FQge Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 9; 1975 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 9, 1975 SGT. PEPPER-1028 E. Univ. 662-0202@! Open 7 days a week, 9:30-11 :00 BEER & WINE, FRESH MEAT AND PRODUCE, DELI COUNTER, IMPORTED CHEESES, IMPORTED WINES ANNIVERSARY FRYING CHICKENS ...........49c per lb. GROUND ROUND STEAK ...... 98c per lb. PORK ROAST ...... ...... 89c per lb. END CUT PORK CHOPS ........ 89c per lb. CENTER CUT PORK CHOPS ... $1.39 per lb. LEAN STEWING BEEF ........ $1.29 per lb. COLBY CHEESE ............. $1.19 per lb. LARGE EGGS ..............79c per dozen BANANAS . ............. 15c per I. DANNON YOGURT ............ 3 for 98c COCA-COLA AND TAB 8 (12 oz.) cans $1.69 WILSONS MILK (1 gallon). ....... .$1.29 HALF-GALLON of ICE CREAM ........98c WILSONS COTTAGE CHEESE (12 oz. carton).......49c CHOICE ROUND STEAK ...... $1.29 per lb. FRESH MUSHROOMS ..... 49c per package HOME MADE SAUSAGE .... ....89c per lb. SALE LASTS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7 TO SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 16 - - - ---- - - - -- - - -- - - - - - - - I Nmolommoo PUBLIC LECTURE Monday evening, Feb. 10 PEACE IN THE MIDDLE EAST: The American Jewish Community consider alternatives Speaker-RABBI RICHARD LEVY, UCLA LOOKING THE WEEK IN REVIEW> BACK GEO strike looms' ALL WELCOME ONTRACTnegotiations be- at H I L L E L-1429 Hill St. tween the University and the Graduate Employes Or-I ganization (GEO) are approach- r~s:.- -""'-o--w ---w"' ---- -w -w-"""""""" -"" ing the eleventh hour as both -CLIP AND SAVE- sides prepare themselves for r E:what now appears inevitable- JEW ISH ACTIVITIES : a walkout by at least one-third * of the 2,200 Graduate Student r * Assistants. (GSA). N CAMPUS I Unlike last year, when union *leaders were uncertain of rank- SDT-Feb. 16-Charity Spaghetti Party : and-file sentiment and a vote 5-8 p.m.-$1.75 to walk out failed530-355, strike I support among a majority of Feb. 14, 15, 16-Charity Panhellenic GEO members is now almost al P foregone conclusion.I 1_Plant Sale _ At a mass meeting Wednes- *rday night, over 600 union sup- H I LLEL-Feb. 15-Dance with live porters applauded wildly as band-free refreshments GEO leader Mark Kaplan pre- *rsented the strike vote recom- Amendation of the organization's A E PH I-Watch for upcoming party r executive committee.j Wfi"It's time to stop waiting," YAVNEH-Feb. 22-Purim Party at !Kaplan declared. "It's time to Herw Ho s-rpm show them (the administrators) Hebrew House-9 p.m. i that we're ready to strike un- Saturdays-Torah Study at til they're ready to come * across." Hebrew House-4 p.m. GEO demands include a 14 :, per cent pay hike, a $200 re- SOVIET JEWRY-Feb. 24- duction in tuition, regulations a on class size, and more input' Demonstration at Power Center concerning curriculum and STRIKE SUPPORT a m o n g undergraduates w h i c h appeared to be scraping rock- bottom only a few weeks ago, is now burgeoning at a sur- prising rate. The impending walkout has provoked many fiery debates in University classrooms as teach- ing fellows and professors ar- gue their case before students. As a result, many classes have chosentto suspend operations completely during the strike and many more plan to honor the picket lines by meetings only off-campus. In addition, the Michigan Brotherhood of Teamsters has vowed to support the GEO strike, a move which should bring the University to its knees in a very short time. By honor- ing the picket lines, the Team- sters will prevent delivery of many essential supplies to classroom buildings and dormi- tories. With strong undergraduate and Teamster support, the strike probably could not con- tinue beyond two weeks. Ob- viously, University negotiators will then be forced to soften their position toward GEO de- mands. ROTC decision _N AN INSTITUTION the size of the University, policy- making is usually a slow, pon- derons process with fairly pre- dictable results. However, this was not the case when the liter- ary college (LSA) faculty un- expectedly ousted a proposal Monday that would grant credit Daifv Photo by STUART HOLLANDER GEO members raise their union cords Wednesday night in defiance of the University administration as they over- whelmingly resolved to take a strike vote. -- oc~oo (ra- ) =0-C-4 p.m. ISRAELI STUDENT ORGANIZATION would like to meet HTo C s all those interested in getting to know Israelis. 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Till next week when we my life.-Lilly Pad. can hibernate in our cubby hole -- Happy Valentine's Day-Pooh. $V4 ~ -II YOUR VALENTINE MESSAGE: -E-lf- --Special Reduced4 -_Classified Rates LINES RATE LINES RATE 4 WORDS LINES PRICE 0 $1.15 7$2.10 policy decisions. Te walkout vote began Thursday and will end tomorrow. The strike, which will virtual- ly shutdown some literary col-, lege departments, will involve nearly all of the GEO's cer- tified 1,000 members as well as a fairly sizeable number of non-union GSA's who plan to honor the picket lines. to some Reserve Officer Train- ing Corps (ROTC) classes aft- er a mere 30 minutes of de- bate. Totally disregardingtPresi- dent Fleming's plea that the discussion focus on the ques- tion of academic merit, the fac- ulty instead hashed out the mor-I and political implications behind ROTC's presence on campus. With a record 400 faculty members and concerned stud- ents attending the regular monthly LSA meeting, the pro- posal was decisively voted down by a 2-1 margin. Only two of the nearly 25 debate partici- pants adopted a hard-line posi- tion in .defense of ROTC, and their arguments were swamped by the plethora of opposing opin- ions. 75 protesters braved the freez- ing temperatures to demon- strote against ROTC course credit prior to the faculty meet- ing. A RMY COMMANDING Offic- er Colonel Kenneth Irish, who coordinates the campus ROTC program voiced his dis- nle-s-re with the "unfair" fac- ulty decision and reiterated his e rlier concern that it would cause enrollment to dwindle even firther from its present- lv low levels. "Tf we don't receive credit, I susneet that if junior enroll- ,'n--t doesn't go inn, this unit will be dissolved," Trish as- serted early lst month. However, his assertion is without much basis because the University's 61 ROTC students r~n r~ tl b tin rrdit fn MIKHAIL STERN SENTENCE 8 YEARS MIKHAIL LEVIEV SENTENCE DEATH CRIME: Application for VISA to Israel. the destruction of Soviet Jewry continues LET MY PEOPLE GO! FOR MORE INFO. CALL 663-3336 COMMITTEE ON OPPRESSED JEWRY A career inlaw witoutlawschool. What can you do with only a bachelor's degree? Now there is a way to bridge the qap between an underaraduate education and a challenginc, respon- sible career. The Lawyer's Assistant is able to do work traditionally done by lawyers. Three months of intensive training can qive you the skills - the courses are tauaht by lawyers. You choose one of the six courses offered-choose the city in which you want to work. Since 1970, The Institute of Paraleqal Traininq has placed more than 700 araduates in law firms, banks, and corporations in over 60 cities. If you are a student of hiqh academic standinq and are interested in a career as a Lawyer's Assistant, we'd like to meet vou. Contact your placement office for an interview with our'representative We will visit your campus on THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20 The Institute of Paralegal Training 1 It I t I it This decision overrode an c~n Ireseniv UJ am credir LSA Curriculum committee military - oriented c o u r s e s recommendation that credit be troah every college except the School of Music and LSA. re-instated for a certain num- "This (the faculty decision) ber of ROTC courses that had sho' ltn't affect ROTC too relatively little military con- much by and large," remarked tent. Carduner. A SSOCIATE DEAN of Curric- ulum Jean Carduner ob- C bb afi served, "The faculty didn't vote { T4 on the report. They voted on NOTHER CHAPTER in the how they felt about ROTC. The ' contin'ling saga of Jewel great majority is still strongly Cobb otened up last week as opposed to the idea of ROTC." The bqily le-rned that the Uni- Economics Prof. W. H. Au- versity administration flatly re- den, originator of a highly re-: icted the LSA deanshin candi- spected 1969 recommendation diate because of the zoologv de- that the LSA faculty eliminate nartment's refusal to grant her credit for ROTC courses, em-! temire. phasized the "fundamental in- According to well - informed compatibility between the De- sorces, Cobb agreed to the fense Department and the col- controversiAl no - tenure offer, lege." bit w-s told by Fleming she Although faculty opposition to cold not accept it because no ROTC was surprisingly strong, LSA dean has ever gone with- especially in light of the Cur- out tenure. riculum committee's recom- This nosition is at consider- mendations, organized student able variance with a statement resistance to the military pro- isslied by Rhodes earlier in the sgram was merely a hollow re- week which contended that a surrection of its f o r m e r no-tenure situation is "not un- strength. unusual for those apnointed to While administrators and University administrative posi- academicians were deliberating tions from outside institutions." the ROTC credit question five Meanwhile, sources close to years ago, self-proclaimed ra- the Regents indicated that dicals disrupted military class- more than one board member is es and more than 700 students now convinced that Fleming marched on the Diag. and Vice President for Academ- Last Monday, however, only ic Affairs Frank Rhodes "ma- st -nd-y,----enipulated" the Regents and ap- proached Cobb with no inten- CIARTERS tion of persuading her to ac- Ec-cept the deanship - despite the unanimous Regental vote to of- fer her the position. 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