The Michigan Daily Vol. XCIII, No. 11-S Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, June 2, 1983 Ten Cents Twenty Pages AFSCME VOTE TOO CLOSE TO CALL Union leade Lansing today properly cond University cler The Michiga of State, Coun ME), Jim Jarn charges were, could result in WHETHER national union wages and ben 1,216 vote, ag Union cries foul play By JAYNE HENDEL were challenged by AFSCME, the University, and the The almost even split makes the challenge votes rs said they will file a complaint in Michigan Employment Relations -Commission key in determining whether University clericals will. y charging that state officials im- (MERC). be represented by AFSCME. lucted last week's vote to unionize If AFSCME hadn't filed a complaint, a formal Those secretaries whose ballots were challenged ricals and secretaries. hearing scheduled for next week, would have deter- may be ineligible to vote under MERC guidelines if n Director of the American Federation mined the outcome of the vote. their jobs include any supervisory duties. There were ty and Municipal Employees (AFSC- A judge in MERC's office in Lansing will hear the 186 ballots which were challenged during the three- mer, would not say yesterday what the case and decide if a new vote should be scheduled, day vote last week, but 47 were resolved ina meeting but state officials said the objection said Shlomo Sperka, MERC director. 'of AFSCME, the University and MERC, and the a new vote. UNDER MERC guidelines both sides have five eligible votes were counted in the election. University clericals will have the working days to file complaints before the vote is THE NATIONAL union has campaigned on campus n represent them in bargaining for final. The University however, has no plans to file an since September, spending nearly $100,000 trying to efits is undecided. Last week's 1,217 to objection, said Jim Thiry, University personnel gain University clericals' support said AFSCME of- ainst the union left 139 ballots which director. ficials. .M11aVV Va Vl aaVaa vav avv vv vvr .i ... w.. aaaa vv va . Daily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS Shake it Tom Easthope, associate vice president for student services, wiggles along with a belly-dancer, the surprise guest at his birthday celebration at the 'U' Club yesterday. )nthe Ins ide ** Pnie.Hearings begin for .ocal News ......" " e The familyrofeiain civil rights re stration resister ryL k.rThe istYsss 1fase ci ,II s-lKst Michigan batsmen advance to World Series By PAUL HELGREN For the third time in four years the Michigan baseball team has been in- vited to that most exclusive of college parties - the College World Series in Omaha. The Wolverines invite was no freebie, however. Coach Bud Middaugh's blue bombers paid their dues by winning the Mideast Regional at Fisher Stadium last weekend. Michigan's first game is against East Regional champion Maine (29-14) at 6:10 p.m. on Saturday. The game will be nationally televised on ESPN, though it will be tape-delayed until midnight on Saturday. ALTHOUGH 10 of Michigan's 22 regulars have been to Omaha before, Middaugh still expects a few sweaty palms and knotted stomachs before the first pitch. "It's an impressive situation," said the fourth-year coach.s"Everygame gets big headlines in the newspapers, just like the (Detroit) Tigers do here. It's very easy to get swallowed up by it all." But when you talk to the players you wonder who will swallow whom. After Sunday's victory over Morehead State to clinch the Regional, the players were reserved but quietly confident of suc- cess in the upcoming World Series. OUR TEAM is gelling, we're peaking," said co-captain and leading hitter Rich Bair. "I'd like to think we'll continue to peak up ioto Omaha and through it." Pitching ace Rich Stoll was more direct in his observations: "We've got a See ON, Page 20 By HALLE CZECHOWSKI Hearings began in a federal court last week in an attempt to dismiss charges againat Daniel Rutt, the first Michigan man indicted for failing to register for the draft. U.S. District Court Judge Philip Pratt could rule as early as this week on one of four motions to drop charges against Rutt, a 21-year-old graduate of Hope College in Holland, Michigan. THE MOTION heard last Thursday asks that the charges against Rutt be dismissed because his right to freedom of religion is being denied. Rutt is a Methodist, but his parents are former members of the Mennonite faith, which advocates pacifist beliefs. Rutt cannot be classified as a conscien- tious objector under the current system, which does not give men an op- portunity to register as objectors before they are drafted. Rutt was indicted for refusing to register for the draft by a federal grand, jury in January 1980. If he loses on all of the motions for dismissal, the case will probably come to trial in late summer, said defense attorney James Lafferty of the American Civil Liber- ties Union. RUTT FACES a five-year prison sen- tence and a $10,000 fine if he loses the See DECISION, Page 2