Monday, November 7,1983/The Battalion/Page 5 Chrysler workers end 6-day strike been unable sckage bee .vaier. sell Fagem elan Hill offi lolines, di] Forest andfi Mississippi, s d ee Mason Is ish. ■e survivonv ish scene foil, plane wenidJ iable to Hill said. ! Around town Texas feuds topic of Nance lecture ole ce eats Manatf the role off ilence. Tht i Tuesday i ad isopento iminanders, t to be a pan t the problt responding the solutioc m he handle either good never ned revoke mo: mild get os id wait forbi more violent i’s lint IS e no more oo he first-be “Texas Feuds: The Grass Roots Historian Looks Backs” will be the topic of one in a series of the J. Milton Nance Lectures in Texas History. Tonight’s speech, presented by Dr. C.L. Sonnichsen and sponsored by the Department of History, will be held in 115 Kleberg Center. gfeThe Nance Lecture Series is presented in recognition of hisi achievements in Texas history and contributions to the Texas A&M history department. Nance joined the Texas A&M faculty in 1941 and was head of the department from 1958 to 1973. He is now a professor emeritus and continues to research and write about Texas history. PSonnichsen attended the University of Minnesota and received his doctorate from Harvard University in 1931. In that year he joined the faculty of the then Texas College of Mines in El Paso. He retired from the University of Texas at El Paso in 1972 and was named professor emeritus. He is now president of the Western History Association and is senior editor of the Journal of Arizona History. Group sponsors self-help workshop III A self-help workshop, presented by Student Activities Minority Director Kevin R. Carreathers, will be held tonight at 7 in 137 Memorial Student Center. The workshop, sponsored by the MSC Black Awareness Committee, is free and open to anyone who wants to attend. Topics will include: advice on “the care and feeding of a professor,” how to be successful in the classroom, avoiding inferiority complexes, and improving self-image. United Press International TWINSBURG, Ohio — Workers at the Chrysler Corp.’s Twinsburg stamping plant Sun day approved a contract agree ment ending a 6-day-old strike that shut down most assembly lines of the nation’s number three automaker. Members of the United Auto Workers union local 122 voted 804 to 293 for the contract, and officials said workers were sche duled to be back on the job for the 3:30 p.m. shift Sunday. Members of the union nego tiating committee had unani mously recommended approval of the agreement, which was voted on in nearby Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio. Some 3,200 workers at the Twinsburg, Ohio stamping plant struck Tuesday over safety practices, job assignments, sche duling and mandatory over time. The shutdown of the facility, which makes front doors and floors for all the company’s cars, forced six of Chrysler’s eight assembly plants to close because of parts shortages and 21,000 idled autoworkers. Chrysler Corp. and the UAW reached a tentative contract agreement Saturday following a 34-hour marathon negotiating session, said Warren Davis, director of Region II of the UAW. Davis said earlier Saturday that safety issues had prolonged the bargaining. “There was an llth-hour stumbling block on the part of the company over the idea of Chrysler Corp. and the UAW reached a tentative contract agreement Saturday following a 34-hour marathon negotiating session. writing ambiguous language into the contract,” Davis said. “But there was union militancy and determination to get clear- cut language to protect the health and safety of our mem bership.” Following the announcement of the tentative settlement, a Chrysler spokesman in Detroit said, “We’re gratified we have an agreement and look forward to ratification so we can get back to building cars.” Chrysler then released a state ment indicating production at the plants it shut down earlier this week due to the strike would start up on a staggered basis through Nov. 14 as sufficient components were delivered. Cnrysler said four of its U.S. and Canadian assembly plants would operate as usual Monday — its Windsor, Ont., assembly plant; Warren, Mich., truck assembly plant; and St. Louis Assembly plant Nos. 1 and 2 in Fenton, Mo. Chrysler indicated produc tion at the four assembly plants shut down earlier this week be cause of the strike would start up on a staggered basis as sufficient components are delivered to each. Thejefferson Assembly Plant in Detroit and Pillette Road Truck Assembly Plant in Wind sor was scheduled to tentatively restart on Wednesday, with the Newark Assembly Plant in Newark, Del., expected to do the same Thursday and the Belvi- dere, Ill., Assembly Plant on Monday. ge situation j with 30 pen said the cog lur phases: Defensive driving course offered lice arrive c lo and Im it buildint rspecially gla pie standing charade, the contaii is are made: in as small; Ml phone m are verified licationcan L - A defensive driving course will be offered by the Brazos Valley Safety Agency tonight and Tuesday night from 6 to 10 p.m. in the Ramada Inn. Participants can preregister by calling 693-8178 or can register tonight at the Ramada Inn at 5 p.m. The fee for the course is $20. The course may be used to have certain misdemeanor traffic offenses dismissed and to receive a 10 percent discount on automobile insurance. To submit an item for this column, come by The Battalion office in 216 Reed McDonald. the neeol Vow you know THESIS TIME Quality copies from rough draft to finished product. kinko's copies 201 College Main 846-8721 hingcanbewc : offender4 n, it’s on l :ation. it be an atiffi routofabaiii ages as post o control tw United Press International leans oi esu, . , , • police noU [. 1 he longest recorded reign of itside comply ponarch is that of Pepi II, a >w far lie'll lxth D y nast y Pharaoh of stop can tr naent EgyP 1 - His reign began stop i 231() g c when he was 6 ears old, and lasted 94 years. )art of the of '■ )w to imtnr se situatioili heATTENTION AGGIES!. gersai Ne e( j a place to rent for your sorority or private parties? Sons of Hermman Lodge is the place. 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