Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAISY Saturday, October 24, 1970 Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, October 24, 1970 NOV. HEARINGS: TF union seeks 'U' recognition as agent Angela Davis: Black revolutionary heroine 11/0 (Continued from Page 1) Smith says he agrees teaching fellows should participate in and discuss departmental policy but he adds "Teaching fellows shouldn't be able to vote on the develop- ment of departmental teaching staffs, because of their short term status and dual nature." Smith says, however, that "teaching fel- lows don't need votes on commit- tees to be influential." TFU is presently in the midst of a membership drive. Hayford says the organization, formed in Oct. 1969, hopes to strengthen its bargaining position by it enlarging its membership. Hayford says she does not rule out the possibility of a strike if the eventual union bargaining de- mands are not met. However, she says, "I think a strike would only be used in extreme cases." University teaching fellows, most of whom are not TFU members, express different opinions on the value of the union. Descoteaux, a teaching fellow in the French department, says she joined the TFU because, "I think teaching fellows should band to- gether to improve their situation. Acting as individuals isn't nearly as effective." But sociology teaching fellow John Entin, who is not a union member, says he is "skeptical about the unior ." He says he doesn't want teaching fellows to develop into "an interest group opposed to undergraduate stu- dents." Entin says his main con- cern is "the quality of undergrad- uate education, and how teaching fellows can add to it." Descoteaux says, however, the union, "wants to help students too, not just ourselves." She says giving teaching fellows autonomy in the classroom, for example, "will benefit students by making their classes more responsive to their needs and desires." The total number of teaching 'fellowships available may be re- duced in the future if department chairmen follow a suggestion from President Robben Fleming to "re- turn faculty members to the un- derclass program" at the Univer- sity. Fleming made the suggestion in his State of the University address Sept. 28. He said in most cases "the graduate teaching fellow can- not equal the senior faculty mem- ber" in teaching competence. However, there will be no re- duction in. fellowships in the next ,school year, Smith says. In fact, J Order Your Subscription Today 764-0558 he says there will probably be a slight increase. Even if there is a reduction in teaching fellowships, the admin- istration probably won't come into conflict with the TFU if it handles the reductions to the satisfaction of the union.1 Hayford says most teaching fel- lows probably "wouldn't mind see- ing ourselves abolished" under two conditions., She says that first, graduate students who are now teaching fellows and those who entered graduate school on the assumption that they would receive teachin fellowships would have to receive equivalent financial assistance in other forms. Second, small recitation classes would have to be continued in ;ii- troductory courses. Hayford says. most union members believe the recitation sections are benefic'1 to students. Kent rally speakers hit indictments (Continued from Page 1) "And please," he said, "I see you wearing these 'Keep Kent Open' buttons. But Kent isn't open now because no non-students are allowed on the campus." The trend of national interest was indicated by the many tele- grams and letters of support from students at the universities around the country. A letter read at the rally from Joseph Rhodes, member of the President's Commission on Campus Unrest, praised the stu- dents for "their restraint" that had "astounded the nation." "You've got to keep people polit- ically conscious here," said Jef- ferson. "Everyone is looking at Kent. You are leading and trying to communicate with these people and all students support you in your struggle." For the student body: DENIM FLARES $4.88 Reg. $8.00 quality CHECKMATE State St. at Liberty (Continued from Page 1) with her father after graduation from Brandeis. He had stopped to buy a bottle of liquor in Chat- tanooga, Tenn., t h e last "wet" city en route to Birmingham. When they crossed the Georgia line her father w a s stopped, searched, fined $50 and held for a time in jail. "She said she be- lieved we Negroes would all be put in concentration camps," her fa- ther said. There were her years of tute- lage by Herbert Marcuse, philos- opher of the New Left, and bM Theodore Adorno, the shining light of the Frankfurt school oil Marxism. Marcuse pronounced her the brightest student he ever taught. There was the chaining a ni d gagging of Black Panther leader Bobby Seale in a Chicago court- room and the shackeling of the, defendants in the Soledad prison murder case. "Completely out.- rageous," Angela Davis t o 1 d an Associated Press reporter, "com- pletely against what this country allegedly stands for." Angela Davis's own, words seem to indicate her political turning point was some time early this year and that it was a gradual process; she herself said there was no precise moment when she adopted a totally revolutionary stance. A year previous to the Soledad prison case Angela Davis had told' a group of students at San Diego State College: "As a Communist I have to seek radical change and as I see ?t capitalism does not contain the solution to our problems today. Capitalism can provide only a token way of solving problems. People are beginning to wake ur to the fact that we have to talk about radical solutions." And just before the Soledad case: "The first condition of freedom is the open act of resistance. Physical resistance. Violent re- sistance. The road toward free- dom, the path of liberation, is marked by resistance at every crossroad." And just after the Soledad case: "We have to talk about going into the streets but this time we have to talk about going with the masses of people, with the millions of people, and demanding our rights. Because if we do not do this at tis point . . . then I think we can very well talk about an era of fascism coming into being. It's up to us. 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