I The Michigan Daily-Sunday, September 9, 1979-Page 9 UAW strike against GM called inevitable; money still the issue DETROIT (UPI) - The talk outside the main bargaining room has been all optimism, but there are still diehards who believe a United Auto Workers (UAW) Union strike against General Motors Corp. Friday night is inevitable. UAW President Douglas Fraser said such people don't understand collective bargaining. YET AFTER days of deadline bprgaining had produced only scant discussion of key wage and pension demands, Fraser conceded his earlier optimism about prospects for a peaceful settlement was getting harder tp support. There's one thing about which most participants and outside experts agree + the outcome of bargaining on a pat- tern contract for 750,000 U.S. auto workers boils down to the size of the pie. The "pie" they frequently referred to is the amount of money GM has available for its operations, including dividends as well as labor costs. y GM, UNION officials,say, does not indulge in what UAW Vice President Irving Bluestone calls "poor- miouthing." It does not plead poverty at the bargaining table. UAW officials are always quick to point out the company has made enor- inous profits in the past several quar- ters - up to $4 billion - and that its return on its invested capital has :emained high. Union demands in some areas have Been scaled accordingly, and GM's initial money proposal to the union was unusually high - calling for a $2.50 an hour wage hike over three years for the. average auto worker, increases from' $700 to $875 in "30-and-out" pensions, and seven additional paid personal holidays. SIGNIFICANTLY, the initial offer did not mention pension increases for workers already retired - a major sticking point. "COLA (cost of living adjustments) For Pensions" was a major union rallying cry before negotiations began. The union carefully avoided saying it wanted to tie pensions to an automatic improvement factor such as the con- sumer price index, and GM said it would never accept such a demand. A FACT AUTO industry analysts also find significant is that there has been little bargaining on pensions thus far - leaving the two sides apparently far apart on an expensive money proposal with the contract set to expire at mid- night on Friday. Because of that gulf, and because of the threat of inflation, recession, energy shortages and slumping car sales and a shrinking profit margin for the auto companies, analysts believe the pie is limited. That translates into a classic union- labor battle over money, says Arvid Jouppi, auto analyst for the John Muir Co. "I STILL feel that it will take a strike as the only means that we seem to have to resolve differences as major as this," he said. "It's very clear that Mr. Fraser and the UAW must recover inflation for its constituency and it's also very clear that Mr. Murphy (GM Chairman Thomas Murphy) must preserve the profitability and the profit margin for GM so it can continue to be a high- dividend, high institutional grade stock. The Calculator Center. We Stock the Complete Line of Hewlett-Packard Calculators & Accessories Including the Series E. Your smartest investment is a Series E Hewlett-Packard calculator for business, finance, science or engineering. For a surprisingly low cost you can use features that are ahead of their time. 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Cavender, who began his career with the band in the 50s, will conduct a song from that era at the Minnesota game. CHANGE IN the band has been minimal. The flag corps has been ex- panded from 12 to 16 members, and Richter hopes to increase the size of the percussion section. Richter said the band will continue to perform its in- famous high-step, with few exceptions. Andthe familiar voice of Carl Grapentine, the band's announcer for about a decade, continues to boom across the field. The band, after only two weeks of preparation, will perform on national televison at next week's game against Notre Dame. Richter said there is "a great deal of concern" among Univer- sity alumni about the future of the mar- ching band, but added that he hopes to 'alleviate those concerns." "The reputation is, at best, very dif- ficult to keep up," he said. Richter added that he wants to make sure there's "very little doubt" that Michigan's marching band is the best in the country. babwe Rhodesian forces were listed as 15 dead - the highest toll suffered by Zimbabwe Rhodesian troops in a cross- border operation. The command said its troops and planes destroyed 11 joint guerrilla- Mozambican army bases, several ,military communications centers, radar sites, supply trains and five rail and road bridges along the vital Lim- popo river supply route running from the border to the town of Guijah, 185 miles inside Mozambique. The Mozambican news agency said the raiders were out "to destroy as much as possible of the existing in- frastructure, especially road and rail communications, bridges, electrical and telegraphic posts and agricultural machinery." The invasion marked the first time that Salisbury has sent troops across the border to attack Mozambican army targets as well as guerrilla bases. 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Marsh Center for the Study of Journalistic Performance, an endowed center within the Department of Communication, again will sponsor a series of Wednesday brown bag seminars. All are open to the public. Each will be 12:10 to 1 p.m. In 2040F LSA Building. Sept. 12 "Delivering Birth Control Information to Teen- agers," Rocco De Pietro, Director of Teen Family Planning Communication Project Sept. 26 "Interviewing: What the Journalist Can Learn from All the Research," Professor Charles Cannell, Depart- ment of Communication and Institute for Social Research Oct. 10 "B irth of a Nation and Rise of the Klan," Pro- fessor Frank Beaver, Department of Communication MORE THAN A BOOKSTORE 549 E. University at the corner of East U. and South U. 662- 3201 ..re & :'... . . ;..1v tt.. l, ",r.t:" r: . "r r .:l r J I (: , - tz f . f r r: i . ... . ,. p .. r, .. " : i. z~' :l l S- ; B. '1' tI . t. 'r i,. , .a . 'a... , t .i- s r 4 ;4 t. j~ ,. 1 ? f t ...-r f r i.,......1:.t"., { tl t t ~~~~~~ . 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