The Michigan Daily-Thursday, March 24, 1983-Page 3 Settlement averts Eastern strike .HAPPENINGS Highlight University fraternity men will put aside their Greek insignia and preppy garb tonight just long enough to help decide who will be crowned this year's Mr. Greek Week. The third annual pageant, scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m. at the Michigan Theatre, is a spoof of the Miss America contest. Contestants from 33 campus fraternities are scheduled to participate. Films Women's Studies - Who Remembers Mama? noon, MLB 2. Public Health - The War Game, 12:10 p.m., SPH II Aud. Ann Arbor Coop - Ottawa Animation Festival, 7 & 10 p.m., Academy Award Winning Animation, 8:40 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. Mediatrics - Some Like It Hot, 7 p.m., The Seven Year Itch, 9:15 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. Performances Musical Society - concert, Murray Perahia, pianist, 8:30 p.m., Hill Aud. Music - piano recital, Miho Kitano, 7 p.m., recital hall; jazz band, Lou Smith, conductor, 8 p.m., Rackham; clarinet recital, Lizette Lewis, 8 p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall. Michigan Ensemble Theatre - "Cat On A Hot Tin Roof," 8 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Union Arts Programs - Music at Mid-Day Series, piano duets by Mary Baits and Susan Gray playing Mozart & Faure, 12:10 p.m., Pendleton Rm., Michigan Union. Iowa State Univ. Singers - performance _at St. Andrew's Church, 8 p.m., 306 N. Division. EMU - Jazz Ensemble, 8 p.m., Pease Aud. Ann Arbor Council for Traditional Music and Dance - Brad Leftwich, Linda Higginbotham, old-time music on fiddle and banjo, 8 p.m., 1612 Broadway. Speakers Law School - William Cook Lec., Irving Howe, "Socialists in the Thirties: A Case Study," 4p.m., Rm.100, Hutchins Hall. Group Concerned with Nuclear War & Public Health - John Trabalka, "Soviet Nuclear Accidents and the Post-Attack Environment," 7:30 p.m., Aud., Thomas Francis Bldg., SPH. W. Eur. Studies; History; Rackham - Paul Bew, "The Crisis of the Nor- thern Irish State," 4 p.m., E. Lec. Rm., Rackham. English - Robert Pack,"Walking to My Name: Selected Poems," 4 p.m., E. Conf. Rm., Rackham. Vision - Stan Sternberg, "Cellular Automate & Vision," 12:15 p.m., 2055 MHRI. Atmospheric & Oceanic Science - Roger Burnside, "Thermospheric Dynamics at Arecibo," 4 p.m., 2233 Space Res. Bldg. Urban Planning - Emmanula Vakalo, "Regional Service Networks," 11 a.m.,1040 Dana. Anthropology - Holly Smith, "Toothwear Differences Between Hunter- Gatherers & Agriculturalists," noon, 2009 Museums Bldg. Res. on Economic Development," 12:15 p.m., Cred Conf. Rm., 340U Lorch Hall. Biological Sciences - Allan Beaudoin, "The Principles of Teratology," noon, 1139 Nat. Sci. Bldg. Classical Studies- Meyer Reinhold, "The Mind of Cassius Dio," 4 p.m., 2009 Angell. Hispanic American Student Services - Elizabeth Petras, "Migration & Development in the Caribbean & Latin America," 8 p.m., Rackham Am- phitheatre. Education - William Cruickshank, "Categorical versus Non-Categorical Education," noon, 1322 SEB. Chemistry - Katja Lindenberg, "Fluctuation-Dissioation Relations in Stochastic Models of Excitation Dynamics," 4 p.m., 1200 Chem. Japanese Ctr. - Paul Berry, "Tanomure Chikuden: 19th Century Literati Painting," noon, Lane Hall Commons Rm. Computing Center - chalk talk, Bob Blue, "NAAS & IMSL," 12:10 p.m., 1011 NUBS; Chitra Ramanujan, "Intro. to Pascal IV," 3:30 p.m., 176 BSAD. Near Eastern & No. African Studies - Meir Pa'il, "How Revisionism Rose to Power and Took Over the Leadership of Israel and the Zionist Movement: A Historical Interpretation," noon, Rms. 1 & 2, Michigan League. Lecture presented in Hebrew. Grad Program in Medicinal Chem. - Keith Mulholland, "The Design & Synthesis of 6-Methoxyquinoline & 5, 8 Quinolinequinones as Potential An- tineoplastic Agents," 4 p.m., 3554 C.C. Little. Judiac Studies - Meir Pail, "The Unique Resource of the State of Israel - Its Military System and Its Limitations," 4:30 p.m., 4th Fl., Assembly Hall, Rackham. Mich. Society of Fellows - Angus Campbell Roundtable with Arthur Burks, William Uttal, Sarah Winans, "Intelligent Systems," 4 p.m., E. COnf. Rm., Rackham. Library Science - Sarita Davis Lee., Jean Fritz, 1:30 p.m., ballroom of Michigan League. Guild House - Margo Duley Morrow, "Empowering Women in Politics," 8 p.m., 802 Monroe. Center for W. Eur. Studies and History - Willie Korte, "Bavaria in the National Socialist Period: A Comment on the Historiography of Martin Broszat," noon, Rm 5208, Angell. Meetings Ann Arbor Libertarian League - 7 p.m., Dominick's (basement), 812 Monroe. LaGroc/Lesbian & Gay Rights - 7:30 p.m., Welker Rm., Union. Racquetball - Practice mtg., 8 p.m., Cts. 10 & 11, CCRB. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship -7 p.m., Union. Med. Ctr. Bible Study -12:30 p.m., Rm. F2230 Mott Children's Hosp. Campus Crusade for Christ -7 p.m., 2003 Angell. Russian & Eur. Studies - 4:30 p.m., Lane Hall Commons Rm. Judo Club - 6:30 p.m., IM Sports Bldg. 0 Mothers Against Drunk Drivers -7 p.m., Sheriff's Dept. on Hogback Rd. Miscellaneous Scottish Country Dancers - beginning class 7 p.m., intermediate class, 8 p.m., Forest Hills Cmmty. Ctr., 2351 Shadowood St. Aikido - practice, 5 p.m., wrestling rm., Athletic Bldg. Renaissance Univ. Club - demonstration on meditation & holistic yoga practices, 8 p.m., Rm. A, 3rd fl., Michigan League. Museum of Art - art break, Gina Alexander, Native American Art, 12:10 p.m., W. Gallery. Michigan Ensian - appointments begin for portraits, 1984 book, call 764- 9425. Coalition for Better Housing - tag day, campus and downtown area. First Baptist Church - rummage sale, 9 a.m., 502 E. Huron. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI. 48109. Looking for the intellectual side of life? _a WASHINGTON (AP) - Union machinists and Eastern Airlines reached tentative agreement on a new contract last night, just five hours before a midnight strike deadline that threatened to ground a large part of the nation's busiest airline just before the busy Easter travel season. The three-year settlement was an- nounced jointly by Dwain Andrews, senior vice president for labor relations at the airline, and Charles Bryan, president of District 100 of the Machinists Union and chief negotiator for the union. BOTH ANDREWS and Bryan hailed the agreement as one benefitting both the financially troubled airline and the union, which represents some 13,500 Eastern mechanics, baggage handlers and ground workers. But neither would give details. Bryan told reporters that represen- tatives of the unions various locals at Eastern would be briefed in full on the pact at a meeting in Atlanta tomorrow, after which details of the proposed con- tract would be released. He said he ex- pected a ratification vote by the rank and file within two weeks, and said the union leadership would recommend approval. Andrews refused to say whether Eastern sweetened an offer that had t been rejected last weekend by a margin of nearly 3-1 among union members. But he did say, "We felt like we needed to get a resolution of this and get the airline running normally." BRYAN SAID the tentative agreement is "a major improvement over the contract we voted down.. . You always want more, but we're highly satisfied and we'll recommend" ap- proval in membership voting. The threat of a strike against Eastern, which leads the other carriers in the number of passenger miles it flies, came at the onset of the Easter holiday season, one of the busiest for airlines. Eastern board chairman Frank Borman, who arrived in Washington Tuesday, had said a walkout against the financially ailing company would he a "catastrophe." BUT BORMAN also had vowed that the machinists could not shut down Eastern, saying the airline would con- tinue to make between 65 and 75 percent of its scheduled flights. Borman was not participating in the negotiations. s More than 13,500 union mechanics, baggage handlers and ground workers, who now get $13.15 an hour at top scale, were dissatisfied with the money provisions of the company's proposed three-year contract. A strike was averted March 13 when management countered with a contract proposing wage increases of 32 percent during the life of the pact, which would be retroactive to Jan. 1, 1982 - when the previous agreement expired - and run through Dec. 31, 1984. San Francisco State University Extended Education Wildlands Research Institute Join a Backpacking Research Team in the Mountain West or Alaska Summer, 1983 3-9 units On-site explorations to preserve: . Wildlife Species . Wilderness Environments Course details: WILDLANDS RESEARCH INSTITUTE 407 Atlantic Ave., Santa Cruz, CA 95062 (408) 427-2106 Borman ... vowed no shutdown Former Inteflex student loses lawsuit (Continued from Page 1) later successfully made up the deficiency. HE ARGUED the Promotion and Review Board acted arbitrarily when they dismissed him from the program. However, Feikens said Ewing had had a great deal of trouble before he failed the board exam. "It is significant that it took him three years to complete the first two years of the program," Feikens wrote. "It is also apparent that he had great difficulty in the 'hard' science cour- ses." PROFESSORS AND deans in the medical school testified that Ewing had academic difficulties throughout his term in the program. After one year in Inteflex, Ewing requested and was granted a leave of absence. He was placed on a different program than the structured one most Inteflex students follow. Because of these previous dif- ficulties, the Promotion and Review Board voted to dismiss Ewing from the program on July 24, 1981, after he failed the board exam. The board had previously sent letters to Ewing war- ning him that any further deficiencies would result in dismissal. Although the Board told Ewing he could not be re-admitted to the Univer- sity, they agreed to sponsor him if he chose to retake the exam to apply to other medical schools. X61