Tuesday, December 10, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Hoge Nine Tuesday, December 10, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY F~age Nine M-ERI (Continued from Page 1) University is discriminating against the union by denying a promised eight per cent pay hike. The University contends that all issues are negotiable at the table, and will grant no pay increases until a contract is signed. Sperka's decision means that the two. sides will probably be going to mediation sooner than P Ost pones expected, as the GEO is anx- re-evaluation of the University's ions to have the case heard and wage offer. 1 believes that it can strengthen SHORTLY after the decisionn its legal position if the Univer- for postponement, which was t sity refusal to yield delays me- worked out in private by the ' diation. judge during an hour and a. Nonetheless, GEO officials half recess in the hearings, GEOCt say they are unhappy with the; spokesman David Gordon ex- IC delay, as they had hoped MERC pressed his disappointment: would rule against the Univer- "By putting off the hearingh sity and force an immediate a month, they've put off the I eight per cent pay hike and a solution a month." t GEO case But University attorney Wil- iam Lemmer, who made the motion for postponement, called he delay the only reasonable approach. "THE IDEA is that a media- or will help resolve the issue. hope he will. But what I had hoped was that we would have made a negotiated agreement before we even went to MERC. Castro's Cuban revolution We've got to do it someday," he said. However, the possibility that the issue will yet be resolved by MERC remains. Judge Sperka refused to grant a University motion to dismiss the suit, say- ing that although he hoped the issue would be resolved by mediation, a continued impasse would force him to examine the merits of the case. But MERC intervention in the case might delay the con- tract negotiations beyond the end of the school year. accord- ing to Sperka, as in all proba- bility no contract would be signed until the case was settled - a process which takes months. THE TWO sides will meet three more times before the end of the semester in attempts to resolve minor issues before calling in a mediator, to help facilitatenegotiations. But until the mediator comes, the state of negotiations, the possibility of strike and a long legal battle over wage levels, are unresolved problems. e. 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THE DAY AFTER the bogus "Cuban rebel" planes bombed Cuba, Castro de- clares, for the first time, that the Cuban revolution is socialist in nature. The stage is set for the stupid and danger- ous Bay of Pigs adventure; after the CIA-planner invasion (April 17-19), the American government establishes the economic boycott which most Latin American nations later adopt. A year after the Bay of Pigs fiasco, the Cuban missile crisis takes place, and American and Russia come as close to starting a nuclear war as they ever have. After this affair ends, relations between Ha- vana and Washington are extremely tense, but Soviet-Cuban relations are not good either (the Cubans thinking that the Russians betrayed them in the mas- ter). A possible Cuban-American reconcilia- tion coui that time 1963, Ca a discre in order ended a and thet Nixon pr didn't h the endt the begi the pros ed intot consider TO Attorney accuses Ehrliclhnan of falsifying report to Nixon d have been in the making at e. From May until November of stro drops numerous hints that et round of negotiation might be . The assassination of Kennedy' ll hopes of an early settlement, Viet Nam war, the Johnson, and residencies (especially the latter) elp matters any. Only towards of the Nixon administration and nning of the Ford presidency do pects of Cuba being re-integrat- the "American family" improve ably. )MORROW: Liberalization? or writing feature stories a b o u t the drama, dance, film arts: Contact Arts Edi t or, c/o The Michigan Daily. just o note about our Holiday Hifi Sale._ i I "HISAND "HERS" W10 SPEED BIKES TWO GRAND PRIZES rr, { i -- -_,, W IC TWO TOP L.P, IRECORD ALBUMS 50 IN ALL TO BE GIVEN AWAY R t M 1301 South University Ann Arbor-665-2650 SALAD BAR ala carte 99c Homema cde Soups.S0C (Continued from Page 1) home on July 6, 1972, a fewf cause it was one co-conspira- 1reeks after the June 17, 1972,1 tor, giving a self-serving state- Watergate break-in. ment to another co-conspirator By that time, CIA leaders hadr to relay on in case things came informed the FBI that no in- unstuck." telligence resources in Mexico would be jeopardized by a full- The prosecutor said he is un- scale investigation of Water-t able to "see that this is any- gate. thing but a charade in which "The President said to me in Ehrlichman and Nixon were to short that he doubted that as- help protect one another once shrtae doubte ta ta- the cover-up began coming surancfied. , Ehrlichman Ltesi- fid He believed Gen WVfitersi apartt was in effect covering up CIA EIRIUA esiidta activities." after interviewing several per-a THE 49-YEAR old Ehrlicnman sons involved in Watergate, he quoted Nixon as saying that de- drafted the report in the mid- spite what the CIA said Nixon' dIe of the night on April 11 and believed "a vigorous FBI in-i handed it to Nixon the next day. vestigation could uncover con-I Although Neal said the prose- idential and secret CIA activi- cution had no objection to in- ties to the detriment of the CIA' troduction of the report, Sirica and national security." said he would rule on the ad- C I A deputy director Gen. missibility of the document as Vernon Walters has testified evidence today. that at the request of defendant Earlier, Ehrlichman recounted H. R. "Bob" Haldeman, the' meetings he had with Nixon at FBI was asked to limit its in- Nixon's San Clemente, Calif., vestigation into money used to Leaving Town for the Holidays? FBe Smart-Shop Ann Arbor ~ and Liberty Music Shop R Nobody, but Nobody! Has the diversified stock records and cassettes that you can find at the LMS. Take care of youra ift problems the finance the original June 17, 1972, break-in. Later, Walters testified that the FBI was told no CIA interests were involved. acting FBI Director Patrick Gray he wasn't going to allow "those kids at the White House" to push him around. P R E V IOU S testimony has shown Ehrlichman ordered Gray not to hold the meeting with various FBI and CIA officials in the weeks following the break- in. Ehrlichman acknowled on the stand, but said h cancelling the meeting h ing to do with limil Watergate investigation. Becomi musical1 gifted. 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