ge three £ittigan 3athj BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Thursday, August 17, 1972 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN News Phone: 764-0552 Local parties organize air practices unit By CHRIS PARKS Apparently tired of their own 'spy-versus-spy' cam- paign tactics, local politicians have agreed to form the city's first Fair Elections and Campaign Practices Com- mittee. Announced at a morning press conference yesterday, the tri-partisan committee will draw up an election code and investigate allegations of unfair campaigning. The committee will include one representative of each of the city's three parties, as well as four non-partisan members of the community to be chosen by the partisan Unionizing. attempt fails at Jacobson's By JIM KENTCH Following several months ef union organizing attempts, the eUloyei of the local Jacobson departmen store overwhelming- ly rejected yesterday plans to affiliate with Teamsters Local Union No. 614. Employes' grievances includ- ed the low wage rate, arbitrary management practices in giving raises, hiring and firing prac- tices, the commission system, And the lack of a clear delinea- tion of employee rights. While 144 employes voted against unionizing, 32 employes voted in favor of joining a un- ion, according to unofficial to- tals. Over 200 employes work at the store. Laura Baddeley, an employe and organizer of the drive for unionizing, said she could offer no explanation for the results. "They just knew how to get out the no-vote and we didn't know how to get out the yes- vote," she said. Baddeley was fired during the organizing campaign. In an in- vestigation, the National Labor Relations Board found "reason- able cause" to believe she had been fired for her unionizing ac- tivity, a violation of federal law. Baddeley was subsequently re- instated and given back pay for time lost. members. The committee's first meeting is slated for early next week. Each party representative will have the power to veto the chosen representative from an- other party. Although optimism was ex- pressed that the committee may tone down the city's increasingly unruly campaigns, it was ad- mitted that the only real effect of the group will be that of "a deterrent." Peter Wright, chairman of the city GOP said yesterday, "Al- though the committee will have no legal sanctions, by virtue of it's mere existence, candidates will think twice" about engaging in false allegations and smear tactics. The American Independent Party has been invited to join the fair practices committee. If they choose to do so, the compo- sition will change to four party representatives and five non- partisan members. One of the fall races which may first occupy the commit- tee's time is the crowded contest for Wahtenaw County sheriff. In the recent county primary. the Democratic candidates for the party's nomination fought across local news pages, trading insults and allegations. Presumably, such grievances will in the future be taken before the Fair Elections and Campaign Practices Committee. City Council member Jerry De Crieck (HRI'-First Ward) said last night that the committee "can only work if all three par- ties and the local media get be- hind it and push it." "It's high time for everybody to clean sup or shut up," he added. Doiy Photo by JIM WALLAL Left to right are photographer Tsien Szu-chieh, reporter Yeli Chi-hsing, and Chief Correspondent Chang Hai-toa in The Daily news office. Chinese writers tour t' By DAN BIDDLE As the city and campus lan- guish in the lazy days of sum- mer, three journalists from the People's Republic of China hosted by a New York Times reporter investigated the local sights yes- terday. The three representatives of New China News Agency (Hsin- hua), Chief Correspondent Chang Hai-toa, his associate Yeh Chi- hsing, and photographer Tsien Szu-chieh, are assigned to United Nations coverage in New York and are currently touring the midwest with Times correspon- dent Fox Butterfield. Chang said the tour, which is their first American trip outside the New York area, will hope- fully give them a chance "to see the working processes of industry and agriculture" in this country. The three journalists lunched here with political science Prof. Allen Whiting, a leading China expert, and a group of students and teachers from the Chinese studies department. Ther tour of the campus included the Phoenix Memorial-Ford nuclear reactor on North Campus, Mott Children's Hospital, the Univer- sity library's Asia collection, and The Daily. The three said Hsin-hua is a news-gathering wire service sim- ilar to the Associated Press, and is the official national news source for every newspaper in China. The tour has so far included visits to a coal mine in Pennsyl- vania and Detroit's River Rouge Ford plant. Butterfield said they plan to see farming areas of Wisconsin and Illinois soon, as well as steel plants in Indiana. Chang and Yeh, who will de- scribe the two-week tour in an article for the Times, said Ann Arbor is their only campus stop. TRUSTEES CLAIM: Local day care center faces problems of funding, location Camp aids lots By DIANE LEVICK The University's Child Care Action Center, once the center of attention for campus radical and women's groups,face-usa serious fin'anciat crisis according to the Board of Trustees. The center, established three years ago, has always faced questions of how much support would be given from the Univer- O kids By LORIN LABARDEE Most people are familiar with the American practice of sending the little ones to camp for t h e summer. But at the University's Fresh Air Camp, not only do the little ones go off to camp, but some big ones go too. Owned and operated by the University, the camp provides students majoring in education, psychology and sociology a um- que opportunity to study the spec- ial educational problems of child- ren in an informal setting. The children who attend the camp represent the entire spec- trum of learning abilities. Many of the children have no disabil- ity but have never had the chance to live in a country set- ting. Others are either physically or emotionally handicaped a n d still others are deaf. According to Prof. W a n d a Milburn, asociate director of the camp, one of the main goals of See AREA, Page 7 sity, and how much would have to be mustered by the center's participants and the community. The University has provided a location for the center. But the location has been changed often, ranging from the University Ter- race Apartments to its present cite in the education school. Uni- versity officials say there is no permanent space available. However, funding for the cen- ter, which serves about 40 fami- lies of University staff and stu- dents, has come from the city antfron the families thei- selves. In mid-July, the center's Board of Trustees, made up of parents and staff members, ap- pealed to President Robben Fleming for funds to help out, but Fleming said that no money had been allocated for the cen- ter, so none was available. Ftetming himself says he sup- ports the idea of the center. 'I guess he feels his hands are tied," says ianette Wineberg, a menber of the board. But the board re-emphasizes its long-held belief that there should be Uni- versity funding for the center which is "an integral part of the University community," and is supported by "a large number of University-related groups." One of the chief problems faced by the center is the present site. - Although the education school location will be available for one more year, it is inadequate under state law governing nurseries. The fees charged by the cen- ter, according to the law, are in- adequate to run the operation as presently defined. Fleming Parents pay 60 cents per hour for each child, or 75 cents if their income exceeds $6500. In addition, the center recently received $750 frot City Council and $500 from Project Commun- ity. But more money is needed to pay four staff members and cover other necessary expenses. Wineberg says the center is just squeeking by this summer. "Little gifts have helped us get through," she says. "We barely have enough to pay the staff's meager salary." A core of dedicated parents works to keep the center pro- vided with snacks, toys, repairs on equipment. The teachers also work more than the hours they are paid for. "They put in a lot more time, planning the curricu- lum, consulting with parents and social workers, says Wineberg. Camp scene