,.k~x,. s. . : 4 nn." ...- .. ,r: . ae, '' ..T . x.k . .*x'.. =..,. RDS, I FORCE SERIES Fl LE See Sports, Page 7 Consistently convoluted See Editorial, Page 4 I P Ninety-three Years of Editorial Freedom IE~III Oh, well. Cloudy today with a nasty chance of rain. The high will be in the upper 50s, with temperatures plummeting in the late afternoon. Vol. XCIII, No. 36 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor. Michinn-Wednesday, October 20, 1982 Ten Cents Eight Pages 'GEO accuses f 15 LSA programs face review 'U' of contract Violations By GLEN YOUNG The University and the Graduate Employees Union (GEO) have found nother point of disagreement in their ears-long labor dispute. The 'teaching assistants' union has filed a formal grievance charging that the University was late in distributing dues cards to TAs and that it has not been properly informing TAs that they are covered by a collective-bargaining agreement, according to one of its leaders. TIM FEEMAN, a member of the 'unions steering committee, said yesterday that the University has violated provisions of its contract in failing to inform graduate teaching assistants of their labor rights. He also said the University .was required by contract to hand out dues cards to TAs in early September, but that it did not do so in some depar- tments until last week. -Feeman said the GEO filed an official grievance with the University last week, but that the University has not *yet responded. COLLEEN Dolan-Green, University personnel administrator, said that the University is looking into the complain- ts. She said the University is proceeding as if the proposed contract between the University and GEO, } which will be voted upon next week by the membership of GEO, were already in effect. The proposed contract, like the existing agreement, requires the University to distribute the dues cards land copies of the contract to TAs. See GEO, Page 2 By JIM SPARKS Fifteen LSA departments will be plac- ed under the review microscope this term in an effort to find ways to reduce the college's budget. 'None of the programs are slated for elimination yet this year, according to LSA Associate Dean for Long Range Planning Eric Rabkin, although last year an LSA review resulted in the closure of the geography department. RABKIN wouldn't say how much the LSA college is trying to save through the reviews or when he expected them to be completed. The reviews fall under two main categories: lengthy evaluations which may result in recommendations for budget increases or cuts and those ex- pressly set up for budget reductions. The committees also have the option of recommending that a program be reviewed for elimination, Rabkin said. In that case, the. LSA Executive Com- mittee could set up a review panel for that purpose. ACCORDING to a letter sent out to LSA faculty members on Oct. 15, cuts could range from reducing the numbers of teaching assistants in certain depar- tments, to limiting the scope and budget of some off-campus programs, such as scientific field stations. The committees will also be looking for possible reductions in "instructional support units," such as the Coalition for the Use of Learning Skills and the Alice Lloyd Pilot Program, which have no tenured faculty members.s s Lacking tenure makes the staff members of these programs. par- ticularly vulnerable in times of budget cutting, Rabkin said. THE UNIVERSITY is only required See LSA, Page 2 Return engagement Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK While his audience waits, brimming with anticipation in the unseasonably mild weather, an itinerant troubadour prepares to begin the first concert of his engagement here. Reagan may increase forces in Lebanon From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - Lebanese leader Amin Gemayel asked President Reagan yesterday to expand the role of the multinational. peace- keeping forceinhis nation, and U.S. officials said the idea will be studied seriously. A senior U.S. official, who briefed reporters in the two-hour meeting between the two leaders, said there had not been any discussion of sending more U.S. Marines. the official indicated, however, that if Washington volunteered to send more, Lebanon probably would accept them. THE FORCE includes about 1,200 U.S. Marines. "What the president of Lebanon talked about was the desirability of an expanded multinational force in some form to be used somewhere, or in some places, to facilitate the withdrawal process and to be in place until all foreign forces withdrew ... But we did not talk about American Marines," the official said. Israel has made it clear that it does not want U.S. forces in Israeli-dominated southern Lebanon. Still, an expanded force could super- vise the withdrawal of Israeli and Syrian troops from Lebanon, which Reagan and Gemayel are said to want by the end of the year. Reagan said, however, "I can't pick a date." "PRESIDENT Gemayel can rely on the help of the United States," Reagan said after a White House meeting that focused on the withdrawal of Israeli, Syrian and Palestinian units from Lebanon, as well as U.S. economic assistance and aid to bolster the Lebanese armed forces. A senior State Department official told repor- ters about Gemayel's proposal that the American, French and Italian forces expand their duties from Beirut into the Lebanese coun- tryside. Gemayel also raised the idea that the peacekeeping units stay in Lebanon until all foreign forces are gone. The official stressed that the proposals, also broached to Secretary of State George Shultz during a meeting at Blair House, is still in the discussion stage. Concern was expressed when the Marines were sent into Beirut in late June about the danger they faced, and U.S. officials said at the time that could be minimized by confining their duties to the capital. Gemayel, whose two-day visit to the United Nations and Washington was cloaked in intense security, arranged to leave Washington late Tuesday night and planned a stopover in Rome before returning to Beirut. Pa. college requires computers for students y GEORGEA KOVANIS While students here go through the rigors of book rush, students at Pit- tsburgh's Carnegie-Mellon University will be coping with computer rush in the coming years. Carnegie-Mellon administrators an- nounced yesterday that starting in three years, all students there will be required to buy their own computers, much as they buy class books today. THE NEW policy will mean students Where will have to dish out an extra $750 to $1,000 each year to pay for the ter- minals. At the end of their studies, students will have the option of keeping the terminals or selling them back to the University, administrators said. And Carnegie-Mellon officials have even grander plans. By 1990, the university hopes to have more than one computer terminal for every student. There are currently 5,500 graudate and undergraduate students at Car- negie-Mellon. Within eight years, the school hopes to have about 7,500 com- puter terminals on campus, according to CMU Vice Provost for Computing and Planning, Douglas Van Houweling. "WE WANT to provide students with better tools while at the University," he said, adding that the computer training should make students more employable after graduation. Van Houweling said that while students have expressed concern about the cost of the equipment, they also "recognize that they will be receiving something." He said the university will try to negotiate a discount for students with a computer manfacturer. University of Michigan ad- ministrators said yesterday that while no plans to enact a similar policy are in the works here, almost all engineering students will probably buy them anyway. JAMES Duderstadt, dean of the University's engineering college, said most students here are buying them voluntarily, "I think it's a natural evolution," he said. "I suspect in the next. three or four years, all of the (engineering) students will have them." He said that between 10 percent and 20 percent of University engineering students already own their own com- puter terminals. Duderstadt said the University might require students here to buy their own computer terminals in 10 years or so. Purse 1, Sallade debate the issues By KENT REDDING The Republican and Democratic rivals for the second U.S. Congressional District squared off in a debate last night and, though they disagreed on economic issues, said they opposed fur- ther student aid cuts and the draft registration. Much of the debate between Republican incumbent Carl Pursell and Democratic challenger George Sallade, which was sponsored by the Jewish Community Council, focused on the troubled economy and the problem of conflict middle east. The debate was held at the Beth Israel synagogue. THE CANDIDATES differed the most on economic issues, both echoing their familiar respective party lines. Sallade lashed out at the Reagan budget and tax programs, charging Pursell with supporting policies that See PURSELL, Page 3 U.S. Rep. Carl Pursell (R-Plymouth), left, and Democratic challenger George Sallade discuss issues ranging from student financial aid to the Middle East in yesterday's debate. TODAY- M*A*S*H ball NARY SO MUCH as a single Michigan vs. Ohio State University football game can go by without something interesting happening, and this year is no different. The OSU dean of student life, Mitchel Livingston, calls the game "a positive tradition that encourages good sportsmanship as well as good Futurity chess tourney THE BEST IN Michigan chess have descended on Ann Arbor this week for the first Michigan Futurity Chess Tournament. Dr. Paul Poschel, of A Arbor, and David Goodman, of Great Britain are curre ly leading the tour- nament, which started Saturday, and is sponsored by the University of Michigan Chess Club and other local and national organizations. There are ten entrants, all of them top-ranked chess players, according to the tournament's coordinator, Fred Lindsay. Play is started at 7 p.m. in the Michigan Uninn's Welker Rom. and the nublic is invited to a basement wall during remodeling of a Victorian house last week and found 50 bottles of scotch, bourbon, brandy, wine, and ale. Newspapers packed around some bottles dated back to 1921, two years after the start of Prohibition. One bottle of brandy was dated 1912. Matthew's parents, Lee and Chloe Gleason, bought the mansion two years ago and said they weren't surprised it had the booze. The previous owner was Mamie McLeod, an artist who inherited the house from her mother, Clara Williams, whose California Wine House in Tacoma established the family fortune. The Gleasons say they have no intention of packed the Administration Building in a 5-hour wait for tickets to the Michigan-Minnesota game. " 1951-Victorious sophomores headed back to campus after winning the tug-of-war against the freshmen. After a short struggle the sophomores pulled the freshmen into the frigid water of the Huron River. " 1960-Dean of Women Deborah Bacon said she was ac- ting according to established procedures in removing two women from Cambridge Hall for alleged violations of a regulation stating that "At NO TIME may a girl have in- toxicating beverages in her room, REGARDLESS OF HER m i I