NQ(ON aUrz KAjLUHowAW MrG Women's money for women's needs By ANDREA SACHS MOST PEOPLE suport their life styles with an array of credit devices, including charge cards, loans, time payments, and mortgages, with barely a second thought. In this "credit society", however, women, already handicapped financ- ially by job and wage discrimination, are fur- ther hampered by credit discrimination. A variety of myths regarding the financial hab- its of American women impair their ability to establish credit, despte statistics which dis- prove these misconceptions. As the co-manager of the Ann Arbor branch of the Feminist Federal Credit Union, 1 have spoken with many women who have experienced complete frustration in their attempts to estab- lish their own credit ratings. Although 50 per cent of all American families receive 40 per cent or more of their income from women, women's incomes are usually not considered in family credit ratings. Women find that they cannot obtain charge cards in their own names, although they are making consider- able salaries, or that male co-signers are re- quired in most credit arrangements. OFTEN, THESE FACTS are discovered by women who have just been divorced, or who have attempted to become financialy independent for the first time. And the facts are disturbing.. The Feminist Federal Credit Union was estab- lished to help rectify the inequality of sexist credit policies. Begun by two women in Detroit, Valerie Klaetke and Joanne Parrent, the Credit Union has grown to almost 1,200 members, and has offices; in Detroit, Ann Arbor, Flint and Kalamazoo. Like other credit unions, Feminist Federal gives members the option of saving and/or tcking out loans, if they qualify. Credit unions by definition involve a common bond among the membership, which in this case is feminism, and provide a non-profit alternative to banks. Membership requires a fifty cent fee, an inil- itial $5 minimum deposit, and membership in a feminist organization. Many members choose to jon the Michigan Women's Liberation Coalition through the Credit Union, or to join N.O.W. (Na- tional Organization for Women). THE ONLY QUALIFICATION for loans is the ability and the willingness to repay. As for men - they are permitted to join under the same membership conditions. Accounts are in- sured up to $20,000. The Detroit Branch of the Feminist Federal Credit Union has been operating since August, while the Ann Arbor women, Susan Elliott, Mary Musielewicz, Terry Beuer, Jane Rothstein, Debbie Wood, and I have been running the branch office since November. Interest in the Detroit area has been wide- spread; Valerie and Joanne have appeared on various television programs, including- "Haney's People," "AM Detroit"; "Detroit Today,' and "June Brown's Detroit."* And the idea seems to be one whose time has come, since feminist credit unions are open- ing up in Harrisburg, Pa., Pittsburgh, New Haven and San Francisco. The office, located at 225 E. Liberty, is open on Mondays and Wednesdays, 12-5 p.m. and 5-8 p.m. As the brochure says, it's a "first in her- story." THE Michigan Daily Edited and monaged by Students at the University of Michigan Wednesday, June 26, 1974 News Phone: 764-0552 The Nuclear Blues 0NCE AGAIN, in the madcap world of international politics, our blackest satire and darkest fears have proved to be more accurate in predicting the future than all the data banks in all the computers run by all the experts. Tom Lehrer (remember "So long, Mom, I'm off to drop the bomb"?) and the little old ladies from SANE in their orthonedic shoes carrying "Ban the Bomb" picket signv were. in reztroenect. neither doomsters or crackpots. But then. nobody wants to pay attention to scary predictions of the future, not when there's beer to be drunk and cars to be tootled around. So now all God's children got the Bomb. Well, not exactly the Bomb, just peaceful nuclear capabiilty, like India for example. Then again, "peaceful purposes" has been the alibi all along. Tell it to Hiro- shima, and all the Pacific islands littered with radioactive debris. BUT THERE'S NO need to play the bleeding heart about unknown people in far-away places. Right here in the great state of Michigan, the weather has been altered by nuclear power plants: fishers in the Great Lakes don't know where to look for fish, or what species they'll find, or whether the catch will be poisoned by the ring of nuclear reactors spaced at 20 mile intervals around the lakes: and vacationing families have a new game to play on the roads: it's called Which-Truck-Is-Hauling-Radio- active-Waste. Perhaps those of us who grew up in the shadow of Nagasaki and Hiroshima, with lots of Strontium 90 in our bones and teeth, are a bit too fatalistic and blase about the pros ects of being blown away with the planet. Energy planning and landt use must become more of a personal concern and less of an intellectual construct for each of us. Maybe it's not too late to take the shiny toys away from nationalistic weirdos and gadget junkies. -MARNIE HEYN Sprin, Staff t1 . , o Aip 'It's a bird!' 'it's a plane! 'No!It's Super Kissinger!' WEBSTER AT THE BAT erbification runs amok GORDON ATtCHESON ... JEFF DAY CHERYL PIATE. JUDY BUSKiON JEFF SORENSEN BARBARA CORNELL. JANET HARSHSMAN ANDREA LILLY ... STEPHEN IHERH . DAVmD WHTtI5GJ TOM GO'rTLIEB -KAREN KASMAUSKI ... REBECCA WARNER Eeditor MARNIE HEYN Editoriai Director KEN FINX Arts Editor .... ... Night Editor .Ni..... Night Editor ....... Night Editor ... . . ... Night Editor .Night Editor ...Asst. Night Editor .Ass't. Night Editor .".... .........Asot. Night Editor .. ... . . .. ..Asst. Night Editor . ...........Ass-L.Night Editor .Photographer ........ .... Photographer By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) - The impact of the Watergate tapes can be measured in many ways, one being an increase in nounal verbi- fication. People see in the transcripts how President Nixon and his aides kept converting nouns into verbs, and the next thing you know they are talking that themselves. - The favorite White House verbification involves the noun "stone wall," as when the President told John Mitchell "I want you to stonewall it." It may be argued that since "stonewall" al- ready existed in verb form the President and his men were not verbifying, or forming -v e r b s themselves. But that is a weak argument. Lexicographers only recognize "stonewall!" as a verb in its cricket and pprliamentary contexts. In cricket, it means to play entirely on the de- fensive. In parliamentary terminology, it means about the same thing as "filibuster." IT IS CLEAR from the transcripts that the' White House crowd was using it in another con- text; i.e., to stand firm like a stone wall, the way Stonewall Jackson stood at Bull Run. In any event, it is catching on. As I was leaving a cocktail party on a recent evening, I commented that the large group still clustered around the shrimp dip was a tribute to the hostess' hospitality. ' I' think they are going to hardcore it," she said. ANOTHER CLEAR-CUT case of verbification turned up the other day in a conversation I over- heard on a Capitol elevator, apparently between two lobbyists. One was telling the other that the only way to get his point across to congressmen was to "blackboard it." Had Nixon and his aides been able to crystal- ball it, I doubt they would have set such store by stonewalling the Watergate case. ' In retrospect it appears a better course might have been to cleanbreast it. MARC PLDMAN Sports Editor CLARKE COGSDILL .......... . Contributing Sports Editor GEORGE HASINGS .. . .........,. .. EecutieSports Editor JOBS KATLER ..... . . . . Assogiate Sports Editor ROGER ROSSnTER .......... , .Managing Sports. Editor