrac- tual demands of AFSCME Local 1583. February 23, 1977, the 1S&A-SG endorsed the AFSCME strike. We urge the University to immediately offer a fair and just settlement to AFSCME, so that the strike may be ended, and conditions at the University may return to normal. --LSA Student Gov't. Executive Council -Mike Taylor -Theo Yemen -Joel Klein -Eugene Juergens -Shareen Ober -Jodi Wolens -Phil Weiss -Don Share -John Edmond -Dick Brazee -Janet Yeghissian To the Iya.hy: Let us see what the University Letters is really doing. For three years under their previous contract, AFSCME workers were over- worked, underpaid and exploit- ed. When their contract ran out this year, they extended dead- lines four times to avoid a strike, hoping to come to a com- mon, favorable agreement with the University. The University policy has long been to break the Union if they couldn't get the Union to give in to dirt cheap contracts. AFSCME said NO to the University. Soy now who is being exploited: Students: But not by AFSCME as stated by the left side on Thursday, but by the University. Students are being offered "stu- dent" pay to cross the picket line and do Union work. Lower level -administrators, too, are being exploited. On Wednesday four cafeteria ad- ministrators w o r k e d twelve hours, attempting to fill the jobs of about twelve Union workers. Ito te These administrators are sup- posed to represent the Univer- sity. They are carrying out Uni- versity desires by threatening student workers who refuse to cross the picket line. However, these people, too, should be out on the lines. The enemies are not the workers. The enemies are the high level administrators who sit at their desks and watch: they are responsible forrunning our expensive institute for high- er learning more like a multi- million dollar corporation than a university. -Sarah Warren -Ramon Berguer for the Student Support Committee MSA To the Daily: This letter to the editors of the Michigan Daily is intended to acquaint the readers of' the Daily with the facts concerning the case of Michigan Student Assemblyman Stewart Mandell and to disclose the remissness of the Daily's coverage of the confrontation between Mandell and the Michigan Student As- sembly (MSA). On Wednesday, February 23, the Daily printed a letter to the editor from Irving Freeman of MSA who.reported that Mandell was no longer a member of MSA and that Mandell wsas tak- ing tis case before the Central Student Judiciary (CSJ) com- mittee who was deciding the case. On Monday, February 21, CSJ had ruled that Mandell had been unjustly removed from his seat on MSA and should be im- mediately reinstated. Two days after CSJ made its determina- tion, the Daily printed a letter claiming that Mandell was not a member of MSA and that no decision had been reached by CSJ! In light of this it seems clear that the Daily is guilty of irre- Daily d _ r " - r. ". ; ' t r .. f. ,y . a J THE MALE ROLE AND IMAGE by NIC and KAREN TAMBORRIELLO THE CIEF? 7,004 A YEM WHY? j\ ( 4 . ~ __ :L~~ - -:6 Let's not trade restri ctionls with the Soviet Union Working hard every day Bringing home all my pay just to hear you sa-y That you love me baby. "From Now On"-Lou Rawls N LAST week's column we presented sketches ofworking men. Given the variety of jobs and the limited space of this column, we are of course limited in what we can present. Therefore, we have sought to express the threads of com- monality that run through the male experience. We feel safe in concluding that even though some change has occurred, most men assume the breadwinner role as their primary consideration. Given the image of men in all forms of media and most life experiences, young boys grow to adulthood with scarcely a thought as to the consequences of a career choice. Of course economic factors are considered, and working en- vironment is given some thought, and usually geography. But for most of us, it's impossible to determine beforehand whether the balance of career and personal interests will' pro- duce the proper blend to make us happy. Unfortunately, most of us are of the opinion that any job is better than no job at all. This too often leads a person to make commitments and sacrifices that may not be in his or her interest. If that person has assumed responsibility for the well-being of others, namely the breadwinner role and its variations, alternatives to tradi- tional jobs are usually invisible or at best seem impossible. ONE ALTERNATIVE to traditional work patterns for bus- bands and wives, or for any two people living together, is a complete role reversal. That is. the male becomes the house- husband or homemaker and the female earns the family in- come outside the home. This arrangement could be adopted either permanently or by turns or even once in a lifetime. The experience for those who have done it even briefly usually results in a humanizing of both workplaces brought about through a broadening of each person's roles. It enables both people to realize the pluses and minuses attached to each role so as to be able to enhance the pleasures and diminish the drawbacks. Mike McGrady in The Kitchen Sink Papers relates what it was like to have primary responsibility to run the house and raise children for one year while his wife, Corrine, became the breadwinper. * He discovered that sort'ing the family socks after washing them was a time consuming, frustrating ordeal. Eventually he instituted a plan for each family member to pick out his or her socks from the laundry basket. ,BEFORE THE ROLE reversal he had never considered what it had meant in terms of time and effort to open his dresser drawer to see rows of neatly folded, paired, and color matched socks. Nor had he felt the disappointment of preparing a spec- ial dinner only to have Corrine arrive two hours late because of being "tied up" at the ofice and worse yet, the humiliation of being oi-en an allowance of spending money by Corrine who communication and understanding as they are able to discuss happenings or decisions at either workplace with a more total comprehension by knowing exactly what the other person is expressing. ANOTHESR VARIATION is for both people to simply workf parttime although not necessarily- at the same, job._ In fact, if they work the same shifts, they will have freed up more time to spend leisurely with each other in order to develop or pursue similar interests and to grow together. If they work different shifts, they can each be available half of the time for raising the children. The children benefit from being exposed to two personalities, instead of one, and fathers have a greater opportunity to share daily living with their children. These children further benefit from seeing a father who succeeds and fails during the course of a day rather than someone who gees out of the house daily to some mystical workplace. The ar- rangement also permits a mother to pursue a job or continue her education while raising young children. Of course, there are advantages and disadvantages to part- time work besides those pertinent to sex roles. Society gains through having another person's talents at work. Business in general improves as shopping areas, restaurants, theatres, etc. enjoy more even usage of their facilities. Rush hour traffic and congested mass transit systems can be alleviated. FOR THE INDIVIDUAL working part-time. it is possible to eat more healthful and inexpensive meals at home than out, and to maintain a less expensive work wardrobe. On the other hand, an individual who alters the traditional work scheme should expect to encounter some censure from friends and relatives. Co-workers may doubt your "drive." Career ad- vancement may be limited vertically, but probably widened horizontally as you feel freer to try various kinds of work. Most infortunately part-time work is usually not compensated adeciately and does not often include the fringe benefits of medical insurance or accrued vacation time. Typically that is true because ma-v part-time jobs have been "women's jobs." However as part-time work becomes more popular, pressure can be brought to bear to improve its rewards. There are other job alternatives including a shortened work week of four days or "flexitime" where an employee can set his or her own hours. HOME BASED emoloyment'is yet another option whether a person chooses to write or paint or to be an auto mechanic or a free lance delivery person. The time saved by not travel- ing to and from work throughout a lifetime is staggering. Be- sides that, think of the decrease in tension'by avoiding traffic jams, the decrease in exposure to fumes from an hour in traffic everyday, and the savings in terms of what you have to snend on fuel. Finally, some consideration and leeitlation could be en- couraged for homemaker nayments so that whoever works at home ^onld be compensated montetarily and therefore removed from lgve, martyr. or subordinate status. Each of us anticipates life to be a multi-varied set of exneriences that will contain the elements necessary for an existence that we can call' fulfilling. However, the extreme delineations of sex roles in this countrv lead men and women down such divergent paths that each sex is denied the experiences of the other. THE DENTAL of the fllest -range of experiences leads *in av y^n to diffic-1tv of communication- not only between the sexes but within each sex, a sense of individual trauma for those not suited for traditional roles, and a perpetuation of false values. These value include among them that men are in most wavys sinerior to women and therefore men should be nroviders for women. Tf ,n,. ----, 11+-h -lo f na in i enh ,i- sponsible journalism on several counts. Initially, the Daily was neglectful in its investigatory responsibilities. While clainting in numerous advertisements to be increasingly proficient in its reporting, the Daily was un- aware of theoutcome of the suit before CSJ despite having print- ed the time and place of the hearing. On two occasions Man- dell's plight was awarded front page coverage but when the case was at its conclusion. the Daily failed to cover the out- come. Secondly, the Daily was derelict in that they printed Freeman's letter without verify- ing the facts contained therein. Further, the Daily was cogni- zant of the outcome of the CSJ hearing. Mandell c a 11 e d the Daily and gave a statement im- mediately following the hearing. At the time of this writing, three articles have appeared d scribing Mandels remoal and subsequent request for reinstate- ment and yet the Daily neglect- ed to follow the case up with a report of the outcome. On Mon- day, Mandell was reinstated as a member of MSA and on Tues- day he attended the MSA meet- ing as a full member. - -Tim Beyer Legal Advisor for Stew Mandell GEO To the Daily: In the last part of your Feb- -ruary 23, 1977 article on the Un- fair Labor Practice hearing in- volving GEO, statements made by me were used in an irre- sponsible manner in an attempt .to discredit some of GEO's testi- mony. The first statement at- tributed to me was never made; neither was it true. The content and context of the second state- ment were altered slightly, b'ut this change was enough to pro- duce a major misrepresentation of what was said. The third statement, the only one support- ing our position, was accurate. The fourth (and last) statement was made in a separate part of the interview. Using this statement in an entirely dif- ferent context not only produced a major shift in the focus of the statement, it also changed its reference. , We spent a lot of time pre- paring our testimony, making sure that it was correct and that it would stand up uder stiff cross-examination. I do not have, nor have I expressed, reservations about the accuracy of our testimony, and I am con- cerned that my quotes were dis- torted to produce such an im- age. Igam also disturbed about an- other aspect of this article. GEO presented its evidence under oath in open court, subject to cross-examination and rebuttal testimony, -and the Administra- tion did not challenge or refute any of the testimony we pre- sented. Neither did they present any evidence of their own. But' after the' hearing, they made statements challenging the cred- ibility of our witnesses and they presented bits of unsworn evi- dence, safe from cross-exam- ination and rebuttal testimony. By reporting these cowardly al- legations on a par with our sworn court ?testimony, The Daily has let the Administration try a case in the newspapers which they refused to try in court. The Administration's actions and statements in this case have once again revealed their con- tempt for due process and fair treatment. These attitudes were a major factor in the formation of GEO; their persistence is the major factor in hostile labor relations between the Admini- NINETEEN Michigan counties and the city of Detroit have been tabbed as off-limit territory for So- viet officials and Journalists in a move which we can only call child- ish and stupid. It's which United ficials State Union from a territo all part of a retaliatory plan makes 23 per cent of the States off limits to Soviet of- and journalists because, as the Department said, the Soviet banned American officials a proportional amount of its ry. SUCH INFANTILE tit for tat play goes against the basic principle of freedom by which this nation was founded. When we take into account the State Department's random coun- ty selection, this entire action reeks of the most repugnant, if not childish, reasoning. Are we going to see customs booths constructed on all major highways to weed out Russians from the chosen counties? Or will hunters scour Charlevoix, Keewanaw anid Isoco counties for suspicious looking fore- ;n ^"l 'nt ieen i a 141I h fn ,,111 I