The Michigan Daily Vol. XCIII, No. 33-S Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, August 9, 1983 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Mich. Bell operators put city on hold By HALLE CZECHOWSKI and KAREN TENSA Management and recorded messages at the Michigan Bell office in Ann Arbor are filling in for more than 350 operators and repair personnel who walked out on their jobs Sunday as part of a nationwide strike against the American Telephone and Telegraph Co. Nearly 700,000 operators and employees are picketing Bell offices nationwide calling for higher wages, more benefits, and better job security. ACCORDING TO local Bell officials, operators will only answer urgent calls and no new phones will be connected until the strike ends. If the picketing continues through September, Univer- sity students returning in the fall will have a difficult time getting telephones installed, said Len Singer, a Michigan Bell spokesman. However, Singer said he doesn't expect the pickets to last that long. "We certainly hope the strike won't be going on in September," he said. LOCAL WORKERS are picketing the Bell office on Huron Street in four-hour shifts, said Dee Curtis, one of four Bell operators picketing yesterday afternoon. Although Bell officials said customers haven't noticed a reduction in service yet, eventually the drastic cut in help will make the management "go crazy," said Curtis. Currently, negotiations with AT & .T and the three unions:, the Communication Workers of America, the In- ternational Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, and the Telecommunications International Union, are stalled. THE UNIONS contend that because the company is be- coming more profitable, workers deserve a larger share of the profits in higher wages. Another key factor is the recent Supreme-Court-ordered See TELEPHONE, Page 5 Rastaman vibration Jamaican reggae superstar Peter Tosh entertained a full house Saturday night at the Michigan Theatre. See Story Page 10. Diag peace vigil marks 1945 Nagasaki bombing By BETH ALLEN There'll be several students in the Diag today who won't be takinga nap or playing frisbee. Members of the Progressive Student Network (PSN) are holding a 24-hour peace vigil, beginning at 8 a.m., to commemorate the bombing of Nagasaki 38years ago today. ORGANIZERS SAID yesterday their vigil is also in protest of military research on campus, and is par- ticularly directed against the Regent's refusal to approve a more stringent University-wide defense research policy. But today's vigil is just a warm-up for bigger things in the fall when students come back to school, according to PSN spokesperson David Miklethun. "We feel a need to step up our efforts, particularly in light of the rejection of the guidelines by the Regents," Miklethun said. "It's the beginning of a longer, stepped-up campaign." THE FALL campaign will include more 24-hour vigils, Miklethun said. But he added that PSN may stage the protests for several days in a row in- stead of just one night. Micklethun said PSN is not expecting today's vigil to match the size of the ones held during the school year. "We're not expecting to have three to four hundred people. It's just going to be a few of us," he said. "It's just a personal thing," said Tom Marx, co-organizer of the vigil. MIKLETHUN SAID the idea for the demonstration came from "local initiative," and was not connected to See PROTESTERS, Page 2