0 9 -W -W -W lS 7W first-year TA in the School of Natural Resources, who didn't join GEO. "There's not enough discussion and too much rhetoric going on. I can't under- stand why they can't get together." Ritchie says that his experience with other schools has shown him that non- unionized graduate student staffs fare better than GEO has. "The dealings between graduate students and ad- ministration were much more low-key and much more productive," he says. GEO remains one of the few graduate student unions in the country and the only one in the Midwest that is recognized formally by its school's ad- ministration. Because the contract failed, this will be the first year since GEO's creation that TAs have not received a pay hike. In addition, graduate students are receiving the same break on tuition they did a year ago-despite this year's 15 percent tuition increase. In previous years, the reduction in TAs' tuition has increased in proportion to tuition hikes. The University says it now is in the awkward position of being unable to grant the pay and tuition "waiver" in- creases even though it wants to. That's because both sides agree a unilateral, non-negotiated pay hike would be con- sidered an unfair labor practice. For TAs who won't be back after this term, that could mean a loss of $400 to $600, according to John Forsyth, the key University official for GEO affairs. The leadership of the moderate group says the militants are responsible for allowing TAs to lose that money, and they cite the loss as evidence of a lack of interest on the part of the left wing in the real needs of TAs. The moderates believe the left wing of GEO is more concerned with their own political ideology, more with "Marxist revolution," than with the welfare of TAs. "To them, this is the closest thing to a class struggle," says Marty Burke, who Classic trio torodin Trio Rackham Auditorium 8:30 p.m. Saturday, November 20 By Lauris Kaldjian W HEN THE institutions of marriage and government are at odds with each other who wins? Well, in the case of the Borodin Trio, we do. As Soviet citizens, violinist Rostislav Dubinsky and pianist Luba Edlina were not permitted to perform together out- side of the Soviet Union because they are husband and wife. Consequently, in 1976 they emigrated to the west, along with cellist Yuli Turovsky. These three musicians comprise the Borodin Trio and will display the fruits of their long association in Rackham Auditorium this weekend. The members of the Borodin Trio have performed in various com- binations while in the Soviet Union. As the founder and first violinist of the Borodin Quartet, Dubinsky was joined by Edlina in the piano-strings and piano-violin repertoire. Edlina also ac- companied Turovsky in the piano-cello repertoire. Though they continue their duo ensemble performing today, most of their concerted efforts are in the trio literature. The piano, violin, and cello form a uniquely balanced ensemble. Unlike the string quartet, the trio does not have any subordinate members. The chordal facilities of the piano allow it to carry melodies and offer harmonic support simultaneously. The com- plementary voices of the violin and cello add immensely to textural possibilities and create instrumental dialogue. When wisely exploited, a piano trio is a work that combines three distinct instruments whose lines give, take, and share equally with one another. As with any intimate relationship, time is essential to chamber music. The perception and sensitivity that cham- ber musicians must show is a result of mutual experience. (Some of the greatest virtuosi have been the worst chamber musicians.) The members of the Borodin Trio have had the necessary time to understand each other's idiosyncrasies and bents; and once this is accomplished, an ensemble is molded into a single trio, not a trio of singles. For their program the trio has selec- ted works by Tchaikovsky (Trio in A min., Op. 50) and Schubert (Trio in E flat, Op. 100, D.929). The juxtaposition of these two names seems odd, especially in terms of chamber music. Tchaikovsky's relatively few chamber works are severely overshadowed by the rest of his literature. Contrarily, Schubert's many and varied chamber works epitomize important aspects of his style. Programming such a musical com- parison allows the listener an oppor- tunity to consider the differences in the works of two substantially different composers. Tchaikovsky and Schubert do share some common ground (though they stand at opposite ends of it)- the romantic period. As the first great romantic, Schubert began to break from the late classicism that ended with Beethoven, and as a result his style exhibits more clearly defined and controlled phrasing. Tchaikovsky, with a .c u w. .. v -, I , 'O- C ' v X ',N V TAs: Teaching under fire. GEO from 1 employer. Ever since 1976, the Univer- sity refused to sign a contract with the union, saying its members were not ac- tual employees but only were working under a sort of financial aid, work- study plan. Then, in November of last year, something short of a miracle occurred. Having just lost an appeal with the state employee relations department, the University gave up. The ad- ministration, under the direction of the Regents, said it would return to the bargaining table to negotiate a new contract with the then 38-member TA organization. Suddenly, other graduate students woke up to GEO. By September of this year, the organization's membership had soared to more than 600. And a GEO bargaining team in July had agreed to a three-year contract with the University and readied it for a mem- bership vote this fall. But then the roof caved in. By mid-September, factions of the union leadership were fighting with one another over the quality of the contract and over the bargaining process from which it grew. The anger on both sides was fierce, and some of the leaders limped away from the melee, calling it the worst experience they'd ever had. Suddenly, after surviving so many ups and downs in its interminable struggle with the University, GEO was facing a fight with what some said was its toughest opponent ever: itself. The vicious attacks alienated a large section of the current membership as well as a significant number of poten- tial union recruits. And the possibility that GEO may soon lose its status as the tA's official bargaining unit looms over every move the union now makes. After this fall's battle, GEO now finds itself with no unified voice, no forward direction, no sense of solidarity, and- some say-no purpose. To some-the members of GEO's more militant, left-wing faction--the! problems began when a weak-kneed group of student bargainers succumbed to administration pressures and brought back to the membership a con- tract that offered little more in wages and other benefits than TAs were already getting. In fact, they argued, with inflation and skyrocketing tuition taken into account, the contract would have meant an actual cut in pay for TAs. To others-those who are called the union's right wing (a misnomer in itself as most consider themselves to be near the far left of the political spectrum)- the union's failings lay clearly in the in- transigence of the militants. These "Birmingham-raised Leninists," as one TA describes them, are more in- terested in promoting social transfor- mation than the good of teaching assistants. For the moment, the right wing has called it quits, disgusted by the militan- ts' attacks and doubting that the union can achieve anything under ideological domination. "We're tired of being ac- cused of being anti-GEO," says one, "so we're telling them 'Fuck you-go ahead and have your little fling.' " At the heart of this internal conflict is a dispute over the union's strength. On the one hand, membership has in- creased dramatically in just one year and has continued to grow since the contract's defeat three weeks ago. The militants argue that the membership is demanding deep concessions from the University and that the graduate students will stand by their union, ready to strike if necessary. The grad students showed their determination, the left wing claims, by soundly defeating a contract in which the union made few gains. On the other hand, fewer than half of students eligible to join GEO actually are members of the union, fewer than one in four teaching assistants par- ticipated in the contract vote, and only 186 of the more than 1,600 teaching and staff assistants in the University ac- tually voted "no." Union meetings still can't attract more than a tiny fraction of all TAs. In sum, there are a lot of grad students who-like Michael Ken- ney of the School of Natural Resour- ces-believe they are "being treated fairly by the University." Given the University's bleak finan- cial situation and a general apathy among graduate students, the moderates argue, the ill-fated contract was in fact the best bargain possible for today's TAs. With allsthe bickering at the top, many TAs wonder when the leadership will ever get around to serving them. "The leadership is such that each side has its own ideas about the way things ought to be run and is fighting with the others," says Mark Ritchie, a Borodin Trio: Balanced ensemble his sweeping melodies and expressive freedom, writes in a late-Romantic style far removed from Schubert's pristine beginning. This contrast manifests the passage of time in one period of musical history. The Bor paper and sound on geniuses C and you m worth your down Peter Gabriel Hill Auditorium 8 p.m. Saturday, November 20 By C.E. Krell S O TICHO said to write about the album covers, but why? The first album has a picture of Peter Gabriel on it. The second album, on the cover, has a picture of Peter Gabriel. Peter Gabriel appears on the cover of the third album. That fourth album has a picture, too. I think it may be Pete. So Larry said to write Sanskrit. San- skrit. Sanskrit. Sanskrit. Sanskrit... So I said I may write about sex. About sex: It's wonderful, and it gets better the more you do it. Then it can go stale. Let's play allegory roulette. We'll pretend Peter Gabriel is sex. Gabriel started out sex-like. A darkened stage. Slowly, a spotlight points out a rather large egg (ovum?). The egg breaks open and out pops a flower dressed like a man, singing about sex: see "Counting out Time"- The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway. For Genesis, this would be the climax of a wonderful, twee sort of existense. As far as I know, the lamb ascended in- to vinyl heaven, and ole Pete left. Went away, gone. El Exodus. Gabriel smokes a cigarette. P.G. I was ok, neat, gee, yea, fun, like climbing up on Solsbury Hill. More sex. Another orgasmic rendition. I have to say it: Jetzt Kommt Die Flut. Slap! P.G. II was not a Genesis like album so much as it was an excellent exercise in aerobic rock/pop. P.G. III was not II so much as excellent investigation into a case work of a synthesis of syn- thesized stylistic detective endeavors. Rock, pop, disco. At the end of III (you know III. It has a picture of Peter Gabriel on the cover), there was a foray into the fray of African sensibility and rhythm as a basis for composition and enjoyment: "Biko," a large pohleetikall statement for a man who had talked about sex so much. Sprung from this came WOMAD, the world of music, art, and dance. You've bought the album, now read the dirt. Our Pete lost his terror filled overdress on this British fest of international musics from around the globe. If you haven't bought the album, go ahead and get Pete out of debt, so he doesn't have to perform again with the name that he has striven so hard to rip himself clean from: Genesis (yes, he did it). Thanks partly to Gabriel, African pop now troddeth de airwaves. So from WOMAD came P.G. IV; Africaned, rhythmed, and beaten out. Sex returns as "The Family and The Fishing Net." It disappointed, though. Jetzt kommt die short paragraph. Now that we've picked up the glass of pop, let's look at the bubbles. Bubbles are intrinsically good journalism copy. Peter Gabriel has had a lot more ef- fect than effectively given credit effects for. Performance-flowers, masks, tight wires, lasers, clouds, lights. Solo records also. No P.G. Band, but a smat- tering of innovative and thought provoking and downright freaked out baddass musicians. Robert Fripp, Larry Fast, Tony Levin, Paul Weller, Kate Bush, Ekome-a veritable Kellogg's variety. Pak. Carving out sound from sounds from stones of people. A little learning from your sculpture. Sound only from the man who wrote "I talk in pictures not in words." Say goodbye to flesh and blood, Gabriel's words range from the obscure, to the more obscure, to the relevant to the clever to the dumb. Yet interest holds- songs as extended allegories-and you get them or you don't. Peter Gabriel's most popular album was his third solo effort, after the well- set pace of the opening chapter. The new alburr doesn't se have the (s The mas last seen, ple stage power (an( surge of h force, carr terror and Will the shit at ever ficiently p behind the Gabriel: I, II, III, IV GEO: Internal division 16 Weekend/ November 19. 19825W 5 We,