Tuesday, Muy 9, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three 'U' tradeworkers' strike continues By JEFF SORENSEN A 12-day-old campus tradeworkers' strike for higher wages continues after an unproductive meeting yesterday be- tween negotiators for the University and the Washtenaw County Building and Con- struction Trades Council. The Trades Council workers are de- manding a salary increase of 11 per cent the first year of a three-year con- tract followed by annual raises of &75 and 7 per cent. Although the increases were recom- mended last week by Alan Walt, a fact finder appointed by the Michigan Em- ployment Relations Commission, the University terms the raises "excessive." OTHER recommendations made by the state fact finder were accepted yester- day by the University including improve- ments in shift premiums, three-year duration of the agreement, longevity benefits, the wage increase wilt be retro- active as of April 1, a cost of living pro- vision and no change in existing holiday work premiums. The fact finder is expected to call another meeting between the bargaining teams later this week. The 290 University electrians, plumbers and carpenters represented by the Council have been striking since June 27, although it is technically illegal under state law for public employes to take such action. THE STRIKE has halted work on all University construction projects includ- ing the new Architecture and Design Building on North Campus, an addition to the Institute for Social Research, al- terations on the grad library and con- struction of two new recreation build- ings. University negotiators James Thiry and Douglas Geister said in a prepared statement that "these proposed in- creases are far in excess of other settle- ments this year for skilled maintenance groups." They computed that. the salary in- creases. alone with other sections of the economic recommendations, will actually mean a 12.4 per cent increase in com- pensation the first year, followed by 10.9 and 9 per cent raises the next two years. "THE FACT finders erroneously com- pared rates paid by the University wilt rates paid in the construction trade by private contractors," the statement said. "Thie University is not able to in- crease skilled maintenance trade rates by the percentages recommended with- out doing serious injustice to other staff members," it continued. However, a Trades Council spokesmao countered that "because the University has succeeded in negotiating poor con- tracts with other groups this year does See 'U'. Page 9 Trudeau's Liberal Party wins in Canadian election Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN UNIVERSITY ELECTRICIANS Urby Ault (right) and Max McCorty picket in front of the power plant yesterday. The tradesmen have been on strike since June 27 because of a wage hike dispute with the University. Pot question not to be placed on ballot TORONTO ')- Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau's Liberal party won a resound- ing victory last night in an election re- buke to Conservative Robert Stanfield's proposed wage and price freeze to curb inflation. And the Liberals appeared to be win- ning enough seats to form a majority government. The party swept eastern Canada, pick- ing up more than two-dozen seats in Ontario, Quebec and the Atlantic mart- time provinces. With early returns from Canada's westernmost province of British Colum- bia, the Liberals seemed headed to- wards topping the magic number of 133 needed to form a majority government. There are 264 seats in the House of Commons. Liberals were elected in 131 districts and leading in six. They held only 109 seats going into the election. In a major upset, New Democrat lead- er David Lewis, whose Socialist-oriented party held the balance of power in the last minority government, was defeated by Liberal candidate Ursula Appolloni. LEWIS, 65, had held the seat in a largely Italian working class district of Toronto since 1965. His defeat puts the leadership of his party in doubt. Appolloni, whose husband lost to Lewis in the 1972 election, is a former free- lance radio broadcaster and chairman of the Board of Referees of Canada's Un- employment Insurance Commission. With decisions or trends available in most districts, Liberals were elected in 124 districts and leading in 7; Conserva- tives elected in 48 and leading in 14; New Democrats elected in 10 and lead- ing in 2 and Social Credit party candi- dates elected in 11 and leading in 1. No trends were indicated for 46 districts. Social Credit leader Real Caouette was re-elected. TRUDEAU and Stanfield won re-elec- tion in their home districts in Montreal and Halifax. A Liberal majority would be a per- sonal triumph for Trudeau, who nearly lost the 1972 election. He came to power in 1968 on a wave of voter appeal dubbed "Trudeaumania" and formed Canada's first majority government in a decade. But four years later the Liberals edged Stanfield's Conservatives by only two seats and Trudeau formed a minority that was able to survive only with the support of the New Democrats. VOTER TURNOUTwas re- ported heavy in southern Ontario and around Vancouver, two areas expected to swing the election. Elsewhere voting was reported near normal with a light turnout on the prair- - ies. Canada has 13.3 million eligible voters. Trudeau voted near his Ottawa home, then flieu to Montreti where he iet party workers in the posh Mount oyal district. Stanfield was among the first to vote at a church hall in his liifa district. He then visited other polls it the dis- trict, took a walk downtown with friends and returned to his hotel for a nap. Ca- nadian voters had a clear-cut choice: Stanfieid has proposed a 90-day freeze of wages and prices followed by 18 months of flexible controls to curb the coun- try's nearly It per cent inflation. Tru- deau and two minor party leaders op- pose an' freeze. 'U' announces appointments for top posts University President Robben Fleming has announced the appointment of Rich- ard Kennedy as the new vice president for state planning. He replaces Fedele Fauri who plans to retire September 1. Several other appointments have alsa been announced, including the new dean of the graduate school, new chairwoman of the women's commission, and deans for the recently revised art school. KENNEDY'S APPOINTMENT is part of a major reorganization of the Univer- sity's top level administrative offices which will be formally approved by the Regents at their July meeting. Kennedy is currently secretary of the University and assistant to the president. He will continue to serve as secretary but will not continue as Fleming's as- sistant. The reorganization calls for the plan- ning function of the Office of State Re- lations and Planning to be returned I* the Office of the Vice President for Academic Affairs. THE STATE RELATIONS office, under Kennedy, will retain the capital planning and legislative liaison functions. In other areas, Eunice Burns has been named chairwoman of the University's Commission for Women. She succeeds Virginia Nordin. Burns was formerly the assistant to the dean for administration at the School of Education. Dr. Alfred Sussman has been appointed the dean of Rackham School of Graduate Studies. The appointment, effective July 1, is still subject to formal approvat by the Regents. He succeeds Donald Stokes. Sussman has been associate dean of Rackham since 1972. Prior to that time he served as chairman of the botany See TOP, Page 8 By DAVID WHITING Petitions aiming to reform marijuana laws and ban private handguns by amending the state .constitution have failed to obtain sufficient signatures to put the questions on the November ballot. A proposal aimed at repealing the state's sales tax on food and drugs, will however, appear on the ballot. THE DEADLINE for filing the 265,001 valid petitions signatures required to put the proposals on the statewide ballot was yesterday. Hoping to prohibit criminal penalties for growing, using, or possessing dope for those over 18 the marijuana petition received 150,000 signatures. The drive to reform marijuana laws was sponsored by the Michigan Mari- juana Initiative with state representa- tive Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) draft- ing the petition in Lansing. According to Bullard, about 150,000 signatures were collected during the petition drive. It was the second attempt to put the dope question on the ballot and Bullard said it wouldn't be the last. "There will be an effort to organize the people for a long term struggle," he said. THE PETITION drive to ban private ownership of handguns obtained about 200,000 signatures. . Dwite Walker, chairman of Citizens United to Save Lives (CUSL) wh, spon- sored the campaign said "we do not plan to give up," promising the cam- paign for handgun control would "abso- lutely be continued." Walker contended the major reason for the failure to obtain the required number of names was "a late start" with his group working only 96 of the 180 days allotted for a petition drive. TIlE HANDGUN control petition al- lowed police, military, and security guards licensed by the state to carry' handguns. Further exempted from the ban would be sports enthusiasts and gun collectors provided that the guns were stored in. a local law enforcement facility. Walker said that according to FBI reports there were 19,000 homicides last year with handguns used in 55 per cent of these and 27 per cent being crimin- ally caused. See POT, Page 9