I rlt fYI! .Fllka ~N L.JFL Sunday, ebruary , 19 4 WALLABEE LOOKING THE WEEK IN REVIEW BACK ...makes: concrete feel like grass MEN'S Sand or brown suede; block, brown or white calf . . . $32.00 Boot style: sand or brown suede ......... ..$34.00 WOMEN'S Sand or brown suede; brown or white calt . . . . ..... $30.00 Strike looms By the end of the week, a mood of fatalism was taking hold among negotiators for the teach- ing fellows and the University ad- ministration. After meeting with TF leaders Thursday afternoon, President Robben Fleming seemed ready to throw in the towel. A strikae vote, he conceded, is now all but inevitable. For their part, organizers for the TF's Graduate Employes Or- ganization (GEO) seemed ready to take the p 1 u n g e. They agreed Thursday night to hold an election among the University's 1600 graduate employes wi t h a vote of 800 or more necessary to approve a strike. GEO Chair- woman Sandra Silberstein pro- claimed, "The battle lines are drawn!" TF leaders blame the current impasse on what they describe as the "intransigent" bargaining attitude of the University. One TF gave his class the fol- lowing account of the relation- ship between GEO and President Fleming: "We had been trying for months to get a meeting with Fleming. He just never answered our let- ters or returned our calls. Then, a couple of weeks ag-, someone mentioned the possibility of a strike at one of our meetings and it was reported in a newspaper. The next morning, Flemings sec- retary called us and said, 'Gosh, I've been trying to get in touch with you people'." Although the story may be apocryphal, it is indicative of the feeling among TFs that the administration has not been re- sponsive andrthat aitrike is the only way to force action on their demands. Whatsdo the TFs want More money, for one thing. Have a flair for artistic writing? IfYuare interet poetry, and music or writing feature stories about the drama. dance, film. arts: Contact Art Editor, c/o Th*e Michigan Daily. Describing his rather cramped life-style on a fellowship °stip- end, a TF commented, "I just can't go on like this anymore." More important, however, is recognition of GEO as a legiti- mate bargaining agent. It is on this issue that the chasm be- tween the administration and the TFs is greatest President Fleming has firmly refused to even consider such a move, insisting that he won't re- cognize GEO unless he is forced to do so by the state's Employ- ment Relation's Commission (MERC). Applying to MERC for certifi- cation, GEO responds, would only lead to a protracted legal hassle. . While a strike vote seems inevitable, several que4tions re- main unanswered: " How much support does GEO have among rank and file teach- .ing fellows? * What will be the response to a strike by students and ten- ured faculty? " How will the University re- spond? Last week President Flemtng said, "I don't know what sup- port GEO has and I don't think they really know either. ' Even the TF leade -s them- selves are uncertain. "Right now," one of them said Thurs- day, "I'd put the odds at about 60 to 40 in favor of a strike." Clearly, the support enjoyed by GEO varies widely from de- partment to department. A con- census "gestimate" rates GEO strength by department some- thing like this: Romance languages and mathe- matics: strong support; political science and history: some sup- port; English and the physical sciences: little or no support. The GEO leadership is consid- ering plans to throw ii: picket lines around major class build- ings, and such a move would clearly force the issue At this point, most undergrads seem at least sympathetic. Their concern centers around two ques- tions: Will an increase in TF salaries mean anotn.r tuition hike? and will I lose my credits if there's a strike? The GEO leadershin moved to deal with the first problem Fri- day night, voting to put a "zo tuition hike" plank in their list of demands. The organization as a whole, is divided on the ques- tion, however, and approval of the plank at tomorroN night's mass meeting remains uncer- tain. Meanwhile, the administration has been carefully nonr umnmit- tal, taking the position that it is too early to tell what effect a TF settlement could ha v, on tui- tion rates. The issue of credits is simil- arly muddled. Teachiag fellows play a major role in many cw'trs- es, grading tests and papers and conducting recitation sections. No department has yet issued any statements on courses and cre- dits in the event of a strike. Ideally, GEO would like to see a parallel student class strike. Realistically, they know the cur- rent mood of the campus makes such active support unlikely. "I guess if the students just remain apathetic we'll have to be satisfied," one TF comnment- ed. Almost equally important is the question of faculty support. Prof. Dan Fusfeld' "union" has already declared its support. By his own admission, however, the group only represents around 10 per cent of tenured professors. On the whole, the faculty ap- pears uncertain of what to do. As one TF put it, "The faculry can't decide whether the TFs are 'one of us' or 'one of them'." One group whose stance is clearly unambiguous is the ad- ministration. Right now, President Fleming isn't ruling out any options in- cluding the possibility of seeking a court injunction to stop a strike. * * * Rent control Rents moved to center stage as the city's number one cam- paign issue last week with the disclosure that the Board of Realtors is mounting a multi- thousand dollar campaign to de- feat the rent control proposal on the April ballot. According to members of the Human Rights Party - sponsors of the rent control proposal - a committee known as Ciazens Op- posed to Rent Control 13 asking each local landlord to contribute $5 per rental unit to the effort. If successful, the campaign could generate as much as $85,000. This city's unusually high rents MAST'S SHOES 619 E. Liberty F- 0 11 L AST TWO SHOWS TODAY! ULRICH'S have long been a point of con- tention between left-leaning poli- ticians and Republicans and their business allies. Last spring, -a Democrat-HRP controlled council estahlished a commission to study the prob- lem. Its report is due soon. r In the meantime, HR? gath- ered signatures to put their own rent control proposal on the bal- lot. Their plan, if approved, would freeze rents, control pro- fits and provide for arbitration between landlords and their ten- nants. Just how seriously the land- lords take'this is ampiv demon- strated by the almost hysterical tone of their campaign raetoric. Fund raising letters, released to the press by the HRP, warn that nothing less than 'the right to retain private ownership and maintain the free enterprise sys- tem" is at stake. The proposal, one letter charges, is designed "to bring people who 7wn, oper- ate or manage property to their knees." This massive, weil financed anti-rent control campaig'i coup- led with Mayor James °tephen- son's use of his city ball office to coordinate the fight against another proposal popular with young voters - a redaction in the marijuana penalty -is likely to polarize this election like never before. And this polar- ization may make the position of some local Democrats very dif- ficult. Seeking to finally win the stu- dent vote back from -he IIRP, the Dems have been taking a low profile stance on oath pro- posals, giving them half-heart- ed support "in principle", while warning that they may not be workable. Daily Photo by KAREN KASMAUSKI A shrill GOP/landlord counter- offensive on these issues .V i 11 make this an increasingly un- comfortable fence straddle, and the Democrats may find them- selves forced closer and closer to the HRP position as the cam- paign heats up. Dorm hike "Just another slap in our fac- es" - that's how a member of the Housing Policy yConmittee reacted to the refusal of the Re- gents to approve their suggestion that Stockwell Hall go co-ed. According to HPC member Ron Beck, a lot more than sexual liberation is involved, -as t h e Stockwell proposal was crucial to the committee's fig'it against a proposed 8 per cent dorm rent hike. As things stand now, the Hous- ing Department can't find enough women to fill thc, all-female dorm. At -the same time, the de- partment is strapped for space . for male students. Beck says filling empiy rooms in Stockwell with male students would save enough money to make a rent hike unnecessary. HPC recommended the m o v e when a survey of Stockwell re- sidents showed more women would return next year if the dorm went co-ed. The Regents action, B e c k says, closed off one of the "few remaining options for saving money." Another dorm hike, now al- most inevitable, is not likely to please quaddies who are likely to view it as just one more step in a long term trend of increas- ing rates and deteriorating ser- vice. -CHRIS PARKS { I t t "THE FINEST REPERTORY COMPANY IN NEW YORK CITY" -New York Times "ONE OF THE MOST ENGAGING AND TALENTED YOUNG TROUPES I HAVE EVER SEEN"-Boston Globe "BRILLIANT! THE COMPANY IS A JOY!"-Cue BRAND NEW REFERENCE i V; , BOOK SALE PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM A high-falootin', fast shootin', rootin'-toonti' comedy. -ALSO- Woody Woodpecker in "TERMITES FROM MARS" (color, 10 min Monday, Feb. 18 Natural Science Aud. 7 & 9 p.m. I ,,'"I j ONLY $1.O0 to $2.95 originally published at $4.95 to X24.95 The Prefossional Theatre Program welcomes the CITY CENTER ACTING COMPANY JOHN HOUSEMAN, Artistic Director I I' I presenting JOHN GAY'S THE BEGGAR'S OPERA Feb. 16, MATINEE at 3 P.M. and SHAKESPEARE'S MEASURE FOR MEASURE FEB. 168i 17 at 8 P.M. / FEB. 17 at 3 P.M. MENDELSSOHN THEATRE Tickets: PTP Ticket Office-Mendelssohn Lobby 764-0450 ummer ublet Supplement Iidl e mlI1I1Tal FOR ONLY $7 You Can Place A 1 Col. x 4" AD 3 i m mm. mm mm mmmi rn m~~~~a =a= amm m m~inmim mm mm m mm m~ m mmm am mmmmmmum400 m a I f r 1 I r I f I 1 f f NAME-..:- ADDRESS- r I I f I I I I f f Pntor Type Copy Legibly in Space Provided as You YWould Like it to Appear. ; r I . THE MICHIGAN DAILY aI f I I S r I 000 0i4 t {a "SPECIAL SHOWING" New Movie on the October War "THE YOM KIPPUR WAR TUESDAY, FEB. 19 TWO SHOWINGS-7:30 and 8:30 p.m. at HILLEL-1429 Hill St. UNIVERSITY LECTURE The Department of Rc'mance Languages and Literatures Presents a PUBLIC LECTURE Realism and the Fantastic BY Professor Bernard Vannier Director, Eurocentre, Paris TUESDAY, Feb. 19-4:10 p.m. Lecture Room 1, MLB Uncle Bruno by JOHN ZEBROWSKI A collection of short stories about Polish immigrants in Michigan and Pennsylvania during the "nostalgic" 1920's $1.50 available in Ann Arbor at I a i i