0 -Ninety-Two Years of Editorial Freedom e~it III aI MEDIOCRE Windy and colder Sunday with a high in the upper,20s. More snow likely. ..-. . - --. . -.... -_.....L 1 % r L..AA.L:.. .f.:..w_ L__ .__ . .. Vol. XCII, No. 100 Copyright 1981~, The iciigan ailmy Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, January 31, 1982 Stalking the white-tails: drive census tallies deer Ten Cents By PERRY CLARK Heavy snow, tangled underbrush, and rugged countryside did not deter 62 hardy souls who marched across the Michigan landscape yesterday. Driven by urges unknown to man, beast, or anything else, these people dedicated a major portion of their weekend recreation to counting deer. "I WANTED to get out in the field, have a good time, and see some deer." said sophomore Karl Stromayer. The occasion was the University's annual George Reserve deer drive, a research effort to census the white- tailed deer population on the Univer- sity's two-square-mile research area near Pinckney. The drive began with participants lining up along the reserve's east fence, an 8-foot-high deer-proof enclosure which encircles the research area. Af- ter assigning everyone a number, the drive organizers spaced individuals 100 feet apart. SOON THE cry "move out" rolled across the snowscape. The drive was on. The object of all this hoopla was to drive the deer to the opposite end of the reserve, then count them as they came back through the line of people. Since not even a deer's great leaping ability can conquer an 8-foot fence, the animals are forced back through the human horde. "Make a lot of noise, fall down, have a good time," said Prof. Dale Mc- Cullough, who coordinated the drive. "We're not trying to surprise the deer." Wildlife biologist McCullough, a for- mer University professor, and now at Berkeley, flew in Friday night to supervise the operation. MCCULLOUGH said the herd is studied and managed .to gain knowledge on deer biology and population dynamics. "A lot of the value of this population is the fact it's been studied for so long-longer than any other animal population in the world other than domestic livestock," he said. See WHITE-TAIL, Page 3 Daily Photo by PERRY CLARK A WHITE-TAILED deer races through the census line at the George Reserve Deer Drive yesterday. Unions lead Solidarity Day From AP and UPI Thousands of supporters of Poland's independent trade union raised "Solidarity" banners as they rallied in cities around the world yesterday urging an end to martial law in Poland and freedom for labor leaders jailed there. t The AFL-CIO organized gatherings in all 50 states to mark "A Day of Solidarity" with the Polish labor movement, with major rallies in 16 cities. BUT THE official Polish media, joined by the official Soviet media, lambasted the protests with bitter commentaries loaded with everything from outrage to satire. Both countries zeroed in on the .U.S. government's production of "Let Poland be Poland," a television broadcast featuring Reagan, several West European leaders and Hollywood stars. Demonstrations also were held in Tokyo, Vienna, London, Brussels and in several cities in West Germany. The chief U.S. rally was in Chicago, which has the largest Polish com- munity outside Warsaw. An estimated 10,000 people turned out to hear AFL- CIO President Lane Kirkland and Secretary of State Alexander Haig speak at the International Am- phitheater bedecked with "Solidar- nosc" banners. IN REMARKS prepared for the gathering, Kirkland said, "The thousands assembled here are part of a world wide movement.. .of plain people who cherish, for themselves, the rights claimed by Solidarnosc. Whatever ground we cede to the enemies of human rights, we surrender of our own freedom.r "Poland is not merely an incident to put behind us," Haig said, recalling that he told Gromyko "it has cast a long and dark shadow over East-West relations." In Hamtramck, the heavily Polish enclave of Detroit, more than 1,200 people filled a high school community center decorated with large photographs of Walesa and hand- lettered signs, in English and Polish, calling for an end to martial law in Poland. In the rally held in Washington Sen. Henry Jackson (D-Wash.) called for the freeing of Solidarity Chief Lech Walesa and other detainees, the lifting of mar- tial law and resumption of negotiations petween Solidarity and the gover- nment. Kirkland .. . says all cherish rights Jazz artist cancels Hill performance By RICHARD CAMPBELL Jazz "pianist Oscar Peterson, scheduled to perform last night at Hill Auditorium, cancelled his concert at the last minute for health reasons. His sister, May Peterson, called the Eclipse Jazz office at noon yesterday from their home in Mississauga, On- tario to say that Peterson would be unable to perform because of arthritis flareup in his fingers and hands, said Kevin O'Connor, who took the call. ECLIPSE JAZZ spokesman Peter Pretsfelder said the Peterson concert would be rescheduled later in the semester. The new date for the concert will not be decided until tomorrow or Tuesday, he added. Tickets will be honored for the rescheduled performance and refunds will be granted beginning tomorrow at 'the place of purchase. The concert's cancellation is an ironic twist for the Eclipse concert series, O'Connor said, because Peter- son's November 1979 concert had to be rescheduled twice. It was first rescheduled when Peterson's wife became ill and was cancelled again because of a train derailment near his home. Peterson, 57, has played jazz piano since 1944, when he began touring professionally in Canada. In 1949, he first came to America and performed at Carnegie Hall where he received critical praise for his fluid, powerful mastery of the piano. Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER Prison overcrowding Julie Haab and Michele Sobota find room to study in the Graduate Library stacks. POOR HEALTH forced jazz pianist Oscar Peterson to cancel his Hill Auditorium perfrmance scheduled for last night. Professor offers solutions to By BEN TICHO In the midst of continuing high inflatiion and unemployment, one University professor has proposed a dramatic restructuring of American working life that he says could alleviate many of the nation's most serious problems. Philosophy Prof. Frithjof Bergmann foresees a large-scale reduction in the amount of necessary work resulting from continuing technological advan- ces. To combat the effects of this "reduction, Bergmann recommends limiting the amount of time each person spends at work. BERGMANN calls his proposal an "attractive, even splendid yet at the same time feasible and realistic alter- native." The future of work in America is the subject of Bergmann's 10-part television 'series, Culture After the Elimination of Labor, premiering tomorrow night on Ann Arbor's Public Access cable network. Conflicts between the rising need to work - for cultural, social and finan- cial reasons - and technology's escalating ability to make many jobs unnecessary have created an ever- increasing quantity of what Bergmann calls "excess labor." BECAUSE OF this gap between the increasing numbers of people who need jobs and the decreasing amount of necessary work, the country faces an imminent period of "widespread -unemployment on a scale of which we so far have no conception," Bergmann said. Bergmann insists, however, that the consequences of a drastic reduction in the number of jobs need not be disastrous. "If we could change the number of the social arrangements and if we could sharply change the political ,con- figuration of the country, then we would have an excellent chance of realizing an extremely atractive and promising future," he said. IN THE television series, the professor proposes a variety of solutins to the problem of excess labor. Given the projected decrease in the amount of necessary work, only a redistribution of the remaining work would equitably ensure that large sec- tions of the populace would retain a source of income, Bergmann said. This redistribution might, he said, involve cutting the average American's work time in half, while raising wages. Less work time would not necessarily mean fewer work hours per day or even fewer work days per week, Bergmann said. Instead, companies might popularize longer vacations - for example, "six months on, six months off." Under such a hypothetical system, Bergmann suggested, a worker might receive full pay for his or her working time and half pay during his or her time off. WHAT TO DO with the resultant in- crease in personal time presents an ex- citing and interesting challenge, the professor said. Individual pursuits could include everything from con- tinuing education and raising a family vork shortage to writing a book and learning a new and resists any attempt to devise sim skill. Over a summer, for example, a plistic slogans to describe iis waiter could learn the cooking skills proposals. "The project cannot be needed to become a chef on his or her easily reduced to a simple formula," he return to work, Bergmann said. said Such a modified work schedule would Bergmann said some kind of lead to increased ,work quality, while revolutionary action is neither alleviating the problem of worker revlssary ction is neig "burn-out." necessary nor capable of addressing Culture after the elimination of labor the nation's'problems. And, he said, no could offer the greatest possibilities for available ideology, from socialism to selfrealizationanymdens ossityes.rliberalism, offers viable answers to the self-realization any modern society has, problem of excess work. known, he added. CURRENT policies of the Reagan ALTERED SOCIAL and economic administration are "practically certain arrangements would encourage "much to worsen the problems that -they are more extensive and productive uses for trnt he sa. -there what is now mere leisure time," he trying to cure, he said. Neither cuts said. in taxes and government programs nor Bergmann said he recognizes the nationalizing or expropriating complexity of the excess work problem See T.V., Page 2 I TODAY-7 A rare relativity ARBARA HEDRICK became a grandmother twice, her two look-alike daughters became mothers and aunts, and their newborn girls became nieces and cousins-all within 30 minutes. Deborah Cagle, 22, and Donna Davis, 20, gave birth to daughters Tuesday within 30 minutes of each other, in the same complaint filed by the De#partment of Registration and Education against Conception Rivera. The complaint said Rivera offered to treat an undercover agent for a back problem and perform an abortion on the agent's fictitious cousin. Rivera also reportedly sacrificed doves to remove spells. A hearing on the bizarre case has been set for Feb. 4. The state hopes to get him for practicing "medicine" without a license. Q That's a lot of refrihos proposed by a St. Louis researcher. Klaus Schulz of Washington University in St. Louis surmised that meteors the size of mountains smashed into the earth's fragile crust eons ago, and unleashed volcanic eruptions in the split crust that built up the current continents. Supporting his claim, Schulz said he believes he has evidence of a 1,700 mile-wide crater lying below the forests and lakes of central Canada. Schulz added that it's hard to get direct evidence of events that happened about 4 million years ago, but that he'll keep trying. Q "several decades" of misguided actions for creating the situation he is now trying to correct. On another occasion, he said the ill-advised course had been followed "30-odd years or so." Thirty years would take us back to the start of the Eisenhower administration. However, it can be argued with sound logic that the seeds of the recession were plan- ted long before that. Research points at least a circumstan- tial finger of guilt at our 10th president, John Tyler. So much for you, John Tyler. If it weren't for him, we wouldn't be in this mess. ,I { ,I