the CAPITOLIST VoL 2 No. 3 Awareness Committee To Aid Olivetti Employees by Roger L. Hawkins The main purpose of the Capitol Campus Awareness Committee is to work closely with workers and unions in the nearby area in trying to show them how the Vietnam War can in fluence their job security. Gary Clement, an employee of Oli vetti Typewriter Company, pointed out some of the ways the Vietnam War can influence a worker’s job se curity. For example, he discussed how an employer can profit from the war but that very same employer will continue to pay inferior wages, di spite his increase in profits. He also used the situation of the workers at Olivetti as a prime ex ample how businessmen exploit work- in the case at Olivetti, workers are required to put in 50 hrs. per week, that is 10 hrs. on Tuesdays. Women are paid indiscretely less money than men and are still demanded to lift the heavy typewriters. Discrimina tion against blacks is extremely bad. Blacks are paid subsquently lower wages than whites to start. And out of 900 employees only 75 of them are black. These are just some of the decaying situations present at Oli vetti. What the committee plans to do to help situations such as this at Olivet ti and elsewhere is to help organize a union by handing out pamphlets to workers coming to and from work to persuade them in trying to organize a union to better their working con ditions and wages. The Capitol Campus Awareness Committee is also a peace organiza tion. The committee will take an active part in the moratorium which is to take place on October 81, 1970 in Harrisburg. The purpose of this peace rally, as outlined by the committee is to fight against imperialism in Vietnam and to show the workers that the situa tion abroad affects the situation at home. Any students having the time and desire to participate in this vital or ganization will gladly be welcomed. Peace Anonymous Being for being, and seeing For seeing, life is not hard, For bracing is defacing, and Time so short goes on, racing. But we together, as one mankind, Must go, and return in Greater force, until forever Gods, believing nothing we Shall all be united. We Print” “All The News That Fits CAPITOL CAMPUS Middletown, Pa. Harrisburg October 81, 1970. Dedication To The People of Capitol Campus This issue is dedicated to the many students and faculty members at Capitol Campus who are reaching out. . . . To the Capitol Campus Awareness Committee, working to end the War in Vietnam, to end racism, to end discrimination at Olivetti, to end imperialism.. . We thank you. To the Environmental Committee, working to make our world cleaner and safer, not only for us, but for future generations. . . We thank you. To the Tutoring Society, working long- hours to help the students in Middletown, passing on the knowledge they have, acquired. . . . We thank you. To the. Black Student Union, holding meetings to end polorization, to help us live together, to affirm the black cultural heritage. . . We thank you. To the professors who care, who realize that education never ends, who want us to discover ourselves. . . We thank you. To the students who are working in the November elections, who be lieve that change can come from within the system. . . We thank you. To the students who pray for peace, who still have a Dream. . . We thank you. We believe in you, Capitol Campus. Work for Peace October 31st and October 30, 1970