L tha tra tro fed The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 10, 1984 - Page 5 GEO asks 'U' to renegotiate contractARNS IR ADR.AN'ST-SHIRT (Continued from Page 1) Jane Holska, GEO vice president, renegotiated.)PRINTERY UNION MEMBERS said the tax on says that she doesn't expect the at third was not figured into their con- University to be happy with their "WHEN WE were negotiating, no one ct and has put some TAs in financial demands, but that the administration knew if the Internal Revenue Service TEAM )uble since December 31 when the will have to respond. was going to force us to withhold (the feral law exempting tuition taxes ex- "WE'RE LOOKING for a long range tax)," said Dan Gamble, University pired. In a letter to the University outlining their demands, the union said, "We can find no satisfactory: reformulation of tuition and salary structures that solv- es the current problem without in- creasing the degree of complexity .. . We propose that the University abolish tuition for all Graduate Student Teaching and Staff Assistants." solution that gives us an economic situation we can live with," Holska said. "We aren't holding the University responsible for acts of Congress, but we do hold them responsible for main- taining the terms of the contract we agreed upon," she added. University officials said before GEO announced their plans that it was unlikely the contract would be manager of compensation and staff relations. "That could occur to any of us in a bargaining situation. I don't see how you can go back to your employer and ask for more." Gamble says the University has been in contact with legislators in an attem- pt to solve the problem. "Our concerns are being well-heard," he said. GEO members argue that it could be quite a while before legislation abolishing the tax will be considered by Congress. According to Judy Conrad, an aide for Michigan Republican Congressman Carl Pursell, the bill is slated to go before the HousemWays and Means Committee sometime in early March. e Conrad says she does not know when the legislation will reach Congress. to . _. i I.OCAT~D fi w,,w~iu ~ ~ SHE *OA&flRWt ~ir~z A * 4W03 Ii LI 994-1367 [i~1 SHOPmi OUR SRO1ROOM/STORE 100's of Surplus U.S. defends Beirut shelling; Syrian commander killed USE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS (Continued from Page 1) Beirut came under sustained bombard- ment, apparently from artillerymen in Syrian-occupied Druse areas. U.S. NAVY gunfire on Wednesday killed the commanding general of Syrian forces in Lebanon and a large part of his general staff, ABC News reported yesterday. The report on ABC's World News; Tonight, attributed to U.S. and Israeli; intelligence sources, said the Syrian headquarters was in Hammana, 15 miles east of Beirut. The general was not named. Top administration officials yester- day defended U.S. bombardment of hostile positions near Beirut and said the United States is not abandoning Lebanon but merely moving its troops "2 to 3 miles to the west." Defense Secretary Caspar Wein- berger said Wednesday's massive naval shelling of Syrian-controlled positions in Lebanon was launched in part to demonstrate an unwavering U.S. commitment In California with Reagan yesterday, White House spokesman Larry Speakes insisted that the latest naval gunfire still is in defense of U.S. troops, con- sistent with the War Powers Resolution authorizing the Marine presence in Lebanon - and not in direct support of the embattled Lebanese government of Christian leader Amin Gemayel. Speakes said the United States is justified in attacking Moslem gun positions outside Beirut because "these weapons are capable of hitting the air- port and the Marines at the airport." lh f n uDaily Photo by TOD WOOLF I0Aft unidentified driver gets his summer off to an early start as he cruises 'Clwn South University yesterday in his convertible. Pr s ?r-of Ytnews By ANDREAW :;lgarles Darwin's th pFbQld still be taken people must. rememb witten over one hun ?rqf. Michael Ruse sai "Philosophers and h lock at Darwin to see w about ourselves," Rus people in MLB. He sjld avoid .the fall prejudices and biase highlighting them wit Wr vin's works." , st a;prof.essor o Cirimity ofGUplph in Darwin is "a child of h he wrote with all t pzrejiudices of a typical dle-class Victorian. S THOSE values, religion, cannot be scientific thought, Rus they are all tied into th era. dleligion separated disrts the picture," he hile studying Darw mt realize that. our o bies too. "'The only ca do is translate our be gthe same," Ruse gays Darwin 's still valid VILLIAMS IT IS WRONG to judge either science eory of evolution or arts as being objective because, n seriously, but Ruse said, "It just ain't true."- er that it was Ruse said Darwin believed there was idred years ago, a God, but that creation was a long- d yesterday. term process, not spontaneous. historians should Darwin believed the "greatest of all vhat we can learn gods is not the one who intervenes ... se told about 125 bam. . . now we have humans.. . bam. added that "we . . now we have English," Ruse said. acy of bringing Ruse is a native of Birmingham, s of today and England and received his un- h lines found in dergraduate and graduate philosphy degrees from the University of Bristol. f philosophy .at He is currently on sabbatical teaching Ontario,;said that at Harvard. is time'" and that he values and THE FACT that Darwin did not successful mid- receive a degree in biology leads some people to claim that he, was "only a which include diletttante butterfly collector with a separated from second-rate theory" was refuted by se said, because Ruse who said Darwin was educated at he thought of the Christ College, Cambridge, before there was any such thing as a biology d. from science degree. e said. "To say that Darwin was only a win, he said, we naturalist is a distortion of Darwin's own values have work," Ruse said. modest thing we The biggest obstacle in exploring r own values as evolution-is that some people believe tht said. "it is just a theory not fact," said Ruse. THE BEST ; JUST GOT BETTERa 540 E. Liberty St. 761-4539 Corner of Maynard'& Liberty, TAKE THE LEAD Help New Students Discover the Diversity of Michigan BEA FALL ORIENTA TION LEA DER, Pick up applications at the Orientation Office (3000 Michigan Union) or call 764-6290 for further information. " an affirmative action non-discriminatory employer . APPLICATIONS DUE FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17 The Most Sophisticated Training Ground For Nuclear Engineering Isn't On The Ground. It's on a Navy ship. The Navy has more than 1,900 reactor-years of nuclear power experience - more than anyone else in America. The Navy has the most sophisti- cated nuclear equip- ment in the world. And 1106 get them fast. 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