Thursday, August 14, 1975 FHE MICHIGAN DAILY Hoge Five Men fare well at 'women's work' Boston officer injured as (Continued from Page 3) service representative, another five men in his nursing class position traditionally held by and "they bent over backwards women. for us." "WHEN YOU get four or five guys in a group of 70 or 80 girls, they treat you like a brother and look out after you , . . it's kind of neat," he added. A former Michigan Bell op- erator, Ken Bailey, found it "surprisingly easy" to land his job and was probably too read- ily accepted. "A business man would call in and still say 'How ya doing ma'am'-the same thing he'd been saying for years," said Bailey, who now works as a BUT FOR others there have been those awkward moments like when a woman walked into the office and said to Nuismer, "Why aren't you out shovelling or lifting bales?" Such incidents, however, are taken with a grain of salt and seem to be rare. "It depends on you-if you feel self conscious," says Rudy Woods, a nurse at the Univer- sity Hospital's Burn Clinic. "It's a two way street. If you're sure of yourself then they have no qualms." ACCORDING to Ken Bailey's supervisor, Henry Kenworthy, Michigan Bell is engaged in an active campaign to recruit men as operators and service repre- sentatives. T he company is working under an agreement with the Equal Employment Op- portunity Commission (EEOC) to reach "certain levels" in em- ployment, eventually resembling, the profile of the population. On the other hand, the Uni- versity and St. Joseph's Hos- pital do not have similar plans but claim they willingly hire the few men who do apply to be secretaries or nurses. House OKls P closes down. new political neighborhood store (Continued from Page 3) are still doing things the way reform bill she could make a tri to one of they were doing them twenty the outlying shopping centers. years ago. i "I new violence: breaks out BOSTON (P) - A policeman civil rights demonstration at was slightly injured yesterday South Boston's Carson Beach, when struck in the face by a which has traditionally been rock thrown through the window used by whites. of a cruiser as renewed violence ABOUT 800 police kept the broke out in Boston's largely groups apart Sunday, but could black Roxbury section. not prevent rock- and bottle- It was the fourth consecutive throwing exchanges over police day of scattered disturbances i lines. Ten persons were arrested NhciN P S S lwt and 40 persons were injured. NINE PERSONS, all white, Mayor Kevin White, at a news were injured and 20 persons, Moren hite, a a ne both black and white, were ar- conference yesterday, called the rested in rock-throwing mci- rock-throwing incidents "uncon- dents Tuesday in the same area scionable and obviously intoler where the police cruiser was able." hit. He applied to the "vast ma- Police sealed off two streets jority of decent, law abiding in the Roxbury section early parents and citizens" to put yesterday afternoon after spa- down the disturbances. radic reports of bands of black HE SAID police would prose- youths stoning cars. However, cute anyone involved in mob within two hours of the direc- actions. "We will not abandon tive, police were permitting ve- this city to any hoodlums, white hicles driven by blacks through or black, who act under the the streets. cover of some alleged injustice The city has been the scene or infringement." of scattered incidents of racial White added: "I'm going to violence since Sunday when stop any march that is intended some 500 blacks and 1,000 whites to inflame or to escalate ten- confronted each other during a sions." Theatre Phone 668-6416 TONIGHT at 7 and 9 p.m. (Continued from Page 1) MAJOR provisions in the law are: -a limit of $1,700 any individ- ual can contribute to a cam- paign other than that of a state legislator (e.g., attorney gen- eral, secretary of state, etc.). A limit of $450 is placed on indiv- idual contributions for senator- ial races and a limit of $250 for candidates for the House of Re- presentatives. -expenditures for a guberna- torial candidate cannot exceed $1 million, $300,00 for secretary of state and attorney general and $50,000 for university re- gental candidates. -hopefuls must list by name, address and profession any in- dividual that contributes m o r e than $100 to his or her cam- paign. -lobbyists will be strictly reg- ulated with penalties of up to 90 days in jail and a maximum X1,000 fine for violating expend- iture regulations. Michigan also becomes the first state in the country to pro- vide for partial public funding for gubernatorial candidates. The funds will come from a $2 state income tax checkoff, sim- ilar to the present federal sys- tem. The Political Ethics Commis- sion will oversee enforcement of the law once it goes into effect. It will consist of six members, three from each political par- ty, appointed by the gvrnor and approved by the Senate. if you see news happen, coll 76-DAILY CHARING CROSS BOOKSHOP Used. Fine and Scholarly Books- 316 S. STATE-994-4041 Open Mon.-Fri. 11-9,. Sot. 10-6 t "EVEN WITH roller skates I couldn't get that far," she lamented. The closing of the store is just part of a massive "re-develop- ment program" in which A&P has closed over 1200 of its branch markets in the past six months, including nearly 65 in Michigan. An A&P spokesperson at their corporate headquarters in Patterson, New Jersey said yesterday that more than 200 additional closings are expect- ed. A supermarket industry source in New York has indi- cated that A&P brought its cur- rent crisis upon itself through sloppy management. "They've lost an awful lot of money," said the source, who works for a trade publication. "They have been a poorly man- aged firm for a long time. They EARLIER this year, A&P commissioned a massive com- puter study of all its stores, to determine which ones could not be profitably operated. The study indicated that it was not worth A&P's corporate while to supply smaller stores like the one on Huron. Bob Taylor would have been working at the Huron A&P for 24 years this March, had the store not folded. He said he held no bitterness toward the com- pany. "I would like to see the store stay where it is," he said, methodically placing groceries into the customer's bags. "But A&P has been good to me. I'll miss the older customers you get to see year after year. It's a shame, because it gets to be a way of life." 231 south. state S T A T ETheatre Phone 662.6264 ''' TONIGHT and FRIDAY at 7 and 9:10 p.m. Open at 6:45 Due to Contractual Obligations, Guest Night has been suspended. -AUGUST SUPER SALE- BIKES, FANTASTIC SAVINGS on all 10-SPEED BIKES 0 100% ASSEMBLED . FREE 30-DAY CHECK-UP VALUE SALE Custom Bottecchia..... ...600 450 Bottecchia Giro D'Italia .... 399 289 Torpodo Premo ...........349 249 Centurion Super LeMons . 265 185 K.W. Imperial (Cr. Mo. D.B.) 239 169 Torpodo ................. 219 159 Kabuki Super Light (Alloy) 199 159 Bottecchia Deluxe ........ 189 137 Liberia .. . ..... ...... 179 134 C. Itoh . . r... ... ..... 169 139 Atala . ............. ..159 129 Corso ........ ..... 149 119 Taylor Bike Shop only 5 minutes east of Metro Airport on 1-94 CALL 1-291-6802 ... K 1080NE PG wwaa oo ROY SHAW RICARD SCHUEDER DREYFUISS Mon.-Tues.-Thuts.-Fti. at: .0 3 0 7&9:15OnlyOenat 6:45 Sat.-Sun.-Wed. at: M1:15-3:45-6:30-9:05 p.m. Open at 12:45 "The Greatest Western Since Theatre Phone 665-6290Ford's 'Stoecoach' "- L.A. Times