Page Ten THE MICHIGAN -DAILY Wednesday, June 19, I W4 THE ICHIAN DILY ednsdoy Jun 19,197 Argus employes strike Postal strike threat looms (Continued from Page) "They're probably afraid that when we unionize we'll ask for better working conditions, or more pay, or benefits," she claimed. "We don't have any benefits now, we jist collect a paycheck." WHEN QUESTIONED as to whether he would consider a new NLRB election fair, Day said, "I wouldn't speculate on that." Strikers report, however, that they would not consent to a new election because they feel the first election was valid. Day said he does not recog- nize the strike as official, be- cause he has "not been offic- ially notified that my people are striking." Strikers reported having been told by company officials, "We're not anti-union, we're anti-loss." Day claimed that his company is not, in fact, anti-union, but is concerned that workers who would not want to join a union would be forced to pay dues if unioniza- tion were permitted. ARGUS HAS hired 10 to 15 workers to replace striking em- ployes and has assigned some workers to jobs they do not ordinarily perform. (Cow tiwed from page t1' errors. UNDER THE new system, clericals re-route mail by using specially prepared mimeograph- ed stickers listing every change of address in the last year. According to Schneeberger, before centralized mark-up went into effect, nearly 85 per cent of all complaints directed at the post office stemmed from incorrectly forwarded mail.{ Local letter carriers, however, dispute this figure and claim that an equal number of errors will be made by the clericals. "OFF THE top of my head, I could name you 90 correct for- warding addresses of people that used to be on my route," says one letter carrier. "This new system is just a waste of time. When we were forwarding mail, we'd mark a new address and the letter would be on its way five minutes later - now there's all this nonsense of stickers and people running around looking up addresses." Schneeberger, however, denies that centralized mark-up -will cause any significant delays in the forwarding system. "This process may cost us a little more money at first, but when you're working with the mails, you can't afford to pro- crastinate," he says. "This sys- tem has been successful else- where and we expect it will be here." DESPITE his emphasis on the efficiency of the centralized sys- tem, Schneeberger admits that local mail "occasionally might be delayed one day." BgcauLe letter carriers have fewer mail processing duties now, their routes have been lengthened in a move aimed at eventually eliminating 16 or 17 carrier positions through attri- tion. LOW-COST FLIGHTS with SCHEDULED AIRLINES to EUROPE STILL AVAILABLE FROM College Travel Services-(416). 962-8464 771 YONGE ST., SUITE 204, TORONTO M4W 2G4 LATEST AVAILABILITY: NEW YORK to SPAIN . . $269 (fix(v, return NEW YORK to LONDON . $319 (fixed return) NEW YORK to LONDON or PARIS . . $389 (3 to 6 wks -N.Y. to AMSTERDAM or BRUSSELS $389 (3 to 6 w k 'from COLUMBUS . . add $90 from CLEVELAND and DETROIT . . add $60 YOUTH FARES THROUGH CANDADA under 24 years of oqe from MONTREAL to LONDON or PARIS $299 (Boic) from MONTREAL to AMSTERDAM or BRUSSELS $299 - ( Basic)i from MONTREAL to SPAIN .. ... ... $319 (Basic) from TORONTO to above destinations .. add $20 to basic from DETROIT WINDSOR to above dest. add $50 to basic ADULT FARES THROUGH CANADA from MONTREAL to LONDON or PARIS . .... $299 (3 to 6 wks. from MONTREAL to AMSTERDAM or BRUSSELS .. $299 (3 to 6 wks ) from MONTREAL to SPAIN $319 (3 to 6 wks.) from TORONTO to above destinations . . . add $20 from DETROIT WINDSOR to above dest. . add $50 twik-, rms ,rsui svaIolatle from your Student Activites l or StcCc unioa mitwe or v-contactiun cwlcvge ,,vi 5 "evfC,-co Caus-vyti $10 per donation Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday DETROIT BIOLOGICALS, INC. 234 W. Michigan Avenue Ypsilanti, Michigan-Phone 487-9400 The longer hours spent de- livering mail are a major griev- ance among letter carriers, who protest that cutting back on their office work makes their job more grueling and more likely to provoke heart attacks and other illnesses due to heat, cold and dampness. U Club Owes University $79,000 (Continued from Page 3) ployes," Hinerman says. "Too bad it happens at the same time we're having to make other ad- justments because of our fi- nancial position." THE UNIVERSITY Club's present financial status has added fuel to a controversy sur- rounding the restaurant's rela- tionship to the University. 'We are University - related, but not University - related," says Peter Heydon, a club board member. "We're not Uni- versity - related because we have a liquor license, yet our board of directors must he ap- proved by the Regents. So we're neither fish nor fowl." haw Prof. Samua Estep, a founder of the club' and a mem- ber of its executive board, says the restaurant's relationship to the University "depends on how you look at it." Estep nego- tiated with the state Liquor Control Comission for the U Club's license. WHILE THE club has a sepa- rate charter, he says, the res- taurant is "under University labor conditions." Harlan Mulder, assistant to the chief financial officer of the University, says he "wouldn't even try" to categorize the U Club's connection to the Univer- sity, since "it is a complicated and legal-type question." As part of the University, the club has claimed the right to pay lower taxes than it would if it were separate from the University. The city and the U Club are presently in court over the club's contention that it is exempt from city taxes. WHEN THE CLUB applied for a liquor license, however, it acted as a private corporation. According to the Michigan Liquor- Control Act, "no license shall be issued by the commis- sion .. . in such cases in which the property or establishment to be covered by the license is situated in or on any state- owned lands." However, the law permits licensing of 'such an establish- ment if the "department or agency charged with control of such lands" submits an annual certificate "setting forth that the issuance of a license is not incompatible with the objects and purposes entrusted to such department or agency." REGENT Gertrude Huebner (R-Bloomfield Hills) says the University Club received a li- quor license when Estep "clear- ed it through the liquor com- mission." Huebner says there must have been "some little legal loophole," involved in the clearance, and even Estep agrees that the clause in the Liquor Control Act concerning state - owned property is "ar- guable." However, Estep says he sees "no reason to get into this kind of discussion with outsiders as to which meaning (of the act) is the proper one." Israeli planes raid Lebanon (Continued from Page 1) new president, Gen. Antonio de- Spinola, b e f o r e returning to Washington today, Spinola arrived at Lajes Air Base in the Azores three hours before Nixon's scheduled touch- down. Next time you see someone polluting, point it out. It's a spewing- 5nsokestac(k. It's litter in thse streets. It's a river where fish can't live. You know what pollution is. But not everyone does. So the next time you see pollution, don't close your eyes to it. Write a letter. Make a call. Point it out to someone who can do something about it. People start pollution. People can stop it. t Keep America Beautiful 9o Park Avenue ,. New Yori. NewIYrk 10016 APutkac a WtogWdkb4qgwRmst od Ataoa SUBSCRIBE NOW! 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