Page 10 The Michigan Daily - Saturday, June 4, 1983 - Apex faces $5 million penalty (Continued from Page 1) was a "scam" to avoid paying union During the quick closing and This link makes the sale a "scam," ac- practices they will end up paying benefits. reopening of the drugstores under the cording to union members. higher union wages anyway. But Apex officials contend they were Apex name - two days for most Ann The hoard, however, would not Cunningham employees made an "perfectly lawful" when hiring em- Arbor stores - several union em- this charge which Gurewitz saik average $6 an hour compared to $4 an ployes urig te cangove, sid a- p ths carg whch ureitzsaid is hour at Apex, union officials said. ployees during the changeover, said at- ployees did not have a chance to apply, frustratin torney Greg Muzingo. said Union attorney Mary Ellen "Apex did nothing to discourage Gurewitz. But for Apex, this move is a sign of almost a year partly because Cun- them from applying, nothing unlawful. Gurewitz also points out that when the Judge's final ruling. ningham and Apex refused to cooperate There was no discriminatory procedure Apex recently bought several non- Apex President James Devine has with the board's investigation, whatsoever," Muzingo said. unionized drugstores in Florida, none of said since last year that Apex and Cun- Gurewitz said. Only when the board "We are confident that through the the employees were fired. ningham are independent companies. threatened to subpoena information course of litigation the facts will bear Union officials contend that Apex and The two issues, however, are closely about their hiring practices did the out that Apex didn't engage in any Cunningham are one in the same and tied according to Gurewitz. If Apex is companies voluntarily release discriminatory hiring practice," he that the sale was "union bursting." found guilty of discriminatory hiring documents. said. Cunningham's is privately owned by Apex hired 63 of the 90 Cunningham CD Holding Co. Two shareholders in CD workers who applied for jobs, said Holding, Mickey Shapiro and Spencer Correction N ew w a v e Muzingo. Partrich, also own 75 percent of Apex. 4 4 4 The Daily incorrectly reported Thur- sday that the undergraduate Dentistry School program had no black students. There are no black students in the den- tal hygiene program. INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 25,7 Ave of berty 761-9700 $2.=0WEDSAT SUN SHOWS BEFORE 530P.M. MY DINNER WITH ANDRE WRITTEN BY & STARRING ANDRE GREGORY AND WALLACE SHAWN ha ireut banned at *h sehool graduation TORRANCE, Calif. (AP) - Despite pleas from fellow students and her parents, Laurie Kato's flat-top "new wave" haircut may keep her from at- tending high school graduation exer- cises, school officials say. "They just said my hair is a radical change in personality and an ex- presion of anger towards the school," the 17-year-old senior at Bishop Mon- tgomery High School said Thursday. "They say I have problems under the surface." THE REV. Liam Kidney, principal of the school, said her haircut wasn't the issue, but he declined to elaborate other than to say the school may relent and let the girl attend Sunday's ceremonies "My hope is to get together and talk;" Kidney said after a meeting with Miss Kato's parents Thursday. Miss Kato, who described herself asa B and C student with an interest in art, said her troubles began three weeks ago in a conversation with Carolyn Quijano, girl's dean of student discipline at the Roman Catholic school. "WE WERE talking about my hair. I said I was going to get it cut again. She said, 'I'd rather you grow it out for graduation because it would look bet- ter,' " Miss Kato said. But Miss Kato decided to cut her brunette hair, anyway. An apprentice hairstylist at a haircutting competition in Beverly Hills cut her hair in a style now popular in London, Miss Kato said. Her classmates gathered about 150 signatures on a petition demanding Miss Kato be allowed to attend graduation. "It's so stupid," senior Diane Murphy said Thursday. "The school officials act as if it's bothering us, and it's not." Miss Kato said she also was told not to attend an awards ceremony at which she was to be given a certificate from the Bank of America for her art work. But she and her parents attended anyway. Her mother, Kenichi Kato of Carson, said the family is upset about the school's attitude, calling it "a big in- sult." SAT, SUN. 2:10 4:10 6:10 8:1010:10 "ALTMAN'S MAGIC IS THE REAL THING... HE'S IN HIS PRIME AS A DIRECTOR."-TheNew Yorker STARRING KAREN BLACK CHER MON-6:00 8:0010:00 SAT, SUN 2:00 4:00 6:00 8:00 10:00