Page 14 THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22, 1981 Features iEC Every working woman needs a wife, professor says United Press International WASHINGTON — “Every working woman needs a wife, says a University of Maryland pro fessor. “Imagine going home from work and having a drink ready or dinner ready. Or, when you go on a business trip, someone to pack for you, and even better, someone to unpack and do your laundry when you get home.” Because executives work under constant, intolerable stress, large corporations spend millions to help managers cope with the rigors of running the company. Rosewood Junction presents The MAX Wednesday-Friday ($2°o Cover) TnnnnnnrBTnj» 8 o o o ottb b b B'lnrB a 8 o'0 - 0Tr»Tnnr8 vtnr ALBATROSS Saturday Night ( $ 1 00 Cover) Culpepper Plaza College Station But it’s not the executives who need help, says Prof. Dale Masi of the University of Maryland School of Social Work. It’s secretaries. A secretary — generally a woman — pounding a typewriter and scribbling in a steno pad is subjected to much more pressure than her higher-salaried boss, Masi says. The boss often is re sponsible for her stress. He uses her as an escape valve for his ten sion. Secretarial pressure often leads to mental and physical damage, alcohol and drug abuse, Masi said, and it can be deadly. A federal government ranking of the 10 most stressful occupa tions rates secretary second, be low coal miners and construction workers. Officer managers and foremen are ranked lower. The ranking is based on death rates and admissions records at hospit als and mental health facilities. Masi, who works for the U.S. Department of Health and Hu man Services through the Univer sity of Maryland, said secretarial strain is manifested by a greater risk of heart disease, abuse oflegal drugs, alcoholism and mental ill ness, most often in the form of Con SPRING... For tho cut thot tolls into place naturally. Full salon service tor men ond uuomen by certitied Sebring designers — 846-2924 Open 9 o.m. to 6 p.m. Mon.-Sat. Next to the Romodo Inn, CS. depression. She said the rate of coronary disease among clerical workers is double that of all other working women. Stress among women office workers is more acute than other “pink collar,” low-paying occupa tions — cashiers, nurses and wait resses — for several reasons, Masi said. One is the disparity between the amount of responsiblity and autonomy. Secretaries very often have more knowledge of the nuts- and-bolts operation of the firm than their bosses, but seldom have the authority to make or imple ment decisions. Other factors are lack of oppor tunity for advancement and bore dom, particularly for secretaries with college degrees who entered the field because they couldn’t de cide on a career. “Secretaries are underem ployed, especially college grads who didn’t know what to major in. You work for years as a secretary and all of a sudden, you wonder if there isn’t something more, some thing better. You ask, ’Where do I go from here?”’ Masi said. Feeling that their contribution to the firm is minimal, or com pletely ignored, enhances low self esteem and heightens frustration. Another factor among all women workers, but particularly secretaries, is lack of sleep caused by trying to excel at two jobs — one at home and one outside. “The biggest social change of the past decade is the number of women working outside the home,” Masi said. “One reason is because they want to, but in a THE TAMU THEATER ARTS PROGRAM PRESENTS BY OSCAR WILDE A SERIOUS COMEDY FOR TRIVIAL PEOPLE RUDDER THEATER APRIL 22-24 8:00 P.M APRIL 25 3:00 & 7:30 STUDENTS $2.50 NON-STUDENTS $3.50 TICKETS AT RUDDER BOX OFFICE OR AT THE DOOR great number of cases, the eco nomy pushed them into the work force to keep their families going. ” Trying to stretch a meager pay check also exacerbates stress, partcularly for divorced women and single parents, whom Dr. Masi called the country’s fastest growing poverty group. They bear the double burden of child care and job. Married women don’t fare much better, Masi said, because they are saddled with housefrau responsibilities after they cover their typewriters for the day. Working women often feel guilty if they can’t handle both jobs prop erly, she added. She said the subgroup most vul nerable to coronary disease is the secretary married to a blue collar worker with at least three chil dren. Their husbands suffer from the “that’s women’s work” syn drome and offer little help with household chores or caring for children. On-the-job stress has boosted the number of secretaries abusing legal drugs and alcohol. Masi said women workers are “almost matching” men addicted to alco hol, with one woman alcoholic for every four males. Conducting occupational re search in Boston a few years ago, she found a shocking number of working women who took pre scription tranquilizers would save the pills for a Friday "jolt.” Masi said companies can save money by implementing prog rams to alleviate secretarial “People with personal lems don’t operate at peal ciency. Lateness, absence, govers, poor decision mi lot of lost time — if cora[ do something to get people tioning, it’s very cost-i She said women emi should present their concerns to their malesu| “and put their heads tog( solve these problems, these men are fathersofdi who might become 9 one day.” Companies should instil ployment counseling for ies who want to move career ladder, she said should also involve clerical ers in decision making, shops on how to handles 1 up in-house day care andol time to let secretaries to their work days around needs. The problem of secrdii stress just won’t go awayA&M going to get worse before i!» ws to fj better. Masi said. Replay There.,s n0 „f Sout people who say women snoi - work have to realize that. \Vo;L are working for economicreas^ and because they want I “Unfortunately, there ii| cultural resistance to wtd women. But it’s a very sadl! There simply is no altemafe women not working outside| home.” Father says courts ^ Bansas c have pro-mother bife' ijust anotlu United Press International EVANSTON, Ill. — Jeff Atkin son’s story is not unique. He is a divorced man with two young daughters. The girls are in his ex-wife’s custody. Atkinson is out to change that with a suit charging sex discri mination. It will be argued before the Illinois Supreme Court in mid May. “The suit is just a very natural outgrowth,” said the 32-year-old attorney. “I had been raising those kids for eight years. I still feel I can do a better job. “The ability to parent is not unique to women. My former wife got custody because she is a woman and the kids are girls. If the kids were boys, things might be different. Courts have got to look at the individual facts and not just arbitrarily award custody to women.” Atkinson was divorced from Janet, 31, in 1977. Since then, Janet, who also is an attorney, has remarried. Atkinson has not. The father said he got the short end when Judge Albert Porter awarded custody to his ex-wife. “The visitation rights are not very good,” Atkinson said. “I’m only allowed every other weekend and Tuesday nights. But I’ve found ways to get around that. I teach at the girls’ school part-time and get to see them then.” Atkinson said his daughters, Abby, 11, and Tara, 9, have told him they would prefer living with him. That, he said, creates “a lot of bitterness” between him and his former wife. “I am not trying to take away Janet’s motherhood,” he said. Janet, now Mrs. Hoffman, says, “I’m just a mother who has watch ed her children suffer. The kids have become a battleground.” The tension has affected the children. “I am trying to be as nahiulj loving as I can be,’ Atkinson “They feel caught in the mi(H| Atkinson denied he is ti)i use his children to get backaltj mother. “Our marriage is i Moses M -a firm t action o: Elalone’s 1 [night shif Houston lory over tl over. I want my personallifer 1 l ; 0 ? M " n on,” he said. ’T can give Conferen WI1 > .YdlLI. J. Ldll Uft [ij , > better sense of themselves as; r lous s pie. I tune into them more [ , 0 ‘ He said it has been 30« ' edtwo . st ‘ since the state Supreme Couill s as . agreed to hear a child custody: a ( where sex discrimination was issue. Houston h “Times have changed,Ti Takers in son said. “Courts shouldnoln the best decisions based on sex.” 1® t^ en be Attorney Herbert Gleibers^tonio thn a divorce lawyer and author,wt best-of mates one third of all father!#°d news ft fight for custody of their clii ^" s:ls City actually win. jvantage in In Illinois, the state con* | Moses M tion’s equal rights clausedisat' punt of p custody decisions based solel ^yer that’ sex, he said. ® mR > said “If you have two workinil F n '> Peo rents, the mother doesnI F what kirn any more time to devote K 1 1 child, ” Gleiberman said. “If when she comes does things of a personal and the father on the other comes home and starts helpiilj kids with their homework 1 court could conclude he’s thtj ter parent because he’s , quality time. That’s what hatdf H0US ing in many, many cases. Astern Atkinson is less than opti"* slay has about his chances. “The law is neutral butj«*j ' hearts are not,” Atkinson said alls fror is their gut instinct that mod' should raise children.” “It’s t liey can ley wan :an do.” Even if he doesn’t win cu^ Atkinson said he hopes. will result in better visit* 11 rights and perhaps make it^ ^ ere for other fathers to win custody e P the future. ********■**--¥■■¥■-¥--¥■*¥*1 i TRADITIONS } COUNCIL J POSITIONS ARE OPEN * * For Literature Chairman Silver Taps Chairman Howdy Chairman History Chairman )^Pick up applications in Rm. 216 MSC Student Go' eminent Office. ^.Qualifications: Motivated Aggies enroll 2 at Texas A&M. ^-President ^ Vice President ^ Secretary/Treasurer He sa Severs >een tel NBA giv