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March 12, 1982 - Image 3

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The Michigan Daily, 1982-03-12

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The Michigan Daily-Friday, March 12, 1982-Page 3

Comnittee discusses 'U' affirmative action policies

By PAM FICKINGER
The state Committee on Affirmative
Action will hold a hearing today to
discuss the policies and the implemen-
tation of affirmative action programs
at the University.
Today's meeting will mark the first
time the committee has met in a year
and a half and the first time it has held

a hearing in a location other than Lan-
sing.
ROBERTA BOOTH, assistant to the
University's vice president for state
relations, said the committee "wants to
know the philosophy of the University
in regards to affirmative action, and
the role that it plays at the University."
The committee is appointed by the

UAW reopens negotiations
its GrM Fte*r rdW acIt

W aLIR IP.LV.L lE
DETROIT (UPI)- Prompted by
plant closings and a new concessionary
contract with Ford Motor Co., United
uto Workers representatives voted
overwhelmingly yesterday to reopen
stalled talks with General Motors Corp.
The vote by the 314-member GM
Council was 299-15.
NEGOTIATIONS with GM, which
broke off Jan. 28, will resume at 8 a.m.
today. The giant automaker was expec-
ted to make an economic presentation
to the union at that time.

X' V lam.. V- jr v , I
UAW President Douglas Fraser said
the council'stvote was the result of both
GM's recent decision to close eight
plants and the new agreement signed
last week with Ford. The Ford pact
trades wage and benefit freezes for job
security and profit sharing.
GM has a record 145,000 workers on
indefinite layoffs. Those factors, he
said, eroded much of the original rank-
and-file opposition to contract con-
cessions. "Circumstances and events
changed, so they changed their minds,"
Fraser said.

legislature to check affirmative action
in institutions and report back to the
legislature on its findings, Booth said.
The committee, chaired by state Rep.
Teola Hunter (D-Detroit), was
originally formed in 1978 and is updated
every two years. The University will be
the first institution the committee visits
as it begins its hearings. In, previous
years the hearings were held in Lansing
Officials say
case of FBI
is'c losed'
(Continued from Page 1)
yet.
Many faculty members and ad-
ministrators here and at other univer-
sities have said that the State Depar-
tment should be allowed to place
restrictions to determine which
scholars are admitted to study in this
country. But once a scholar is admitted,
he or she should be allowed to work as
he or she pleases.
Prof. Raymond Kahn, chairman of
the faculty and student Research
Policies Committee said,"Clearly it is
not the University's job to act as con-
trollers of information. If the (gover-
nment) is concerned, then the ap-
propriate place to address it is on the
administration side, not the education
side."

at the state capitol.
The hearing will begin at 9 a.m. and
will be held in 2553 LSA Building. Other
topics to be discussed include the af-
firmative action. plan at the Univer-
sity's Replacement Hospital, and han-
dicapped staff members and students.
There will be a public comment section
at the end of the hearing.

d.C.A.T. Mid-Terms
State Boads
L.SAT.
Aptiude Tests
S.A.T.
Final Exams G.M.A.T
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-~~EAPPEINS
HIGHLIGHT
The Musical Society will present Marcel Marceau tonight at the Power
Center, 8 p.m.
FILMS
Mediatrics-Smiles of a Summer night, 7 p.m.; Wild Strawberries, 9 p.m.,
Nat. Sci.
Cinema Ii-Stir Crazy, 7 & 9 p.m., Aud. A, Angell.
Cinema Guild-The 20th Ann Arbor Film Festival, 7, 9, and 11 p.m.
Michigan Theatre.
Alternative Action-They Drive By Night, 7 p.m., The Big Sleep, 9 p.m.,
MLB 4.
SPEAKERS
Guild House-Luncheon, Susan Edwards, "Ann Arbor Women
Organizing," 12 p.m., 802 Monroe.
Near Eastern & North African Studies- Symposium, Herman Eilts
Richard Parker, Leonard Binder, William Quandt & Harold Saunders,
"American Policy Toward the Middle East," 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Rackham Am-
pit.
Communication-Sem., Horace Newcomb, "Researching Television
Aesthetics and Text," Noon, Frieze Bldg.
Int. Center-Poetry reading by Bert Schierbeek, 8 p.m.
Nat. Resouces-Laird, Norton Distinguished Visitor Series, Jim Giltmier,
"Workings of Congress," 3-5 p.m., 1040 Dana.
Wholistic Health-Ann Danielson, "Radix Education in Feeling with Pur-
pose," 7:30 p.m., Lord of Light Lutheran Church.
Anthropology - Colloq., Christopher Roberts, "Idle Tlk: Cultural & Con-
scious Intellection Among Tabwa of E. Zaire," 4 p.m., 2203 Angell.
South & Southeast Asian Studies- Bag Lunch, Carol O'Dell, Eight Mon-
ths at the Indochinese Refugee Processing Center in the Philippines," 12
p.m., Commons Rm., Lane Hall.
Astrofest-Jim Loudon, "Space Shuttle: Second Mission's Results, third
Mission Preview," latest shuttle films, 7:30 p.m., MLB 3.
Grad Program in Transportation -Martin Lee, "Planning for Fuel
Crisis: "How Much Should State Govts. Know About Automobile Travel?" 2
p.m., Henderson Rm., League.
PERFORMANCES
Dance Department-Concert, Judith Mikita Krzyminski & Leslie Wexler,
7:30 p.m., Dance Studio Theatre, 1310 N. Univ. Ct.
Canterbury Loft-"The Indian Wants the Bronx," by Israel Horovitz, 8 &
10 p.m., 332 S. State.
School of Music-Conf. on Women in Music-Rackham Bldg., Trombone
Recital, Ann Savaglio, BM soprano, 8 p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall.
Ark-Billy Novick & Guy Van Duser, 1421 Hill.
MEETINGS
Instit, For Mental Retardation & Related Disabilities-Behavior
Management and the Law Conf., Thomas Coval, 8:30 p.m., Chrysler Center.
Ann Arbor Chinese Bible Class-7:30 p.m., Univ. Reformed Church.
English-Dickens Fellowship, Dsicussion, Martin Chuzzlewit, 8 p.m., Lec.
Rm., Hutchins Hall, Law School.
Museum of Art-Art Break, Katherine Aldrich, "The Moral of the Story,"
12:10-12:30 p.m.
MISCELLANEOUS
Ann Arbor Handweavers Guild-Exhibition, 8:30-4:30 p.m., N. Campus
Gallery, corner of Bonisteel and Murphin.
Dept. of Recreational Sports-International Recreation Program, 7-9 p.m.
NCRB.
Univ. Duplicate Club-Bridge Club-Open Game, Inexperienced players,
7:30 p.m., League.
Folk Dance Club-Fok Dance Instruction, 8-9:30 p.m., Union: Request
Dancing, 9:30- midnight.
Hillel-Shabbat services, Orth., 6:20 p.m., Cons., 6:30 p.m., Dinner 7:30
p.m. (RSVP Fri. noon) Union of Students for Israel, Oneg Shabbat, 8:30
p.m., "The PLO and the Destruction of Lebanon," 2010 Washtenaw.
NCAA-Indoor Track Championships, Pontiac Silverdome, for info., 663-
2411.
To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of:
Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI. 48109.
SUNDAY AFTERNOON 3:30, March 14
LOTIMOAMERIC CEINTA
AT
PENA ARK

11

Man arrested for kicking
police car
Ann Arbor police yesterday arrested
a 26-year-old man for malicious
destruction of police property.
Two officers answering a fight call in
the 200 block of Thayer said they found
the suspect beating another malewith
his fists. The officers restrained the
suspect when he jumped on the victim
"for no apparent reason," according to
a police official,
The officers handcuffed and escorted
the suspect, who they said had been
drinking, to the patrol car which he
damaged when he tried to kick out the
window.
Police would not release the suspect's
name, pending arraignment.

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