- - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - 7- 0=4 I I 11- 1 v I i,%o I I I %jr-x I q L,77"Tr= r i LOOKING GIVE THE GIFT OF LIFE AT' I THE U-M STUDENT BLOOD BANK MON., Feb.11... 11 a.m.-5 p.m. TUES., Feb. 12... 11 a.m.-5 p.m. WED., Feb. 13. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. THE WEEK IN BATTLE LINES between the University and its 1600 teaching fellows and graduate assist- ants appeared, by the end of the week, to be fixed. At a meeting Thursday night, 300 members of the Graduate Employes Organization - Organ- ization of Teaching Fellows (GEO-OTF) decided to hold a strike vote if the administration fails to agree to a written con- tract by February 17. While expressing a readiness to meet with TF leaders f o r "talks", President Robben Flem- ing was holding to the firm stance he took earlier in the week against "bargaining over issues." Although the package of TF demands covers a range of eco- REVIEW nomic and academic issues, ob- servers agree that the crucial point of contention is recognition of GEO-OTF as a bargaining agent. Fleming says the University will refuse to do this unless GEO-OTF gets official sanction from the Michigan Employment Relations Commission (MERC). Many TF leaders read Flemn- ing's, statements as an attempt to "trap" their organization into a costly and debilitating legal battle. The past performance of the administration in such af- fairs has not allayed these fears. In 1966, interns and residents formed a similar association. The Regents voted against granting official recognition, and in 1970 the interns took the case to MERC for ajudication. The University's corporate at- torneys kept the case tied up in the state courts for three years until they finally lost in the Su- preme Court in January of last year. Last fall the interns and resi- dents inked their first contract with the University - seven years after they began. The TFs are not willing to wait that long. They see a strike to force recognition as their only option. University officials concede that a TF strike would bring the educational process to a near standstill. The only question is: Will the TFs really do it ? Clearly, most of them would prefer not to. "If there's a vote to strike, I'll strike, but most of us really don't want to," a TF leader admitted last week. "Be- lieve it or not, we feel a respon- sibility to our students." And in many departments, ap- athy is the prevailing attitude. "I just don't feel oppressed," a History of Art TF said. "I real- ly feel privileged to be teach- ing. Besides, I don't think most people understand the issue. It (recognition of GEO-OTF) is not a tangible thing like a demand for more money." Some observers feel GEO-OTF was stronger last fall when the issues were concrete and eco- nomic: Specifically, the Univer- sity's termination of special TF tuition benefits followed by a gen- eral 24 per cent tuition hike. Then, the administration de- fused the situation by reinstating the lost benefits and granting a small wage hike. Fleming will try, in the next two weeks, to cool this crisis THUR., Feb. 14 .11 a. m.-5 p.m. with more of the same. TF lead- ers are in no mood to be bought off. What remains to be seen is whether their followers feel the same way. * * * HOW MUCH POWER should student committees have? Com- mittee members feel they should be able to dictate policy. Stu- dent Services Vice President Henry Johnson thinks otherwise. Their dispute, which surfaced this week, has its origins in a move by members of the Hous- ing Policy Committee to amend University leases to give the committee control over rent rates. Housing Director John Feldkamp blocked the move and was backed by Johnson who told him the policy committee "does not have the authority to supercede powers delegated to the director." The OSS policy committees were established in the late six- ties when "student power" pres- sure on the administration was at its peak. Robert Knauss -- OSS-VP at the time - promised to abide by all policy committee decisions. -.P V 1 i . nd Floor-Michigan Union INFO. CALL 761-6075 Jerusalemi the Golden: The Historical, Religious and Architectural Significance of the Eternal City in the Tra- ditions of Judaism, Christianity and Islam. Jerusalem in the Judaic Tradition Monday, Feb. 4-4 p.m.-2402 Mason{ Jerusalem and the Islamic Tradition Monday, Feb. 4-8 p.m.-Modern Language Building, Lecture Room 2 PROFESSOR S. D. GOITEIN! Institute for Advanced Studies at Princeton University Jerusalem in the Christian Tradition Wednesday, Feb. 6-8 p.m.-Modern Language Building, Lecture Room 2 PROFESSOR D. NOEL FREEDMAN Director of Program on Studies in Religion at The University of Michigan The Sacred Monuments of Jerusalem: AN ILLUSTRATED LECTURE Thursday, Feb. 7-8 p.m.-Angell Hall, Auditorium B PROFESSOR OLEG GRABAR Professor of Art History, Harvard University ...._...... _.......... fi( Y~ #Y: ... . ...:.+. I in s roar THIS SUMMER IN BOULDER, COLORADO, AN OUTSTANDING GROUP OF SCHOLAR PRAC- TIONERS WILL EXPLORE THE INTEGRATION OF EASTERN AND WESTERN DISCIPLINES. THE INSTITUTE WILL OFFER A TOTAL OF 75 COURSES TAUGHT BY 50 FACULTY MEMBERS. AMONG THEM: ANN ARBOR DANCE THEATRE presents 10th ANNIVERSARY CONCERT OF DANCE February 15,16-8:30 p.m. February 17-2:30 p.m. RESIDENTIAL COLLEGE AUDITORIUM Monroe at E. University ADULTS $2.50 STUDENTS $1.50 tickets available at Stangers and at the door BEHIND THE GREEN DOOR BACK When he stepped down from the vice presidency two years ago, he summed up his policy by saying, "I think in this office, where you are concerned with student services ,that the pri- mary and principal responsibili- ty for determining what serv- ices are needed should be in the hands of the students that are being served." Just how seriously the posi- tion of the policy committees has deteriorated became clear last week when Johnson respond- ed to charges that he was illeg- ally subverting the authority of the committees. ' "These committees," he said, exist only as creatures of. the vice president . . . The director (of the housing department) has to be held accountable for a final decision just as I am held accountable. Effective participa- tion can never be equated with final decision-making power." A long-time observer of the campus scene, now employed by the University, had this com- ment on the Johnson statement: "It' shows the advantage ad- ministrators have. Students are transients, while administra- tors remain here for years. They can give the students something and then turn around a few years later and take it away." M A T T H 0 F M A N, SGC's enigmatic right-wing gad- fly, seems to have a knack for stirring up racial tensions on this already uptight campus. Last week, it almost cost him a bloody nose. First, Hoffman offended Chi- canos by contemptously munch- ing non-union lettuce when they made their pitch for SGC sup- port of the farm workers' boy- cott. Then, he antagonized Asians by his unsuccessful move to de- pose Asian Affairs Director Ted Liu for alleged use of physical force on the night of Lee Gill's resignation. By the end of the meeting, on- ly a cordon of ad hoc body guards prevented Hoffman from being pummeled by angered stu- dents. Hoffman's seemingly deliber- ate baiting of racial minorities remains a puzzle to SGC observ- ers. Most agreed, however, that given the current state of cam- pus race relations, his timing couldn't be much worse. -CHRIS PARKS DIAL 668-6416 1214 S. UNIVERSITY Sat., Sun., & Wed. Promptly at 1, 3, 5, 7, & 9 p.m. Thur. & Fri. at 7 & 9 only - DOUBE FETURE CAMPUS GIRLS PLUS THE SEXUALIST gal&CIE Chogyam Trungpa, Rinpoche, Tibetan Meditation Master, Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism. Jean Claude van Itallie, America, Hurrah, playwright. Allen Ginsberg, poet. Ben Weaver, ex- director Esalen Institute. John Cage, composer. Herbert Guenther, translator-author-scholar. The Tontric View of Life. Theodore Roszak, The Making of the Counter Culture, historian. Jose Arguelles, Mandala, The Trans- formative vision, art historian. Stanislov Grof, psychiatrist, LSD researcher. Ram Dass, Hindu medi- tation student, Be Here Now. 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