Ninety-Two Years of Editorial Freedom -1 c tic LIEiga IE III FLAKY Chance of snow, highs in the upper 30s. Vol. XCII, No. 65 Copyright 1981, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor; Michigan-Tuesday, November 24, 1981 Ten Cents Ten Pages U'signs first contract with GEO since '75 By JENNIFER MILLER The University yesterday signed a 1976 contract - which it had refused to recognize for six years - with the Graduate Employees Organization, but the battle between graduate student assistants and the University is not yet over. Under a recent legal ruling, the University must now collectively bargain with the GEO over a new con- tract and settle issues stemming from the retroactive 1976 contract. LAST FRIDAY, the Regents and. President Harold Shapiro decided not to appeal sthe court order and to recognize the GEO. Negotiations will begin next Tuesday,' said Assistant University Personnel Director John Forsyth, who signed the contract for the University, and who will represent the University during the bargaining sessions. "We hope to negotiate' and reach another agreement as soon as we can," Forsyth said. GEO AD HOC Steering Committee member David Marker said of the court order: "The University has been shown that they can't kick us around." At last week's Regents meeting, Shapiro said, "I am confident that the University and the Graduate Em- ployees Organization can negotiate in good faith and reach a satisfactory agreement." Marker said that some of the things the GEO will ask for in the new contract are: " A salary hike * Elimination of the 30 percent tuition payment deduction from paychecks. * A 40-hour work week instead of the current 48-hour week. * Smaller class sizes. " Greater job security. * Preparation sessions for, new See 'U' SIGNS, Page 5$ Presid signs spendii From AP and UPI WASHINGTON- Congress rushed a fresh emergency spending- bill to President Reagan late yesterday, hours after he vetoed its forerunner and, with the barbed understatement that "this is not business as usual," ordered much of the government shut down. Passage of the new measure ap- parently ended, for now, a confron- tation between Reagan and Congress that triggered the temporary layoffs of hundreds of thousands of federal em- ployees and witnessed the virtual shut- down of all "non-essential" offices. DESPITE THE infuriation of House Democratic leaders at Reagan's ,ac- tions, the chamber agreed to a Republican drafted compromise that would reopen the money tap which technically was closed at 12:01 a.m. Saturday. GOP leaders said Reagan would sign the new, even more temporary, ver- sion-which expires Dec. 15. Democrats had sought interim funding authority through Feb. 3, but the ent iew Republican plan was substituted on a vote of 221-176, then passed 367-26. House Speaker Thomas, O'Neill charged Reagan "knows less about the budget than any other president in my lifetime." SOME Republicans joined in the anger that-unlike much of the rhetoric in past Congress vs. President bat- tles-was genuine and bitter. Even the "boll weevil" conservative Democrats accused Reagan and budget director David Stockman of playing games with the-imoney figures. But it was House Democratic leaders, so often stung by Reagan, who led the most bitter and accusatory attacks on the president. O'NEILL SAID Congress gave Reagan even deeper cuts than he requested, and the president- was in- terested only in political "theatricism."- The measure 'sailed through the Senate, 88 to 1, with only Democrat Alan Cranston of California voting See SPENDING, Page5 Ford library to reopen after forced shutdown Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK Theologian speaks Hans Kung, a controversial Swiss theologian, speaks on the synthesis of science and religion at Rackham amphitheater. See story, page 3. By JULIE HINDS The Gerald Ford Presidential Library is expected to reopen its doors today after being shut down when the Federal government ran out of money. Saturday. Operations at the library and several local federal agencies were curtailed yesterday when President Reagan vetoed Congress's emergency spending resolution. Last night Reagan signed a temporary congressional measure giving the government money to operate until Dec. 15, DON 'WILSON, director of the Ford Library in Ann Arbor and the Ford Museum in Grand Rapids, said yester- day the library would reopen when the president signed the new bill. Twenty-three employees of the library and museum were furloughed without pay when the government stop- ped authorizing money to continue ser- vices, according to Wilson, who remained in the library yesterday to man the phones. He also said the shutdown incon- venienced students and forced him to cancel two tours of the library, which is. visited daily by about 100 people. "I'VE HAD A couple of calls already from students needing to use the library for work on their term papers. Right now there's no way to let a student in," Wilson said yesterday. The Library receives $500,000 an- nually from the National Archives. Wilson said the staff took the shutdown "very seriously," since they will ap- parently lose money for the time spent off the job. PoliticAl science Prof. Al Cover said such governmental shutdowns are not uncommon. "IT'S HAPPENED before," Cover See FORD, Page 2 LSA students vote on 2 ballot proposals By BETH ALLEN In addition to selecting the new officers and mem- bers of the LSA-Student Government, LSA students will be asked to voice their opinion on two general issues when they go to the polls today. The two ballot proposals are non-binding and LSA- SG officials say their purpose is only to help student goverament representatives gauge student opinion on the issues. LSA-SG members say they will use this information in deciding whether to pursue the issues. ONE PROPOSAL suggests that the University charge a 50 cent tax on every official University ticket - for everything from football games to Major Even- ts concerts - and thatthe revenue generated from the tax be added to the University's General Fund to "ease the financial crisis." The second item on the ballot addresses the University's "smaller but better" plan for retrench- ment and ask voters if the University should continue to cut its budget "without direct student represen- tation." Although LSA-SG and the University will not be bound to act on the results of the ballot, the results will still be useful to student government leaders '-when negotiating-with the administration and other, student groups, according to LSA-SG, Treasurer Mark Dann. "WE CAN USE them (the ballot proposals results) when people ask, 'How do you know you're represen- ting the students?" Dann said yesterday. The two proposals were authored by an LSA-SG "action group" that grew outof last year's "It's Our University" group, Dann said. IOU was an umbrella organization of students and faculty members which helped to organize opposition to the University's retrenchment plan, particularly the elimination of the Department of Geography last summer. Yesterday was the first of two days of voting in the annual LSA-SG elections. Fifty students are conten- ding this year for the 15 seats on the student gover- *nment and four campus political parties are running candidates for the LSA-SG presidency and vice- presidency. Voting will continue today in the Fishbowl and the Union during the day and polls will move in the evening to East Quad, South Quad, and West Quad dormitories, Elections Director Bruce Goldman said. No roses for Blue but Bo has 'no qualms' By MARK MIHANOVIC It isn't quite what he had in mind, but Michigan football coach Bo Schem- bechler, resigned to the'fact that he will not be spending his New Year's in Pasadena, is beginning to look forward to the Wolverines' Dec. 31 Bluebonnet Bowl game against UCLA ini the Houston Astrodome. "I was surprised (that we are playing) UCLA," he said at his media luncheon yesterday. "I don't know how they got 'em in there. I think it's a good matchup. I have no qualms about going down there. North Carolina went down there last year and really enjoyed it." KICKOFF TIME for the Bluebonnet Bowl is 7 p.m. CST (8 p.m. EST) on New Year's Eve. Details of the University's participation in the Bowl were not finalized last night, but- they are scheduled to be announced sometime today. The Alumni Association will of- fer an official tour program for See BO, Page 8 Zapping starships: The latest craze . . for video junkies By SUSAN SHARON Steve Mitchell is posed over a flashing barrage of lights and cosmic noises. His fingers click incessantly as he spins the "superzapper" hoping to wipe out the enemy starships. A scene from a sci-fi thriller? No, Steve is mastering "Tempest," one of, the newest video games fast attracting a devoted following. "IT'S THE challenge of a new high score, reaching the next level of skill," Steve said. I love to figure out the tricks and patterns of the machine." Whenever there's a -competition I'll go for it. Video games will always be a big part of my life. Steve, a 20-year-old engineering junior at the University, is a video game champion. In a recent national tournament in Chicago, he placed 25th in the all-around competition and seventh in a specialist category. Steve says he spends up to $30 each week on the games, but adds that being an em- ployee at a local video emporium allows him to save money because he can play for free. "It's the game of the future," says Marty Sotnik, an employee at Flipper McGees. "If you stare at the Asteroids screen long enough, you lose. yourself in a defferent reality. It's not unusual for a guy to come in here and drop $20 in a night." "YOU CAN BECOME psychopathic about it," says Henrietta Lewis. "It's really frustrating but you can't stop." What compels these individuals to drop countless quarters into these'six- foot machines? Some video fanatics say the game - among themr PAC Man, Berzerk, and Space. Invaders - are a constant challenge. Others flock to the video arcades to forget their problems and take out ; their frustrations by blasting spaceships to Kingdomcome. "I come to the Moose (the Cross Eyed Moose) and forget I'm flunking calculus," says University student Joe Werber. "THERE'S A LOT of prestige in- See ZAPPING, Page 3 Daily Photo by'MIKE LUCAS STEVE MITCHELL, VIDEO GAME expert extraordinaire, comes face-to-screen with one of his standard opponents, a video game called Tempest. Local pinball arcades are attracting increasing numbers of video junkies, some of whom spend as much as $30 in a single evening. TODAY Jerry jokes in vogue ("10 YOU THOUGHT Jerry Ford jokes were out of style, well, guess again. At yesterday's Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs session the ex-President and University alumnus' name came up in connection with, as usual-a new University building. David Heebink, assistant to the President, said thr - t- no nW-nchntan of trvino to raise monev for a may be hazardous to your ability to get a'job, according to a study by two Seattle University professors released yester- day. In a survey of more than 200 Puget Sound-area managers with hiring responsibilities, more than half said they would hire a non-smoker over a smoker if given two otherwise evenly matched candidates, says C. Patrick Fleenor, an associate professor of management. "What was interesting was that nobody would pick the smoker," Fleenor said. "Something like 54 percent said they would pick the non-smoker. The other 46 percent said it was a toss- up. "If you apply simple probability and figure about half the time in the 'toss-up' category the non-smoker would be rinbn lthn ..vr ,- ..r-h n.. r-n-:- n.nn :h i :,- - - 77 r 7 polled worked in a number of fields, including retail, ser- vice, financial and health care areas. The survey was com- pleted earlier this fall. O Picking off paraq uat Researchers at the University of Mississippi are testing a substance from orange peels to determine if it can be used to warn marijuana smokers if their pot has been sprayed with the herbicide paraquat. The new substance, referred to as DLDM, is an orange peel extract mixed with sulphur. tained 250,000 listeners for almost an hour with a routine of jokes and songs. "I just clowned around on the air like I do at home," said Base, a 54-year-old machine operator with no professional entertainment experience. It all began with a phone call from his son became interspersed with pop music. Harry hung up and telephoned his local operator to report the trouble. At her suggestion, he dialed again to continue the conversation with his son and interrupted a BBC sports program: Once he realized he was on the air, Harry launched into his routine. He says he has always had a knack for making people laugh. A radio station in New Zealand contacted him Sunday, saying it wanted to rebroadcast some of his radio debut. n I i I i