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The Daily Tar HeelMonday, November 5, 19901 1 Grievance "They are afraid of a breach of con fidentiality," she said. "I can see where there could be a (similar) problem with this also. There's kind of a mistrust of administration." SEANC members have suggested a third person who "has no stake in the process whatsoever" be involved in resolving grievances, she said. Com mittee members have not agreed with that suggestion. A Physical Plant worker, who asked not to be identified forfearof retaliation, said employees' confidentiality had been breached in the past. "If (the grievance is against) some one with legal experience, they can re ally bury that employee," he said. "If something happens, you can't cover it up." Lewis said although employees did not always agree, he always had been fair when carrying out the grievance process. Collin Rustin, director of the coun seling service, could not be reached for comment. Burnele Powell, chapter president of the American Association of University Professors, said the A AUP also had met with imittee members to discuss the Side. VELL , FiOUSEKETEERSTHIS WE'RE STRIKING THE TENT, AND SHUTTING DOWN THE TO HEAD INTO THE SUNbh.7 50 WHAT AM I UM.WE SUPPOSED 17" x i A SUBSTITUTE. ( U Mr m Calvin and Hobbes RDY FAIL DM. TO BE. W MORNING It Doonesbury HI,LACEYJTSJ0WI. HAVE YOU GIVEN ' HBLLO ? ANYMORE THOUGHT 10B5IN6 A 6VRJTZ INCANPIMT5? f IT OUT. Shoe Ptwe wrez . IF " " T m x'm mot jit H ti 1m acp ten op v)rm Right, mm A TcmreiBM WmW qy0"' 1 j THE Daily Crossword byFredTooie ACROSS t Fashionable 5. Unit of matter 9 Corn 13 Ness 14! " which will live in " infamy" (FDR) 15 Holm oak 16 USA word: abbr. 17 Substantial 18 Bladed tool 19 Doctor 22 Parent 23 Crucifix 26 Cuban leader 29 Fortress defense 31 Coins: abbr. 33 Like Swiss cheese 34 HST name 35 Soak flax 36 Shamrock land 37 Velvet finish 38 Horse 39 Had dinner 40 Noncom 41 Journal 42 de deux 43 Fighting force 44 Dons 45 Stow away 47 Public esteem 48 Toddlers' school 54 Mr. Kazan 57 Indian home 58 Whit 59 Ribald 60 Assumed name 61 Domini 62 Hatchets 63 Need 64 Pastures DOWN 1 Applaud 2 Residence 3 Chilled 4 Name a child 5 Worship 6 Ankle bones 7 Of the ear 8 Seniors' health program 9 Grand e.g. 10 Ancient 11 Pince 12 Eng. river 14 Houston player 20 Ventilated 21 Pretentious 24 Discards 25 Sound system nmhihition of lawvers in the new pro posal. Representation by lawyers should be an option that co-exists with the counseling service, he said. "Any process associated with a great university such as this ought not to only be fair, but ought to appear fair " he said. "The employees who have griev ances or employees who are in the least position to resolve disputes with the University will often be unfamiliar with technicalities of the system and the way bureaucracies operate. "The management at this University is quite sophisticated and used to deal ing (with grievances). Closer examina tion leads any reasonable person to conclude most employees involved in disputes do not bring the socio-economic muscle to the table that man agement brings to the table." Employees also have questioned if the idea to prohibit lawyers from the first three steps of the process was proposed by employees at open meet ings held in December 1989 and April 1990 or by the grievance procedure review committee. Ben Tuchi, committee chairman, said last week the idea originated in the meetings as well as discussions with lS OUR CURTAIN CALL... ROUNDING UP THE FREAKS SIDtbHUW. u 5 i nt . rlArr 1 nvi-s FOUND s3? GOING 1X) COULD STM H0VAE THIS WORKING? I uip.iJ.yES. I 4 HAVE, PEAR. I SUP- AND POSE IF THERE'S NO IF OTHER CAHPIOATE, ftP BLEOEP, BE IRRESPONSIBLE KXJ'U- YES. BUT UJITHONE PROVISO. 1990 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved 26 Inexpensive 27 Arteries 28 Most wily 29 Shabby 30 Fr. river 32 Unrelenting 34 Injure 37 Of mater and pater 38 Substance 40 Rani robe 41 Mountain lion -44 Book leaves 46 Approves 47 Monstrosity 49 Rue Paix 50 Grandiose 51 Musical sound 52 Lab burner 53 Temple 54 Important period 55 Far from strict 56 Clinch 5 lawyers, officials at other universities and employees who were asked to re spond to an original draft of the proce dure. The December meetings were de signed to get employees' opinions on problems in the present policy. The April meetings were held to give em ployees an opportunity to discuss the proposed procedure. At each of the six December open meetings, two committee members served as panelists. Committee members contacted last week deferred all ques tions about the meetings to Tuchi. Tuchi said he could not remember after which meeting the idea to prohibit lawyers was brought to the committee. McCulloch said he was one of 30 people chosen to critique an original draft of the proposed pol icy. He said the document he received, which was dated March 23, prohibited lawyers from the first three steps of the procedure. Jim Goldstein, a University accoun tant, said he attended part of each of the December meetings and no one sug gested prohibiting lawyers while he was there. McCulloch said he thought the meetings may not have been well-aa- ?SST Wt LUULJJN I nrrurw A UHPQF FDR THE tlPlt)E INTO THE SUNSET" BIT. BUDGET CUTS AND ALL THAT... A UJHAT'S THAT? I MIGHT HAVE TO RESIGN AGAIN. fR. OVERTAXES. ENOUGH! s I'M AM IN17I4PEM4A0LE PART OF 7WEPft30iM... SCADUIUMP 1SIEITITISI L I A L 1 0 1 IoIpIaUI I A IB IA IS IE a i h TTtTi 1 a I n I i fal I ii I n I n I I I u I AHI tl lUIUItlHI iu n p h mi I IE GO SI INI I 1CIHIEIS IoIaInItIeL IaipIsIeUtIbIeIyI SLEEP WSWHgV 1 2 3 p I 15 6 7 18 I 9 To" U 12- 13 TT" " 15 16 17 1 19 20 21 22 23 2 25 I 26 27 28 " " 29 30 31 32 33 "" 34" " 35 35 " " 37" """38 39 40 41 42 43 ""45 IT" 47" 48 49 1 50 " 51 52 53 54 S5 56 ""57 U 59 60 61 62 63 64 vertised. "Their (committee members') offices are close," he said. "You say 'no won der it went that way with the people that are on them.'" The proposed policy was scheduled to be reviewed Oct. 4 by the State Per Week sic human right to a clean, safe and sustainable environment. Bower was twice nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize, and he is author of For Earth's Sake: The Life and Times of David Bower. ' Another featured speaker is exiled Chinese student Li Lu, one of the leaders in the uprising at Tiananmen Square during the summer of 1989. He will discuss his role as a student activist and the violations perpetrated by the Chi nese government at 8 p.m., Nov. 13 in Hill Hall Auditorium. Guide the guide. Kim Dyson, a freshman from Hickory, said the guide was too limited in its coverage of classes. "I thought it was a good overview for the classes that were in there, but it didn't have a whole lot of classes in there, it just had a few," she said. "It needs to cover more of the classes." She also said she thought the guide may have been too positive in its de scriptions of courses. "I don't think they should downplay any of the classes, but they could maybe say, 'Well, this is a class you'll have to pay closer attention to,"' Dyson said. Joe Matelis, a sophomore from Rockville, Md., agreed the guide con tained uniformly positive descriptions. This did not prevent him from con sulting the guide to choose his classes, he said, although he did not know if it would be helpful to everyone. "It happened to be helpful to me FINAL WEEK -THE SINGLE MOST IMPRESSIVE MOVIE OF THE YEAR " Milled' cdossing 31 2 4:20 7 9:20 l.MMr.-i:".-i ELLIOTT ROAD at E. FRANKLIN-9S7-4737 $3,50 ALL SHOWS BEF0RE6PM a tram tlu director of ratmAmacnon mm 2:55 t t t it R7:05 S:22T o:uuj U BE jacoD s iaaa ef9:10 BELUSHi'CAINE PlrU1lc 2 fin nriiniA: g:92siBLING7:00 I.UUK 1 V AJL K Y f GraM Bridge Nightly 7:309:45 (PG-13) X ft OilA mAmAC pjofc m wmii ihm 1 7:15 9:15 Nightly pg-13) EpaujgjEPaEiiiSll 7:00 9:00 Nightly (pg-13) 9f00 4:30 Sat & Sun University Square Downtown Chapel Hill Universitv Mon-Fri 10-6 HOGHBALLS ToNighT 1 s'l OPTICIANS Saturday 10-2 sonnel Commission. The commission deferred its decision until December and sent the proposed pol icy back to the University. A series of meeting will be held this week to discuss the proposed policy. The meetings are: Dr. Joseph Edozien, ruler of Nigeria and UNC professor, will give a talk sponsored by the Association of Inter national Students. He will address hu man rights issues in his country in a speech at 5 p.m. on Nov. 14 in Union 226. Randall Robinson, executive direc tor of Trans-Africa, will give a keynote speech at 8 p.m. Nov. 14 in Memorial Hall, discussing U.S. involvement in and sanctions against South Africa. Human Rights Week will begin in front of the Old Well with the 14th from page 1 because it talked a lot about the eco nomics department and that's my ma jor," Matelis said. "Some of the other departments were slighted, it seems to me. I did choose one of my Econ pro fessors by what they said about him." Jj & PG-13 33fc .TTJ. 7;30 fer 9:45 ll INfl THE KONEY BAKED HAM CO. is in search of help during the holidays to fill our Sales Counter and Production positions. We have stores located in the following states: Alabama, Arkansas, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Nevada, North and South Carolina, Tennessee and Utah. Please check the white pages for information on UNC, STATE EMPLOYEES PLEASE QNEl This space provided as a public BLUE-WHITE GAME Student tickets are now available for the Blue-White basketball game. The game will be played in the Smith Center Saturday, November 1 0th at 4:30 pm. HOW TO GET YOUR TICKETS: ' Present your picture I.D., registration card and athletic pass at the Smith Center Box Office between 8:00 am and 5:00 pm. Students may also purchase guest tickets for $7.00 in addition to their compli mentary student tickets. BLOCK SEATING AVAILABLE: Student groups of 50 or more are welcome to send a representative to the Ticket Office with the group's athletic passes for block seating. Our 20th Anniversary Sale - November Copies XL 99(2 Oversize Copies 99(2 Color Copies the copy center Cpsn 24 t!curs 1 14 W. FrarMn St. 967-0790 price is for black & white, 8Vx 11, autofed copies on 20 99 copies are 8V4 x 1 1, Canon laser copies. 99 Oversize copies in black & white up to24"x36'. I Tonight, from 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. . in room 107 Berryhill Hall B Tuesday from noon to 1 :30 p.m. in Toy Lounge, which is located in Dey Hall : O Wednesday from 7 a.m. to 8:30; a.m. in room 1 1 1 Murphey Hall from page 1: annual Footfalls 10K run on Nov. 12, followed by numerous activities-' throughout the week. Panel discussions will cover such issues as racism on campus, the en dangered black male, civil rights in the -'90s, discrimination in athlete drug testing and sexual assault. Other activities will include slide' presentations. Student Union movies about human rights violations, a read-a-thon in the Pit and workshops to edu cate students about human rights abuses happening around the world. The principal purpose of human rights week is education, Whitney said. "I'm hoping that from what students, faculty and staff learn, from what they see and hear during the week, they will not only listen and take it to heart, but also try to apply it to their lives and also apply it to the community," he said. II It H J u the store nearest you. - - ' - - - f - UnibedWfcy service by The Daily Tar Heel. -li n n n A- i I
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 5, 1990, edition 1
11
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