King's B-day observances vary The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 17, 1986 - Page 3 Reagan hails Soviet disarmament plan from The Associated Press Martin Luther King's birthday, :celebrated as a federal holiday for the 'first time on Monday, will be a patch- work memorial: honored in his home estate and cities where he led protests, but ignored in the town where he was slain. By federal law, the third Monday of January is a holiday for reflection "on the principles of racial equality and non-violent social change" that guided king, who was born Jan. 15, 1929, and murdered on April 4, 1968. THAT LAW has deflated the lingering controversy over a holiday which employers - righy up to President reagan - had long opposed as too expensive. A survey by Associated Press bureaus in 50 states found only scattered and local con- troversies, including one in Memphis, Tenn. In Memphis, where King was gun- ned down by James Earl Ray 18 years ago, the date of the death is a holiday but the City Council has refused to add a birthday holiday in January. v "The City Council has missed its opportunity to do what's right and proper and get in line with the rest of the nation," James Smith, executive director of Local 1733 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, said Wed- nesday. LATER IN the day, Memphis Mayor Dick Hackett said city em- ployees can take off Monday, without pay, to celebrate King's birthday. In Milford, Conn., Mayor Alberta Jagoe ordered city offices closed an hour early on Monday, following a protest by the local Association of colored People over her decision against granting a holiday for 500 city workers. It has been a state holiday for a decade. "I think his memory should be honored," she said. "But as for the holiday, it's strictly a negotiated mat- ter asnd a contract matter with our labor unions." A SURVEY of four dozen nearby Connecticut towns found that 17 are observing the holiday this year, 12 are HAPPENINGS ~ x Highlight Performance Network presents tonight Children of Sandino, written and directed by local playwright Tami Spry. The play is based on oral , histories of women who fought in the Nicaraguan revolution during the Samoza regime. The show begins at 8 p.m. at 408 W. Washington. Speakers School of Public Health - Vernice Davis-Anthony, 3 p.m., SPH I e Auditorium. South and Southeast Asian Studies - Brown bag lecture, Joy Shepard, "The Meaning of Form in a Newar House," noon, Commons room, Lane x Hall. Guild House - Bunyan Bryant, ''Economic Democracy for Ann Ar- ;bor," noon, 802 Monroe. Affirmative Action - Brown bag, Virginia B. Nordby, "Current Issues in Affirmative Action," noon, conf. rm., 350 S. Thayer. Meetings University Aikido Club - 5 p.m., Wrestling room, IMSB. y Regents - 9 a.m., Fleming Bldg. Juggling Club -3p.m., Union. Tae Kwon Do Club - Practice, 6 p.m., room 1200, CCRB. Korean Christian Fellowship - Bible study, 9 p.m., Campus Chapel. International Students Fellowship - 7 p.m. s Miscellaneous International Folk Dancing - 8:30 p.m., Angell Elementary School. c Black Student Union - Movie on the life of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., 6 p.m., Law Quad. Hockey - RPI, 7:30 p.m., Yost Ice Arena. Women's Indoor Track - Michigan relays, Track and Tennis Bldg. Women's Basketball - Minnesota, 7:30 p.m., Crisler Arena. Gay Liberation Front - Coffee House, 8 p.m. University Club - Buffet, 11:30 a.m. Michigan in Motion Video Yearbook - Free showing, 1985 Video Year- book, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Fishbowl. t~. Saturday Highlight D.J. Jacqui 0. plays the current British and European dance music tonight at the University Club's New Music-Euro-Dance party. Meetings Women's Aglow Fellowship - 9:30 a.m., Cornerstone Church. MacTechnics - Mactechnics-Macintosh Users Group, 9 a.m., Schorling Auditorium. Ann Arbor Go Club - 2 p.m., room 1433, Mason Hall. Miscellaneous Men's Gymnastics - Minnesota, Illinois, 1 p.m., Crisler Arena. Men's Wrestling - Illinois, 7:30 p.m., Crisler Arena. Hockey - RPI, 7:30 p.m., Yost Ice Arena. Men's Indoor Track - Michigan relays, Track and Tennis Bldg. Women's Swimming - Ohio State, 2 p.m., Matt Mann Pool. Women's Gymnastics - Illinois, noon, Crisler Arena. Sunday Highlight The Bullard Film Series presents The Business of America and The Wall Street Connection at 7 p.m. in Auditorium A of Angell Hall. Meetings Video Yearbook - 5 p.m., 1412 Mason Hall. Alpha Phi Omega - 7 p.m., Union. Miscellaneous Canterbury House - Episcopal Worship Service, 5 p.m., 218 N. Division. not and five, like Milford, are gran- ting leave only if the contract calls for it. The Central Illinois Employers' Association surveyed 84 businesses in its area and found that no factories would be closed. Only 11 percent of banks, insurance agencies and similar businesses plan to close, ac- cording to Sandy Lang, a secretary. James Fahey, manager of com- munications for IBM in Poughkeep- sie, N.Y., saud employees would be given time off to appear in or attend programs or services honoring King. STATE WORKERS in Tennessee have Monday off, but the Chattanooga Board of Education a request by teachers for a paid holiday. School of- ficials offered to dismiss classes Jan. 20 and make the day up in June like a snow day, but Superintendent James McCullough said closing schools and paying teachers would cost more than $150,000, In Alabama and Arkansas, King shares the holiday with Gen. Robert E. Lee; Virginia salutes King, Lee and another Confederate general, Stonewall Jackson, at one time. King's birthday is a holiday in South Carolina, North Dakota and Iowa, but state employees 'don't automatically get the day off, while Oregon's state workers learned just this week that they would not be working Monday. IN CALIFORNIA, Colorado, Delaware, Kansas, Minnesota, Nebraska, Nevada, Oklahoma, Oregon, Washingtondand Wisconsin, King's birthday is a holiday for the first time this year. On Friday, Utah's Senate passed a bill authorizing a King holiday. Private businesses generally are ignoring the holiday, but many em- ployers offered workers the oppor- tunity to attend King celebrations, with pay. Some states continued with celebrations on Jan. 15, the birth date while Indiana celebrated on Dec. 31. MONDAY WILL be a holiday in Montgomery, Ala., where a young Martin Luther King led a 382-day bus boycott beginning in 1955, and in Selma, Ala., where he led voting rights protesters to confrontations with law enforcement officers at a bridge in 1965. "Dr. King was to America what Jesus was to a sinner and that was a savior," said Selma Councilman Lorenzo Harrison, who sponsored the holiday resolution. Among the oddities of the day: *Monday is Maritn Luther King Jr. Day in Kentucky, but only the Legislature and employees of the state's judiciary system will be off. *State workers in south Carolina, for the third year, have the choice of a day off on King's birthday, Robert E. Lee's birthday Jan. 19, Confederate Memorial Day May 10, or Jefferson Davis' birthday June 3. *State workers in Oregon didn't know they would have Monday off un- til this week, when an arbitrator ruled that a 1985 law creating a state holiday in King's honor automatically made all workers eligible for a paid day off: WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan yesterday welcomed a new arms proposal from Mos cow as the first Soviet support for "actually eliminating nuclear weapons" and urged the Kremlin to back it up at the bargaining table. The plan calls for 50 percent reduc- tions in nuclear arsenals capable of reaching the other side's territory, and elimination within eight years of U.S. and Soviet medium-range missiles based in Europe. THIS WOULD be followed by a worldwide nuclear weapons freeze and, finally, complete nuclear disar- mament by the year 2000. Gorbachev made his proposal Wed- nesday night and followed it up yesterday with another statement hit- ching any cuts in nuclear arsenals to the scrapping of Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative, popularly known as "Star Wars." The White House described the Reagan ... offers cautious praise Soviet disarmament pllan as "a serious proposal that's worthy of study" - but also flawed. SPECIFICALLY U.S. officials said some elements of the three-point plan were imbalanced and no different from previous positons rejected by Washington. Singled out as the most troublesome was the continued in- sistence that Reagan abandon his "Star Wars" missile-defense program, a renewed proposal to end nuclear testing and a U.S. "disadvan- tage" in medium-range nuclear missiles. There was a more positive U.S. response to a possible shift in the Sovietsposition on medium-range missiles in Europe and apparent willingness to address the issue of on- site verification. "We're very grateful for the offer," Reagan said. COME JOIN OUR STAFF The University of Michigan Housing Division RESIDENCE HALL POSITIONS 1986-87 The Housing Division is looking for well-qualified candidates to serve as resident staff members in Residence Halls. We specifically are looking for students interested in: -Serving as positive academic and group living role models -Fostering a spirit of community -Developing and strengthening leadership, communication and group skills and -Developing programs for a diverse student population. THERE WILL BE TWO INFORMATION MEETINGS: Sunday, January 26, 1986 1:00 - 3:00 p.m. Tuesday, January 28, 1986 7:00 - 9:00 P.m. IN AUDITORIUM 3 - MODERN LANGUAGE BUILDING Representatives from the Housing Division will be there to provide information and answer questions regarding candidate qualifications, selection processes and job expectations. Applications are available only at these meetings. ALL NEW APPLICANTS ARE REQUIRED TO ATTEND ONE OF THESE MEETINGS An Equal Opportunity, Affirmative Action Employer I .- - I I, I , iiI' >« ur a g i y iCn' 1W T-SHIRT PRINTING TEAM AND ORGANIZATION SHIRTS RUSH JOBS WELCOME MULTI COLOR OUR SPECIALTY SURPLUS AND "OOPS" SHIRTS 3/$550 SUPERIOR QUALITY SINCE 1973 206 S. FIRST 994-1367