I OPINION Page 6 01 be tdtga Bil Vol. XCIV, No. 14-S 94 Years of Editorial Freedom Managed and Edited by Students at The University of Michigan Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily Editorial Board PSN gets sloppy F OR SEVERAL YEARS, the Progressive Student Network and its allies have fought the good fight. In the face of growing student apathy, the PSN has taken bold and controversial stands on a variety of crucially important issues. Last week, however, PSN's act began to wear thin. On May 31, PSN and the Michigan Alliance for disarmament chose to descend, uninvited, on the home of Ann Arbor Mayor Lou Belcher at 7 a.m. to present a two-page "Bid for Peace." It informed the mayor of numerous civic concerns ranging from the lack of low- cost housing to the increasing city solicitation of weapons reseach contracts. The demon- stration lasted less than ten minutes. Despite the ceremony's brevity, PSN and MAD managed, through a carefully or- chestrated public relations effort, to get their pictures plastered over the local papers. Unfortunately, the demonstration may have done more harm to their causes than good. As PSN quite obviously realized, presenting a petition to the mayor of Ann Arbor in his bathrobe in a bizzare-make that rude-way of getting a point across. Unless an activist group has a very compelling reason for such behavior, people will not take the group seriously. The cause will be trivialized; the group will come off as a bunch of cranks. The protest can hardly be seen as a legitimate act of civil disobedience, since the group had not exhausted all of the non- disruptive alternatives available to them. Civil disobedience suggests an illegal action taken because it is the only possible way to prevent a greater harm. By the group's own admission, little effort was made to contact the mayor in a less ob- noxious manner. PSN could have made their presentation to the city council. Of course, the City Council chambers are a far less dramatic set for a PSN performance than the mayor's residence-especially when the audience is the local media. Further, PSN's single perfunctory phone call to the mayor's office did not show any willingness to use the conventional means available. It instead showed a bad faith effort to justify a selfish exploitation of the mayor's privacy. PSN's cause is too important to be trivialized in this manner. Certainly at times the severity of-an issue justifies rude behavior. Sometimes it is necessary to cause a commotion and to pull someone out of a shower. But doing so just for attention weakens the credibility of an organization and, more tragically, weakens the credibility of their cause. Friday, June 8, 1984 The Michigan Daily Barbados: Where the jobs are ment-nearly $3 million-and Through an agreement with the By David Beers expertise will make the differen- Academy of Sciences in Peking, ce this time. Fuchs, an Pacific Data Services teaches American, predicts that his Chinese students English and BRIDGE TOW N, B AR - payroll of 200 Barbadians, most typing, then hires them to key in- BADOS-The lure of cheap labor, of whom are women, will expand to computers legal data ranging coupled with advances in com- to more than 400 by the year's from court reports to volumes of puters and telecommunications, end. statutes. Workers earn about $7 a is spurring some U.S. companies Fuchs' confidence seems to be week, and, according to the com- to shift office work such as word shared by the Barbados gover- pany, their rate of accuracy is processing and data entry over- nment. 99.95 percent. seas. A "SERIOUS, hard-sell Meanwhile, American labor Much of it comes to Barbados, strategy" has been developed to unions and industry analysts are an island that hopes to become attract more U.S. clerical wok to eyeing warily the trend to offices America's "offshore office" in the island, according to Rawle overseas. the Caribbean. Chase, general manager of the "We're concerned, and we are For several years now, U.S. state-financed Barbados In- going to have to take a much firms have shipped invoices, sub- dustrial Development Corp. The closer look at just how many scription forms, questionnaires incentives offered are enticing: computer-type office jobs are and other paper work to Bar- duty-free importation of equip- leaving the states," says Michael bados, where operators paid less ment, raw materials and data; Donovan, who heads up the AFL- than half the U.S. rate key them relatively cheap office space, full CIO's arm in the Caribbean, the into computers. Stored on repatriation of profits and a cor- American Institute for Free magnetic disks, the information porate tax of 2.5 percent. Labor Development. then is shipped back to the home What does Barbados receive in DONOVAN, based in Bar- office. return? "Jobs," Chase says, bados, says the offshore push ONE DRAWBACK that has "and a population with more comes after a decade-long "con- kept this quiet trend from familiarity with computers. We certed effort to organize more becoming a boom is the inconven- expect to be part of (futurist U.S. white-collar workers," a ient time lag built into sending in- Alvin) Toffler's 'Third Wave.' " drive he calls "very successful." formation back and forth by air Chase says his nation's high But any proliferation of of- freight. literacy rate-97 per- fshore offices can't help but erode Now, however, the latest com- cent-English language, stable the bargaining power of the U.S. pany to set up a data entry shop politics and excellent telecom- white-collar workers, says Lenny in Barbados, American Airlines, munications-"as good or beter Siegel, who, as director of the is using satellite telecom- than in the U.S."-make it a Pacific Studies Center in Silicon munications to speed up the natural setting for the offshore Valley, follows labor practices in process considerably. If office. the electronics industry. American's experiment proves HOWEVER, HE admits that Peter Cervantes-Gautschi of successful, it may begin what other Caribbean countries, with the Santa Clara Central Labor some industry watchers have even lower labor costs, are Council in Silicon Valley says: been dolefully predicting: a qualified, too. "Obviously, the flight of office major exodus of office jobs from "Throughout the region, I'm work overseas is going to have to the United States. not sure there is an awareness be stopped in Washington. And Every morning, a quarter ton yet of the potential that the in- we have plenty of options open, of used passenger ticket coupons formation services industry ranging from a tax placed on is delivered by air to Caribbean holds," he says. corporations to finance Data Services, American's The practice is not limited to retraining of laid-off workers to wholly owned company in Bar- the Caribbean. An estimated 40 duties placed on the import and bados. The facility looks like a companies in the United States, export of electronic data. transplanted chunk of Silicon Australia and Japan now send "Office jobs are considered the Valley: Equipment hums and their labor-intensive clerical biggest potential for growth in keys click as workers sort the work to operations in Ireland, In- America's new high-tech tickets, then feed pertinent in- dia, Taiwan, South Korea and the ecomony," he says. "If we can't formation into an array of com- Philippines. even keep those in the country, puter terminals. That data is BARBADOS and the other we're headed for a major funneled into larger computers, countries might soon face stiff depression." I I 6 I then beamed via satellite back to the airline's computerized ac- counting center in Tulsa. CARIBBEAN Data Services managing director Samuel Fuchs says that since December all American Airlines tickets, about a million a week, are processed at the facility. "With technology where it is now, we had no reason to keep this operation in America," he says. The reason for the move is clear: Data-entry operators in the United States earn from $5 to $15 an hour; Fuchs says those at Caribbean Data Services are paid between $1.75 and $3 an hour, near the bottom of the Bar- badian wage scale. Even with satellite tran- smission costs, American repor- tedly will save up to $4 million a year with its remote facility. SIMILAR, BUT smaller, satellite-linked offices in Bar- bados have proved unprofitable in the past. Fuchs thinks American's large invest- competition for American office work from a less-expected sour- ce: China. There, more than 200 data-entry operators are em- ployed by Pacific Data Services headquartered in Dallas. Beers, a correspondent for the San Jose Mercury News, wrote this article for Pacific News Service. 0 LETTERS TO THE DAILY Totalitarian seatbelts To the Daily: In his letter (June 1) criticizing your May 23 editorial on seat belts, Kenneth Warner sees a seatbelt law a "public good." He lists sundry reasons for it (lower healthcare costs, etc.). What he does not list-what he cannot list, since nobody can-is the "good" in intangible things, like the ex- pansion of freedom. Expansion? A seatbelt law would contract freedom. A seat- belt law would be a form of totalitarianism, at least for motorists. It would mean Big Brother's nose into every vehicle in Michigan! I'd like to remind Mr. Warner what year this is-1984. While not precisely the 1984 of Orwell's novel, the two are still too close for comfort. What Mr. Warner would do is make the calendar- 1984 coincide with the one of the novel. His intentions are good, even the best. Except that "The road to hell is paved with good in- tentions." -S. Colman June 5 0 0