The Michigan Daily -Thursday, April 4, 1991 - Page 3 Union stewards *to picket by Laura DePompolo Daily Staff Reporter The local chapter of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) union is protesting the harassment of University stewards by forming an informational picket line today and tomorrow. The union stewards are responsi- ble for protecting the rights of ser- vice and maintenance workers on campus and informing union mem- bers of their rights as workers for the University. Patricia Darden, president of AFSCME Local 1583, said in a press release that management attempts to intimidate union stewards threaten the rights of all union members. Union members are protesting work speed-up, mandatory overtime atnd racism. Darden also said Workers are sometimes laid off for a few days, without notice, for minor incidents.' The press release alleged that several University area supervisors central campus supervisors Bob Amidon, Chuck London and Jan McCrath, and hospital supervisors Sue Ernest and Diane Lamb - have harassed union members. But Lamb said the accusations did not surprise her. She said a phrase demanding that harassment of employees cease is usually added to the end of every grievance which is reported. Darden said the problems have been building over the years, but she said that they have been getting worse, -especially since December 1990. "Grievances are written up every day," Darden said. "But 'the University just looks at them like they have no merit." "We just want a reasonable and fair working environment," she added. The picket line will be held to- day at 4 p.m. in front of the Fleming Administration Building, and to- morrow at 3:30 p.m. in front of the Taubman Center Entrance. Alums: U of D High should Ste p pin gstone s First-year law student Ryan Roset frolics among the rocks of the Huron River yesterday afternoon. Playboy to scope prospects for 'Grl of the Big Ten' by Robert Patton Daily Staff Reporter Representatives from Playboy magazine are coming to the University to conduct interviews for models for the magazine's "Girls of the Big Ten" issue. If you are 18 or older, a full or part-time female student, and "attractive and well proportioned," then you just may have what Playboy is looking for, said Elizabeth Norris, a spokesperson 'Being in Playboy is (for the models) the ultimate affirmation of the fact that they're attractive' - Elizabeth Norris Playboy spokesperson for the Playboy Photo Department. Norris urged students to apply. "If a girl is fit and well propor- tioned, she should give it a try - I guarantee it will be the experience of a lifetime," she said. All types of students pose, Norris said. "We get people some might think are the intellectual 'eggheads.' They want to show they are as sexy or feminine as any girl." Norris said models who appear in the magazine will be paid on a graduated scale, with a higher pay for nude photos than for semi-nude, and the lowest pay for fully clothed shots. But she said most don't do it for the money. "It's probably something they've always fantasized about," she said. "Being in Playboy is the ultimate affirmation of the fact that they're attractive. It's a thrill." Cecelia Ober, a member of the Feminist Women's Union, did not share Norris's enthusiasm for the benefits of posing for Playboy. "I think it trivializes women, especially in what is supposed to be an academic atmosphere," she said. "'It harms an image of women as se- rious and reinforces an image of women as playmates." It harms an image of women as serious and reinforces an image of women as playmates' - Cecelia Ober Feminist Women's Union member Students' reactions to the idea were mixed. LSA first-year Ann Llewellyn said students posing for Playboy "defeat the purpose of their being here. They're here to bet- ter themselves and to make a better place for women in society," she said. LSA sophomore Padma Thota disagreed, saying, "If people want to do it, that's their business." Interviews are being held at the Campus Inn from April 15 to 17. not adn by Jeannie Lurie Daily Staff Reporter The University of Detroit Jesuit High School (U of D), an all-boys school for 115 years, may have girls in its classrooms within the next five years. Michigan is the most popular university among U of D graduates, with about 40 enrolling at the University each year. A survey recently sent to alumni to help project the number of in- coming students also includes ques- tions concerning the possibility of making U of D co-educational. The Board of Directors will make a deci- sion on the issue sometime next year. "One of the natural questions was whether we would take girls," U of D President Father Malcolm Carron said. "If we give such an ex- cellent education, we shouldn't deny it to girls." Carron is surprised about the strong negative reaction to the pro- posal. "By the way people talk, I think it's all over now," he said. Carron explained that just as he would ideally like a racially inte- grated school, he would like to see both sexes attend U of D. "It's about 30 percent minorities right now. By the same token, we'd like to see about 30 percent girls." "We're part of 46 Jesuit schools around the country, 15 of which have taken girls," Carron said. "It's kind of a natural thing to come up at this time." LSA senior Michael Buist, a U of D graduate, didn't like the idea of including women at his old high school. "This might sound a little chau- vinistic, but it's not meant to be," he said. "I felt that compared to other schools in the Catholic League, we were academically supe- rior because we were all male. If I were female it would be the same thing." Buist felt that letting girls into the high school would change the learning atmosphere. "When you get teenage guys and girls together, hormones run wild," he said. Bill Ward, a first-year student at U of D High School, agrees that girls would be a distraction. Ward said he can relax his grooming habits at an all-boys school. "Sometimes you just throw it girls some clothes together and not comb your hair," he said. "(If girls were admitted) you'd always be trying to impress the girl." "I think (co-education) would be for the worst because of the stu- dents' reaction," he said. "When you go to an all guys school, there's just something different. It's maybe male bonding or something." LSA junior and U of D graduate Patrick Kruse also finds fault in the proposal. "I haven't really talked to any U of D alumni who liked the idea," Kruse said. "My dad went there and graduated in 1944. We had a big talk about it." "I don't mean to sound sexist, and this is not really something I can verbalize," Kruse said, "but there's a whole difference between what your social life is and what your school life is. It was sort of a pride thing that there weren't any girls at our school." Men are not the only ones with reservations about bringing the sexes together. Margaret Ward, Bill Ward's mother, may have the oppor- tunity to send her youngest daugh- ter to U of D. "I'm sort of a traditionalist," Ward said. "I kind of like it the way it is." Ward believes her daughter will probably want to go to Mercy High School. "If there's a need for females and the economic situation says we could do better with a co-ed system, then I'm not against it," Ward said. U of D did not propose the idea in order to increase revenue, Carron said. The decision to admit girls would require massive spending by the high school. "The cost would be monumental," Carron said. "We would have to put in new locker rooms and new bathrooms." Carron would also expect changes in the faculty. "I say cer- tainly you'd have to have a couple of women counselors." U of D already has five or six women teachers out of about 40, Carron said. The U of D recently began a new advertising campaign separate from, the nation's Roman Catholi~c Schools' "Discover Catholic Schools" campaign. U of D's slogan, soon to be seen on billboards, will read, "One hundred percent college bound - U of D Jesuit High School." THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today 'U' cops want peace - not drug busts - at weekend Hash Bash Meetings ACT-UP Ann Arbor, weekly meeting. Group not affiliated with Revolution- ary Workers' League. Call 665-1797 or 662-6282 for info. Union, Anderson Rm., 7:30. Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry, weekly mtg. Hillel, 7 p.m. Tagar, Pro-Israel Student Activists, weekly mtg. Hillel, 8 p.m. College Life, weekly meeting, spon- sored by Campus Crusade for Christ. Dental School, G005 Kellogg Aud., 7 p.m. Persian Gulf Mutual Support, weekly mtg. 3100 Union, 12-1. Amnesty International, weekly mtg. MLB, B-116, 7 p.m. In Focus Filmworks, weekly mtg. An- gell Aud D, 7 p.m. Anti-Imperialist Action Caucus, mtg to plan actions to fight racism and po- lice brutality. Union, 7 p.m. Institute of Industrial Engineers, general mtg. Nominations, 439 Mason, 8:30. Ultimate Frisbee Club, weekly mtg. Fuller Park, lower fields, 5 p.m. Homeless Action Committee, weekly mtg. MLB B124, 5:30. U of M Biological Society, mtg. Nat Sci Bldg, 4th floor conference rms, 7 p.m. Society of Women Engineers. General Dynamics on "Artificial Intelligence." 1200 EECS, 6:15. Speakers "First Lessons in Group Behavior: A Case Study of Japanese Preschools," Lois Peak. Lane Hall Commons, noon. "The Velvet Revolution and Beyond," Jirina Siklova of Charles University, Prague. 200 Lane Hall, 1 p.m. "Time-Dependent Thermal Lensing Technique as Used in V-T Energy Transfer Studies," Alexander Chembayo. Chem Bldg, rm 1640, 4 p.m. "How to Start a Small Company," Furthermore Safewalk, nighttime safety walking service. Functions 8-1:30 a.m. Sun.- Thurs. Call 936-1000 or stop by 102 UGLi. Also at the Angell Hall Com- puting Center 1-3 a.m. Sun. - Thurs. Call 7634246 or stop by the courtyard. Northwalk, North Campus nighttime safety walking service. Functions 8- 1:30 a.m. Sun.-Thurs. Call 763-WALK or stop by 2333 Bursley. ECB Peer Writing Tutors available to help with your papers Sunday- Wednesday, Angell/Haven Computing Center, 7-11:00. 611 Church St. Com- puting Center, Tuesday, Thursday, 7.- 11, Wednesday, 8-10. Free Tax Preparation. Sponsored by VITA until April 15. Union, 3rd floor, 9-5. Stress and Times Management Consultations with peer counselors. Mondays 1-4, Thursdays 10-2, and Fridays 1-4. 3100 Michigan Union or call 764-831'2. Russkij Chaj, weekly Russian conver- sation practice. MLB 3rd floor confer- ence rm., 4-5:00. U of M Shotokan Karate Club, Thursday workout. CCRB Small Gym, 8-10:00. U of M Taijiquan Club, Thursday practice. Cube, 5:15. Michigan Prison System, weekly seminar. MLB B135, 7:30. Humanistic Seder, call 996-5950 for info. 307 N. State, 6 p.m. Carillon auditions. Call 764-2539 for appointment. "Everything You Wanted to Know About Sociology as a Major, Career Opportunities, and Course Offerings, but Didn't Have Time to -Ask." MLB, Lec Rm 27-9. "The War Ain't Over: Aftermath of the War at Home and in the Middle East," panel discussion. Union, Anderson CD, 7-9. Lunch and book signing with Jeffery Weeks, part of Lesbian, Gay Men's, and Bisexuals Awareness Week. U- Club Terrace, noon. Gay Film and Video Night, part of Lesbian, Gay Men's, and Bisexuals Awarenss Week.I Leaeue.. Henderson by Tami Pollak Daily Crime Reporter While $100 fines won't be the high point of Saturday's Hash Bash, Executive Director of University Relations Walter Harrison said University police will not be out to bust marijuana smokers. "It's my assumption that they are not going to be there to bust people for drug deals, but to make sure things don't get out of hand as they often do when people get drunk and high," Harrison said. Harrison added that the University's main concern is to pre- vent junior high school and high school students from participating in alcohol or drug consumption. "There are always younger peo- ple who come out ... We are work- ing with many community drug prevention programs who will have representatives out there," Harrison said. He added that officers will be instructed to hold drunk or high minors and call their parents. University police and Ann Arbor officers willibe patrolling the scene in pairs, Harrison said, but it will be the University officers is- suing citations. Because of the wording of the re- gent's action which created the dep- utized police force, University po- lice are not allowed to enforce the $25 fine that was created under Ann Arbor city law last spring, but rather will be enforcing the $100 fine or 90 days in jail stipulated un- der Michigan state law. "This is not what we anticipated in enacting this... and we are look- ing into changing the wording for the future," Harrison said. LSA sophomore Shelby Kibler, who observed but did not partici- pate in last year's Hash Bash, said the majority of people he saw on the Diag were older than college stu- dents rather than younger. However, he didn't seem too alarmed about the $100 fine. "I'm not too fond of this idea, but I can understand that if that's what the law says, they will have to penalize under state law," he said. Residential College junior Heather Rising, who was also at last year's Hash Bash, didn't re- member seeing many high school or junior high school students. . "I'm not going to speculate about what the police are going to be doing out there, but on April 1, when a few people came to the Diag thinking it was Hash Bash, I saw three University police officers out there within a minute," Rising said. She also added that although she has never supported deputization, the University police and their en- forcement of the $100 fine are not going to stop her from attending this year's bash. Thom Harris, coordinator of the Ann Arbor chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of. Marijuana Laws, said last week, "I think University police will en- force the marijuana laws more strictly." Here was a Fred Zinn; When comes such another? WEEKEND needs to replace its departing cartoonist. Call Gil at 764-0552 If Interested. Food Buys U U ., i ..: { r T t'.N -"'N Get one medium pizza loaded with cheese and pepperoni and extra thick crust for only rmmmmmmm e . (~) i r i i ----- u Additionalt 1 OPEN DAI Valid Thursdays Only. No Coupon Necessary. Expires 6-1-91. S30' PEPSI 0 toppings I .00 per iitem. LY FOR LUNCH! CENTRAL CAMPUS E761-1111 AV*,D4d NORTH CAMPUS A% 0 - I I