The Michigan Daily June 16, 1982 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Wayne State negotiators avert layoffs By LOU FINTOR Specialtothe Daily DETROIT- Minutes before a state of "financial exigency" was to be declared yesterday-clearing the way for faculty layoffs-Wayne State University negotiators announced that a tentative compromise on faculty wage concessions had been reached. After returning from a closed executive session, WSU President Thomas Bonner announced, "The two parties (administration and the faculty union) have come to an agreement. If we implement the procedures, there will be no layoffs under the contract." WSU administrators last week said they would seek the financial emergen- cy declaration from the WSU Board of Governors and begin laying off tenured professors if an agreement could not be reached on wage concessions with the American Association of University Professors-the WSU faculty union-by yesterday's 2 p.m. board meeting. The institution's 1982-83 proposed fiscal budget of more than $147 million, containing faculty wage and benefit concessions of approximately $3.25 million, was tentatively approved by the board Friday. Final approval of the budget was con- tingent upon the completion of negotiations with the AAUP or the im- plementation of layoffs. WSU administrators attempted to use the declaration of "financial exigen- cy," which allows tenured faculty layoffs, to press the AAUP into an agreement when negotiations became deadlocked. "The possibility of a declaration did not produce the agreement, but sped things up quite a bit," said AAUP faculty negotiator and WSU Psychology Prof. Francine Wehmer. "The faculty will come to believe that this is a one- time response to a special circumstan- ce," she added. Following the board-meeting, Wayne State AAUP President Norm Kop- meyer said the agreement is "a See WSU,-Page 3 Daily Photo by ELIZABETH SCOTT SIGNS IN THE OFFICE of AAUP on the Wayne State campus show one of the options that may have been considered had the university begun layoffs of tenured professors under a declared state of financial emergency. Strike at hospital proj ect may end By BILL SPINDLE The strike which has delayed con- struction on the University Replace- ment Hospital Project for two weeks may be settled by Monday, hospital of- ficials reported yesterday, and some workers may return to the site today. All three of the unions involved in the strike have reached contract agreements, although one contract has yet to be ratified, union spokespersons said yesterday. SPOKESPERSONS for Teamsters Local 247 and Operating Engineers Local 325 said their unions ratified a See CONSTRUCTION, Page 2 Artist after 22 years cut d7 from local art fair By CHARLES THOMSON Jon Lockard, a widely-known local uP black artis whose paintings often por- tray blacks struggling against op- pression, had had a booth at the Ann Arbor Art Fair for the past 22 years. This year he won't. The Acceptance Committee for the fair has decided that his-paintings are Daily Photo by DAN DEVRIES "not acceptable," and although the THE WALL MURAL in the Afro-American Lounge of the South Quad dor- fair's organizers vehemently deny that mitory was painted by Jog Lockard, who will not be in this year's Art Fair See ART, Page 10 for the first time in 22 years. Britain regains Falkiands See story, Page5