Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, March 15, 1977 PaQe Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY . .. WE MOVED!4 We are proud to announce that we have moved from our original up- stairs location on S. State St. to a N E W STORE and COMPLETE WORKSHOP at 619 E. Wiliam St. just off the Diag. Ann Arbor's 1st and oldest com- plete leather works. Since 1967. We have produced a full line of bags, belts, garments and accesso- ries. We also have the equipment and leather on hand to create your own special orders. Schuma (continued from Page 1) nology, where appropriate. "So many people have no imagination and can't see what's being said," the German-born economist lamented. "If it's smaller and cheaper, all they can think of is the horse and buggy." He said adoption of an inter- mediate level of technology will help provide "a stable growth based on human needs and cre- ativity, restoration of the envir- onment and primary reliance on renewable rather than non-re- newable resources." BUT INTERMEDIATE tech- nology, he said, has "a tenden- cy to disappear." "We have reached a situation BILLIARDS at Reduced Rates for COUPLES Today and Every TUESDAY at THE UNION IA i cher speaks at Hill i where we have only the best and the latest technology and the primitive and unforgettable ba- sic tools, since what is in be- tween has disappeared:" The 60-year-old Schumacher heads the Intermediate Tech- nology Development Group, which works with ,Third World nations in designing some of the "appropriate technology" which he advocates. He said he views the current, highly-industrialized era as a "recent and fairly incomprehen- sible phenomenon" which "can't go on.'' "O I L CONSUMPTION 50 years ago was five per cent of what It is now," Schumacher stated. "And I'll just mention that 100 years ago, there was no cement, no electricity, no steel. All these things which we take for granted now are of very re- cent origin and they all are ex- tremely oil/ or fossil fuel inten- sive. "I'm not saying that we're finished all together, but there is not very much time to rethink everything," he added. Schumacher maintained that the problem is compounded "since the world's tremendous development has been associat- ed with polarization in the pat- tern of settlement." CITING THE United States as an example, he stated that 92 per cent of the population lives in urban areas which comprise only two per cent of the nation's; land area. "All of this has profound con- sequences, particularly in terms of energy," he said, "because that centralized way of livingj makes it quite impossible to make effective use of solar en- ergy, wind power, etc. and makes the society totally de- pendent on fossil fuels." - Schumacher said "It is time to organize ourselves from the grass-roots up and "not lean back and wait for government to do it for us." SCHUMACHER said he does not believe violence is necessary to accomplish a changeover. "By adhering to the Christian doctrine, I think we can do it. In this respect, the Christian doctrine means you have to be as innocent as doves and as cun- ning as serpents. The innocence makes you immune and the cun- ning makes you irresistable." U', union close, but not close (continued from Page i ) with the University. which, both sides admnit, may "THERE ARE quite a lot of. become central in a future con- people concerned about (the is- tract 'settlement. sue)," Block said. "The union' Bargainers have made prelim- is seeking protection for our. inary efforts to decide whether people so they don't lose their striking AFSCME workers will jobs." be subject to disciplinary ac- During the spring break, mean- tion by the University once they while, supervisory personnel return to work, continued their attempt to com- The University does not plan pensate for missing unionumem- to punish or otherwise ridicule bers. returning union members who Campus Housing Director John were not involved in criminal Feldkamp acknowledged that activities connected with the the break was "helpful" in the strike, according to Neff. cleaning up and re-supplying of THOSE PERSONS arrested dorms. and found guilty of "serious FELDKAMP NOTED that the wrongdoings," however, may be University's main problem has subject to disciplinary action or not been one of keeping supplies even discharge from their work. flowing to the dorms, but one of In question are union mem- staffing. bers arrested for vandalism to "We hope the strike doesn't University property. last much longer," he said. Block said the "no reprisal" "We've really been pushing our issue "will be a big factor" in supervisors and staff, and arriving at a final agreement there's just so much you can enough push them." Picket lines remained in place during the break, keeping de- livery trucks moving at slower paces throughout the campus. UNIVERSITY officials said yesterday that AFSCME work- ers are starting to return to their jobs in increasing num- bers, in spite of the strike. In one case, an entire work unit from the union has reported back to work. Many union members report- ed threats to themselves or their families because they were abandoning the walkout, Univer- sity sources said. But AFSCME leader Block re- ported that "less than 10 per cent" of the membership was returning to work. In fact, Block said that some union members who had not initially participa- ted in the strike are now join- ing picket lines. THE SLASHING of tires and smashing of windshields on Uni- ver&ty vehicles continued last week, and several bomb threats in campus buildings were re- ported as well. While AFSCME maintains that the University is being hard-hit by the walkout, cam- pus administration continues to shrug off the strike. "We're continuing to serve students and patients," Neff said. "We have no intention of closing the University. The facts speak for themselves." Council debates waste pians PTP presents Daytie TV. Stars (Continued from Page 1) square one," he said. PLANS FOR the project must be submitted to the DNR by August 1 ift approval is to come from the federal Environmental Protection Agency by September 30. Planning for the sewage treat- ment facility began in fall 1975. Since then, the estimated cost of the expansion has risen $6 mil- lion on the local level alone. The city will contribute only 15 per cent of the cost of building the new facilities. The remaining 85 per cent will originate from state and federal funds. The city, however, will pay all oper- ation costs upon completion of the plant. Price cited reasons for the in-' crease in the cost of the facility, including the addition of nollu-, tion control equipment and a sixteen per cent inflation factor. FUNDING FOR apy additional plans which' are not approved by September 30 must be borne by the city. Although he refused to take a stand supporting either the in- cineration or composting plans, Council member Ronald Trow- bridge (R-Fourth Ward) said, "With incineration we risk the possibility of air pollution, but with composting we add the dangers of seepage into the ground. "The question is, should we pay 40 per cent more to avoid the possibility of air pollution," he said. C,O U N C IL MEMBER Earl Greene (D-Second Ward) said, "It's Tweedle dum or Tweedle dee between the compost and the incinerator. Personally, I'm opposed to smoke or putting oth- er things in the air." Greene added that he was will- ing to take the risk of harmful materials from compost used as landfill and fertilizer rather than risk air pollution from incinera- tion. To change the sewer plan now would increase the time needed before any plans could be ap- proved by the DNR and EPA. I Y6 x ?i" 1{1. BeRNARD BARROW -j(MNNY RYA! " Try Daily Classifieds JUI A BARR "BROOKE ENGLISH' ALL SMY CHILDREN PATRICIA CONWULL -~TRACY DALLAS' EDGE OF NIGHT I SUIWANEE SPRINGS LEATHER WORKS, Famous for Ou H andmade Sandals TONY CRAIG: 'DRAPER SOT" EDGE. Of NIGHT ILDI WIGGINS 'MIEG HAR' LOVE or LIF RON TOMNME "BRIC(E SrERLI%G" LO ;'E OFJ.L)FE Human Sexuality 619 E. William 761-7992 ...f Daily Classifieds Get Results _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.. .inOM&UIB March 25-27 Power Center Fri.-Sun. at 8:00 p.m Sun. at 2:00 p.m. Ticketsavailable at PTP Ticket Office Mendelssohn Theatre Lobby, Mon.-Fri. 10-1, 2-5 For Information Call: 764-0450 Tickets also available at all Hudsons PLAI TALK /_ A U How hiring you can cost somebody $42,168 Whatever America's unemployment rate. 89,(XX),(XX) of us now hold jobs. That won't mean much when you look for a job, yourself. You'll have tough competition. You're among 18(X)0,000 imore Americans looking for work over the next ten years. That's how many new jobs America must create, includ- ing yours. It's going to cost a lot of money. Before you get a dime of salary, who- ever hires you will have to buy tools, office space, factory equipment and buildings-the things it takes to let you do your job. The average cost to com- panies is now $42,168 for each job. We don't mean you can't be hired until your employer finds exactly -42,168. You might walk into an existing job. But don't count on it. Not with 1 8,(XX),(XX) competitors. Some compa- nies can hire you for less than $42,168. But others-heavy industry, for instance-need much more. At Armco, our cost is now S55,6(X) a job.+ That money must come from whatever a company has left over after expenses. In other words, from profits. A company might borrow againstfu- ture profits to make you a job. But still, profits pay for jobs because that's the only source companies have. to FREE" -Armcos plain talk on how to get a job We've got a free booklet to help you get a job. Use it to set yourself apart, above the crowd. We answer 50 key questions you'll need to know. Like why you should bone up on companies you like. What to do after the first inter- view. Hints to make you a more aggres- sive, attractive job candidate. All prepared for Armco by a consulting firm specializing in business recruiting, with help from the placement staff of a leading university. Send for your free copy of How to Get a Job. Write Armco Steel Corpor ation, Educational Relations Dept., General Offices, U-1 Middletown, Plain talk about PROFITS Over our company's 77-year history, Armco has averaged 5C profit on each dollar of sales. We pay out part of our earnings immediately in dividends to Armco's 100,000 shareholders. So out of each nickel, we have perhaps 3C left to invest in new jobs. Building $55,600 jobs-3C at a time-is tough. At this rate, we must sell another $1,850,000 worth of products and services to clear enough money for a single new job. That's why better profits are important. They make more jobs. Even Government jobs. The Government's money comes from taxes on all of us who work. Next time some know-it-all sneers at money-grubbing business' ask him what he'd do without it. He's sneering at his own job chances, and yours. Armcowants your plain talk about profits and jobs Does our message make sense? Wed like to know what you think. Your personal experiences. Facts to prove or disprove our point. Drop us a line.