x a *i £r1ien a1 Eighty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Wednesday, March 16, 1977 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students'at the University of Michigan Payboy'te nt eswourt . Takecameas lsewere PLAYBOY MAGAZINE, grandaddy of "cheesecake," has been running cen- terfolds fpr over a quarter of a century. Doubtless it will continue to publish them for many moons to come. Doubtless also, this is not the first timef they have recruited ... shall we call it talent? ... from the Ann Arbor area. But their campaign has never been so well- publicized. Photographer David Chan, who two days ago set up headquarters in a campus hotel, has announced that he is seeking models for a project entitled "The Girls of the Big Ten." For students with any sense of history, this piece of news is depressing. The strug- gle for women's education has been ardu- ous, and stereotypes of the "cute coed" abide with us still. It is an unfortunate truth that women, or "girls," as Playboy chooses to call them, have not achieved equality in their search for personal growth and dignity. There are places, however, where we like to think this search is a little easier, where women are considered something more than a meat show for interested lechers. The University is one of these places - and as many women will testify, establishing this comparative haven did not come easily and will not come easy in the future. In a city where the rape rate was, and still is, one of the highest in the coun- try, it was the product of demonstrations, careful legislation, and time. Perhaps Playboy considers it a triumph to bare a University of Michigan repre- sentative on its pages - an ironic tribute to a campus where many feminist struggles were launched. Let us remind Playboy, however, that there .are many of us who consider de- humanized "girlie" shots to be a sublimated battle that humiliates women. In Playboy's more blatant offspring magazines, this war has taken the form of violence and sado- masochism. Playboy's approach is more subtle, but no less degrading and insult- ing. The planned Big .Ten special with its ironic juxtaposition of cheesecake photos against a university background is a coy denial of women's intellectuality. Mr. Chan, women have seen so much of this particular battleground that it bores us with its familiarity. Take your cameras elsewhere.. SAFSCME ne By MIKE TAYLOR WjEDNESDAY, February 23rd, University service and maintenance workers - American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employes (AFSCME LOCAL 1583)-went out on strike. This was the cul- mination of two months of tedious negotiations between the University and the union that had resulted in a proposed contract effectively worse than AFSCME's current one. The Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) Immediately responded by voting overwhelmingly to endorse AFSCME's contract demands, which at the time included a raise per month of about a dollar, and an end to the "cap" on the cost of living adjustment that had effectively prevented union workers from keeping up with inflation. The strike is now in its fourth week. After an initial period when the University refused to resume nego- tiations, the first effects of the strike were felt last Friday (March 11) when the two sides finally met, and the union reduced its per hour raise to 70 cents and the University upped its offer from 55 cents to 60 cents. Unfortunately, all other issues, including the cost of living increase, remain untouched. IT IS OBVIOUS in the interest of all parties, includ- ing the University, the union, and students that this strike be ended as soon as possible. One question per- plexes supporters and non-supporters of AFSCME alike: "Why has the strike dragged on for so long?" A major reason is lack of significant student support for the union. Strikes are designed to show that if By SYLVIA HACKER and NANCY PALCHIK QUESTION: Do you know of any programs around the Ann Arbor area to help individuals who wish to stop smoking cigar- ettes? ANSWER: Your letter came just in time. On Thursday, March 17 at 7:00 p.m., the Ann Arbor Smoking Cessation Clinic, which is jointly sponsored by the University Health Service and the Michigan Lung Association, will hold a public meeting in the basement conference room (Room No. 5) at Health Service. The primary purpose of this meeting is to explain what will be involved if you wish to join our upcoming program which will be- gin on March 22nd and last for 4 weeks (12 sessions). The public meeting is free of charge and all interested community members are invited to attend. So note the evening of March 17th on your calendar. Come and find out what the program will consist of, what costs may be involved, who the leaders will be, and other important facts about smoking withdrawal. If you would like any additional information on the program, do feel free to contact the Ann Arbor branch of the Michigan Lung Association at 995-1030. QUESTION: I have been told I have Gilbert's Disease. Could you explain what this is and what restrictions I must observe in eating or drinking? ANSWER: We have referred your question to Dr. Paul, Dur- kee who has ofhaz ed the following explanation: Gilbert's disease is also called, to use a fancy t rm, idiopathic unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia. Translated this means that under usual circumstances IS A NOT ES eds student workers who normally do work that is taken for grant- ed do not show up, general chaos results. If the effects are severe enough, management (in this case the University)' has no choice but to settle differences with the union. In this case, however, the effects of the walk-out have not been severe. Why? A large number of students have been "scabbing" - doing the work that union members would normally be doing. Since things have been running fairly smoothly across campus, with the exception of East Quad where the disruption of proper services has been more se- vere, few students have had much to complain about. Complaints, however, 'could be the key to the whole matter. If students across campus had been calling President Fleming and the Regents for the past two weeks about the inconveniences of the strike, perhaps it might be over now. Thus, the strategy forWhelping to end this strike is two-fold. First, students must be discouraged from doing union jobs. If that campaign is more effective than it has been the past few weeks, the disruption of servicesdshould increase. Then, students should be en- couraged to complain to the University that they are not receiving proper services because of the strike. This is the kind of pressure that has been sorely lack- ing thus far. Meanwhile, many students are still asking, "Why should I support AFSCME in the first place?" .Briefly, though the Universitl h'as the largest budget of any of the state universities, its service employes are paid far the normal breakdown of red blood ceps relseases the pigment bilirubin into the blood plasma. The bilirubin is then taken up by the cells of the liver and excreted as a nart of the liver fluid, bile. For reasons not com- pletely understood, in persons with Gilbert's disease the bilirubin pigment is not easily taken up by the liver cells.. It may, therefore, acumulate in the blood in a little bit higher levels than in people without this problem. Sometimes. as a result of this higher pigment level, it is even possible to see jaundice in the eyes of these individuals. That isto say, the whites of their eves may be somewhat yellow. But this is seen more often when they also have some other type of infec- tion, virus illness, etc., or during times of fasting. The most common way that we find out about CGilbert's disease at the Health Service is when pa- tients who have been unsuccessful blood donors are sent to us. A potential blood donor is screened for any evi- dence of jaundice because of the severe dangers of hepatitis being transmitted from collected blood. Since the screening test is riot able to distinguish a diseased liver from Gilbert's disease, these people are always rejected and often conte to us for explanations. THE CONDITION - we really shouldn't call it a disease -is not of any consequence as far as causing liver damage nor does it leave one more susceptible to liver 'infections than other people. In other words, it is not dangerous. It is thought to be a genetically trans- mitted conditiop, and the most recent issue of Beeson's Textbook of Medicine says that about 16 per cent of par- ents and 27 per cent of siblings of patients with this disorder will have the same results if their blood is a'so tested. When we see patients with this problem at the Health Service, we routinely examine them and check support now less than those at several other public institutions in this state. These workers are simply asking for the wages and benefits guaranteed to most other workers in America; they would like to achieve a decent stand- ard of living, one that would allow them to send their children to college. AFSCME has shown its willingness to bend, to accept a settlement far less than they need and deserve, to end the strike. Now it is up to the University to do its part. It is also up to us to provide what has been missing from this strike: student support for the union. Look for announcements of events sponsored by the AFSCME Student Support Committee, and get involved! Join the committee, if you like. Most important, however, call President Fleming and the Regents. Let them know that you are fed up with this strike. Tell them' to settle this thing immediately, so that life for all of us can reurn to normal around here. This strike has gone on too long already. With the help of the .stu- dents, we can end it now! NUMBERS TO CALL FOR INFORMATION: AFSCME Student Support Committee Headquarters (Guild House) 662-5189 Karen Lerner-761-1231 Mike Taylor-764-0650 Wendy Goodman-764-0658 Ilene Moskowitz-764-4650 Mike Tay br is the MSA couanications cooidina- tor, and a member of the AFSCME Student Support 'Commraiittfee. their liver tests to be certain that the liver is func- tioning normally; if this is so, then they are apprised of this. There isn't any treatment as there really is not a disease. Also the condition doesn't get worse as one gets older, It probably wil, however, exclude in- dividuals from being blood donors in the future either because the condition will be caught in other blood screening tests or because when they are asked if they have ever been refused as blood donors and give this story. they will again, of course, be excluded. QUESTION: What, approximately, is the volume of a pound of ugly fat? ANSWER: According to our dietitian, Irene Hieber, to whom we have forwarded your question. it is unfortunate that most neo-le have come to think of fat, itself, as "ugly", as it is an essential component of the body. Further- morq, a body which is only muscle. bone and skin wo';ld not be at all attractive to look upon; neither would it be able to sustain many of its regulatory functions. An excess of fat may, however, be termed "ugly" (though 'beauty is n the eye of the beholder"), and it certainly is known to contribute to the onset of cer- tain disease. Thus we must agree that it is undesirable. Now. to answer your question directly, a pound of fat is equivalent in volume to a pound of butter. Send any health .related questions to: Health Educators U-M Health Service Division of Office of Student Services 207 Fletcher Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 Carter can't work miracles r IESE FIRST MONTHS of a new presi- dent's term are hopeful ones. The promise of a new cabinet, the optimism of 4 freshfaced president ,with ideas for change - it all mokes us think that things might turn around. Many Americans, even many who voted for Gerald Ford, have turned their gaze to the person and per- sonality of Jimmy Carter with hopes that all the problems of policy and government will vanish under his touch. But no matter how proficient Carter is, all those problems will not vanish, and the bitterness that will result is a chronic and critical ailment of our society. The point is this: no single person can work the miracles for which the United States' crises cry out, yet people have more and more focused their calls for good gov- ernment on the presidency. Government is the President, the President is the govern- ment - it's an .unhealthy belief. There is another bunch of government, and it is designed to represent citizens far more -efficiently and fully than a President ever can. Yet the United States Congress is almost ignored by the constituents it is meant to serve. Many don't even know who represents them in Washington, and that ignorance further diminishes the abili- ty of Congress to serve. fjF COURSE, CONGRESS has consistent- ly turned over more and more au- thority to the executive branch. Legisla- tive initiative seems almost the personal property of the President. Federal regula- tions upon regulations - many of which are as good as the law of the land - are produced not by Congress but by the sprawl- ing agencies of the executive branch. This shift of power is well established by re- cent decades, and it will probably never be reversed; nonetheless, the hopes of the nation will inevitably be dashed if they continue to be concentrated on the nar- row, inadequate shoulders of a mere Presi- dent. It is difficult to' think of a peacetime President who forged through his term with solutions to every woe., What a President has been remembered for is the tone of his tenure, more likely, and his ability to prompt action from others. Even Frank- lin Roosevelt's New Deal did relatively little to end the Great Depression, yet Roosevelt- led with a mood of action and concern. 0 IT SEEMS a President can best exert only a sort of emotional, psychological leadership. Yes, Presidents propose and work for policy projects, but that work is in no way proportionate to the responsibili- ty for policy which people demand from a President. More than ever before, the nation is wracked by disgust with govern- ment. The individual is alienated by prob- lems he or she cannot understand, and when the ambitious candidate promises a Square Deal, a New Deal, a New Frontier, a Great Society, the Politics of Joy, or the Politics of Love, the ears of the alienated take note. But the promise is always too great, and the President's inability to fol-- low through results only in deeper disillu- sion. Jimmy Carter is not the Promethean his campaign presented, and he should not have to apoligize for it. He will not keep all his promises, and that is also under- standable. We don't fear the failure of his plans nearly as much as we fear the de- cline of spirit that will inevitably follow. Carter will not be the single person re- +sponsible, yet he will be charged, almost alone, with the great share of the blame. PEOPLE MUST TRAIN their hopes on the broad forces which constitute Ameri- can government, not on the single mortal at its head. Public opinion is indeed a pow- erful tool, and one need look no further than the resignation of Richard Nixon for proof. When Representatives and Senators called for impeachment, they were called brave, but this isn't really so. They acted, at least in large part, out of political neces- sity. The public wanted Nixon out of office, and the Congress, usually so cumbersome and timid, acted with great force. Government's performance will never meet its promise. But until people realize that their complaints should fall on the ears of many instead of just one, the na- tion's spirits are due for a Great Depres- sion all their own. Distaif f To The Daily: In her very sarcastic article (see The Michigan Daily, No. 126) Marnie Heyn speaks ironi- cally about the common news media irony towards the Soviet Union's role as a human rights defender. After all chemical metaphores Marnie Heyn's po- sition is the following: what right do .we have to accuse the "silly Soviets" in violating hu- man rights, while we have such a poor situation as "a glutted job market, plea bargaining for the poor, prisons, mental hos- pitals, nursing homes," etc. And, of course, blacks, Indians and Vietnam deserters. I have had 38 years experience of living in the Soviet Union and only 1 year experience of living in the West, but things in com- parison are so obvious, that I feel it is my moral duty to re- sist such light-headed verbiage as Marne Heyn's. First of all, it is Russians in the Soviet Union, not The De- troit Free Press nor other me- dia of this country, who take. the Soviet official support of unhappy American dissenters ironically. I dare say that such a people, as the Russians, who read a great deal and are greedy for any kind of information, in- deed do know a lot about life in foreign countries. And this is not The- Detroit Free Press' "ho, ho, ho," this is the ironi- cal laughter of the Russian peo- ple to their government's arti- cI'es in their government's news- papers. To identify the Soviet media with the Soviet people means not having the slightest idea about how that system works. Being a Soviet you have no t opportunity at all to discuss po-1 litical problems in newspapers,. on TV or radio. Sometimes it ist allowed to discuss the bad con-c sequences of smoking or of ex-1 tramarital affairs, but you would be crazy to write a letter to a paper in which you express your1 disagreement with any aspect of Kremlin policy. (From thist point of view there is a certain logic in the government's treat- ment 'of dissidents as the men-1 tally ill). So when an ordinary Soviet citizen reads in "Prav- da" that Dr. Spock, or Mr. Slack Crow, or somebody else spoke in Times Square Garden,1 or in the Michigan Union Pen-t dleton Room, or elsewhere about the oppression of some groups r in America, the. thought comes, to his head: "They can speak 1 openly 'against their governmentR and not be immediately impri- soned or placed into asylum?" { Just compare it to the situation 1 in the Union of the Soviet Social- ist Republics!.2 " I humbly disagree with Mar-e nie Heyn's adored old Sherm about the non-existence of a scale for human misery.t Of course, misery is misery, suffering is suffering and it is senseless to compare 50 million dead to 1 thousand dead since all these numbers do not reflect the true meaning of the losing of each individual life. I believe a-Iso, that there are few moral perverts in this world, who actu- ally love prisons, poverty, xeno-1 phobia or secret police. Rut there is a scale to evalu- ate and to compare such things as listed above. There are pri- sons, where you have your tur- l key on Thanksgiving and enough strength to play basketball. And to Boycotts do work; UFW, Teamsters reach accord the there are prisons, where you, have a bowl of waterish soup and a piece of stale bread a day (since it is officially pro- claimed, that they "educate" people through physical suffer- ngs) . There is one kind of pov- erty, when you can have a poor but individual apartment, when you have your own car (al- though it may be old), when you must take welfare and food stamps (even with terrible im- possibility of buying imported delis with them). And it is yet another kind of poverty, when you have to pay 1/10 of your monthly wages .for *a-pair of pantyhose, when you can only dream about a daily bath, and when twice a day your ribs are actually, not metaphorically, cracking in (oh, such lovely or- ganization!) public transporta- tion. There is xenophobia in this country, but it is protested by public organizations and also by concrete government's meas- ures (even if its efficiency leav- es something to be desired). And there is xenophobia in the Soviet Union, which is forbidden to mention aloud, when the whole peoples can be arrested and exiled, when you cannot live in your own land if you are a Crimean Tartar, and when you can not dream about good jobs or some university departments if you are a Jew. Even risking to lose any credi- bility forever in Ms. Ueyn's circle, 1 dare to say that there are two kinds of secret police. I like the human rights move- ment in this country and only last month I joined the confer- ence of the Civil Liberties Un- ion. I assume the possibility of human rights violations by CIA and FBI and I also completely share the views of professor Erazim Kohak from Boston Uni- versity who said at that con- ference: "The defense of pri- vacy,nIwould submit, demands a constant vigilance-but also a clear identification of our ad- versary. Ordinarily, we tend more than a bit paranoid. We and which are committed to the defense of our privacy. I find their adversaries, the KGB and organized ,crime, far more threatening ..." one of my friends said after reading Ma'rnie Heyn't article: "She tries to equate a sea-sick person with a drowning one." To equate irresponsibly the human rights situation in this' country with that in the totali- tarian world means "to worsen things here. If government in- stitutions limiting certain as- IT'S FINALLY OVER. No longer must we deny ourselves the crisp, head lettuce that we all love in salads. We don't have to scour the city. for a store that sells United Farm Work- ers (UFW) grapes. After years of vicious struggle between Cesar Chavez's UFW 'and the Teamsters over which union would represent the thousands of migrant field workers in Cali- fornia, an agreement has finally been reach- ed. Chavez and Teamster President Frank Fitsimmons last reek initialed a settlement that would give the UFW the right to rep- resent all field laborers in California, while the Teamsters will retain control over can- ning and delivery workers. At the same time, Chavez called for the. end of the lettuce and grape boycott that has kept many of us from eating our fa- vorite foods for several years. The UFW/Teamster battle lasted far too pects of individual freedom exist in this country, then this could be only because they have sup- port from a rather big part of this society. In order to proper- ly defend human rights in this country, we n e'I acurat in- formanld, wo-.1tJ mIte types ot violation that occur in other countries - not irresponsible chatter. Lev Lifshitz, Teaching Fellow, Slavic Dept. organize nation-wide boycotts. But their ef- forts have met with general apathy, and cries of, "what difference will it make," from the American public. The success of the lettuce and grape boycott proves that 'there is hope for mass protest - it can work. Fitsimmons admitted that "with all the letters and phone calls we got, plus the boycott and other protests, this whole mat- ter was just becoming too much of a head- ache, more than it was worth. So, if you are one of the thousands who faithfully boycotted lettuce and grapes all these years, rip this editorial out of the paper and shove it under the noses of the sceptic friends of yours who have laughed at you for years saying, "what good do you think you can do?" And move on to your next good cause secure in the knowledge that your effort did some good.. You can be sure that we at The Daily will be doing likewise. J0 by W. L. SCH E LLER SDI AMIN, two weeks ago announced that all Americans were barred from leaving Uganda. He then ordered them to ap- pear at Entebbe Airport for a "meeting", Alexander Ginzberg was trying to make a phone call from a Moscow phone booth one morning when two KGB agents suddenly appeared and drag- ged him off to prison. His crime? He was the administrator of a fund set up by Alexander Solzenhytsin to aid tlhe families of political prisoners in Russia. These events have two very important similarities. First they are flagrant violations of human rights and secondly they follow- ed statements 'by President Carter condemning human rights practices in the two respective countries. . FORTUNATELY, THE 250 or so Americans in Uganda have again been allowed to leave if they wish and Amin's "meeting" has been indefinitely postponed. Nothing has changed however. The terrible crimes of Idi Amin continue and purges still rage in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union. The Carter declarations ad actions have been at best the mistakes of inexperience or at worst the signs or a blundering foreign policy. American policy on human rights should take a form that will best help those who are oppressed, without endangering American lives. Publicly infuriating a foreign government or leader can potentially damage our relations with them or, especially when dealing with a madman like Amin, prompt reprisal against Americans in those countries. THE WAY TO deal with these countries is to make it ad- vantageous for them to respect human rights. This means es- sentia'ly putting pressure on them right where it hurts. Trade and foreign aid. We can privately express our opinion to them at various levels, and make it quite clear that their current stances on human rights do not please us, or make their chances of trade Contiact your reps Sen. Donald Riegle (Dem.), 1205 Dirksen Bldg., Washing- ton, D.C. 20510 Sen. Robert Griffin (Rep.), 353 Russell Bldg., Capitol Hill, Wahi tnl C 1fl(iS1C