Opinion Page 8 Saturday, August 15, 1981 The Michigan Daily The Michigan Daily Vol. XCI, No. 63-S Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan The 12 weeks of summer C ONGRATULATIONS. You have endured the crazy-certainly not lazy-days of summer. Given the rampant flow of head-spinning news events, on the local, state, national, and international levels, you should be proud of yourself for surviving with your sanity intact. We have witnessed the gory first stages of the Reagan Revolution, which has progressed unimpeded, while the more subtle Shapiro Revolution has taken the first steps of making the University smaller but better. In a predominately baseball-less summer, we have been instead entertained by nuclear reactor raids and the shenanigans of Interior Secretary James Watt. The thrills and chills have never been more abundant. What we really need, in order to preserve this festive season for posterity, is a song. A song that we can join together and sing with all the spirit that has filled these past weeks. We'll call it "The Twelve Weeks of Sum- mer," and we'll use the melody of the similarly titled Christmas carol. Ready? On the first week of summer, my real-world gave to me: Twelve MX missiles, Eleven federal tax cuts, Ten tuition hikes, Nine James Watt haters, Eight Saudi A WACs, Seven humble Democrats, Six Cuban proxies, Five neutron bombs, Four replacement hospitals, Three states'rights advocates, Two royal newlyweds, And a Med. fruit fly in my back yard. It has been a strange and demented sum- mer. Enjoy your much-deserved vacations and we'll see you in September. Ah, September. Letters and columns represent the opinions of the individual author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the attitudes or beliefs of the Daily.. Goodbye to all that 4 It's disorienting, to say the least. You've found a job. A real-life 9 to 5 job. Within a fortnight you must pack your duds and head for Coming Apart _ 1 y Ch ristopher P t ter the faraway Oz of Denver, Colo. Your dreams of remaining an educated bum the rest of your life suddenly lie in tatters. Oh, my God, is it really time to grow up? Is that fair? COME ON, you're a lucky man. You're getting the chance to make a living at the very thing you supposedly dotbest, the very pastime you most enjoy pur- suing-and now you can do it legally. You're a damn good writer, and now they're actually going to pay you for it. You've been spared a life of quiet desperation. You can create to your heart's content because that's what's expected of you. Could things possibly be better? Yeah, but... even passage to a better world means ritual goodbyes. To friends, to parents, to edifices and images grown fast and loving through familiarity. To the Daily. Especially to the Daily. For the Daily is different. This aging institution may ap- proximate something unique in journalism. True, its schizophrenic penchant toward servicing both town and gown habitually stretches its capacities well beyond its limits. Any staff member past or present who ever searched in vain some evening for a stapler, a piece of Scotch tape, or even a. sharp pencil can testify to the always-frustrating reminders that we were working for something less than a real-life daily paper, whatever one's lofty pretensions. BUT SO WHAT? Freedom was the essence. My God, you could write anything here. Anything. No restrictions, no overt censor- ship short of outright libel, no Big Brother looming despotically over your shoulder, tut-tutting disapprovingly. It was the First Amendment in its quintessence. Only taboo was taboo. Tell it like is was (your description). If "fuck you" metaphorically fit the occasion, "fuck you" it was. Got a long story? Write it. Restric- tions? Only those of pertinen- ce-and hell, what wasn't poten- tially pertinent in our present chaos? If the Daily did a disservice, it was that of spoiling its em- ployees. How could any confir- med Dailyite be prepared for the world of strict subject limitation, size restrictions, deadline tyran- ny? "Family papers" don't cot- ton to dirty wordsor controver- sial subjects; the Daily's at- mosphere was rarified, to say the least. We lived in a fantasy world governed by the principle of "if you believe it, say it"; in real-life journalism, things don't work out that way. Which is why the Daily was so special. Maybe we were on to something othersweren't. Our relative obscurity was our salvation; people ignored us-we flourished. We dug, we ferreted where others feared to tread. Perhaps it made a difference. In any case, it was fun, it was oc- casionally thrilling, perhaps it mattered. AND NOW, it's goodbye to all that. Goodbye to the debates, the ' all-night bullsessions, the arguments about politics, about movies, about sports, about sex-debates that don't occur very often on real life dailies. Goodbye, readers and colleagues (oh, good grief, spare the schmaltz). I won't forget the bullshit profundities that shaped us for better or worse. Such moments are icons to be cherished, to carry one through the future dark days of the Reagan Reformation. We were ludicrous and glorious. How can I separate from it all? Goodbye, dead weirdos. Please keep faith with the future. In the pit of our good souls we don't want neutron bombs, we don't want our news spoonfed, we don't envision Utopia as an exhulted extenuation of the lexicon, "Keep your fucking hands off my money!" There's more to life, godamnit. There's more to journalism. Keep the flame, dear friends. You just might help keep America's lurching ship of state afloat. I love you, Chow, cheerio, godspeed. Christopher Potter is a for- mer Daily editorial director. LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Print shop unfair to workers To the Daily: We, the former employees of the Wordprocessors, would like to take this opportunity to respond to the letter (August 1) written by ' James and June Smith, former owners of the business. We believe that the letter contains serious, if not libelous, ac- cusations which must be ad- dressed. It is sad that the Smiths, who have themselves boasted of their own "left-wing'' affiliations, must now drink from Joseph Mc- Carthy's sad little gutter of red baiting. We are a group of 29 in- dividuals, which like any cross- section of the population,. is represented by widely varying political ideologies. The fact that not one of us is a member of any communist organization should be irrelevant. However the Smiths have chosen to take com- fort in this pathetic panacea in order to explain away the fact that after 2 years in business, they had so successfully alienated their workers, that in April of 1980, 29 out of 35 em- ployees, and three out of five managers, walked out of the shop in a show of solidarity that Ann Arbor has rarely seen. Following that walkout, we filed numerous unfair labor prac- tice charges with the National Labor Relations Board. The NLRB investigators found such overwhelmingly supportive evidence, that the Smiths were charges with dozens of violations of labor laws. The owners were not stopped however, and con- tinued to break the law. In the months that followed, we filed more charges; and this time, the court awarded us with a bargaining order-a legal dictim which stated that the Smiths had committed so many unfair labor practices that a fair and democratic union election was impossible. We have maintained a well organized, law abiding interest in correcting many wrongs. The Smiths have broken the law coun- tless times, and have mismanaged their own business to such an extent that their public bankruptcy records would bring tears to the eyes of any com- petent businessperson. We are truly sorry that things have ended this way. We would like to thank the many people who have supported us. Had the union had a chance, employees at the Wordprocessors would have had decent working conditions for the first time in the history of the business. To the employees at Kolossos, and in other shops in Ann Arbor, we give our support and encouragement. A union can make you strong! -Employees Against Ar- bitrary Action (EAAA) Judy Allen Aline Clayton-Carroll Staci Eisenbrey Cindy Heenan Micah Kaminer Ben Mattison Paul Lefray Tony Rein Mary Mcnamara Kay Slevatz