The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 15, 1988- Page 5 MSU workers keep up picket BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Clerical and technical employees at Michigan State University con- tinued to walk picket lines yesterday, ' just days before registration was to begin at the state's largest campus, while about 75 other school districts 'continued negotiations. Teachers in Ovid County's Ovid- Elsie district also struck yesterday, accompanying their counterparts in the Stockbridge, Baraga, Pontiac, .Holland and Michigan Center dis- -tricts. At the East Lansing university, members of the Clerical-Technical Union picketed throughout campus and at most entrances, donning picket signs and wearing pins that said, "I do not want to strike. But I 'will." The 2,300-member union main- tains the school has reneged on an agreement in its 1983 contract to "abide by an employee wage and classification study. School spokesperson Cherryl Jensen said the "university has interpreted the results differently, but has made efforts to implement them. A state mediator has called a meeting today with top union nego- tiators to prepare for talks tomorrow with the complete bargaining team, Jensen said. About 25 percent of the clerical- technical workers had reported to their jobs Tuesday and yesterday, she said. Temporary employees are hired every year to assist with registration, 'which begins Monday, but more will be required because of the strike, she said. Jensen emphasized that registra- tion will continue as scheduled. "The university's offer does not even come close to the recommendation made, by the con- sulting firm that did the classifica- tion and wage study," said Rondy Scheidt, vice president of the union and strike coordinator. "They've said they'll accept our new titles, they've accepted our grade levels but they're saying, 'We'll de- termine what the wages are,"' said John McDaniel, a recording produc- tion technician for the music school who picketed outside the Union SBuilding. 'U' Prof. was 'medical school BY MARION DAVIS AND ROSE LIGHTBOURN "He excited a generation by example," said Dr. William Castor last night of Dr. William Robinson, a renowned professor emeritus of internal medicine at the University who died at age 77 last Sunday. "He was one of the founders of rheumatology," said Dr. Irving Fox. "We respected him tremendously.... he was an incredible fund of knowledge." Robinson gained nationwide recognition as an expert in the field of nutrition and rheumatology, but is remembered by Internal Medicine chair William Kelley as "an individual who committed his entire career to University of Michigan, and did it in a very honorable way." Robinson chaired the University's Department of Internal Medicine for 17 years until he retired in 1975, the year he won the University's Distinguished Faculty Award. iant' "He was one of the giants of the medical school," said Castor. Robinson was past president of the American Rheumatism Association and served as a consultant to the U.S. Surgeon General. He also participated in a U.S. commission on Nutrition in Spain during the Spanish Revolution. "He insisted that the doctors he trained treated patients as human beings," said his son David. "Ever since he was a child he wanted to be a doctor." Born in Hoosac, N.Y., Robinson earned a medical degree from the University in 1934. He served his internship and residency and completed his training as a resident fellow here, joining the faculty in 1944 as an assistant professor of internal medicine. Funeral services will be private. Robinson is survived by three sons. Associated Press No, this isn't wallpaper Rows of martial arts devotees display perfect formation in Seoul yesterday, rehearsing for the 1988 Olympic Games. U.S.S.R. explodes nuclear bomb SEMIPALATINSK. U.S.S.R. (AP) - The land heaved and windows broke more than two miles away yesterday when the Soviet Union detonated an underground nuclear bomb for the first American experts to witness a Soviet nuclear blast. The Americans stood in a chilly wind on the barren test site at, the Forward Command Post Semipalatinsk Polygon about 1,700 miles southeast of Moscow in the republic of Kazakhstan. As the shock wave rippled out, the ground shook and a low rumble began. Within moments of the 11 a.m. blast, a reddish dust cloud rolled above the spot where Soviet scientists planted a nuclear device in a shaft drilled 642 yards into hard rock. Some observers seemed a bit queezy from their proximity to ground zero, only 2.4 miles away. Soviet observers watching a similar test on Aug. 17 in Pahute Mesa, Some observers seemed a bit queezy from their proximity to ground zero, only 2.4 miles away. few millionths of a second before the explosion destroyed the sensor cable buried a few yards from the nuclear device. The Soviets and the Americans, who monitored the blast with U.S. technology, have agreed to release the data within a month. Deputy U.S. Energy Secretary Joseph Salgado Solgado said yesterday's experiment and the similar one in Nevada "have demonstrated the effectiveness and non-intrusiveness of CORRTEX," the U.S. technology developed to gauge the force of nuclear explosions. However, Soviet Lt. Gen. Arkady Ilyenko, chief of the Semipalatinsk test site, said it was too early to determine whether the American method was non-intrusive - meaning it does not interfere with the blast or pick up other data the country doing the testing would like to keep secret. - The Associated contributed to this story. Troubled Zilwaukee bridge to open Monday Press Nev., remained about 30 miles from the blast site - too far away to feel the impact. After Wednesday's test, the Soviet scientists quickly checked their instruments and announced they had obtained the data necessary to determine the force of the blast. The information was gathered in a ZILWAUKEE, Mich. (AP) - Officials will cut a ribbon Monday and set off in classic cars to open the southbound lanes of the 1.5-mile, $121-million Zilwaukee Bridge, completing a troubled, 9-year-old project. State Transportation Director James Pitz, Zilmaukee Mayor James Darland, Saginaw Mayor Delbert Schrems and other officials will drive across the span 125 feet above the Saginaw River. The drive-over on the new bridge will mark the end of service of a drawbridge that has been in use since 1958, periodically halting Interstate 75 traffic to let ships pass in the river. "You'll Love Z-Bridge" signs will greet drivers on either end of the new span. The Zilwaukee bridge is amoung 102 construction and repair projects progressing in favorable late-summer weather on major roads around Michigan. The trouble-plauged bridge project began in 1979,with a bid of $76.8 million for the work and a projected completion date of 1983. Problems including a sagging bridge deck and cracking concrete plauged contractors, and the state said in December 1987 that cost overruns had boosted the final price tag to $121 million. That did not include $9.8 million for approach ramps. Liberation Army had been opposed to the leftist government of the late Prime Minister Leabua Jonathan. A Continued from Page 1 number of bombings and killings Thabane said the hijackers were were attributed to the group, which .members of the dissident Lesotho reportedly had South African Liberation Army. The Lesotho backing. CLASSIFIED ADSI Call 764-0557 THE WEIGHT CONTROL FALL SESSION CLINIC BEGINS ctthe SEPTEMBER 19, 1988 Uve Sty of Michigan CALL 747-2722 Is no Secret! 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