Tuesday, July 16, 197 4 THEMICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Tusay ul 6,174TE IHIA DIY aehhe Colson testifies al Ciyworkers if contract - . aod wakou Nearly 300 municipal workers, who had threatened to strike in a wage dis- pute with the city administration, rati- fied a two-year compromise contract, Saturday. The employes represented by the, American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employes (AFSCME) Lo- cal 369 approved the pact by a 151-33< margin.- TERMS OF the contract call for a 20 cent per hour wage increase and a cost -> of living hike of tip to 10 cents per hour xms to be added in December. In the second year, the employes will receive another wage and cost of living ; jump. Disagreement between the city and the union, however, arose only over the first year figures. Originally the city offered a 15 cent wage increase, while the union demand- ed four times that much. The compro- mise was reached during a seven hour bargaining session last week, after the union had voted to strike unless the ad- ministration improved its offer. REPRESENTATIVES for both the city and the union said they were "satis- fied" with the compromise contract. Nonetheless, the agreement may re- sult in additional employe lay-offs. At the time the city made its initial pro-' posal, City Administrator Sylvester Mur- rav said workers might have to be dis- missed if the final contract exceeded the 15 cent level. Currenttv the administration is cal- culatin the siecific dollar amount the ;h ne, oti ted hact will cost axidsvhere the ftnds could >coie fron in the btid et. THiE CONTRACT must stilt go before City Council for approval. Murray said AP Photo council will be consulted about the bud -FORMER WIITE HOUSE aide Charles Colson waits yesterday to testify before See CITY, Page 8 a closed session of the Ihouse Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill, women employes meet to discuss union usefulness iearing WASHINGTON (A) - Former White House aide Charles Colson said yester- day that he had been told that President Nixon once said he had approved "the operation" in connection with Daniel Ellsberg -- but Colson said he did not know what operation was meant. "It doesn't necessarily mean a bur- glary," Colson tolds newsmen during a dinner break from his closed-door tes- timony to the House impeachment in- quiry. Colson's testimony prompted con- fusion among the House Judiciary Com- mittee members. SOME SAID they though Colson was suggesting Nixon had acknowledged ap- proving the burglary of Ellsberg's psy- chiatrist's office. But most said the testi- mony was either unclear or that it was clear ('Olson had not specifically referred to the burglary. Members were expected to press (ol son on what lie did mean when their turn came, following comnuittee coun- sels' questioning, to ask their own ques- tions. Rep. IHanilton Fish (R-N.Y.) said that during questioning on -Ellser and the Pentagon Papers ('olson testified that former aide John Ehirlichman had told him that Nixon had told assistant Att. Gen. Ienry Petersen that he Nixon had approved 'the operation." BUT COLSON said in response to newsmen's questions as he left the hear- ig roon that he did not know what Ehrlichman was suggesting the Presi- dent might have meant by that. "I just used the precise words lie used,' ('olson sid. Nixon said in a detailed statement on May 22, 1973. that he did order an in- vestigation by the White Iouse plumb- ers unit of Ellsberg as part of the inves- tigation to find out how the Pentagon Papers had been leaked to the pubhlc. Nixon said he could understand how highl% ,motivated aides could miscon- strue his order and go further than the Presient had itended FISH QUOTED Colon as quoting Ehr. lichman as saving Nixon made the state- mient of hosing approved "the opera- tion" in April 1973 i-nearly two years after the .llsberg Pentagon Papers in- vestigation. Rep. Delbert Latta (R-Ohio) said he understood ('olson's testimony to go no further than Nixon's own May 22 state- ment that ie hid irdcreid the investiga- ttiof Ellber ini cmniectiin witi the Pentatgon Papsers letik Earlier, Colson told the committee that Nixon knew ahout and acquiesced in a cover story fr the FBI itvestigation if CBS newsman I)aniel Schorr, according to three congressmen. "There was a certain pride of author- ship and there were some of us who had wounded feelings," he said. "But when you look at it in the cold light of day I don't think anyone was upset," he said. ' Dash acknowledged that after an in- tensive investigation lasting more than 15 months, "you're damn sure that cer- tain people are guilty of certain things. By BARBARA CORNELL Women workers from across the Uni- versity gathered Saturday to discuss the importance of unions as a bargaining tool. Although the conference, sponsored by the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes (AFSCME), was open to anyone, it was clearly aimed at University clerical workers whom AFSCME and the United Auto Workers (UAW) are vying to represent. THE MICHIGAN Employment Rela- tions Commission has scheduled an elec- tion between the unions for September 16 through 23. A keynote address given by AFSCME member Nancy Perlman argued for col- lective action to deal with a management "convinced by power, not by nice words." "It is easy for the University to deal with one, but they cannot ignore 3,000. Recognition is something that comes by muscle, you've got to demand it," ex- plained Perlman. SHE CONTENDED that although the University has made some concessions to women's demands, the majority of women workers are still suffering from sex discrimination. "Remember that in negotiations wie must be seen as equals, not as slaves," she toM the 60 people at the conference. Following the keynote address, the participants split into two workshops, discussed problems of working wonen and reached some tentative conclusions. about possible resedles. ONE WOMAN told of a friend with a masters degree in microbiology looking for a research position before she began work on her PhD. However, when she applied for a job, she was immediately asked about her typing skills. Another woman said her prospective employer, fearing that she would become pregnant, asked her what sort of con- traceptive she was using. The woman, who was unmarried, neither answered the question nor took the job. Many women advocated abolishing female-type casting, providing equal pay for comparable jobs and creating more, child care, and maternity and paternity benefits. They said they needed better evalua- tion procedures that would take the re- sponsibilities of hiring and promotion out of the realm of supervisory whim. They also asked for more interesting work. ONE WOMAN complained that despite the fact that the majority of the people in many departments are female, the heads of the same departments are us-, ually male. "It's like a master-slave relationship," she said. Several representatives of the Coalition of Labor Union Women (CLUW) were also present at the conference. CLUW is a nationwide multi-union organization of working women. CLUW member Mary Jane Wyers said she feels that eventually the majority of union women will belong to the Coali- tion. "This is what we have to do if we are to have what is comingto us as women workers," argued Wyers. She explained that CLUW is a way of "warning the nation that women are on the move'for more equality." Although she said that a union grie- vance procedure is the quickest way of getting things done, she pointed out the Coalition also works to improve affirma- tive action programs, to see that existing legislation is enforced and to educate both female union and nonunion mem- bers about the problems they confront. Art fair to return bigger, more colorful than ever By STEPHEN HERSI The city's annual street art fair will be more festive than ever this summer. Not only will the tremendous crowds be present, pushing past booths crammed with every kind of artifact imaginable: jewelry, paintings,,sculpture, glasswork, leather and fabric work, but this sum- mer's fair will also feature musical per- formances and will include a colorful celebration of Ann Arbor's sesquicenten- nial. The Ann Arbor Street Art Fair and the Free Fair conglomerate will' also be bigger than it has been in the past. The fair will spread from its usual site at East University and South University Streets to encompass much of Main Street. "We're going to be working with the 1690's theme on Main Street," said Vic Gutman, coordinator of the University's Artsists and Craftsmen Guild, which or- ganizes the Free Fair. "There's going to be a whole lot of red, white and blue -flags, bunting and the like. "And we're going to have I890's-style entertainment on stages-jazz, square dancing, folk singing." The fair, scheduled for July 17-20, will include 850 exhibitors, coming from all over the country. The vendors of organic, exotic and just regular old food will be more numerous than they have been in past years. The Free Fair will offer an area where fair-goers will be able to leave their children to paint and play under super- vision. The Street Art Fair is now entering its 15th year, and the Free Fair its 14th, . See ART, Page 8