SUPPORT GEO See Editorial Page Y i.~a wat STRIKING High-26 Low-1.7 See Today for details Eighty-Four Years of Editorial Freedom Vol LXXXV, No. 110 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, February 11, 1975 Ten Cents Eight Pages ST T IFSSEISE SCAPP LL X-Mly Free Press pressure The Detroit Free Press has been inquiring about the amount of money University Regents chalk up on their expense accounts each year. As a result, Richard Kennedy, Secretary of the University, has sent each regent a letter asking permission to release their itemized expense accounts and ex- pects the response to be "favorable." Kennedy approximately the annual amount to be about $12,000. The Free Press reported yesterday that Michigan State's trustees each spent an average of $20,000 of state allocated money on personal expenses which included football games, travel, and the purchase of cars. The article also said that University officials have refused Free Press reporters this information, maintaining that the "law is not definitive," on this issue. The final decision on the disclosure will be made by Wed- nesday. Valentine greetings Now is your chance to give all your friends a unique Valentine's Day greeting. This Friday, February 14 the Daily will have a special Classi- fied section just for personal Valentine messages offered at a special low rate. Place your ad in person by noon Thursday, February 13, and keep your friends for life. Happenings Are women oriented today, with a whole slew of talks by and about women. There will be a general meeting for Academic women from 4-6 p.m. in Rackham, sponsored by the University Commission for Women, featuring speakers Caro- lyne Davis, Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs: Regent Sarah Powers; and Eva Mueller, Associate Dean of LSA. The topic will be "Re- cruitment, Retention, and Promotion of Academic Women". . . . NTational Organization for Women (NOW) is sponsoring a panel discussion on every- thing from housing discrimination to birth con- trol in public schools at 8 p.m. in the First Uni- tarian Church auditorium at 1917 Washenaw. Panel members will include State Representative Perry Bullard, and State Senator Gilbert Bursley . . . Another panel discussion on "Women in Medi- cine" will be held at noon in the sixth level amphi- theatre at University Hospital . . . While the subject is on medicine, John Fischer M.). will give a speech on 'Sex and the Cardiac Patient" at 4:30 p.m. in 2703 Furstenberg, the basement of Medical Science Bldg. I, sponsored by the American Association of Critical Care Nurses . . . Profesor Rhoads Murphy's lecture on "Western Impact in Asia" has been canceled. It was to take place in Green Lounge of East Quad at 7 p.m. . At 9:30 p.m. in Green Lounge, East Quad, the Poetry Works presents an open reading entitled Wine and Madness . . . the National Student Com- mittee Against Racism will be selling bus tickets for the National Conference Against Racism to be held in Boston February 14-16 in room 4001 of the Michigan Union from 10 - 3:30, and from 6-7:30. 0 Labor pains The University isn't the onlyone with labor pains, even if it seems like that today. Some 19,000 production workers have struck the Mc Donnell Douglas aircraft plants in California and Missouri over wages and benefits. Company offic- ials say if the strike lasts very long, jet lighter production will be curtailed. At the St. Louis plant, union members receive $5.82 an hour in wages and $1.61 in benefits. Union leaders are seeking raises that would bring the total wages and bene- fits to $15.09 per hour. McDonnell Douglas is the largest employer in St. Louis with a weekly pay- roll of $2.7 million. A long strike in that city will have a serious effect on the city's already falter- ing economy. On the tnside... s...Pilot Program Director Richard Munson pre- sents an alternative to Housing D~irector John Feldkamp's proposal for dormitory rate increases on the Editorial page, Joan"Borusawrites on singer Paul Siebal for the Arts page, and Brian Dem- ing explains what happenedrto the hockey team in Colorado Springs on the Snorts Page. On the outside... . Winter is still going strong. Due to a series ~~~~~...... ....... a . ... rFrctr :ri11n~ rn~ nr~ Probes of Cobb decisions sought By SARA RIMER, DAN BIDDLE and JUDY RUSKIN The Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) Civil Rights Division has made plans to review the University's controversial actions in the se- lection and rejection of Jewell Cobb as the literary college (LSA) dean to see if any of those actions conflict with fed- eral affirmative action guide- lines. At the same time, Cobb, a black Connecticut educator, has privately indicated she would like the Regents to begin a full, independent investigation of the deanship selection process, The Daily has learned. A CIVIL Rights Division of- ficial in HEW's Chicago regional headquarters said his office has requested a written account of the Cobb crisis from the Univer- sity administration, describing "what the circumstances sur- rounding the (deanship) offer were, and what were the re- sults." HEW, staff official Bernard Rogers said, will examine the report and "decide whether this complied with the University's affirmative action plan, or was in conflict with it." While he stressed that the re- quest was part of HEW's "on- going monitor of affirmative action," Rogers noted that the regional office was "extremely interested" in the Cobb situa- tion. THE UNIVERSITY'S original See COBB, Page 8 OK'd 689-193; talks continue By ANN MARIE LIPINSKI and JIM TOBIN The Graduate Employes' Organization (GEO) began a strike at 12:01 this morning. After eight months of bitter bargaining, the union membership voted 689 to 193 to use the extreme weapon in an effort to resolve their dead- locked labor dispute with the University administration. Intensive all-day negotiations, held behind closed doors over the weekend and yesterday in a last-ditch at- tempt to forestall a strike, failed to break the deadlock. BOTH SIDES reported that substantive progress was made. However, GEO leaders insisted last night at their mass meeting at Doily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS ONE OF THE Graduate Employes Organization (GEO) members casts a ballot during yester- day's strike vote. The union, which represents all University teaching fellows and staff and re- search assistants, overwhelmingly voted to walk off the job beginning this morning. CON TRO VERSY RAGES: the First Methodist Church that to a settlement. "Significant progress has been made over the weekend," reported union negotiator David Gordon, "but on a scale of zero to a hundred we've only moved to about forty. That's significant but we're not yet bringing you a package to rati- fy as a contract." On Friday University Presi- dent Robben Fleming announc- ed that the University was pre- pared to bargain all weekend in order to ward off a strike. THE TWO parties met for more than twenty hours over the weekend in the Administra- tion Building. Addressing an emergency meeting of the Faculty Senate Assembly yesterday afternoon, Fleming stated, "it's our view that agreement can be reached if both parties continue with their efforts. There is a forgot- ten interest here that both of us (both parties to the negotia- tions) have a great stake in satisfying, and that is the stu- dents." Fleming went on to claim that See GEO, Page 8 it was not enough to come close 'U' talks: Fruitless By JIM TOBIN The strike by the Graduate Employes' Organization (GEO) which has blasted into the Uni- versity community, catching it off-guard and confused, is the grim result of eight harrowing months of bargaining fraught with tactical struggles, mis- understandings and irreconcil- able differences on certain cru- cial issues. Though the two parties have reached agreement in a few areas, the central disputes re- main unresolved, leading to the final impasse which has di- vided the campus into several philosophical factions. BARGAINING began l a s t See GEO, Page 2 Counci By DAVID WHITING T h e Republican - dominated City Council passed an already controversial application to the federal government last night allocating a $2.5 million revenue sharing grant with the 6-5 vote splitting along party lines.; The application to Department' of Housing and Urban Develop- ment (HUD) includes: $371,250- c o d e enforcement; $25,00- road repair; $185,625-manage- ment, planning, and evaluation; passes CDRS $133,650-health and drug abuse; $123,750-child care; $100,000- public housing rehabilitation;, and $100,000-f i r e equipment purchase. THP GRANT is in the form of Community Development Rev- enue S h a r i n g (CDRS) funds aimed at aiding low and moder- ate income residents, according to the HUD office which admin- isters the program. Democrats and Human Rignts Ford attacks gas rationing HOUSTON, Tex: (A') - Presi- dent Gerald Ford declared yes- terday gasoline rationing will be enacted only "over my dead body." Invoking the strongest lan- guage to date in sounding his opposition to a rationing plan, Ford told an energy confer- ence here that such a system would lead only to "a jungle of red tape, bureaucratic judg- ment, inequities and other prob- lems. FORD, STEPPING up his campaign for public support for his energy proposals, departed from his prepared speech text to accuse Congress of being "shortsighted" and of taking "a step backward" by attempt- ing to block his reconmmenda- tions. He attacked Democratic moves for gasoline rationing and pleaded with his audience of Texans to "not succumb to what some say is an answer to the energy problem . . . Gaso- line rationing is about the poor- est answer I can imagine." He said gas rationing would last for from five to 10 years and declared "if we get into gasoline rationing . . . it will be over my dead body." MANY OILMENwere in Ford's audience of about 600, and applauded his call for an end to American dependence on foreign oil. The President rejected sug- gestions that he ease off his proposal to cut oil imports by a million barrels a day. He said "this bet-a-million philoso- phy - that we can continue to import the entire million or a significant part of the million- barrels that I propose to cut back - is a very high risk and reckless gamble." In his appeal for support for his proposals, Ford waved a copy of the 167-page bill spon- sored by his administration. IN CONTRAST to his "com- prehensive program," Ford said the House has passed a four- page bill to suspend his import quotas of up to $3 a barrel See FORD, Page 8 Party' (HRP) council members supported an alternative minir- ity proposal which they plan to submit to HUD. The minority proposal in- cludes: $400,000 - community services; $400,000 - child care; $435,000-code enforcement and home insulation: $132,900-legal services; $165,000-parks; $25,- 000-safety walkways; $135,000- recreation for low and moderate income residents; $130,000-re- habilitation of public housing units. KATHY Kozachenko (H RP- Second Ward) angrily vowed a lawsuit against the Republicans' allocations claiming the propo- sals violated the Congre siofial CDRS guidelines. HRP and Democrats blasted a GOP road renair recommend- ation of $250,000 for not directly benefitting the CDRS target group of low and moderate in- come people. In response GOP Mayor James Stephenson pointed out that a road repair program "in- volves many jobs" for these people. STEPHENSON f rther artued that poor roads are "a prob- lem that has plagued 1': for many years" and emphasized CDRS funds for their repair would be aimed at low and See COUNCIL, Page 8 Faculty asks GEO to postpone strike By ANN MARIE LIPINSKI A special emergency session of the Faculty Senate Assembly moved yesterday to urge the Graduate Employes Organiza- tion (GEO) to delay strike ac- tion "as long as it believed profitable negotiations were go- ing on." Dave Gordon, spokesman for the CEO, called the 41-1 vote on the motion "disappointing," adding, "we didn't want the Senate Assembly to become in- volved." "IDEALLY," Gordon asserted, "we would have wanted them to move in support of"our picket lines, but realistically we would have expected them to not take any position at all." Gordon explained that the mo- tion would be debated by the GEO, but contended that the executive committee was pres- ently opposed to delaying a walkout. The motion came after Uni- versity President Robben Flem- ing and GEO chief negotiator Sandy Wilkinson assured the assembly that some prograss had been made during closed- door negotiations sessions Satur- day, Sunday and yesterday. FLEMING called negotiation progress "substantial," explain- ing that University and GEO bargaining teams had, "tenta- tively agreed on several more issues." Hoping to prevent any in- quiries into the exact status of negotiation progress Fleming warned that, "it would not See FACULTY, Page 8 Congress to probe Pentagon contracts WASHINGTON UP) - Chairman John Stennis (D-Miss.), of the Senate Armed Services Committee began an inquiry yesterday into a Pentagon contract with a private corporation to train Saudi Arabian national guardsmen protecting oil fields. Stennis said he asked Secretary of Defense James Schlesinger for an explanation after disclosure Sunday of a $77 million De- fense Department contract with Vinnell Corp. of Los Angeles. VINNELL is recruiting former U. S. special forces soldiers and other war veterans for a 1,000-man force to send to Saudi Arabia. The Pentagon confirmed the contract. Maj. Gen Winant Sidle, Pentagon spokesman, said Vinnell Corp. will train the Saudi Arabian National Guard forces for "general internal security" as well as protection of oil fields. STENNIS told reporters he had not hard before of any D~e- fense Department contract withha private corporation to train military forces of a foreign country. "It raises questions," he said. Stennis declined further comment before learning "the facts," h>it said he uinderstood that the contract is based iupon l1zal au- Speed record broken By PAULINE LUBENS It's over, they're done. The long gruelling s t r e t c h from chess game to chess game has drawn to a closeandSteve Feld- man and Bob Beinish hold the world recorud theysw eree seek- in g..41 It's now up to someone else to play more 'hours of mara- thon "speed" chess and set a new record. Beinish and Feld- man have gone home to sleep.:Y AMID CHAMPAGNE bottles popping, whistles, cheers and