TDE Michigan Daily Edited and managed by Students at the University of Michigan Tuesday, August 13, 1974 News Phone: 764-0552 Bottle up your trash IT'S BEEN ten months since Oregon implemented the toughest beveraee container bill ever passed by a state legislature and by all appearances the bill is a complete success. The bill outlaws snap-top cans and throw-away bottles. and also requires a 5c refund to be payed on all carbonated beverage containers except for the one bottle which was already returnable. The effec- tive enetment of the bill has resulted not only in de- creasing Orecon's In ter problems, but it also proved to be an efficient method of energy conservation. Michigan, indeed, every other state in the union, is in need of such a bill. In Oregon, the litter resulting from beverage containers was reduced 50 per cent to 70 per cent during the first three months after the passage of the bill. With tourism such an important part of Michigan's economy, it is important to keep our resort areas as clean as possible. Instead of spending extra money to pick up these containers it would be much simpler to stop them from being left behind in the first place. AT THIS MOMENT Consumers Power must buy electric- ity from other states to keep Michigan supplied with power. If all the beverage bottles sold during 1971 had been returnable enough energy would have been saved to provide residential electric power to a city of 6.5 million people for one year. Returnable beverage containers are economical as well as beneficial to the environment. A throw-away can costs 4 to 5 cents while a one-way bottle costs only 3 to 4 Cents. In 1969 Americans paid 1.5 billion dollars more for beverages in throw-away containers than that same beverage would have cost in returnable bottles. In addi- tion to this, taxpayers spent at least $350 million to dis- pose of those came containers. The success of the numerous paper drives and recycling centers demonstrates that the people are concerned enough to act. It's time the government did too. -Sue Wilhelm Do 'foreign laundry' NOW THAT WE ARE finally cleaning the nation's politi- cal laundry, let us examine the international clothes hamper too. The Senate Committee on Foreign Relations is con- sidering a bill (S. 3394) which authorizes funding of mili- tary assistance abroad in 1975. Zap this budget, and the incidence of world-wide violence will fall proportionally. THERE ARE A NUMBER of promising trends that should be encouraged: First, the CIA estimated on Saturday that Soviet and Chinese arm supplies to Vietnam have dropped in recent months. The U. S. should follow suit. Secondly. Portueal has disclosed plans to grant two of three African colonies-Guinea-Bissau and Angola- independknce. The formula calls for a two year power transferral to native provisional governments. Don't for- get Mozambiote, either. Third, no fighting on Cyprus for two days! Turkish and Greek army officers agreed to separate their armies last Saturdav: at least bullets won't complicate the deli- cate Geneva neeotiations. ON THE OTHER HAND . . . ceasefires are frail inven- tions. Half a world anart, Vietnamese and Cypriots have nibbled away at each other's truce established ter- ritories. Geneva talks have ground to a halt as Ankara demands partition of Cyprus and Athens stresses "peace- ful coexistence" of the two ethnic groups. Meanwhile the Saigon government has seized a news paper for appealing to both sides to stop shooting. Still another ceasefire is barely holding. Sunday night, Israel placed its army on full alert. Something other than rining the border with barbed wire emplace- ments will ease Mideast tensions. Yet the U. S. continues supplying the guns while looking the other way. Other fences need mending also. We urge normaliza- tion of relations with that island barely 90 miles off our coast-Cuba, and resumption of ties with India whom we alienated by arms sales to Pakistan during the Bangla- desh War. International housecleaning begins at home. Con- gress has the power to prevent American rifles from re- maining household furniture in Vietnam, Portugal, Greece, Turkey, Israel, Pakistan and other neighborhoods. We urge the Senate to end appropriations for military aid abroad, -BILL HEENAN Letters to the clerical concern To The Daily: TIE AFSCME article which apeared in The Daily cites two critical questions involved in a choice between two unions: 1) which union has more exper- ience in dealing with the prob- lems of University employees and 2) which union can provide greater support for employees on the 'U' campus . . . Let'; ex- amine the facts. While it is true that we are public employees, we are just as importantly clerical w o r k- ers, UAW is composed prii ar- ily of auto workers, but its lOP division, whose membership is now 85,000 strong and of which U-M clericals would be a part, deals strictly with technical, of- fice and professional personnel. AFSCME represents such di- verse classifications as main- tenance men and zookeepers. AFSCME implied that 'U' cleri- cals would be "out of their ele- ment" by joining the autowork- ers; surely such an affiliation is no more ludicrous than clericals joiningtforces with zookeepers. While the UAW may be regard- ed by some as a relative new- comer in organizing university clerical workers, we onlieve that in its short history it has outshone most of the experienc- ed office-related unions. HERE IS A GOOD example. AFSCME points out that U-M service workers who have been organized for seven years now start at $3.17 an hour compar- ed to the $1.82 they made when they first organized. This would apear to be a very effective comparison were it not fir the fact that Wayne County Com- munity College service workers of the same grade (organized by UAWTOP) start at $4.00 per hour after only two years of being organized by the UAW. Which do you want, exper- ience or results? AFSCME also points out that U-M service workers will be getting a 13c an hour cost of living allowance. With the rise in the cost of liv- ing expected to be well over 10 per cent this year, it apprs that AFSCME with all of itn experience has been able to get its employees a mere 3 per cent cost of living wage ;n- crease. UAW contracts include a cost of living escalator clause which corresponds to the ac- tial inflation rate, not some arbitrary figure which will help emloyees keep up in these days of spiraling inflation. Again we ask, svhich doti want, experience or results? WE ALSO believe the issue of women representing them- selves to be one of the maior considerations in deciding be- tween the two unions. Once a union is selected by the em- nlovees, we as- members of the union will be resoonsible for running our own local, repre- smting orselves at the bar- naising table, and settling our erievances. These are jobs from which women have been tradi- tianlly excluded, As in many other social move- ments, the UAW has set ;he trend among unions and indus- trv in psbing hard for women's rihts. There has been a wo- men's department in the UAW for over 30 years andhitU ha been a searate division of the UAW for 20 vears. In the constitution . of the UAW, all -nts who have women mem- hers are required to have a tanuding committee on women. The prose of this committee is to encourage women to take nart in the leadership roles of ts. anion and become active n-rtici ants i deision-making. Caruline Dais, who is the head at the UAW Women's Denart- meat, in one of the 12' found- ing members of NOW (National Or. nization of Women). Ol a Mdar, who is the national re- sident of CLUW (Coalition of Lab rUnion Women) was lect- ed to the International Vxecu- tive Board of the UAW in 1966, the first woman ever to bald such a position in any u-sion. Women are truly an important part of the UAW. Today Sere are 75 women who are local presidents and sote 817 wo- men holding the top four elec- tive offices in UAW locals, some of them in locals where men outnumber women members. PLACING WOMEN in le-iler- ship positions has been one of the goals in our union drive here at the U-M. For far too long women secretaries hive been told by male admitsstra- tors that they should be happy making their measly salaries because they are only putting their husbands through school. A union is a way women can control their own work place. Through the CCFA UAW-TOP organizing drive we have learn- ed many skills which will help us once a union is achieved here on campus. For instance, when the Michigan Employment Relations Commission held a hearing to determine when the election for a union would take place, CCFA/UAW was repre- sented by five clericals and orae man from the UAW. AFSCME was represented by three men and a woman who Da'ly I only to return and find a line of Art Fair cars waiting to buy for "one dollar" spaces whic had already been purchased by U of M employees. Needless to say, not one parking soace was available in the Hill Street structure, the Church Street structure, or the parking sti-uc- ture across from the M4LS (we work in the Residential College which is across the Diag from the MLB). We were forced, since we were already twenty minutes late looking for "legal U of M parking spaces,' to park in an illegal tow-away zone some eight blocks away 'roni where we work. On present secretarial salar- ies, the cost of a $25.00 U of M parking permit is enough of a financial burden without the ad- ditional cost of a parking ticket or a towing fee. WE FEEL that this practice is unfair to U of B employees and feel some assurance should be made to provide parking for ts during Art Fair Week. -Thelma Kirk Claudi Haigler July 17, 1974 fairness alphabetized the AFS of-interest cards. 0 is, if we as women - igoing to represent once a union is in isn't it in our best be gaining as muc experience as possib ization by actively ourselves? If thet U-M clericals votet CCFA/UAW represe bargaining with the women will be read leadership roles in -Mitzi Burton Bryne, JanC Joyce Holder CCFA/UAW To The Daily: I WOULD LIKE t way for people to protest City Council's cancel the Blues an. tival. Lloyd Fairbar the Republican cul vice-president of Ht National Bank. I ri account on account proclaiming all the cause of my unhap HVNB. If others were toc the effect would be There are doubtles turn economic pressi council members someone more kn write the Daily and 1 This is an area wh uals can successful our city government, Republicans where them, in the money --Doug Nelson July 30 To The Daily: AT THE BEGINN academic year we parking permits for the sole purpose of University parking while working as se U ofM for 8 to 5, A Friday. On July 17th we my car to a garage CME show- To The Editor: ur 4uescion workers are ON JU NE 3rd at the invitation t ourselves of Senator Bursley, I represent- nplemented, ed the Ann Arbor Chapter of interests to the National Organization for h firsthand Women at a committee hearing le in union- in Lansing, and I wish you organizing could have been there. majority of Despite the position of dozens to have the of organizations and individuals, tnt us in from the Governor of Michigan University, to the League of Women Vot- y to fill the ers, all of whom support House this union. Bill 4639 which is legislation , Dan which would render it illegal to Cooper, discriminate against people in r the extending of credit or the granting of a loan, and despite mounds of supporting testimony, festival reams of documentation and scores of legal opinions, Sena- tor Bursley effectively defeated this much needed bill by offer- o suggest a ing a substitute which would effectively have no enforcement power s decision to whatsoever. d Jazz Fos- The token piece of legisiation nks, one of which is left is totally unaccepz- Iprits, is a able to the Ann Arbor Chap-er uron Valley of NOW. The original bill, which emoved my passed the Michigan House with of his vote, only one dissenting vote would while the have made it illegal to discrim- pineswith mnate on the basis of race, col- or, religion, national origin, do the sane marital status, sex or blindness. significant. What's left of the original bill s ways to has no enforcement power and ure on other would do very little if anything. too; would owledgeable GOVERNOR Milliken recently et us know? called for the adoption of the ere individ- original House Bill 4639 in his ly influence State of the State Address when bitting the he said, "It asks for nothing it willtghurt more or n hing less than fair- y-belt. neststo all in the granting of credit." Unfortunately, the Re- publican majority on the Cor- porations and Economic Devel- opment Committee have chosen parking not to sapport fairness in the granting of credit. SING of the If you are concerned about IpGurche fair lending and loaning prac- r urchased tices, please write or call Sen- a$25 tar Bursley in an effort to re- parking in gister your concern over this g facilities issue. cretaries at Mtonday thru -Kathleen M. Fojtik Vice President left to rake Ann Arbor NOW for repairs, June 4 ' . :.; ::'+ : :. '%+.:: 2> ", '.a": s : Contact your reps- Sen. Phillip Hart (Dem), Rm 253, Old Senate Bldg., Capitol Hill, Washington, D.C. 20515. Sen. Robert Griffin (Rep), Rm 353, Old Senate Bldg., Capitol 1Hill, Washington, D.C. 20515. Rep. Marvin Esch (Rep), Rm. 412, Cannon Bldg., Capitol 11111, Washington, D.C. 20515. Sen. Gilbert Bursley (Rep), Senate, State Capitol Bldg., l."nsing, Mi. 48933. Rep. Perry Bullard (Dem), House of Representatives, State Capitol Bldg., Lansing, Mi. 48933,