Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, August 9, 1983 Farmworkers mareh against Campbells Co. From staff and wire reports Protesters from the University joined a group of migrant farmworkers in Camden, New Jersey yesterday, to rally in front of Campbell Soup Co. headquarters against the low wages paid to workers at the firm's tomato farms. About 100 marchers, including some children, walked through the Camden streets for two hours in 90-degree heat chanting "Boycott Campbell's Soup." Six members of the University's chap- ter of the Farm Labor Organizing Committee support group (FLOC) and the Latin American Solidarity Commit- tee drove to Camden for tht rally, ac- cording to University FLOC member BrianSchultz. THE GROUP knelt on the grass before Campbell Place, the two-story corporate headquarters, and presented petitions and flowers while singing "We Shall Overcome" in Spanish. Campbell officials, however, said they could do nothing about farm con- ditions. The giant soup company buys 10 percent of its tomatoes for soup and V-8 juice from 90 farms in northwestern Ohio, where the two-month picking season is about to begin. The rebuff had been expected, but workers said publicity about the march - which was joined in Philadelphia on Saturday by United Farm Workers leader Cesar Chavez - and Campbell's refusal to negotiate could generate public support for a boycott of Cam- pbell products. "THE PUBLIC will see it. That's why we're here today," said Fernando Cusvas, 41. Workers, who struck the Ohio growers in 1978 and launched a boycott of Campbell's products a year later, have urged the company to pay far- mers more for their crops. On March 10, members of the University's FLOC 15-20 member sup- port group appealed to the University Residence Hall Association to try and urge them to support a University-wide boycott of Campbell products. But the Association voted down the proposal 13- 3. Although Campbell's does not direc- tly employ the migrant workers, FLOC members argue that the firm is indirec- tly responsible for their low wages because they do not pay the tomato farmers enough to enable them to adequately support the workers. Protesters mark Nagasaki bombing with peace vigil f ~ (Continued from Pate1>) any particular national protest. lDuring the vigil, protestors will be burning candles, and will observe a moment of silence at noon in memory. of the Nagasaki bombing. Nagasaki, the cradle of Christianity in Japan, will begin the ob- servances of the Aug. 9, 1945, nuclear attack with a morning mass at Uragami Cathedral near the blast's epicenter, city officials said. THE CATHEDRAL, which was destroyed in the attack, was rebuilt into a symbol of the peace movement., About 20,000 people were expected at a memorial for the bomb's victims at Peace Park this morning. Mayor Hiroshi Motojima is scheduled to read a peace declaration calling for a ban on nuclear arms, officlalsasaid. At 11:02 am., the time the bomb ex- ploded, sirens will wail, church and temple bells ring and ships and trains williblow their whistles. The stage for the Nagasaki memorial was'set Sunday night when the Olympic flame airlifted from Greece was rekindled at Peace Park. Praying "let Nagasaki be the last target for atomic attack," bombing victim Chizuko Watanabe lit a cauldron with the Olym- pic torch carried from Nagasaki Air- port to the park by 10 runners. United Press International cont- ributed to this story. TODAY Sex change FROM NOW ONSuzanne Bunker may cringe when she hears the Johnny Cash song "A Boy Named Sue." Bunker recently went to the town clerk's office in Fair Haven, Vt. to get a copy of her birth certificate so she could obtain a marriage license. She is scheduled to marry Shane Plummer, also of Fair Haven, on Aug. 6. She was dismayed to find that the birth cer- tificate listed her as a boy. Bunker went to probate court to get the error corrected. She was advised by the town clerk that people of the same sex are not allowed to marry in Vermont. HAPPENINGS TUESDAY Meetings His House Christian Fellowship - Fellowship and Bible study, 7:30 p.m., 925 E. Ann. Ann Arbor Go Club - 7-11 p.m., 1433 Mason. Baptist Student Union - Fellowship and Bible study, 7 p.m., Rm. B, third floor, League. Miscellaneous Society of Manufacturing Engineers - Conference, "World Congress on the Human Aspects of Automation," all day. Humanities - Conference, "English Technical Writing for Japanese Managers & Engineers," all day, N. Campus Commons. Public Health - "Fluoridation: Litigation and Changing Public Policy," School of Public Health. Ann Arbor Public Library - Roberta Bullough and Linda Aedrioh, guest storytellers, "A Potpourri of Stories," 7-7:45 p.m., main library meeting room. WEDNESDAY Films AAFC - Swiss Family Robinson, 7 p.m., Blackbeard, the Pirate, 9:15 p.m., Lorch. CFT - New Music from Britain, 7:30 & 9:30 p.m., Michigan Theater. Speakers History of Art - Leila Avrin, "Hebrew Micrography, the Art of the Jewish Scribe," 4:10 p.m., 107 Tappan Hall. Meetings Tae Kwon Do Club - Practice, 6-8 p.m., outside behindIM Bldg. Academic Alcoholics - 1:30 p.m., Alano Club. Science Fiction Club-8:151p.m., League. Michigan Gay Undergraduates - 9 p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe. Miscellaneous WCBN - "Radio Free Lawyer," 6 p.m., 88.3 FM. Humanities - Conference, "English Technical Writing for Japanese Managers & Engineers," all day, N. Campus Commons. Student Wood and Crafts Shop - Power tool safety class, 6-8:30 p.m., 537 SAB. Society of Manufacturing Engineers - Conference, "World Congress on the Human Aspects of Automation," all day. Public Health - Conference, "Fluoridation: Litigation and Changing Public Policy," School of Public Health. 4 I 4 4 4 The Michigan Daily Vol. XCIII, No. 33-S Tuesday, August 9, 1983 (ISSN 0745-967X) The Michigan Daily is edited ana managed by students at the Univer- sity of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Subscription rates: $13 September through April (2 semesters); $14 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published tri-weekly Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $3.50 in Ann Arbor; $5 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes -to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI. 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and sub- scribes to United Press Inter- national, Pacific News Service, Los Angles Times Syndicate, and Field Enterprises Newspaper Syndicate. 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