hf THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 7, 19714 FSCME approves new contract with 'U' PEOPLE'S PEACE TREATY Meeting discusses May action (Continued from Page 1) meetings where the voting took place. McCracken said this had to be done to avoid confusion in the voting and to give everyone a chance to ask questions. McCracken said there would be no way for anyone to challenge the outcome of the vote.' The 1,000 people who voted rep- resent less than half of the 2,600 member union. Approximately the same number voted to return to work Jan. 20, following a two-day strike by the union. AFSCME's new agreement in- cludes extra pay for workers who' are not scheduled to work five con- secutive days followed by two days off. Workers will also receive pre- miums if they have to work two shifts within 24 hours. While employes on the midnight shift will receive a 5 cent premium under the terms of the new agree- ment, they will not be eligible for premiums for working five days which are not consecutive. "Many provisions of the new con- tract," said McCracken, "are go- ing to cause confusion because there are so many things that management is going to have to do differently now." "The effectiveness of the con- tract," he added, "will depend on the willingness of the workers to file grievances when their super- visors don't adhere to the con- tract." Several new parts of' the con- tract will attempt to prevent the recurrence of many of the 1,200 (Continued from Page 1) 1 1 grievances the union has filed over cus on this May Day demonstra- the past two years. tion, attended by over 650 people, For example, the University can yesterday approved a proposal no longer transfer stewards to presented by the Seattle delega- other districts. The University has tion to the conference. in the past, says McCracken, trans- The Seattle proposal calls for ferred militant stewards into dis- presentation of the treaty in Wash- tricts where there were already ington on May 1, followed on May stewards. 3 and 4 by massive non-violent The contract also places limits on demonstrations aimed at stopping the amount of work supervisors can the functioning of the federal gov- do which is normally done by union ernment. members.T While the grievance procedure Th Washington action would remains virtually unchanged, the supported by demonstrations on union can now use other '*ier May 3 and 4 in all major cities and unin cn nw ue oherUnier-on campuses throughout the coun- sity employes as witnesses ino muye grievance hearings. try. The University must also consult Members of the Ohio delegation the union before firing any of its from Kent State University an- thembers ninounced to the May Day Caucus members. their plans for a demonstration on Tentative contract agreement Feb. 17 in protest of the recent in- was reached last Monday in the vasion of Laos, and called on the Detroit offices of state-appointed conference participants to join fact-finder William Ellmann. them by organizing demonstrations The union and the University on their respective campuses. negotiators agreed at that time to The caucus then passed a reso- recommend ratification of the con- lution calling for support of the tract to their constituencies. Kent demonstration. Ellmann had been asked to enter Chaos often surrounded many of the dispute following an unsuccess- ful attempt by the University to get an injunction against the striki-ng union. New eourS The settlement also marks the end of four months of negotiationsC between both sides. The talks first (Continued from Page i) began Oct. 5 and continued through Slavic language Prof. David two contract extensions until the Welsh, teaching a center course on walk-out Jan. 18. myths and symbols in literature, hopes to encourage students to create their own "personal myths," Placement activate their unconscious and practice creative writing. ye no at en te s to to ea Ei m sh fe di to th at in cc esterday's activities as vocal mi- said NSA President David Ifsin. "It has been discussed by many or- orities and confused participants is going to be a long struggle that ganizations since last fall. The ttempted to deal with the confer- will go far beyond May. It is just National Coalition Against War, nce. one element of the peace treaty Racism and Repression (NCAW- The May Day discussion was in- movement, a student-youth con- RR) has called for a demonstra- errupted as soon as it began by ference." tion in Washington on May 5. The upporters of the march that failedI Many regional conferences on National Peace Action Coalition materialize. That debate was in the treaty are being scheduled to (NPAC) has called for a march on urn interrupted by a motion to follow this national conference. Washington April 24. ject Ann Arbor Police Det. Lt. Despite the high attendance, However, NPAC members say ugene Staudenmeir from the however, the conference is in finan- they do not see the two proposals ieeting. After much discussion and cial trouble. A conference worker as mutually exclusive. They see houting both proposals were de- said they had collected only about their idea as attracting a broader eated. $2.50 a head instead of the $6 reg- range of support than the more However, conference organizers istration fee that was supposed to militant NCAWRR plan. id not see the seeming confusion be charged each person. Some members of the conven- be particularly detrimental to An organizer said there were tion have charged that the con- ie conference. "It's understand- over 2,000 people going through the vention is too occupied with tac- ble in terms of what we were ask- food lines, but many of them had tics and not concerned enough ig from the workshops," said a obtained official identification but- about achieving any kind of po- onference worker. tons without paying. litical dialogue. They say the con- -"- -- ------------------I ference should form the "radical UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Have a Legal Abortion Performed by License Certi- fied Gynecologists in New York State. Pregnancies to 1 2 wks. '$200.00 Pregnancies 12-18 wks.--$350.00 FREE Transportation-No Waiting. Leave Det. A.M. --Return early P.M. Call for the BEST ECONOMICAL PLAN available in the MID-WEST. YOU SAVE in excess of $50.00 by calling; (9:00 A.M.-10:00 P.M.J 835 5-6715 8-4191 (if no answer) 838 (CLIP & SAVE FOR FUTURE REF - - x 17 I1 "Regardless of what specifically is talked about in the workshops, they serve as a starting point of interest in many areas," he added. Sponsors stressed that the pur- pose of the conference is to discuss ideas and plans for the treaty, not necessarily to develop a national organizing structure. "This conference is a beginning," ;es to open ,. ' DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an 2 p.m., rf the day preceding pub- official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be 'sent in TYPEWRITTEN f o r m to Room 3528 L.S.A. Bldg., before lication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items ap- pear only once. Student organiza- tion notices are not accepted for publication. For more information, phone 764-927(. a r SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 7 Day Calendar, Family Recreation Program: Faculty, staff and married students, Intramural Sports-Bldg., 1:30 p~m. School of Music: Trombone C h o i r Recital, G. Smith, conductor, Sch. of Music Recital Hall, 2:30 p.m. Professional Theatre Program: "School for Wives," Lydia Mendelssohn, 2:30 p.m. School of Music: Eva Likova, soprano; E. Bossart, piano, Rackham L e c t u r e 'Iall, 4:30 p.m. Saxophone Students Quartet: Sch. of Music Recital Hall, 8 p.m. MONDAY, FEBRUAFY 8 Sch. of Public Health: Dr. J. Cassel, U. of N. Carolina, t'The Role of Social Factors in Disease Etiology,' Aud., SPH, 4 p.m. Engineering Mechanics Lecture: Dr. C. Horgan, "On Korn's Inequality in the Theory of Elasticity," 229 W. En- gin., 4 p.m. High Energy Seminar: J. Johnson, j SLAC, "Photoproduction Experiments at SLAC," P&A Colloq. Rm., 4 p.m. Saxophone Students Quartet: Sch. of Music Recital Hall, 8 p.m. General Notices Freshmen and Sophomores in LSA (fewer than 55 hrs. by May '71): Make advanced classification appts, starting4 Feb. 3; no forms will be turned in$ before Mar. 8; have one or two alterna- tive course selections ready; t i m e schedules available sometime f i r s t week of March. 3200 S.A.B. . Interviews for the week of February 15. Appointments may be made be- binning Feb. 8 in person or by phone 763-1363. TUESDAY, FEB. 16 Leo Burnett Co., Inc. Lincoln National Lift Ins. Co. WEDNESDAY, FEB. 17 Jacobson Stores, Inc. Neisner Brothers, Inc. THURSDAY, FEB. 18 Bureau of the Census The Detroit Edison Co. FRIDAY, FEB. 19 The Port of New York Authority Union Commerce Bank SUMMER PLACEMEST SERVICES 212 S.A.B. Interviews: Appointments may be made in person or by phone, 764-7460. TUESDAY, FEB. 9 Pan Omega Corp., Franklin, Mi. in- terviews from 1:30 - 5; looking for sal- vage crew; must have Scuba Diving ex- perience; details avail. WEDNESDAY, FEB. 10 Camp Chi, Wis., Soc. Work; inter- view from 9 - 5; openings include unit leaders, nurses, specialists in arts and crafts, swimming, campcraft, canoeing, tripping, music, drama; details and ap- plications. THURSDAY, FEB. 11 Camp Chi., Wis., Soc. Wk., see above. "The Ecological Frontier: Pol- lution in our Water" will be taught by botany Prof. Gordon McBride, who p 1 a n s to focus on various groups of algae and their signi- ficaice to world ecosystems, pollu- tion, medicine, and economics. A team of University faculty is directing a course in "Winter Bi- ology: Survival a n d Protection" which will examine t h e winter condition for animals, birds, in- sects, and plants. This course, like a number of the six, eight, or ten week courses offered by the center, will involve Saturday field trips. Architecture Prof. Kingsbury Marzolf, who is teaching a course summarizing Western European and American architecture in the last two centuries, remarks that he teaches a comparable course with- in the University. A listing of other courses taught in the adult education center pro- gram beginning next week and some starting later in the spring is available at the center's offices. Dr. Milton Stern, director of the entire Southeastern Michigan pro- gram, points out one anxiety, say- ing "We're out of business unless, we have students." "And we don't have the carrot, the degree, to dangle in front of students' noses," he continues. "We have to offer courses to meet the special interests of people." The University has added to the---------- problem, organizers say, by re- vanguard of the peace movement, fusing to cancel room requests leaving more liberal programs to fusig t canel oom equstsother conferences. made before Friday night's plenary Other participats have praised session altered the agenda, leav- the conference for this very bring- ing many of the reserved rooms ing together of diverse groups of unused. The conference will still the anti-war movement. have to pay for those rooms. "This kind of conference was Within the conference itself there really not possible a few months is considerable disagreement over ago," said Ifsin. "This is an in- exactly what kind of tactics should credible step forward." be employed in support of the treaty during May. Suggestions range all the way Charles W. McKinley, an assist- from a militant effort to shut down ant administrator of University Washington until the Nixon admin- Hospital, has been appointed ad- istration ends the war to a broad ministrator of the Port Huron movement that can be supported Hospital, effective April 1. by groups with a broad spectrum McKinley is now on temporary of political philosophies. r assignment from the University Many members of the conference as director of the 200-bed com- think there should be more empha- munity hospital in Howell while sis on regional programs and de- the administrator there is com- cision-making. pleting advanced study under a The idea of a national demon- National Health Research Fellow- stration in Washington this spring ship. C MW4 c* YDWM~lKNG SUPPUES., A4 LRGE A SSORTMENT OF P7RQCRAM~ TffINE 4 YES AND, OFCOURSE lWHOtLi SRWRt AfD 1* TAIL i II L Daily Ciassif ieds Get Results Fr . 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I CEICKMATE State Street at Liberty Famous Make Instruments 40 Applications now being taken to fill: 1 vacancy on Student Government Council (member-at-large seat) 4 openings on 'U' Cellar Board of Directors (Bookstore policy board) 3 Student openings on University Council (proposesuniform conduct rules and investigates procedures concerning police on campus) Pick up applications and sign up for interviews at 1546 Student Activities Building (For 'U' Cellar Board-also can get applications at 'U' Cellar) APPLICATIONS DUE TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 16 9 4"u 6teete4t kden tine Give her e gift that will 2ndure. Remember her with a monogrammed 111 BANGLE BRACELET Available with one, two, or three r i n g s. Heart shaped tags also avail- -able. J No charge for engraving but please allow 48 hours for this service. .. 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