Youths to 'visit 18 Olympics in Moscow "Tfie Michigan Doily-Tuesday, July 22 100-'Page'5 n:";"t:;,.-^: :";";<^-" ". "r:;^-.o".-v: fi . :'t;"3 : .?"$?^; :: "a :>'+::": ::,: s >:"ti''":+ti""x; :;T:: x:^ n'S, ".' ; .";"z Cy t' :v°",: 1 ,>.:' x"; t "> ^t".""". :';Y.{. :4". v':.".v.S". v::": nvv: v4{".:".?.,v: ":v":". {",:%:v': :"i} :v:tiii':i::'C"::}::i? Y :+}':"i:"'.":"''" "r,, a.":", :"' :"::v .{.ih": ::". ". ;..{.. G' ..:. '"yy:".,.,. :. .. "i;: . .ti::+r?. .>. a::;;" ;@. ";>. }.;::,,:"::,:"::::.fi.":xa:"x<":: :s :::"":. ::"," :.?":r.":.,"":::<; ::">:;N>+"":.i.:::.,":;;R.;:r.,y.." ,;#'.;,,y,.. .,..';..r,'".+n,:i". ."",: ,.: ....:" q., \.;;....,;4.. ,,.,; "> ". ":.,"t::::.>.,6r::i}.": ;+". ,:"X'.. Y:xiss: s"r.:"w":. :a': ;?"":t, : y."::4t:,Q":'u.t 4": r":t ":: .. :.y : ";+: .:".:>'"ai ".;: c;":. v>:"{ ;;r ::,s:yy;.:tta:"::. , ,..^a..r:<"::: v>:..:::2v>:.::a":: r'":r; ... $.; $:.: ". .. e. ,. , r::+". " :. 7.:. s".".:,":.:J,:,.;:.;; . ;.,>.:.:"::::.,a::::.:,":?.:<:"::"::": rx"::v::;",":h :":::.::" ":::. ":: ":: r::.:":>::"z:<,,:: :.;.:: ":..:... :,1:".:; ::::a::k;a:, v ."::::.,k. a...,..:; ":.,,u3:.:::,..,+<. x.,,S...c S:' :......^,,...:,".......... By JOYCE FRIEDEN A group of 50 people, including one Detroit resident, will be going to Moscow for the 1980 Olympic games despite President Carter's boycott. "I feel that the boycott should be made uncon- stitutional," said Drucilla Croft, a Mercy College st- udent and the only Michigan resident to be going on this tour. "The American athletes who were ready to participate this year may not be able to do so in the next Olympics. That's eight years of hard work down the drain." "WE ARE FOR peace and friendship between peoples of different cultures, and we do not agree with Carter's doctrine (on the Soviet Union)," said Larry Moskowitz, tour coordinator of "Voice of the. Future," the New York-based group organizing the Moscow tour. Croft said she hopes to talk to many Soviet citizens. while on the tour. "if the tour doesn't accomplish anything else, it will be at least get the idea across that some Americans are not afraid of the Soviets and States," she added. Airplane flights and hotel accommodations are being made by Anniversary Tours of New York, and tour participants are being charged $995 for plane fare to and from Moscow, hotel lodgings for nine days, and three meals per day. "THE PRICES WOULD not be so low if it weren't for the Soviet youth groups that are welcoming us to the U.S.S.R.," Moskowitz explained. "Groups like the Young Pioneers and the Young Communists League have worked out special arraigements for us." Croft said she is not afraid to visit the Communist nation. "From what I understand, the entry restric- tions there are no stricter than they are here," she said. "I'm more afraid to be in the United States than in the Soviet Union." Moskowitz, whose group arranges and promotes cultural exchanges between the United States and Cuba and other countries in addition to arranging the Olympic tour, added, "We are for competition, but friendly competition. We would rather see 150-meter races than arms races." agreement elusive By ELAINE RIDEOUT As the transit worker's strike entered its fourth week, officials of the Transportation Employees Union (TEU) held a press conference yester- day morning attacking AATA management for inaction, distortion, and an uncaring attitude. Neither the union nor AATA management voiced any hope yester- day that buses will be back on the road this week to service Art Fair crowds. AS UNION PRESIDENT Harry Kevorkian handed out copies of the most recent proposals of both parties to members of the press, he said, "We're doing this because of misstatements and lies the management has been willfully making to the media and members of the public on TEU positions." Kevorkian said the management has mislabelled the union's "final rock- bottom" wage proposal as a 50 per cent increase over the union's base wage of $6.89 per hour. "We want a 14.6 per cent wage increase the first year-not 50 per dent," he said. In addition, the union is asking for a seven per cent increase the second year with a cost of living allowance capped at 10 per cent both years. AATA Director Richard Simonetta denied management had ever distorted the facts about union proposals. "They're asking for $7.89 per hour plus a 10 per cent cumulative cost of living, plus longevity," he said. :'THEY CAN PLAY any number game they want to but by the end of two years, a one-year driver would be making at least $10.50 an hour, a salary few places pay even to senior officers," the AATA official added. Besides a wage increase, Kevorkian said the union is asking for increases in only three other areas while it is prepared to accept the status quo and even concessions in some areas. " Disability insurance: "It's a stan- dard element of most other transit companies in the nation," said Shelly Ettinger, union vice-president. "It would only cost the company $15 per employee per month, which the See BUS, Page I1 AT SCHLUMBERGER