Why DE.. Seagal takes out the trash. See ARTS Page 5. IEIUU1UI TODAY Mixed clouds and sun; High: 60, Low: 39. TOMORROW Partly sunny; High: 84, Low: 42. Since 1890 Vol. Cl, No.134 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, April 16, 1991 The Michna 'U, offers GEO new pact, threatens T by Stefanie Vines Daily Faculty Reporter In a surprise move at yesterday's mediation session, University bar- gainers presented a new package to members of the Graduate Employees Organization (GEO) bargaining team. As a possible GEO work stop- page loomed, the University threat- ened to dock pay for TAs who par- ticipate in a walk-out. The union membership has en- dorsed a three-day work stoppage, starting tomorrow, if an agreement Students *worried about TA job action by Andrew Levy Daily Staff Reporter As the Graduate Employees Organization (GEO) embarks on a three-day work stoppage tomorrow, the question of undergraduate sup- port looms large in the minds of the group's leadership. Random students who were asked to comment on the possibility of a GEO work stoppage expressed a variety of opinions on the planned three-day strike. Whether support- ive, indifferent, or otherwise, the students worried about the poten- tial effect such a job action would have on classes - especially at the end of the term. LSA first-year student Kristi Wink was very supportive of GEO's action, blaming the inconvenience to students on the University. "Well, personally, I think that they have a very vital reason to do what they're doing because of how low they're being paid. It bothers me that the students are penalized for it, because we don't get to go to class," Wink said. "I think we're being penalized by the University, because they're making the TAs do this," she added. Alexander Tang, a first-year Natural Resources student, also supported the stoppage, but was somewhat more concerned. "I'm sort of disappointed that it comes (this close to) the end of the year and all of my classes are taught by TAs and I need extra help, but I do understand their point," Tang said. LSA Junior Christopher Johnson indicated his reluctant support for a strike, but expressed hope that the conflict could be resolved outside a job action. "Personally, I don't like the idea that they're going to strike. I don't like the disruption of classes. But I do feel that they have some legiti- mate gripes and I wish that they could be arbitrated outside of a (work) stoppage," he said. "If it came down to a strike, I would be supportive. I'm not *wholeheartedly enthusiastic about it... but all in all, I'd be in favor of a See REACTION, Page 2 is not reached. Walter Harrison, executive director of University relations, said the package calls for a 4.5 per- cent salary increase over the next two years, third-party arbitration of TA grievances by a neutral outside source, and automatic review for ex- tra pay for TAs who teach sections larger than indicated by the registrar. In addition to the new package, the University proposed a contract extension. They may seek signatures of all GEO members, especially members of the GEO steering, strike, and bargaining committees, to officially sign an agreement which would extend the current contract until the end of the term. Under the agreement, GEO and University bargainers would con- tinue to negotiate with state media- tor Charles Jamerson. If GEO committee members refuse to sign the agreement then the University threatens to dock their pay and tuition waivers by 1.5 percent for each day TAs participate in the proposed work stoppage scheduled for tomorrow through Friday, Harrison said. Chief University Bargainer Colleen Dolan-Greene said the University will give GEO until 3 p.m. today to agree to the conditions of the proposed contract extension. Dolan-Greene said the 1.5 per- cent dock in pay and tuition waivers was not a punishment. "We're not going to pay people who don't work. It is not a penalty," she said. Steering Committee member Michael O'Hearon questioned the legality of the University's decision to send letters to individual mem- bers of the Union without going through the collective bargaining process first. "It is a flagrant unfair labor practice because they are trying to get each individual member to sign this agreement without going through the bargaining team," O'Hearon said. "What they are doing is saying that individual members could ap- proach the Regents and bargain for us while we are bargaining with A pay Colleen and her friends," he said. "They are not allowed to have di- rect contact with the membership. They can only ask us to pass on mes- sages ourselves to the membership." But Dolan-Greene said the letter is legal. "It is not our understanding that we can't directly contact our own employees. Individual TAs have agreed to do particular services and they should report to us," she said. General University Counsel Elsa Cole refused comment on the ques- See GEO, Page 2 Ralliers protest i Playboy arrival on 'U' by Jeannie Lurie Daily Staff Reporter Students and community mem- bers rallied to protest Playboy's campus interviews for its "Girls of the Big Ten" issue yesterday at noon on the Diag. About 200 protesters listened to speakers criticize Playboy for the way it portrays women. "We're seen as defenseless, pas- sive, quiet ... accessibly sexual, just like bunnies," LSA senior Linda Rosenfeld shouted into a mega- phone. Many protesters cheered when Rosenfeld said, "We're going to show Playboy what we think of their narrow definition of sexuality." Feminist Women's Union mem- ber Cecelia Ober added, "They're trying to eroticize women college- students and thereby trivialize us." :ampus LSA junior Mary Rubio agreed. "Unfortunately, when a woman poses nude in a magazine, you're go- ing to assume she's not intelli- gent," she said. RC sophomore Trevor Hart said, "I think this is an opportune time to protest the objectification of women when a magazine whose primary purpose is to objectify women comes to this school." Hart does not believe men read Playboy for its articles. "They read it to see naked women and to lust after them," he said. LSA senior Greg Holowicki the articles about the Playboy bunnies include models' answers to ques- tions based on their intelligence. He acknowledged that he looks at the pictures as well. I think that women who think See PROTEST. Pae 2 A group of women gather to protest Playboy magazine's arrival on campus. They chant as they march to the Campus Inn yesterday. Playboy interviews attract prospective models, avid critics by Jeannie Lurie Daily Staff Reporter The telephone in Campus Inn room 907 rang about every five minutes as Playboy contributing photographer David Mecey and his assistant Ric Moore answered calls from students making appointments to interview for the "Girls of the Big Ten" issue. They told women already on the schedule, "Come right up!" The University is the first stop on Playboy's tour of Big Ten campuses (including Penn State). Around 4:30 p.m., several women were waiting for interviews. Music School junior Lisa Clinton said she was trying out for Playboy "just for the hell of it. You only live once," she said. Clinton said her friends were not sur- prised at her interviewing because she has al- ready done topless dancing and a nude ice skating video. "I don't look at it as pornog- raphy," she said. "It's more an art form." Clinton added she hopes to someday do a nude skating layout entitled, "Icestasy." Mecey and Moore will spend a week on every campus selecting three to five women from each school to photograph, Moore said. "We won't do any photographs until the interviewing process is done," he said. The interviews last about 15 to 20 min- utes, depending on how many questions the student has for the photographer. "We don't want to get to a location and have a girl say, 'I'm not sure,"' Moore said. "After the interview, (Mecey) takes .a couple of Polaroids to see how someone pho- tographs," he said. Women chosen for the issue have the op- tion of doing nude, semi-nude, or clothed photos. Clothed photos range from women wearing bikinis to street clothes, Moore said. Mecey said the first question he asks women is what year they are in school. "I like to get them talking about their back- ground and their ambitions," he said. He also asks about their feelings about See INTERVIEW, Page 2 KENNTH SMULLEH/Da-3y Playboy Contributing Photographer David Mecey is photographing a perspective model's face in the Campus Inn as part of the interview process for Playboy's "Girls of the Big 10" issue. Mecey is in charge of layout for the issue. i Turkey moves Iraqi Kurds to new camps U.N. peacekeeping mission to occupy demilitarized zone as U.S. troops leave ISIKVEREN, Turkey (AP) - Yesterday Turkey began moving thousands of ill and starving Iraqi Kurds to camps farther inside Turkey where they will be closer to relief supplies. Iraq, meanwhile, claimed that thousands of the refugees had begun to return home. But a Turkish official said the Kurds were still coming across the border and that their number could soon reach 700,000. township of Silopi, 36 miles inside Turkey. The new camp will have water, electricity and medical sup- plies. The tent settlement will have a 400-bed hospital, 64 doctors and 129 medical personnel, Health Minister Halil Sivgin said. The order to move the refugees to new bases represented a major policy shift for President Turgut Ozal's government, which previ- ously had kept the refugees in the mountains, saying it could not deal SAFWAN, Iraq (AP) - Several serious problems remain unresolved as U.S. troops pull out of southern Iraq and a U.N. peacekeeping mis- sion prepares to move into the buffer zone straddling the Iraq- Kuwait border. Iraqi police will handle law and order in part of the demilitarized border zone with Kuwait. Refugees said yesterday that is tantamount to q ;nding them to nrisnn or worse They are among 40,000 Iraqi refugees in Iraq, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, and some say they will try to prevent the Americans from leav- ing Safwan. ater, the U.S. Central Command said, including the 17,000 troops of the 1st Infantry Division of the VII Corps, which this week began rolling from the Euphrates River south toward Saudi Arabia. The DMZ stretches six miles into Iraq, and three miles into Kuwait along 120 miles of border. The head of the mission, Austrian Gen. Gunther Greindl, ar- rived Saturday in Kuwait, where he met with government officials be- fore traveling to Baghdad, yesterday for similar discussions. But U.N. peacekeepers are not ex- pected to arrive in Kuwait until later this week, and it would appear Some U.S. soldiers will remain temporarily with the refugees in the demilitarized zone -M7n1n ...H : t.5 I1 N I..an..umiA sl a ti..unn i I