Pacge Ten THE SUMMER DAILY Wednesday, August , 973 - -ge .en THE SUMMER DAILY Wednesday, August1 1, 19731 Loca A&P picket ine continues Cootmed from aPet,) he says. "They don't like it. We "We have a union too," one "We can't really hurt this ation for us." suburban as ever. "Boys and get a lot of complaints. I guess remarked. "They're hurting our store," commented a novice A DECISION to buy on] girls, go home!" calls a middle- they don't like people telling union by picketing." picketer Saturday at the Sta- grapes and lettuce woul aged woman. "Don't you have them what to do." Most A&P employes belong to ditm store. "It's like kicking it to come out of the 32 r anything better to do than this? THE CUSTOMERS, all of whom a subsidiary of the AFL-CIO, in the shins a lot." offices of which Young'si I'm going to go in there and ask had to cross the line to enter the which has sent funds and organ- BUT THE A&P regional man- To boost boycott mor for ,ny lettuce but Chavez's." store, seem irritable and defen- izers to support the UFW strikes. agement is not so sure. Sales Di- the picketers in the city A MAN IN a grease-stained sive. A MAPLE VILLAGE employe rector Maury Young, who works Saturday afternoon at the gray uniform is stopped by the "I go from store to store and asks, "Do you know what this Is out of the chain's Detroit office, Village store. "This is the leafleters, listens good-naturedly I buy where it's cheapest," says about? Then he concludes, "It's says the stores are definitely los- picket line should look, to a few sentences, and agrees a woman shopping with her jun. really just one union against an- ing business because of the boy- ments a tired organizer, to go down the block to another ior high aged daughter and son. other. cott. "Any boycott has an effect people carrying signs an grocery store. "I work for United "I only. have $30 a week to spend. Many Village customers are on any business." ing old union songs tra Air Lines. I'm in a union. The Do you want to see your chil- A&P regulars, he claims, who "e any inss." i gt old oni k snd I only way we're going to win is dren starve because sotneone is won't be swayed by pickets. produce at the lowest price front of the store. by sticking together." picketing?" Occasionally even managers hest unality we can findh Youny The line inciudes Uni ly UFW d have regional is one. tale, all gather Maple way a " com- as 30 nd sing- mp de- orth in iversity "We are involved in buying produce at the lowest rTrice and best quality we can find ... It's an untenable situation for us." -Maury Young, A&P regional sales director "We won't buy lettuce or grapes," say a ye" couple as they rush into the store. "That's not enough," the l e a ftl e t e r counter. At the Stadium store, where picketers Saturday take a softer. line, the answer will be, "That's a start. Next time could you help xs by shopping somewhere else?" Customer r e s p o n s e s to the ticketers r a n g e from embar- rassed smiles and ducked heads to profanity. M a n y customers compensate with extra toughness -' Let California worry about it" -or even try to change the sub- ject-"What's a good looking girl like you doing on a picket line?" FLUSTERED SHOPPERS tend to loek back sheepishly as they enfer the store. "Nine out of ten scabs go in the out door," says a picketer at the Stadium store. Inside the Maple Village store Thursday the atmosphere is tense desipte "WEO" - Where Econo- my Originates-advertising signs and other familiar A&P paraphe- nalia. "We're not allowed to make any c o m m e n t s to the news- papers," the manager says, going on to claim his store has felt "no effect yet" from the picket- ing. But customers are disturbed, A very small, very old worman explains she "could care less. I don't pay attention to thosc things." AND A MAN doing his shop- ping alone expresses the objec- tion the manager cited: "I think they have no right to be in front of the store. They bother people coming in and they try to stop you. They should be doing some- thing else. They're not doing any good." In fact, the picketing has been legally sanctioned by a Supreme Court ruling which states picket- ers whose message relates to a stere's function may walk on store property, as long as cus- tomers are not obstructed. City Chief of Police Walter Krasny says the pickets have not caused much trouble for police. "We get complaints from citizens as well as management that they're g e t t i n g harassed and heckled. But I wouldn't say we'd had a lot of trouble." MANAGERS OF all three stares that have gotten intense picket- ing - Huron, Stadium, and Ma- ple Village - denied their busi- ness had suffered- But store em- ployes seemed extremely con- cerned about the boycott's pos- sible effect on their jobs. display anxiety. Saturday the Sta- dium manager appeared con- siderably flustered at the sug- gestion that he might have called the police who arrived at the store. "MAY THE good Lord strike iee dead at this moment if I call- ed the police," he said excitedly, pointing at his own chest. "Did I call the police?" tee asks a wo- man in a red checker's uniform. "Customer called the police. They're not going to stand for that stuff," she replied angrily. The manager went outside to assure the picketers that he had not called the police. EMPLOYES AT the Maple Vil- lage claimed the Huron store will be closed by Christmas due to the loss of business the boycott has caused. The store has re- duced its hours substantially in recent weeks. The Huron manager denied the report. "The students are gone- When they come back we may go back to 9:00 to 9:00," he said. Customers "see the pickets and come back on the days they're not here," he claimed. Reports that the in-town store is endangered has raised some comment from customers. "What about the old people who rely on this store." says a middle aged woman. "MANY PEOPLE get the idea we're picking on A&P," says one boycott committee representa- tive. "We don't want to close the Huron store down, we just want to clean it tip." At all stores they picket, the committee provides rides to other supermarkets for customers who need transportation. TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION as taught by MAHARISHI MAHESH YOGI " NATURAL TECHNIQUE DEVELOPS FULt CREATIVE ABILitIES * PROVIDES DEEP REST AND RELAXATION " LIFE EXPANDS IN FULFiLLMENT INTRODUCTORY LECTURE THURS., AUGUST 2nd 8 p.m. Assembly Room-Michigan Union Basement Saturday and Sunday August 4 & 5 Two b Truffaut q11 L~U Iy W ~ 11t, I lg asserts. "If we don't carry a particu- lar item, the customers will go to some other store for the things we don't carry. And what will they do when they're there? They'll buy things for their oth- er needs. It's at untenable situ- students, high school kids, par- ents, babies, even two dogs. Checkers peer out the plate win- dows as the line begins to chant "Boycott lettuce! Boycott grapes! Boycott A&P!" "A&P-where exploitation or- iginates," quips a picketer. FIMCOOP presents FI ORO TONITE ONLY ee NTS Filims pemudly presets THE MURDER OF FR-ID HAMPTON, No maior U.S. Filnm distributor will touch it. "When the shtot'nq stopp-d, Fred lampton, the 21 year old chairman of She Illinais Black Paniher Party was dead of a bulbSt thrauqh ihb brain and Mark Clarke, a 22 year old Panther arganicer from Peoria was dead of a bullet through the lungs and heart, FOUr of the ather sureising Panthers were ser- iously woundod. All seen weRe arrested and on January 30, they would be indicted by the county arand juryd fr attempted murder and armed ioenc.'-Scalons NATURAL SCIENCE AUDiTORIUM-O(CentralU-M campus) 8 and 10 P.M. $1.25 CONTRIBUTION A Flint FRANCOIS TRUFFAUT STOLEN KISSES" S e. u'eS~i o nd t"Og u toeByiFii tNO RV emm yLs:«s arie. ia cLs Ga 1as ts A COLORsbyhe-i} nss d y 1C, ti: couch:ptceew^,s:.s s i J f ii flii.ammLi,. AND Modern Languages Auditoriums 3 & 4 7:30 & 9:30 p.m. Washington -t Thayer $1.25 single $2 double friends of newsreel