Petition drive underway to The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 1, 1984 - Page 5 MSA blasts present version of code end je union fees for TAs (Continued from Page 1' GEO. Most graduate students are apathetic about GEO, said geradu te student David Vanderveen, one of the drive's organizers. "We've found that people have been paying because of fear of losing their jobs, not because they support the union," Vanderveen said. BUT GEO leaders say that because all teaching assistants receive benefits from the union contract, such as health E5 REVIEW-IN1ROouclONTNII M.% .J J EDUCATIONAL CENTER Cal Days EvesF& Weekends 203 E. Hoover ANN ARBOR, MI 48104 Permanent Cent MaTtan 15 ajorUS Ctes&Abroad For intormaion about other ce2ter OUTSIDE N.Y. STATE CALL TOLL FREE 800-223-1782 insurance and tuition discounts, they should pay the dues that range from $12 to $24 a semester. "Frankly, there is no reason for anyone to object (to paying dues). Our dues are low and GEO is an important union," said Holzka. Both GEO non-unionized TAs who work more hours pay more dues, GEO member Mike Foley said. If GEO could collect dues from all staff and teaching assistants, its budget could increase to $70,000 a year. But if the petition drive succeeds and the union changes to an "open" shop, GEO's budget could be only half as much. PETITION organizer Julie Goldberg denied the charge that non-unionized TAs who refuse to pay GEO dues are "free loading." Many businesses use the "open" shop system, added Goldberg. The group which started petitioning in several University departments Monday must collect 560 signatures, or 30 percent of the employees represen- ted by GEO. If enough signatures are collectedthe petitions must be submitted to the National Labor Relations Board in Detroit. The NCRB would then conduct a vote of all University teaching and staff assistants to approve a change in the GEO contract. (Continued from Page 1) Rowland countered by saying, "Protests should not have academic punishments at all." "I DON'T understand that logic," Colburn replied. "Pro baseball players are suspended from a team for using drugs. Is that fair? We're saying that a student caught in the act of arson would be suspended from school." Relying on the court system to punish students is often inadequate, according to Colburn. He cited one example where a student in a dormitory cut another student's hand by taping a razor blade to the doorknob, and the University could not take action against him. "THE JUDICIAL system just isn't quick enough - we can't get them out of the dormitories as fast as we need to," he said. The discussion stopped abruptly at this point when a "code enforcer", in a trench coat and dark glasses grabbed a student from the audience in a mock arrest and accused him of hanging up "no-code" posters. "I didn't do it, I'm telling you," the student shouted, but the grim enforcer carried the "offender" out of the room. UNDER THE CODE, offenses such as vandalism, setting off firecrackers and pulling fire alarms could cause the termination of a housing lease. "Lighting a firecracker or setting off a fire extinguisher in a dormitory are not trivial matters," Colburn said, "but we're willing to drop these parts if they're causing a problem . . . Even if it's watered-down, I feel we need to get something on the books," he said. According to a regents' bylaw, MSA must approve the code before it becomes effective, but MSA members fear that the bylaws may be changed to allow the passage of the code without the assembly's approval. "I don't think the University should take that step," Colburn said. "Our han- ds are tied now, but I don't want to see any back-door politics." Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON Communication Prof. William Colburn stresses the need for student par- ticipation in drafting a non-academic code of conduct at Campus Meet the Press in the Michigan Union's Kuenzel Room yesterday. LSA profs reject policy outlining responsibilities WOMEN'S LIVES Conversations on How Women Grow and Change MARCH 2 Joyce Kornbluh Director, Program on Women and Work, Insti- tute of Labor and Industrial Relations, U of M 9 Kathleen Dannemiller Consultant, Dannemil/er Tyson, Inc. 16 Kathy Modigliana Coordinator, Home Childcare Project, North Campus, U of M 23 Carol Hollenshead (Continued from Page 1) the complaints against teachers for many years," Orlin said. "It is very frustrating to hear a student tell me that a teacher has just announced a mid-term exam for the next week, while the student has other papers and tests which were announced at the beginning of the term," he added. MYERS SAID he feels 90 percent of LSA faculty members already follow the proposal, and thinks the other 10 percent would conform out of "peer pressure" if the proposal is adopted. "This 10 percent doesn't think of doing these things. Now they will be able to know what the norm is concer- ning faculty responsibilities," he said. Myers' support of the guidelines stems from personal experience with that 10 percent, he said. "I HAVE had teachers who have violated at least one of these suggestions. Many of my teachers have had office hours but not enforced them," Myers said. "I also have been enrolled in three different sections of Math 115 over the years, but have had to drop them all because the foreign graduate student teaching assistant could not speak English," he said. But some professors say the guidelines are a repressive measure that goes far beyond a list of suggestions for improved teaching. "I DON'T think a faculty code of con- duct is an appropriate way to correct the abuses that are the concerns of the' committee," said Philosophy Prof. Carl Cohen. At the February meeting, Cohen also said the proposal was an "invitation to litigiousness." Even if professors do not conform to the propsal, the committee members contend they are not likely to be sued by students as a result. Under pressure from LSA faculty, the tone of the prop- osal was changed to say LSA "urges" faculty to fulfill the guidelines rather than issuing an order. This change takes away the threat of a lawsuit, according to some committee members. MYERS SAID students could sue professors even without the guidelines, but "the professors just seem to think that with this list of suggestions in print, someone, may" have more of a suit," he said. Modern Hebrew Prof. Edna Coffin who said she generally supports the 'The faculty just doesn't want to be told what it should do.' -Eric Rabkin English prof. proposal, does not see the possibility of lawsuits reasonable grounds for tur- ning it down. "IF PROFESSORS DO not follow these proposed suggestions, then students should have the chance to sue them, she said. "They should be able to expect responsibilities from professors." Along with the threat of lawsuits, some professors say the proposal is too unclear and probably unenfordable. "The terms of the proposal are so vague - how would someone say what is an adequate number of office hours or adequate attention to a student," said John Kingdon, chairman of the political science department. ERIC RABKIN, interim chairman of the linguistics department, said the proposed suggestions place an unrealistic burden on departments to oversee professors. "Some of my professors don't meet with students in their office hours, but for coffee or lunch. How would I monitor where they were all the time?" Rabkin asked. Rabkin also said the proposal does not allow for enough individual dif- ferences in 'teaching style. "Some professors get the syllabus out on the first day, others like to have a little leeway in the schedule. This requirement undercuts this," Rabkin said. AFTER the faculty turned down the proposal in their February meeting, the committee is now working on a revised plan to take back to the faculty in their April meeting. The new recommendations are likely to be a weaker version of the current proposal. "I would like to work on a serious toning down of the document, maybe even taking out some of the mention of departments having to monitor the faculty," said French Prof. Roy Nelson, co-chairman of the committee. The intense debate surrounding the proposal has put Nelson and the com- mittee in something of a hot spot. "I feel like I am Moses coming down from the mountain with 10 suggestions," he said. Director, Administrative Services, Planning and Development, School of Nursing, U of M AT NOON GUILD HOUSE 802 Monroe Program is sponsored by Guild House Campus Ministry and funded in part by Michigan Commission/United Ministries in Higher Education Lunch (Home-made vegetarian soup) is available at $1.00 (For more information call Guild House, 662-5189) ARCH 27& 28 RUN FOR TlE M4ICII/G4N STUDENT 4SSEM1LY aS PR ES/DENT, /CE PR ES/DENT, OR aS A REPRESENTAT/VE FROM A COLLEGE. /NFORMA1 T/ON EL ECT/ON FORMS 4 T 3909 AIC/IGdAN UN/ON. 1II I r FlFA n I