The Michigan Daily-Friday, January 7, 1983-Page 5 Record number of auto workers face layoffs DETROIT (UPI) - Domestic automakers yesterday started off the new year by announcing record in- } definite layoffs for next week of 269,400,, the seventh consecutive week in which a record will be set for the current slump. The new layoff figure is up by 40 ,people from the 269,360 workers who were on indefinite layoff at the end of 11982, which had been the previous high for the slump that is entering its fourth year. THE ALL-TIME high is more than 300,000, set during the 1974-75 recession. Temporary furloughs next week will be 21,100, a. drop of more than 38,000 from the 59,525 workers temporarily without jobs this week, when automakers had 23 plants closed. Most of those plants will reopen next week. GENERAL MOTORS Corp. will have 172,000 workers on indefinite layoff next week, tying this week's record. The automaker will have 4,300 workers on temporary layoff at its Willow Run, Mich., plant. In addition, GM announced 60 workers will be recalled from indefinite layoff next week at its Detroit special truck assembly plant. Ford Motor Co. said it will have 49,477 indefinite layoffs next week, down about 400 from this week due to the recall of 400 workers at its Lorain, Ohio plant. FORD WILL have 12,000 temporary layoffs due to the closing of plants in Atlanta, Edison, N.J., San Jose, Calif., Kansas City, Mo., Norfolk, Va., Twin Cities, Minn., and Wayne, Mich. Its Louisville, Ky. plant will operate one shift only. Chryselr Corp. said it will have 43,500 indefinite layoffs and 4,800 temporary layoffs. Its Belvidere, Ill., and Warren, Mich., plants will not operate next week. American Motors Corp. will have 1,100 workers on indefinite layoff at Kenosha, Wis., and 1,350 laid off at Toledo, Ohio, but will have not tem- porary layoffs. Volkswagen of America will have 1,650 workers on indefinite layoff at its Westmoreland County, Pa., plant but no temporary layoffs. Meanwhile, automakers planned to build 77,187 cars in the first week of the year, up 51.62 percent from the dismal 50,908 cars they built during the first week of January, 1982, the trade publication Automotive News said. Truck production was expected to be 19,974, down 1.5 percent from last year's 20,286. AP Photo Seashore tragedy A man disappeared while trying to rescue his dog from these waters in Blackpool, England, on Wednesday. One policeman died trying to save the man, and two police officers are also missing amid the stormy waters. 50 may have been poisoned by tainted underwear GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) - The num- ber of people who may have suffered a severe skin irritation from wearing chemically contaminated underwear grew to 50 yesterday, the Kent County Health Department said. Six health department employees continued to work on the case although the number of telephone calls coming in from worried Kent County residents was dropping, department spokeswoman Pat Allen said. THE DEPARTMENT has made an initial investigation of at least 50 repor- ts from people who believe their children had contracted a severe skin disorder on the buttocks and genital area after wearing Fruit-of-the-Loom cotton briefs, Mrs. Allen said. The health department believes the people may have developed the skin problem after wearing underwear that inexplicably was contaminated with two chemicals - bis-Tributyltin oxide and Tetrabutyl stannane - before being sold at E&J Unclaimed Freight Co. in Grand Rapids. The chemicals are used in the finishing and dying process in the tex- tile industry, said Ms. Allen. The Chicago-based Union Underwear Co., which makes the briefs, maintains the contamination did not occur during the manufacturing process. The severe skin irritation is iden- tifiable by reddening, blistering and swelling of the buttocks and genitals, she said. Washing the clothing will not remove the irritants, she added. Only two cases, both reported in November, have positively been linked to the chemicals found in underwear, Ms. Allen said. Most of the new reports came in after Christmas and the depar- tment has yet to cpmplete laboratory tests on underwear samples collected from the victims, she said. Bus driver PEABODY, Mass. (AP) - The next time the sweet scent of marijuana drif- ts to the front of her school bus, Gloria Arsenault knows exactly what she'll do. "If I smell pot, back we'll go to the police station," she says. Thanks to Mrs. Arsenault's nose, about 50 teen-agers had to walk or find another ride to school for three days this week. MRS. ARSENAULT smelled the marijuana smoke on Dec. 22 as she drove her bus to Higgins Junior High School and Peabody Vocational High School. It was the third time it had happened, and she was fed up, she said. "At least when we were kids, we used to sneak behind the barn," said Mrs. Arsenault, 58, of Saugus. "Now the defiant kids just smoke in the school bus. And it's a lot more than cigaret- tes." SO THIS time she headed the bus toward the police station. The students, aged 12 to 18, were or- dered off the bus. Police found turns on pot smokers 'At least when we were kids, we used to sneak behind the barn. Now the defiant kids just smoke in the school bus. And it's a lot more than cigarettes.' -school bus driver Gloria Arsenault Man gets five years for letting CHARLOTTE (UPI) - Kenneth Sealy, ordered yesterday to spend a year in a jail work-release program for the death of his infant daughter, said he still believes "trusting in Jesus" is the best medical care for his children. Eaton County Circuit Judge Hudson Deming handed down a five-year sen- tence of one year in the Eaton County Jail's work program and four years of probation for Sealy's Dec. 10 man- slaughter conviction in his 11-day-old daughter's death. He also ordered medical supervision for a soon-to-be born-Sealy child. SEALY, 23, of Grand Ledge, could have received up to 15 years in prison for the offense. He was immediately taken to jail and will begin the work release program Jan. 17. He will be allowed to leave each day for his job at a warehouse, but must return each night. "I did provide care for my children by trusting in Jesus," the slight, soft- spoken Sealy told Deming, quoting the Bible often. "If that results in im- prisonment, I am not the first and I surely won't be the last." "I believe that I'm going to go home and my children will be returned unto me'' CARIE SEALY, delivered at home by her father, died March 11 of pneumonia and its complications. Her father and mother Bonnie, 23, were both charged with involuntary manslaughter for failing to take the girl for medical care. During the trial, Sealy testified he did not believe the infant was seriously ill and felt she could be cared for at home by praying family members. The couple's other child - 18-month- old Joshua - died nine days later of malignant abdominal tumor. No charges were filed in that death. MRS. SEALY'S trial has been post- poned indefinitely becuase of the pen- ding birth of the couple's third child. Attempts by Eaton County prosecutors to gain legal control of the unborn child failed. But Deming included in his sentence orders that Sealy comply with a "program for the physical care and well-being of any child you are the infant die marijuana cigarettes and two hashish pipes hidden in the seats, but they did not have warrants to search the pupils. None of them would say who owned the pot, so school officials revoked everyone's transportation privileges for three days this week. "I'm 100 percent in agreement with what the driver did," said Tom DeCoff, vice president of Travel Time, which operates the buses. Some parents grumbled that they had to drive their children to school. But Mayor Peter Torigian had little sym- pathy with that complaint. "We're trying to highlight a problem that probably every school system in the state has," he said. "This wasn't punishment but caution. If one parent decides to shake his kid's trousers and finds a marijuana joint, then that kid will hopefully get parental attention that the school system can't possibly give." Mrs. Arsenault, a bus driver for 12 years, says she is not bitter toward the students. "There's a lot of bright, very in- telligent kids on the bus," she said. Flint YMCA involved in fight to retain name Seal ... "trusted in Jesus" parent of." There have been unconfir- med reports that the new baby may have blood incompatibility problems which need immediate treatment. He also ordered that Sealy undergo counseling and pay $900 in court costs. He refused, however, to let Sealy remain free on bond pending his appeal. Sealy's court-appointed attorney Thomas Eveland of Lansing said he was "very disappointed" and noted by the time the appeal process is complete Sealy likely will have served his full jail sentence. 764-0558 764-0558 FLINT (UPI) - Would a YMCA by any other name be the same? The Flint YMCA thinks not, and is fighting in federal court to keep its name. The National YMCA Council has sued the Flint YMCA, charging the local group should not be allowed to call itself a YMCA because it is no longer a mem- ber of the national council. ATTORNEYS for the two sides are considering a proposed settlement, but Ronald Thompson, general director of the Flint YMCA, said it's not certain the YMCA's board of directors will buy it. Under the proposed settlement, the YMCA in Flint would keep its name but the local organization operating it would be known as the Flint Youth and Family Center. The Flint YMCA pulled out of the national council in July 1981, conten- ding the dues structure was unfair and that the local group didn't get its money's worth for its annual $36,000 dues payment. GUY HILL, attorney for the Flint YMCA, said the national council claims it has the exclusive right to take away the privilege of using the names YMCA and Young Men's Christian Association. "They are saying that because we are not members, we ought not to be allowed to use the names," Hill said. But the Flint group is arguing that the national council has no such rights of control because the Flint organization existed long before there was a national council, Hill said. Hill said the national council obtained trademark rights in the late 1950s, but questions remain over just what control it has over the use of the name YMCA. Thompson noted that YMCAs in Ann Arbor, Jackson and Saginaw stopped paying their dues and were dropped by the national organization but continue to use the name YMCA. Flint's case is different, he said, because the local group took specific action to withdraw from the national council. "LAW SCHOOL CONVERSATIONS" With UM Law School Admissions Dean Allan Stillwagon Small group discussions on preparation for law school, law school expectations, how admissions decisions are made, and how to select a law school. Time: 9 to 12 and 1:30 to 3:30 (Hourly Discussions) Place: 312 Hutchins Hall (Law School Admissions Office) Please sign up for time and date. Dates: November 16, Tuesday December 1, Wednesday January 11, Tuesday r " The University of Michigan Hospitals announce eltj night The third in a series of lively presentations and discussions on 0 t health-related topics of current concern Stephen C. Cook, M.D. and Melvin J. Guyer, Ph.D., J.D. U-M Children's Psychiatric Hospital KIDS AND DIVORCE: SURVIVING THE CUSTODY BATTLE I The designer, engineer or craftsman who has good qualitx toos has the edge: such as a IolIy drafting table from Martin" Thy7 .-- ---.I t-V.lrA-;.AI -,A;-IN1 I t " ti