The Michigan Daily-Friday, May 12, 1978-Page 3,, Crucial GEO hearings co By THOMAS O'CONNELL Hearings which will determine the future status of Graduate Student Assistants (GSAs) continued into their third day at the Michigan Union yester- day, with testimony being heard from several witnesses. The sessions were ordered by the Michigan Employment Relations Commission (MERC) in order to determine the key question of whether GSAs are primarily students, as the administration asserts, or employees of the University. A decision in favor of the ad- ministration could severely hamper future efforts at collective bargaining by the Graduate Employees Organization (GEO), as well as destroy their chances of winning an un- fair labor practice charge which they are currently pursuing against the ad- ministration. The charge stems from a 1976 contract dispute. Doily Photo by rt I E T sLING Administrative Law Judge Shlomo Sperka presides over hearings which will determine the future of GEO. The hearings are being held in Room 2304 of the Michigan Union. Itinue The day's most significant event was the presentation of a resolution from the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA) urging a decision which will hold-the GSAs to be primarily students. SACUA is the executive committee of the faculty Senate Assembly, a 65-member body elected from the various schools and colleges in the University. Although Administrative Law Judge Shlomo Sperka, who was designated by MERC to preside over the sessions, did not allow the document to be entered as an exhibit in the hearing, it was placed in a rejected exhibit file which may be reviewed by MERC. Sperka apparently felt the resolution was irrelevant. The SACUA document was presented by Professor Charles Lehmann of the School of Education, who had been called to testify by the University. Lehmann, a former SACUA member, says he feels the resolution reflects the sentiments of the overall faculty. Lehmann said the reason for SACUA's opposition to the recognition of GSA's as employees is that such a decision would put professors in the position of supervisors. According to Lehmann, most faculty prefer the traditional professor-student relation- ship. However, Lehmann emphasized that the faculty is not indifferent to the problems of the graduate assistants. "The faculty is very concerned with GSAs," said Lehmann, "they're just worried about this kind of relation- ship." GED president Mike Clark disagreed with Lehmann's belief that the SACUA resolution represents the sentiments of most of the faculty. "I don't think that it (SACUA) does represent the faculty in general across campus," said Clark. He said the at- tempt to introduce the resolution was typical of the University's tactics in the hearings. "Most of the University's case so far is based on irrelevant material," Clark asserted. "The University hasn't produced any real evidence yet. I'm surprised the University would do something like this. They're going to lose" 'Conventional arms' talks planned WASHINGTON (AP) - The United billion package of jets for Israel, Egypt shipments of necessary States and the Soviet Union have and Saudi Arabia. But Carter said the allies and friends," hesai agreed for the first time to begin timing was coincidental. On an 8-8 vote, negotiations to limit conventional arms the panel refused to approve a CARTER ALSO said t sales. resolution aimed at blocking the arms agreement was reache In a joint communique issued yester- sales. States would consult wit day, the two countries said, "The and invite the participat problem of limiting international tran- CARTER SAID the first meeting in of the world's major arm sfers of conventional arms is urgent," the series will take place early this Carter refused to dis -and agreed to hold talks. But that was summer, at a date and place as yet un- the United States or So all they agreed on. determined. In the meantime, the He said that neither s DEPARTMENT spokesman Hodding world will get an idea of how far apart detailed plans for limitin Carter acknowledged that both coun- the two countries are when they present the initial session, whic tries have in the past called for their positions on the subject to the Helsinki last week. restraints on the transfer of conven- United Nations General Assembly's Earlier this year, Pr tional arms, a category which covers Special Session on Disarmament later announced a new poli all military equipment except nuclear this month. ceiling on conventional a explosives. Nothing has come of those Carter indicated that the United and by his calculations, statements. States plans to maintain its special ar- sales by $700 million. He But Carter noted that 'this is the first ms sales relationship with the NATO figure by throwing out t time the United States has agreed to a countries, Australia, New Zealand and "exempt" NATO and Pa continuing set of concrete Japan. Those nations have already figuring in a discount for negotiations." He called that develop- been placed in a special, exempt in total actual doll ment' promising.t category in the administration's ministration conceded,i The announcement came on the same unilateral efforts to reduce its arms failed to reduce the levc day the Senate Foreign Relations sales. had allowed them to incr Committee considered one of the sale.ihadnallowedtthem tolincr biggestconventional arms sale "We will not let these talks jeopardize $2 billion. proposals in American history, the $4.8 Alive and well in Juneau for 13 years, claims to have had this Right about at the top of the list of names that problem all his life. In college, he said roommates evoke the question "Is so-and-so still alive?" is Ir- used to wake him up with squirt guns. Before the ving Berlin. He hasn't written a Broadway show in board members made their decision, Carpenter told 16 years-the last, "Mr. President," was a resoun- them he had made an appointment for tests at a ding flop-and he has lived a quiet life in his Stanford University sleep disorder clinic. Too late, Manhattan townhouse overlooking the East River. said the board, and tough luck. But despite his obscurity, Irving Berlin turned 90 Happenings . . . yesterday at what one friend described as a "quiet Happenings today are a wide assortment. They family gathering." Berlin has been writing songs start with the International Center's tour of the continuously since his last show, and has "a lot of Detroit Science Center and Art Institute. Leaving unpublished stuff lying around." But even when the International Center at 1 p.m. sharp; bring $2 Berlin finally goes, the legend won't. As songwriter for admission to the Science Center .. . Then at 3 Jerome Kern once put it: "Irving Berlin has no p.m., a lecture on "Weighted Polynomial Ap- place in American music; he is American music." proximations," a special lecture sponsored by the Anyway, happy birthday. Math department. Speaker is Prof. G. Freud of Ohio State. Lecture will be in 3201 Angell Hall . . . Too little, too late At 7:30 p.m., the U-M Astronomical Film Festival Juneau school teacher Tom Carpenter is out of a presents The Quiet Sun and Skylab and the Sun, job, because he can't seem to get out of bed in the as well as a lecture on "The Last Eclipse" (your morning. The Juneau, Alaska school board upheld last chance to see a total solar eclipse from the con- his dismissal, stating the fact that Carpenter had tiguous U.S. in this century). Program begins been late to school 41 times since 1972, 20 of them in promptly, so don't be late. Auditorium 3, MLB ... the last year. Carpenter claims he has a sleeping And a harpsichord recital by Geoffrey Thomas disorder, and that he sets seven alarms every mor- follows at 8 p.m. His program will be presented in ning but some of them rang so long without waking the Pendleton Arts Center, second floor, Michigan him that they just wore out. Carpenter, who taught Union. And that's all. arms to our id. hat before any d, the United Ih all its allies tion of the rest s exporters. cuss details of viet proposals. ide presented g arms sales at ch was held in esident Carter cy that put a arms transfers, reduced fiscal arrived at that he sales to the cific allies and r inflation. But ars, the ad- it had not only el of sales, but ease by nearly Rolling with the punches? Sandra Jones dropped out of the Florida Highway Patrol Academy, she says, because a boxing in- structor knocked her to the floor nine times and the next day ordered her to run around the academy building until told to stop. But the order to stop never came-and she ran nearly four hours, stop- ping only when her toes began'to bleed. Jones reluc- tantly withdrew from the academy this week after only eight days of training. "I didn't quit because of the boxing," she said. "I quit because I think I was punished for going to the doctor after the boxing. I wanted to be a law enforcement officer, not a gym- nast." The boxing instructor, Sgt. Walt Sherman, denied that he had left Jones to run endlessly. He also said he held back on his punches with her. "I only hit her with my arms. I didn't put the weight of my body behind the punches," he said. On the outside.. . Today calls for warm weather, but take your umbrella. The high is going to be about 74' but the forecast calls for overcast skies or, if you prefer, "variable cloudiness." And there is a chance of thundershowers in the late afternoon. Chances will be increased if you've just had your car washed. 1 2 1 f aJ r < - . . >