Summer Daily Summ ter t itiooeof Till" MICIG-AN 1DAILY Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Wednesday, May 16, 1973 News Phone: 764-0552 * jules feilie r C126C THAX TkA-f STITrvfiok) AL TT - R641 A6ICC oT T5 _ W M - I R 6AkTG. 0 ASTM146, THAT Z PFWK )T 't Farah workers find no friend in a republican John, By JAMES WECHSLER TOHN CONNALLY'S decision tof J become a card-carrying se- publican has quickly induced con- jecture about what momentous role he will be asked to perform in the rehabilitation of the crisis-torn Nix- | on regime. While he awaits an as- signment worthy of his self-image, there is a service to perform with- in the borders of Texas. He could undertake the mission of oringin Willie Farah out of the ;tonc age of industrial relations. But dont wait up for that news. Farah is the affluent head of the . Texas-based Farah Manufactareg .. Co., one of the nation's biggest ' makers of men's pants. He has been engaged in a primitive cra- sade to block a unionizaiion drive by the Amalgamated Clothingl Workers. Last Wednesday marked the first anniversary of a strike begun by more than 300" employes, most of them young Mexican-Am-, erican women, in a setting remin-. iscent of union organizing battles of the 1930s. John Connally Recently I talked with twa of the strikers - Rosa Flores, 19, whose out that many Farah workers had attractive portrait adorns the un- come to their parish priests to re- ion's nationally-circulated posters, port their grievances long berote and Margaret Quesada, 34,,who are the Amalgamated began its cam- here to help rally support for the paign. Noting Farah's claim that spreading boycott of Farah. they have "over 8000 happy work- They spoke of low wages, op- ers who will not strike," he wrote: pressive speedup, insecurity, anti- "In their simplicity many do not union harassment and the word know that their situation could be that, above all, has beccme the improved, and the company is not battle cry of the picket lines: "Dig- the one to inform them but is act- 5 . . "Talking with (the Farah strikers) one had a, dismal sense of how remote their national gov- ernment seemed to them. These are the for- gotten people of the Nixon era." Connally per, why is it so impossible for gi- gantic Farah to do the same?" the Bishop asked. WILLIE FARAH'S response was to call the Bishop a member of the "rotten old bourgeois" who is "lolling in wealth." But many other voices have spok- en out on the union's side. Like Ce- sar Chavez' farm workers, these Mexican-Americans have enlisted the warm sympathy and supaort of AFL-CIO president George Meany, along with Sens. Ted Kennedy and Gaylord Nelson, and numerous Con- gressmen; even Nelson Rockefeller and John Lindsay have found a common cause in this conflict. Amid declining revenues - no dividends have been declared for the last five quarters - and a sharp drop in the company's stock prices, Farah has vowed to carry on his anti-union offensive. Time and again the National Labor Re- lations Board has upheld union charges of discriminatory firings, intimidations, surveillance and oth- er ancient weapons of the open- shop barons. But each decision has merely invited a new round of le- gal maneuvers. The board's lack of enforcement powers has given Par- ah's lawyers a field day, with no end in sight. IN FACT the strike was precipii- tated by the anti-union firings that began at almost the moment the Amalgamated apeared on the scene; the union finally faced the choice of surrender or a walk- out. It has been a long year now, and William Farah appears outwardly unyielding. The strikers who' I met had no illusion of a sudJen victory. Talking with them one had a dis- mal sense of how remote their na- tional government seemed to them. These are the forgotten neople of the Nixon era. When I asked them whether John Connally had gi-en them any hint of sympathy, they smiled, as if I were a victim of total delusion, And it is, I stipose, fantas.vt: imagine that he would deem the effort to achieve an honorable sit- tlement of this strike a worthy ise of his Texas time. In surFace manner and bearing, Connally has often been likened to Lyndon John- son; but he is not a man graced with any comparable instinot for social justice. He will not ive Willie Farah any trouble; the boy- cott will, James Wechsler is the editorial director of the New York Post. Copyright 1973 by the New York Past Corporation. I LAST [OW6K II) 5A4) acUHM(&Y( i §ALO A UP A VWO }rI-coot., POOT. W Y t fPUt.AR 6 AMP 16k)MOkQ& PTkA u I PHOt-P.R< 'MIR. FkfUS COMtP PYO tOIA T ()Ga 5HcT nidad." As Willy Farah has pain- fully learned, it means dignity, and it is their answer to his boast that the paternalism of a free turkey at Christmas and a medical clinic make his plants a happy home. IN A SENSE Farah is as much an echo of the past as she ;ondi- tions the strikers are pratesting. The heaviest blow he suffered in his home territory was an eloquent affirmation of the strikers' cause and an indictment of Farah's poli- cies delivered by the Bishop of El Paso, the Most Rev. Sidney M. Metzger, in a communication ad- dressed to Catholic bishops throughout the country. He pointed ually taking advantage of their simplicity and keeps reminding them that they never had it so good. However, it should also be noted that without job security and with the high production demands, workers live in fear of being ds- missed and left without a job if their output falls short of their pro- duction quota." - The unanswerable fact, he said, is that the vast majority of Farah workers earn about $61 a week in take-home pay; emplaves in two unionized local companies get $1112 a week under their Amalgamated contracts. "If these smaller plants can live with a union contract and pros- I 60 THE WILL 0 OK) tAt - T 1(6ou TO THECGCJ'ST(TO t5&). On the psychological relationship between money and. happiness By DICK WEST THE MAGAZINE Psychology To- day reports that surveys made in 19 countries show that people all over the world have a strikingly similar concept of happiness. In Yugoslavia or Cuba, Africa and Latin America, from Memphis to St. Joe or wherever the four winds blow, there are three fundamental keys to being happy. The two lesser influences a r e family considerations and health. Con you guess what the main key is? You would never guess that in a million years, so I will tell you. The primary key is, of all things, money. I know that is hard to believe, but that's what the magazine says. WHAT WE HAVE here then is an apparent conflict between psy- chology and philosophy. Philoso- phers have been telling us for years that money can't buy happi- ness. Yet the surveys indicate money is essential to achieve the psychological state universally de- fined as happiness. Puzzled about this, I called up my 89-year-old father, who h as studied at the feet of Glenn Turn- er, Billie Sol Estes and other con- temporary philosophers. "There's no contradiction," my father said. "It's simply a ques- tion of which came first - the money or the happiness? "It is still valid to affirm that money can't buy happiness. But happiness can procure money. "The psychological traits asso- ciated with happiness - a sunny disposition, optimistic outlook and so forth - also tend to promote economic well-being. In other words, a person may not be hap- py because he has money, but he may have money because he is happy." "Turning this around, it is gen- erally assumed persons in pover- ty areas are unhappy because they are poor. Actually, however, they may be poor because they are un- happy." I THANKED my father f o r clearing this tip for me. And nit. I finally understand what his seen wrong with the U.S. foreign aid program all these years. We made the -istake of truyint to help underdeveloped countries prosper by giving them financial assistance. Which explains wI a y little progress was achis-7ed and why some countries resent tmeri- can aid. Instead of sending them money, we shoild have been sending them smile buttons and "Have A ''lice Day" bumper stickers. Make people happy and ts'ic r. ey will take care of itself Dick West is a writer for United Press International. the Nsbs;er-IaikiSynisoa 9-16 87 s i bffl