Election recap See Editorials, Page 4 C I hr Ninety-three Years of Editorial Freedom ~IaIIQ Anomalous Unseasonable warmth continues to- day with a high in the mid-60s. Ac- companying this irregularity is the chance of rain throughout the day. Vol. XCIII, No. 47 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, November 2, 1982 Ten Cents Ten Pages Governor's race evens as polls open IM-. trvl.quLlnn in By KENT REDDING Campaign '82 drew to a close yesterday, with several indications that the race for the gover- nor's chair may be much closer than originally predicted. A low voter turnout could deprive Democrats the office they have seen seeking fir more than 20 years as well as endanger a local Democrat's chances of becoming the only woman in the state senate. The two most recent polls, released over the weekend by Market Opinion Research and The Detroit - News, showed conservative businessman Richard Headlee closing in on Democrat James Blanchard, whose lead in the race has slipped' to only a margin of 5 to 7 per- centage points. ONLY TWO weeks ago Blanchard told a group of cheering, beer-glass-waving Democrats, "We're going to win, and we're going to win big." The latest polls, however, which have contradicted earlier projections suggesting Blanchard,would win handily, have had sobering effect on the four-term congressman's campaign. "We can't rely on the fact that we're ahead in the polls," he said recently. Yesterday at one of his last campaign stops in Hamtramck, he predicted the election would be decided by a margin of only 2 to 5 percentage points. Blan- chard has also expressed fear that a rainy day combined with Democratic overconfidence in- spired by his 20-point lead in early polls, may keep many Democratic voters at home. For Headlee, who finished up his cam- paigning in Macomb County, the polls represented the turnaround he has long predic- Tax cut crusader and, hiawassee Country Drain Commissioner Robert Tisch has not made as much of a splash in the governor's race as earlier expected. Most opinion polls show him clinging to only about 1 percent of the vote.'. If the latest polls are correct, the Democrats will have a blowout in the U.S. Senate race that Headlee is trying to deny them in the gover- nor's race. Democratic incumbent Donald Riegle has huge 26-point margin over Republican challenger Phil Ruppe, a former six-term congressman from Houghton in the Upper Penninsula. In spite of the polls, Ruppe, who was in Detroit yesterday trying to woo Democratic voters away from Riegle, said he is optimistic. "I expect to do well and we'll find out on Tuesday," he said. Ruppe has been attempting to attract moderate voters by portraying Riegle as an ineffective and bungling senator, and billing himself as a moderate who supports the Equal Rights Amendment and cuts in the defense budget. ACCORDING to the polls, the effort has largely failed, and Riegle spent most of the last days of his campaign before friendly crowds in Detroit, taking every opportunity to criticize the Reagan administration. "We have to send a powerful message to Washington and say we want the direction changed," he said. In races closer to home, the way people vote for governor may have an impact on local races. See RACE, Page 3 ted. The question is whether he can pull off the same come-from-behind upset he staged over Lt. Gov. William Brickley in the August 10 GOP primary. "I DON'T expect a blowout for me and I cer- tainly don't expect a blowout for him," he said. -- - -- -- - - - Ed.School support intensifies as review continues &By GEORGE ADAMS Public support for the School of Education continued yesterday, as close to 300 people gathered to back the school in the third of four review bearings for the unit. The hearing-held in a Rackham assembly hall-mirrored the trend of the first two meetings by drawing students, faculty, and legislators from around the state and nation, all of *whom spoke in favor of the school. CATHERINE Nadon-Gabrion, music professor and chairman of the program in Music Education, questioned the reason for the review, saying "If the focus of this review is improvement, then I applaud the effort and encourage more of it. But if (the focus of the review) is for closure, I am appalled at such parochial vision." See HEARINGS, Page 6 GEO pact rej ected; low turnout blamed Daily Photo by ELIZABETH SCOTT Pop stops at record shop Rock star Iggy Pop returned yesterday to Schoolkid's Records, his former place of employment, signing autographs and reminiscing about the good old days. His new autobiography, I Want More, poignantly retells stories of his childhood in an Ypsilanti trailer park.t 'U' humanities place in top ten By PHILIAP LAWES University departments in the humanities ranked impressively in a survey recently released by a bran- ch of the National Academy of Sciences. Overall, six University humanities departments placed in the top ten in their fields, including two in the top five. The remaining three departments surveyed, Ger- man, English, and linguistics, placed 15th, 16th, and 21st in their fields respectively. THE SURVEY, which ranks the quality of graduate humanities programs, is the second of five reports to be issued by the Conference Board of Associated Research Councils, and follows a similar report on mathematics and the physical sciences released in late September. Nine departments were ranked in this survey: art history, classics, English, French, German, linguistics, music, philosophy, and Spanish. In general, department heads contacted expressed satisfaction with the results gained by their depar- tments. Frank Casa, romance languages department chairman, expressed satisfaction not only with the showing of the Spanish and French departments un- der his chairmanship, but also with the performance of the humanities in general. "It's very important for the University to recognize, especially in this time of retrenchment, that many of the departments are nationally recognized, and it would be a shame not to keep them at that level," he said., THE ART HISTORY department, rates seventh in See SURVEY, Page 6 By GLEN YOUNG Graduate teaching assistants have turned down their proposed contract with the University, casting into question the entire relationship bet- ween the University and the graduate assistants union, the Graduate Em- ployees Organization. Early results of last week's vote on the contract, tabulated yesterday, showed that just about half of the union's voting membership cast ballots. Even if all of those ballots had supported the proposed contract, some members claimed, there still would not have been enough of them to make up the majority turnout necessary to pass the contract. THE NEXT step for the union and the University is uncertain, spokesmen for both say. But some GEO members have even raised the possibility of a strike against the University if new bargaining falls through. And there have been suggestions - unconfirmed by University officials - that the University might seek to decertify GEO's union status, pointing to low tur- nout on the contract vote as proof that GEO is not supported by most of the 1,600 graduate assistants it represents. The actual number of valid ballots cast in the vote, which took place over a two-week period, will not be announced until Thursday, according to GEO leaders. But that number will probably be between 320 and 370, most leaders agree. Forthe proposed contract to be ratified, at least half of the union's 700 voting members have to approve the proposal. And, while the final tally was not completed last night, it was clear the contract was far from pulling in the necessary "yes" votes. SOME GEO leaders claim the con- tract's clear defeat - and the resulting talk of a possible strike - will send a message to the University ad- ministration that the union is a force to be reckoned with. But other GEO officials say just the opposite, pointing out that the weak turnout - in spite of an extension of the voting deadline - will send a signal to the administration building that GEO has lost the support of its rank and file. That signal, these union leaders say, could encourage the University to try to have GEO decertified as a union, something they say the University has wanted for some time. University officials, told of the vote results last night, expressed surprise and said administrators would meet soon to decide what course of action to take. John Forsythe, the University's representative in the contract bargaining, said last night that the ad- ministration could either go back to the bargaining table with GEO or seek to have it thrown out as the graduate assistants' bargaining agent, but that both options have yet to be discussed. GEO'S NEXT step is also uncertain and members say the appearance of a deep split in its leadership over the con- tract complicates the decision. Some members blame the contract's defeat, and the resulting uncertainty about the union's future, on a group of GEO members who lobbied against ratification of the contract worked out by their own bargaining committee. Membership for a Fair Contract, the group formed, to lobby against ratification, is now discussing starting the process which could eventually lead to a strike. Some group members are calling for the formation of a strike committee, which would in turn con- sider the feasibility of a strike by teaching and staff assistants against the University. GEO called such a strike in 1976 and pressured the administration into negotiating a contract. But members of an opposite camp in GEO insist the talk of a strike is empty because the union simply lacks the sup- port of its membership. Even if the union leadership were to call a strike, they say, most TAs and GAs would ignore the call. "HOW ARE they (GEO leaders) going to get 50 percent (of TAs and GAs) to vote for a strike, when they can't even get 50 percent to vote on a contract?" asked Marty Burke, a member of GEO's election committee. "There is a limited amount" of energy in GEO and it can be either be used to fight amongst ourselves and tear the union apart, or it can be used to work toward organizing, and getting people See GEO, Page 5 Faculty complaints force can es ,in engineering humanities review, By BILL SPINDL Kaplan, local president of the Associate Engineering Dean Charles In an attempt to alleviate fears that a American Association of University Vest said the objective of the commit- decision to close the engineering Professors, expressed those fears in a tee would be to evaluate the humanities department had preceded a letter to Engineering Dean James "preliminary conclusion" to move review of the program, engineering of- Duderstadt last week. The letter asked humanities into LSA, as well as ficials made several changes this week whether the school's executive commit- examining methods of making the tran- in the instructions for the review. tee had tentatively agreed to move the sfer if they decide it is necessary. Two weeks ago the engineering department. The review committee is VEST ALSO said the new instruc- college announced it was considering given the power only to recommend tions, which will be given to the com- elimination of its humanities depar- methods of transferring the depar- mittee tomorrow, would contain Wment due to a lack of money. tment, not the power to decide if it promises of a commitment to education Shortly after the initial review was should be transferred, he pointed out. in the humanities within the announced some professors expressed The changes in the review instruc- engineering college. concern that the reveiw committee was tions were made to clarify the fact that Also in response to faculty fears, only examining ways to move the no decision to move the department has engineering officials pushed the com- department to LSA, having already been made, although it is one of the op- mittee's tentative deadline back one concluded that its stay in the tions open to the committee, said Vice month to the end of fall term. engineering college was over. President for Academic Affairs Billy Kaplan, however, said that the extra MATHEMATICS Prof. Wilfred Frye. See HUMANITIES, Page 6 w Frye... Humanities closure up to committee Tax-cut witch EATH AND taxes may be a certainty in the minds of some, but a self-proclaimed witch says the "tax-cut spell" she cast over Paterson, N.J. will prove the adage wrong. Joyce Luciano, known as the "Official Witch of Paterson," said the spell she brewed up in a 15-minute ceremony attended by about h 100 hopeful residents and city workers would slash taxes by King, Mac's call truce THE FAST-FOOD front-runners have called a cease fire in the "Battle of the Burgers"-at least, on the national level. Burger King has agreed to discontinue its aggressive advertising campaign against Wendy's and McDonald's. The ads said consumer taste tests proved people prefer Whoppers to Big Macs and Wendy's Singles. In response to Burger King's profferment of the peace pipe, Wendy's and McDonald's said they would lower their legal guns-lawsuits challenging the claims in the ads. Guerrilla- hurricanes, tornadoes, fire ants, pesticides, and condo sprawl. That's the irreverent word from the publishers of Florida's 1983 Calamity Calendar, an annual tongue-in- cheek effort to discourage tourists and new residents by pointing out the state's past and present calamities and possible future dangers. Some members from the founding organization, the Florida Conservation Foundation Inc., say they try to make sure "that we never say anything nice about Florida to someone who may want to come here." A featured cartoon in the calendar depicts a concrete-and- steel flower as the state's symbol. Another shows were driven away by security guards wielding fire hoses. Also on this date in history: * 1942-The University was criticized by a Navy, lieutenant for not having enough students enlisting in the armed forces. " 1954-The Literary College faculty voted to ask the school to grant severance pay to a professor who was dismissed for refusing to testify before the House Commit- tee on Un-American Affairs. " 1974-Michigan Gov. William Milliken announced he would keep his running mate, James Damman. after m I i