0- No progress in 'U' nurse talks the Michigan Daily-Saturday, October 11, 1980-Page 7 SOCIAL SECURITY HOT TOPIC Candidates court elderly By JULIE SELBST Contract negotiations between registered nurses at University Hospital and University administrators were still far from completion at the close of the eleventh bargaining session between the groups last night. University Assistant Personnel Director John Forsyth would not estimate how long negotiations will continue. "I have trouble predicting," he said. "In labor relations, sometimes it seems like you're a long why away and then you settle in two days." THE NURSES are currently working under the terms of the old contract, which has been indefinitely extended spbject to cancellation by either side with seven day's notice. Neither For- syth nor nursing spokeswoman Margot Barron would elaborate on the con- tingency plan to be used in the event of a walkout. More than 1,000 registered nurses are represented by the six-person bargaining unit, which includes all University Hospital registered nurses, but none of the hospital's ap- proximately 300 licensed practical nur- ses. It also does not include aproximately 200 head,, or assistant head nurses. Negotiations for the University ad- ministrators are being conducted by a seven-person bargaining team con- sisting of both nursing administrators and hospital administrators. From AP and UPI Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, and John Anderson took turns yesterday boasting who could do the most to protect the monthly Social Security check relied on by millions of elderly Americans. On retirement benefits, Carter said in a state with millions of retirees, "We have kept Social Security sound and it's going to stay sound as long as you have a Democrat in the White House.'' REAGAN, WORKING the same state, declared, "It is Mr. Carter who has endangered the economic security of senior citizens." And Anderson, in New York, said the Social Security retirement age should be raised gradually from 65 to 68 to safeguard the stability of the system. He advocated changes to reduce the cost of living adjustment applied to benefits to retirees. If the changes aren't made, he said, the Social Security system will face worsening financial pressure as the size of the work force decreases in relation to the number of retirees receiving benefits. THE PRESIDENT gave a demon- stration in the powers of incumbency, using his Florida campaign stop to sign legislation distributing $180 million to that state and others for money it spent on Cuban refugees. Carter also criticized Reagan, con- trary to his Wednesday promise to ABC News that he was "going to do the best I can to refrain from any sort of personal relationship with Mr. Reagan as far as criticisms are concerned. "I think it would be a bad thing for our country if Gov. Reagan were elec- ted president," Carter said in an inter- view with a Tampa, Fla., television station. "I don't know what he would do in the White House, but his opposition to the SALT II treaty, his opposition to Medicare, his opposition to many of the programs like minimum wage, unem- ployment compensation, his call for in- jection of American military forces into place after place... .," Carter added. Meanwhile, Reagan proposed elimination of the current $5,080 annual earnings limitation on those receiving Social Security benefits. He said the limitation "forces retirees to give up one dollar in benefits for every two dollars they make above $5,080." Use Daily Classifieds-764-0557 700 students attend tea at 'U' president's house Tonight CINEMA GUILD Presents Pope John Paul II ... more controversy Pope tells husbands not to lust after wives VATICAN CITY (AP)-Pope John Paul II has whipped up a storm by bidding men not to look lustfully at women, not even their wives. Italian feminists and writers are calling him a male chauvinist because of his latest declaration on sex. "EVERY DAY he 4the pope) is taking ai step backward to the Dark Ages,"'author Lucia Druli Dembi told the Rome daily I Messaggero. "This pope is turning the Catholic faith into a punitive faith," said another writer, Edith Bruck. At hisweekly general audience Wednesday, the Polish-born pontiff offered a sweeping analysis of Christ's words on adultery, "lustful desires and adultery committed in one'sheart." HE SAID, "Adultery in your heart is committed not only when you look with concupiscence (strong or ex- cessive sexual desire) at a woman who is not your wife, but also if you look in the same manner at your wife. "The husband must not use his wife, her femininity, to fulfill his in- stinctive desire," the pope said. "Concupiscence:... diminishes the richness of the perennial attraction of persons for interpersonal com- munion. Through such a reduction, the other person becomes the mere object for satisfying a sexual need and touches the dignity of the person (wife)." Anna Eminente, a spokeswoman for a feminist group called "Univer- sal Womanhood," said John Paul's remarks "confirm the pope is a male chauvinist." "He talks about looking at women with lustful desires but not a word about women doing the same," she said. Many Italian newspapers yester- day carried critical analyses of the papal statement under such headlines as "The Sin of Looking" and "Do Not Desire Your Wife." A TIMELY CITIZEN0 Smart design. Supremely By DEBORAH LeKASHMAN A record 700 University students met President and Mrs. Harold Shapiro yesterday during an open house spon- sored by the couple. The tea was located at the president's house on South University Avenue. For nearly two hours, students talked with the.president and his wife. SOME STUDENTS saw the tea as an opportunity to show the president where they stand on various issues. Jim Schueler proudly sported a home-made "I Support Tisch" button and attem- pted to engage Shapiro in a mini-debate on the proposed tax cut program. Shapiro, who is strongly opposed to the Tisch proposal, refused to argue, mildly stating that his (Schueler's ) position was reasonable, as long as he didn't mind paying the fullscosts of his education. Asked how he liked the location of his home, Shapiro replied "It's great! Why, every Saturday night, students walk by on their way home from the bars and give all sorts of free advice about how to run the University." First-year law students Ed Swails and Tim Butler had a little surprise for the president. In place of a simple han- dshake, they presented the president with a handful of chocolate chip cookies. "We live across the street," Swails explained, and we just thought we'd be a little neighborly and bring over some cookies." BACKGROUND piano music was provided by Music School student Eric Barnes as students filled the 140-year- old building, admiring antique fur- niture and munching on assorted snacks. "No Led Zeppelin," observed Derek Gee, as he inspected the Shapiro's record collection. " Kevin Quin, a spokesman for Nineteen is Fair attempted to pinpoint where the president and the University stand on the current ballot proposal to lower-the legal drinking age to 19. The president deftly avoided committing himself, replying, "I don't think the University has a policy." When pressed for his personal opinion, Shapiro responded, "I don't know where I stand on this issue, as I really hadn't con- sidered it before." FIDDLER ON THE ROOF "Tradition," "Will I Be A Rich Man?," "Matchmaker," "Evening Prayer." Beautiful music goes with Tevye the Milkman as he survives family and political problems in a Russian village and cheerfully emigrates to America when the Pograms begin. "Sasha, give me a break already." 7:00 & 10:00 Sunday: THE WAY WEWERE and LES BLANK FILMS We are located in Lorch Hall Auditorium MANN THEATRES DAILY DISCOUNT MATINEES VILLG E J All seats $2.00'til 5:30 375 N. MAPLE Mon-Sat, 'til 2:00 on Sundays 769-130 E 1DOUBLE FEATURE Pill VjlE Coast to Coast (PG) B J M I 3:30 7:15 1:15 3:15 5:15 Caddyshack (R) 7:30 9:45 1:45 5:15 9:00 DOUBLE FEATURE W hy Would Honeysuckle Rose (PG) Ile PG) 1:45 7:00 1le(G Willie & Phil (R) 1:30 5:30 4:00 9:15 3:3 :30 7:30 '9:3 ., , .r Bruno Bozzertos PG Allegro q NonTroppo "Fantasia"was never like this... GARGOYLE FILMS 7:00 9:00 SATURDAY IN NAT. SCI. A U D. a full-length animated movie i . 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