gan Daily-Tuesday, March 29, 1983-Page 3 I FLOC targets state LANSING (UPI), - The Farm Labor Organizing Committee is targeting the tomato and pickle fields of southern Michigan for what it believes to be the first major effort to unionize the state's farm workers, a spokesman said yesterday. Baldemar Velasquez, president and founder of FLOC, said unionizing effor-' ts will be concentrated on 500 to 1,000 acres producing vegetables under con- tract for the Campbell Soup Co. and the McNeil & Libby Co. He said the farms lie in the region south of Grand Rapids and in the SMonroe-Blissfield-Adrian area. VELASQUES, who was joined at a news conference by representatives of the United Auto Workers and the Michigan Farmworker Ministry Coalition, charged Campbell and Libby have moved production north since 1978 to avoid strikes by unionized workers in Ohio. Sister Patricia Drykyk, a spokeswoman for the farmworker ministries, called for creation of a special legislative committee to over- see enforcement of labor laws on Michigan farms. The nun termed "a sham," a U.S. District Court ruling exempting far- mers from labor laws if they view farm workers as independent contractors, not employees. Valasquez said FLOC's only ground rule for organizing farm workers, who are not covered by national labor laws, is persistence. "The only ones who succeed are those who don't quit," he said. DeLorean funds may have been.'_ DETROIT (UPI) - Investigators believe $17.6 million in missipg DeLorean Motor Co. funds may have been diverted into personal bank ac-, counts of unknown people, the trad.e publication Automotive news said yesterday. In a copyright article, the trade publication said a Swiss firm, GPD Services Inc. that was supposed to act as a middleman in the research and development of the gull-winged spor- tscar may have been created solely to launder cash. AUDITORS HAVE been unable to account for the missing $17.6 million since DMC went out of business last fall just after its founder, John DeLoreah,- was arrested on federal drug charges' He is currently free on bond awaiting. trial next month. t A federal bankruptcy court judge last week agreed to subpoena bank records after hearing testimony the money may have been used to purchase Utah-based Logan Manufacturing rather than pay for the development of the car. PROPOSAL A is A-OK "ENERGY SAVINGS IN RENTAL HOUSING" Endorsed by the Ecology Center MSA, PIRGIM, LSA- SG & others.'',,. VOTE YES - April 4 Paid for by Sport Guides 415 Detroit Street New SACUA chair named By LISA CRUMRINE Business Prof. Herbert Hildebrandt was chosen by the top University faculty committee yesterday to chair that committee for 1983-84. The University's Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA) elected Hildebrandt to replace outgoing chairman Medical Prof. Ron Bishop. Prof. Morton Hilbert of the School of Public Health will suc- ceed Hildebrandt as vice-chairman. Hildebrandt's duties include presiding over the faculty Senate Assembly's monthly meetings. Hildebrandt and Hilbert will assume their duties on Monday. The committee also has three new members, nursing Prof. Cheryl Easley, English Prof. Richard Bailey, and medical Prof. Robert Green. The three were elected at the senate's March 21 meeting and will also take office on Monday. Easley served on SACUA during the past year as a temporary replacement for psychology Prof. Donald Brown who was on sabbatical. "I feel a certain responsibility to par- ticipate in SACUA. It's particularly good to have a minority voice ex- pressed," said Easley, who is black. Bailey and Green are newcomers to SACUA, but have both been senate assembly members. "Faculty involvement in the Univer- sity is a strong tradition at the Univer- sity and I'm glad to be doing it," said Bailey. "SACUA has a crucial role to play in mediating between values of quality and efficiency, and the oppor- tunities that are available to the faculty and students." Green said he thinks his experience as associate dean of the medical school will help him see the administration's point of vies, but added, "this may sway me from a faculty perspective too easily." AP Photo The wild blue yonder The U.S. Air Force Thunderbird jets fly in a six plane formation over Nevada's Red Rock Canyon. The team is set to take-off again after a lay-off of more than a year due to a fatal accident. Nun denies she was told to quit LANSING - Sister Agnes Mary Mansour said yesterday she has not been told to step down as Michigan's welfare director, but some officials who work with the department were hoping the controversy can be resolved soon. An official of the Michigan League for Human Services and a key Republican lawmaker agreed the ongoing dispute has not yet noticeably damaged Sister Mansour's ability to run Michigan's largest department. But both said they feared it may begin to do so if a solution is not found. SISTER MANSOUR'S statement, issued through Department of Social Services spokeswoman Karen Meyer, indicated the matter may not be resolved for two to three weeks. Detroit Archbishop Edmund Szoka last month ordered Sister Mansour to resign her state post, saying she had failed to speak out strongly against the state funding of welfare abortions. The Social Services department oversees the funding. Beginning last Friday, there were reports the Vatican had issued an order backing the archbishop. Church of- ficials, however, have not confirmed these reports. "Sister Mansour has not personally or formally been notified by Vatican authorities to resign her position as director of DDS,." Meyer said. LADIES DAY IS EVERY DAY I CROSS-EYED MOOSE & 5 FLIPPER McGEE'S 1613 E. Liberty 1217 S. University f . I Naturas criticize Reagan 1 1 1. 2 FREE tokens for visiting us & 2 more with first $1.00 Purchase LADIES: Bring in this coupon Tues., March 29 and Receive 10 FREE tokens! mm m""mm mm mm""" m" 3 Hildebrandt ... chairs faculty committee "N mm"mm mm""""""""" mm mm " -APP:ENING-S Highlight Leonard Woodcock and Michel Oksenberg will discuss the changing role of Chinain the modern world, at noon in the Lane Hall Commons Room., Films AAFC - Private Parts, 7 p.m., The Loved One, 8:45 p.m., Angell Aud. A. CFT - Stripes, 5 & 9 p.m., Meatballs, 7:15 p.m., Michigan Theater. Ann Arbor Public Library - "Spring Break Movies," Really Rosie (for preschoolers), 9:30 a.m., Angel and Big Joe and Paddle to the Sea (for elementary school children), 10:30 a.m., meeting room, public library. Minority Student Services - Japanese film series, Sanjuro, 7 p.m., Trotter House, 1443 Washtenaw. Performances School of Music - Organ recital, Ronald Fox, 8 p.m., Hill; String Dept. recital, 8 p.m., Recital Hall; horn recital, John Hancock, 8 p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall. Speakers Urban Planning - Sheldon Markel, "Medical Planning," 11 a.m., 1040 Dana. Chemistry - Dept. colloquium, Alie Popov, "Multinuclear NMR Study of Macrocyclic Complexes," 4 p.m., 1300 Chem. Bioengineering Program 890 - Fred Nuttall, "Receptor Potentials from the Hair Cells of the Inner Ear," 4 p.m., 1042 E. Engin. Computing Center - Chitra Ramanujan, "Intro. to Pascal, V," 3:30 p.m., 176 BSAD. Ecumenical Center & International Center - Khawja Azizuddin, "The Nuclear Controversy," noon, International Center. English - Robert Peck, poetry reading, 4 p.m., Rackham E. Conference Rm. Russian and East European Studies - Ivan Szelenyi, "The New Class in Eastern Europe," 4:10 p.m., West Conference Rm., Rackham. Rudolph Steiner Institute - E. Katz, "The Twelve Main Virtues," 8 p.m., 1923 Geddes. Meetings Ann Arbor Go CLub -7 p.m., 1433 Mason. His House Christian Fellowship - Fellowship and Bible Study, 7:30 p.m., 925 E. Ann St. Society of Christian Engineers - brown bag meeting, noon, 315 W. Engin. Baptist Student Union, 7 p.m., 2439 Mason. Huron Valley Branch, Multiple Sclerosis Society - REMS meeting, Jan Winkelman, M.D., speaking on the effects of M.S. on the eye, 7 p.m., Washtenaw United Way building, 2301 Platt Rd. Narcotics Anonymous -1 p.m., main conference room, Child and Family Services, United Way Building, 2301 Platt Rd.; 8:30 p.m., Carriage House, First Unitarian Church, corner of Washtenaw and Berkshire. Miscellaneous CEW - Job Hunt club, 12 p.m., 350 S. Thayer,2nd floor. Racquetball - ractice meeting, 8:10 p.m., Courts 10 & 11, CCRB. Aikido - practice, 5 p.m., wrestling room, Athletic Bldg. CRLT - Faculty instructional workshop, "Instrucxtional Objectives," 7 p.m., registration required. Student Wood 7 Crafts Shop - Introduction to woodworking, Sec. II, 7 p.m., 537 SAB. Union Arts Programs - International Series, a slideshow from Ar- menia presented by Charles Koelean, 12:10 p.m., Kuenzel Rm., Union. (Continued from Page 1) federal agency whose-programs impact on our natural resources." THE GROUPS said the budget cuts and loss of personnel which have ham- strung the EPA also have harmed the Occupational Health and Safety Ad- ministraton, the Mine Safety and Health Administration, and the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health. In a report titled "The American En- vironment Under Atack: What Next?" the environmentalists said the agencies charged with protecting American workers have failed to adequately regulate a number of potential cancer- causing chemicals. The report also criticized actions by Interior Secretary James Watt and various agencies under his jurisdiction in regulating strip mining, protecting endangered species, and runnng the national park system. THE REPORT criticized the State Department for abandoning the coun- try's leadership role in environmental matters and said the Energy Depar- tment and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration had cut back drastically on research on en- vironmental issues. William Turnage, executive director of the Wilderness Society, said Reagan appointees in the environmental agen- cies were "fundamentally, ideologically opposed" to the missions of these agencies. "The appalling insensitivity of these appointments, the egregious conflicts of interest, the groveling to regulated industry is truly without parallel in the. history of our great nation," he said. Alan Hill, chairman of the president's Council on Environmental Quality, said the environmentalists were beginning to "sound like a broken record." He said Reagan had established a fine en- vironmental record in eight years as governor of California and was creating the same type of record in Washington. 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