Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, November 1, 1973 Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAiLY Thursday, November 1, 1973 STRIKE THREE M M .1-1 r Tuition (Continued from Page 1) yesterday. "I honestly don't have any idea (how many students have paid)," Smith told The Daily. But' he added, "As far as I know, we've not noticed any great change in the level of cash flow." SMITH ALSO refused to shed light on another major money question: the admitted likelihood that the 24 per cent fee hike will produce more revenue than the University needs to fill its budget. "We're still waiting for those figures," he said. "I've been guess- ing too much lately, and it's been getting me into trouble. I'm not going to give any new estimates until I have one I can stand on." President Robben Fleming, ds- cussing the tuition issue in a forum several weeks ago, promised to strike f "make all the numbers public" but would not answer the quesion of possible uses or rebate of extra tuition money. Smith yesterday in- dicated that a rebate to students, isn't unlikely, s a y i n g, "That wouldn't be high -on my list of priorities." SMITH, WHO announced last month that he will soon resign his position, is the key University of- ficial in a controversy that has out- lived the tuition strike: teaching fellows' demands for renewed tui- tion benefits and increased salary. Groups of TFs within several de- partments, who earlier fueled the strike with messages of support, have since organized the unoffi- cially-titled Committee of Teach- ing Fellows and demanded: 0 "a cost-of-living" salary in- ides into 1 crease totalling 10 per cent over last year's pay and excluding tui- tion; * reinstatement of TF benefits removed this summer, including in-state tuition for non-resident TFs and their spouses, and a waiver of spring half-term tuition for gradu- ates with two prior semesters of teaching fellowship; 0 a rollback of TF tuition to last year's levels-the same de- mand made in the student strike; " creation of "a living wage" for TFs and a total removal of tui- tion for teaching fellows, effect!ve in the fall term of 1974. THE TF'S COMMITTEE present- ed the demands to Smith at an Oct. 12 meeting. Smith said he was "glad for the chance to meet" with the group and discuss their .oycott history grievances, but added he could make "no commitments" on finan- cial issues until the University knows how great its tuition income will be.I Smith later said he had "no way of knowing" whether a substantial number of TFs are represented by the committee, but the committee contends it speaks for at least SO - per cent of the University's oo - graduate teaching assistants. Join The Daily CIRCULATION DEPT. Come in anv afternoon 420 Maynard a For undergraduates a Instruction in English a Hebrew Ulpan prior to academic term a Independent study project for interested students a Tours, seminars and extra curricular activities IE YEAR PROGRAM SPRING SEMESTER erican Friends of the Israel Program Center- AZY Aviv University 515 Park Avenue 2 Madison Avenue New York, New York 10022 w York, New York 10017 (212) 753-0230/0282 2) MU 7-5651 Note: departure, January r 4 ON Am Tel 342 Ne' (21: YF Demonstrators urge I of Farah pants in local stores (Continued from Page 1) cident,.atlhough Ann Arbor police dropped by the Fiegel store almost immediately after the protest start- ed to inform the picketers that they had to keep moving and could not loiter in front of the store. MANAGER REACTION to the pickets varied. The manager at Fiegel's bluntly refused to estimate the, effect of the pickets on busi- ness, commenting, "I don't say anything to those people down at The Daily; they are all corn- munists." There were few people in the store. A Fiegel's store employe snap- ped pictures of demonstrators and interested observers, He said he was taking the photographs "just so that people would know what was going on." One man carrying three pairs of Farah pants neatly draped over his arm, the Farah labels clearly showing, rated a click. Business at Marty's s e e m e d slowed by the pickets. Owner Marty Bush said, "They wouldn't be picketing out there if the whole story." they knew BUSH SAID he had complied with a ACWU request to halt ad- vertising for Farah pants. He also claimed he had not ordered pants' from Farah since June and had no intention of doing so in the near future. Bush had already ordered his fall selection of clothes by the time he stopped ordering, he said. At Checkmate, the manager was unperturbed by the picketers. "Farah is only a minor line in our store; we sell mostly Levi's," he claimed. Despite the picketing, there were quite a few customers in the store. The boycott has grown out of a three-year dispute between Farah management and the cutting room workers in the plant. Nearly 85 per cent of the Farah workers are Chicano women. IN OCTOBER 1970 workers at Farah's El Paso plant voted to have a National Labor Realtions Board (NLRB) sanctioned vote to determine whether a union should be established. The NLRB took until 1972 to recognize the El Paso group. By that time union sympathizers in the El Paso plant had walked off the job, protesting botn the work conditions and tne manage- ment harassment of organizers. The 18 month strike has been bol- stered by supporters at other Farah plants. At least 3,500 Farah employes are now on strike. TF committee member Laurie Effron, an economics department instructor, said she and others came away from the Smiin meet- ing "with a great feeling of mis- trust in light of the way we've been treated." "RIGHT NOW there's a mo- mentum building," Effron said yesterday. "We're trying to get in- put from people in all departments. A whole gamut of different actions has been suggested, but the con- sensus is that somethingTrust be- done." She added that the suggestions have included refusal to give grades, refusal to teach for a period of one day or one week, and a full-fledged strike of indefi- nite duration.I Meanwhile, Smith indicated yes- terday that thentuition strike has brought about at least one un- official decision: there will be no fee hike next year. "Not if I'm in my right mind, he concluded. "We've had our fill of trouble on this thing (tuition).' No way should we go any higher.' Daily Classifieds Bring Quick Results su A sTE I Hor HURRY! LAST FEW DAYS! Sign Up for Senior Pix ON DIAG AND MUSIC SCHOOL (11-3) Photographers already on campus! World Campus Afloat: Join Us! Sailseach September & February. Thts is the way you've always wanted to learn . . . and should. 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