ablie irbiwgui 1oaid C: lC Cs SECTION B September 3, 1996 4 RIENNE JANNEY Under construction S vu .e ni11 Reconstud oursel bM college If you want to camouflage yourself on this campus, just wrap yourself in some orange mesh and sit on any street corner. You'll fit right in. Wrmer University President James Duderstadt may have thought a face lift would give the University a new soul. Even parts of Wolverine Access, the computerized student records system, bear the label "Under construction." My class - the class of 1997 - is marked by orientation statistics as the only class not to have a construction- free semester, Until graduation, we will have the pleasure of buzzing and #ming. Of oversized hunks of ~~b age flying past the upper-floor windowvs of Mason Hall. Of 9 a.m. fires in East Engineering (purporte'd to gullible orientees as "East Hall"). And - my personal favorite - detours. This summer, they blocked and boarded the West Engineering Arch. Now I have to - gasp - walk around. What they did to the steps of the Grad last summer nearly caused me * r trauma. I innocently strolled o o the Diag to meet my roommate on the stairs that hold students smok- ing, chatting or protesting - she found me whimpering next to a giant, fenced-off hole in the ground. "Sorry. I forgot to warn you," she said, ushering me away from this sym- bolic destruction scene. 'They'd better put them back," I humphed. -They put them back, having saved i individual step; it gave the original stairs a renewed foundation. With my favorite spot restored, I can concede that it's not destruction if the Grad's broad steps will last for classes to come. Our campus has a stability that cre- ates a picture of insulated life. Although the UGLI was ugly (you may not believe me, but they were thinking about declaring it a National sore Monument), it remained Aiding in hideous glory while I underwent renovation. At the same time, the Law Quad's serene beauty will keep you sentimen- tal enough about your alma mater to give and give and give and give (they start harassing you by phone winter term of your senior year). . At graduation (yes, I know that's at least four years from now, but I'm try- ing to give you good advice. Pay atten- E!), they will speak about the mark leave on the University - that's why the administration recruits the "leaders and the best." Since orientation, all you've heard about is the competition: Everyone in your classes knows something, maybe more than you. Toto, we're not in high school anymore. Wow. Now that we're over that, I'll give a hint. It's not what you can do for AWr University - it's what your Uni- ersity does to you. You'll come out a specialist on some field of study (hope- fully not botany) and on yourself, after four-plus years of construction. But wait, you know everything. You got to college, you're away from your parents, on your way to 21 and you know what classes you're taking this term - you just have to figure out which house to rush and what to fill in t spot labeled "Undecided." (You're tlisted for 12 credits? No problem.) At orientation some charismatic idiot talked you into walking through the fountain. Your trustworthy orientation leader told you that newly christened alums lift their black gowns and plunge toward Rackham - and then without pausing, offered you a bridge over the Salt Lakes, decorated with the same ivy that covers the Law Library. d ut I digress. So you walked through fountain, you braved the "Deep Waters." Don't feel sheepish. I did too. It seemed very new and exciting - you wanted to plunge into tradition. Triton's watery seat is a frequent resting place for me. I anticipate the resumed flow each var When I look ment 3 After walkout, GEO looks to better contract By Zachary M. Raimi Daily Editorial Page Editor For most of last winter, the University community was bit- terly divided. The administration and the Graduate Employees Organization were embattled in a nasty labor dispute. Throughout the semester-long bargaining, a strike loomed. As tensions grew, faculty and undergraduate students were torn between sides. At the last minute, just before a strike, the two sides reached an agreement. The yellow GEO buttons are no longer visible. The white picket signs have disappeared. But the ugly wound that divid- ed the campus has only begun to heal. GEO AND 'U GEO, the graduate student union, represents about 1,600 graduate student instructors, 1,200 of whom belong to GEO. Graduate Student Instructors, formerly called Teaching Assistants, teach most of the undergraduate discussion cours- es that accompany large lectures. GEO and the University began working on a new contract in October 1995, meeting a few times each week. Among GEO's 37 proposals, a reasonable wage increase and better treatment of international GSIs were most important. Although the contract expired Feb. 1, 1996, GEO agreed to extend its contract instead of striking - an act they repeated several times. By late March, both sides were still far apart. cGEO members voted to hold a two-day work stoppage. Most GSIs did not hold class during the stoppage; instead, they formed picket lines in front of University buildings. k"Our goal is to shut this university down for two days," GEO Spokesperson Pete Church told The Michigan Daily at the time. "It is not a protest. It is a picket line. If you cross the picket line, it's not a neutral statement. It's a statement against the individuals who are fighting for a living wage and a fair contract. It's a matter of social justice." GEO encouraged undergraduates not to cross the picket lines and the faculty to cancel classes. But the University said it would dock the pay of those faculty members who canceled class, exacerbating the ten- sion. CHOOSING SIDES Although many students did not attend class, some were annoyed by the work stoppage, especially with final exams just weeks away. LSA first-year stu- dent Allen Mikhail told the Daily: "I pay out-of-state tuition, and I came here for education," Mikhail said. "(GEO is) using us as pawns for bargaining. ... I GEO deserves commendation for its patience during the contract talks. J"N"T"N LU '/ Diy r' j ky , think there are other ways they could have shown their dis- pleasure." Some GSIs disagreed with the stoppage. Political science GSI John Squier told the Daily, "I'm not against GEO, but I think it's a very ill-considered decision on their part (to walk out). He added, "I think it's going to hurt CEO's credibility.... I agree with the fact that we should have a union, but it's a serious tactical error to portray (GSIs) as workers in a Chrysler plant or something. After the work stoppage, the two sides met with a state mediator and finally reached a three-year agreement. BETTER, BUT NOT PERFECT GEO deserves commendation for its patience during the contract talks. The union agreed to several short-term contract extensions while the two sides were bargaining - proof of its commitment to the undergraduates and the University com- munity. And, during the work stoppage, GEO never heckled students who crossed the picket lines; instead GSIs passed out brochures that explained the dispute and why students should support GEO. The new contract is better than the old one, although it is far from perfect. On average, a GSI was paid about $850 per month under the old contract. Such little money is hardly enough to live on, considering the high rent in Ann Arbor. CEO's request for a raise to about $1,200 per month was very reasonable - it amounts to little more than a cost-of-living increase. Please see GEO, Page 2B PERPEC NOPPORN KICHANANTHA/Daiiy LSA senior Danielle Frank shows her support for GEO by staying out of class and lending a hand in pick- eting in front of Angell Hall during the two-day walkout in April. (top) Protesters rally against the Code for Student Rights and Responsibil- ities on the Diag. (left) Wendy Ware (left), Tanya Mulhol- land and Matt Austin (right) work on an AIDS quilt. (above) JONATHAN LURIE/Daily Regents face weighty task: finding a president By Erin Marsh Daily Editorial Page Writer When James Duderstadt stepped down from his nosition as Iniversity nresident on July 1. input from students, faculty, staff and alums.w Though relatively few students attended, 7 their voices were strong and their contribu- tions valuable. The students made passionate 1I he next university resident should always Affirmative action benefits all ............... .2 i 1 0 ,E I I