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00:00:27 - HH's role in TA bargaining in 1976. 00:01:09 - Background of work stoppage. 00:04:03 - TA Stewards' Council. 00:05:00 - Who organized strike. 00:06:28 - TAA office on North Brooks Street. Membership, dues. 00:08:13 - Married TAs not less involved. 00:09:46 - Joan DeBardeleben, daughter of UW regent. Few left from 1970. 00:10:42 - Why math department has high proportion of TA officers. 00:11:38 - Chemistry department threat to German department. 00:13:47 - Some significant gains--right to petition; defining of term "TA". 00:15:02 - UW administration had moved quite a way from its beginning position. 00:17:00 - Bargainers rotated to give experience. Irrelevance of what was said at bargaining table. Krinsky's strategy. 00:18:31 - Faculty bargainers remained silent. Chancellor Young's strategy. 00:20:24 - Changes in TA union following strike vote. TAs angered by faculty pressure not to strike. 00:22:16 - Union more militant now than before strike threat. Mike Bleicher's silence on issue. 00:23:15 - United Faculty's position. 00:23:51 - Women TAs. Campus more sexist and racist now than early '70's; few blacks among graduate students. 00:25:20 - HH teaching remedial math. Calculus badly taught; classes too large. 00:26:55 - Need for public and students to have a say about priorities on campus. 00:28:49 - Attitude of TAs not in TAA. 00:29:33 - Engineers' participation in work stoppage. 00:30:37 - General unanimity on goals among TAA members. 00:31:16 - Support of other unions. 00:32:25 - Harrington's arrogance offended legislature, which wants more say in affairs. 00:33:22 - TA communication with people in state and in legislature. 00:35:24 - HH's background. Trinity College. Contrast of West Philadelphia and rich Chicago suburb. Why HH came here to UW (1965). 00:39:26 - First encounter with civil rights violence. 00:40:08 - Joins Americans for Reappraisal of Far Eastern policy. 00:41:08 - Not interested in student movement at first. Joined SDS in spring 1966. Became president. 00:43:54 - Bob Zwicker leafletting fieldhouse where deferment tests going on. Committee to End the War in Vietnam (CEWVN) takes over issue; SDS recognizes racist consequences of deferment. 00:46:27 - HH's draft position; HH's own research. 00:49:53 - Beginning of TAA. TAs face problem--by flunking students they are consigning them to Vietnam. 00:50:54 - HH got involved in summer of 1967. People from left consider unions reactionary and oppose union contract. 1967-69 TAA an educational reform organization. Impact of requiring out of state tuition. 00:52:26 - Strike vote. Muehlenkamp consulted Frank Lyons on how to strike. Fred Sherman, later a lawyer, joined. Instructs in how to picket, authorization cards, etc. HH begins to agree on necessity of forming union. Organization meeting has 90 people. 00:55:35 - Arranged meeting with Chancellor Young. Got Teamsters. Glenn van Kieran of American Federation of Teachers. Dick Katz showed labor support. 00:57:06 - Legal position of TAA. Young offered health plan. 00:58:36 - Election in May to form a union. 00:59:55 - Once recognized, set up union cards, dues etc. Began bargaining. First issue--bulletin boards in departments. 01:01:56 - Why HH dropped out of SDS in 1969. How TA movement came out of SDS. Reasons SDS failed. 01:08:22 - Young equates TAs with Reds. 01:09:27 - AFL-CIO position on TAs; Teamsters' position. 01:10:27 - TA Radical Caucus, its origins. Ineffectiveness. 01:14:52 - How HH, Marketti, Muehlenkamp and Fred Sterling came together. Steve Zorn. 01:16:29 - Marketti's background. How Muehlenkamp got involved. His present work. Walter Jowdy. 01:19:25 - Women in TAA. Charges of sexism. Split over elitism in TAA. How elitism got started. Paul Skallard. Opposing coalitions in 1971 elections. Outcome of split. Zorn group wins. 01:22:29 - Bruce Vandervort, his subsequent career. 01:25:09 - Union starts going downhill. Elitism still a problem. Ron Walker, Pam Weinstein, Phyllis Karrh, Jean Turner. 01:26:50 - Women's issues as TA issue. TAA couldn't help certain women's issues. Pat Russian and others leave for women's rights effort. 01:29:29 - New University Conference. Frank Battaglia, David Siff, other sympathetic faculty. 01:30:43 - Harvey Goldberg and his TAs. Math department. 01:32:02 - Educational Reform Association. 01:33:00 - Bargaining in summer 1969. Doremus, Neil Bucklew, Arlen Christianson, Mulvihill. Wisconsin Federation of Teachers, Jerry Marshan. Begin preparing for strike in fall. January 8th deadline. 01:34:34 - Doremus on issue of not firing TAs. 01:36:06 - Young's strategy. Nature of union bargaining. 01:37:49 - Faculty-TA committee. 01:38:28 - Fred Sherman giving legal advice. Loefler of Goldberg-Previant-Uehlman firm. 01:40:18 - Announce strike vote on January 8th. How they increased membership. Teams talking to groups. 01:41:56 - Concerns and reservations about joining the TAA. Avoid talk about wage demands. Question of whether strike would work. 01:43:18 - Getting money. $17,000. United Faculty loan. Failure to back TAs. Dislike of United Faculty. 01:44:00 - General disillusionment and anger that led people to join TA cause. 01:46:16 - TAA role in department-TA affairs. 01:47:57 - Non-TA grad students' views. TA tenure never a serious issue. Departments recruiting TAs and then dropping them--history department. 01:51:30 - Night before strike. Young's threat not to talk. 01:54:15 - Don Eaton (teamsters) and law firm begin to intervene. Legal services donated. 01:55:26 - Eaton proposes Feinsinger. TA not eager. Eaton puts on pressure for TA to talk. Power struggle in local 695, Eaton can't afford to push Teamsters too far. 01:57:20 - TA considers joining Teamsters. 01:58:37 - Feinsinger begins mediating. 02:00:10 - Threat of injunction and jail. Leaders welcome idea. Rank and file enjoined instead. Fine of $5,000. Paid three years later. 02:03:23 - Feinsinger's role in negotiations. Pressure from Teamsters to settle. Marketti's meetings with Young. 02:05:24 - Reasons for strike date selected. Maneuvers at faculty meeting. Barbash's role. TA film of faculty meeting. 02:07:56 - TA membership meeting for vote. 02:09:06 - HH relations to math faculty. 02:10:07 - HH comments on teaching. 02:10:49 - HH appointment to Board of Public Works and his work on it. 02:14:39 - Weakness of TAA in early seventies due to elitism. Problem being solved right now. Balloting to permit change in constitution to allow steering committee for leadership, no longer officers. 02:15:29 - Women are now participating on an equal level. 02:16:15 - Comments on present competition among graduate students for recommendations and jobs. Students who come to universities now are less socially concerned. Affects TAA. 02:18:12 - TAA not dead. Revitalized. Cooperation with Madison Federation of Labor, Wisconsin Federation of Teachers, American Federation of Teachers, and AFL-CIO. Only question is how militant its demands will be. 02:20:36 - HH's role now is as delegate to Madison Federation of Labor. Advantages of affiliation with labor unions is access to legal aid sometimes financial aid but don't usually need it. Suggestions about tactics tend to be conservative. 02:22:19 - Now that TAA has access to computer tapes of budget, next thing is to come up with criticism of budget. Thinks state legislature will be interested in what TAA has to say as a third party commentator. Don't have enough knowledge of university to judge budget themselves. Thinks recommendations will be in direction of putting more money into teaching. 02:24:05 - Audit was a sham. Legislature is afraid of University. Will be more audits. Should cut out special privileges. People doing research only should apply for research jobs so public knows what it is paying for. Students ask to take HH's section because man teaching other section (a math education course) is not a good teacher. Graduate students got department to take a professor off a course which they thought he was teaching badly. 02:27:28 - Comments on proposal to hire an undergraduate teaching staff. 02:29:02 - Comments on teaching in college of engineering. Works with minorities--building up math skills so they don't flunk out because of math. HH takes people in first semester calculus. His method. 02:31:46 - On remedial math courses. Has about twelve people. Teaches in class twice a week and then has office hours. 02:33:56 - Also lecturing on his thesis in algebraic topology. Advisor proposed it as a way of finding out what he has done. Three permanent faculty and two or three visiting faculty in algebraic topology attend; also graduate students. Common in math department. Every field has its seminar. Objects to harassment. 02:36:14 - On Anatole Beck. 02:38:14 - Army Math Research Center. Vote in math department in 1973. Excuses for keeping AMRC--that someone else would get money. Many faculty, non-math also, opposed but not willing to carry opposition further than signing petitions. 02:40:42 - Science for the People. Was a national organization counteracting American Association for Advancement of Science. AAAS spokesman for establishment, including National Academy of Science, government's mouthpiece. Was formed in 1971 just after TA strike and when TAA was trying to organize other groups on campus. Difficult to organize RAs because if had to strike would be striking against own research. So TAA raised question of purpose of research. Sent Science for the People pamphlet to all RAs. 02:44:33 - A lot of work done in biological sciences, agriculture. Sent aid to North Vietnam. Were asking for research on what could counteract herbicides. Group did library work in Ag library and sent copies of useful articles. Some work on cancer. Different campuses working on different things. UW did most work on agriculture. Chicago and Minnesota universities very active. 02:46:02 - No officers, met in people's homes. Mostly hard sciences and math, a few social scientists. Sociologists were ones who kicked off renewed attack on AMRC. Pentagon in '70's began to get demographers and economists to deal with guerrilla movements. Demographers in TAA learned that Tauberg and Winsborough were going to work for MRC. Picketed an AMRC symposium on demography. Realized lacked documentation. Paul Still in agriculture. 02:48:40 - In archives found all original papers pertaining to establishment of AMRC--reports, letters. Had been in Harrington's papers, HH thinks, not sure, and when he retired he donated all his papers to archives. So history from 1956 to 1966. At that time AMRC very proud of what doing. Science for the People worked with papers and produced book, The AMRC Papers. About a dozen people collaborated on it. Wrote it at Bonnie Acker's house. Did whole thing themselves until reached stage for printer. 02:53:24 - Summary was published in Cardinal. 02:54:17 - Question as to whether any protest at use of material, e.g. on ag campus when Science for the People researching re herbicide counteractants. People who do this sort of thing are better scientists, have wider view, think more, so don't get queried. 02:55:22 - Sapped a lot of energy, didn't continue here. But now in Boston area a group is querying genetic manipulation and may have restarted Science for the People organization. Five or so people in UW working full speed on this genetic manipulation. HH interviewed them several years ago. Two people from Boston came and gave a talk in medical school about dangers of that work, and in process talked to group and did reactivate it, but didn't come for that purpose. 02:58:22 - No effort to involve social scientists in new effort. 02:59:39 - Science for the People interested in IES, objected to what Reid Bryson doing but it was HH's project to talk to Bryson. In 1974, protesters were a research assistant, a graduate assistant, and--not sure but weren't faculty. Didn't want to get involved with Advanced Research Projects Agency which works with weaponry. Didn't want to be involved in using weather or food for a weapon. After HH published his articles in Cardinal (1974), Cap Times had AP story that Bryson's work had been used by CIA. 03:02:33 - Bryson a big name in security type analysis. Just because didn't get money, doesn't mean isn't doing it. And may have been funded by someone else. Doesn't matter whether made public. Information not useful if you can't use it. Only agencies with great power can use it. 03:05:12 - HH interviewed Bryson twice. 03:06:38 - Graduate students’ views about research, particularly in hard sciences. Many are concerned, don't know how to get on to science specifically for public as against army, establishment. 03:08:53 - HH's experience teaching in Baraboo. Was originally part of state college system. When HH taught there, 1972-73, it was viewed as a community college, bringing education to a community for people that couldn't afford to go to Madison or La Crosse. HH spoke on AMRC there, had some seminars--physics teacher and HH to talk about issues like Science for the People. Spoke to Bill Hart, Socialist, Congregational minister in Baraboo, has run for office. Spoke to women's clubs. People's reaction to him. 03:13:21 - Students there either too poor to go elsewhere, or nervous going to big campus, want to start on small one. HH enjoyed experience; agrees with Wisconsin Idea-- bringing education around to state. College was struggling for its existence. Rationally should be run with extension and vocational school but power struggle among three makes it unlikely. Thinks small colleges are a good idea. 03:16:01 - Ways HH would change campus. Would separate research and teaching budget. Should have both but know, who's doing what. Compulsory evaluations of all teachers, fire people who can't teach. Give teaching seminars first, give them time. Secondly, look into kind of research being done. Research is being done for companies. Saves companies a lot of money, taxpayer being ripped off. Engineering, chemistry, agriculture particularly guilty. 03:21:24 - Haslach came to UW in 1965. Transferred to UW from University of Chicago--had Master's degree. HH not involved in any politics prior to this time except for some civil rights involvement with voter registration. Stayed at YMCA at first. Met Nuel Mack. Got involved in Americans for Reappraisal of Far Eastern Policy (ARFEP). Members mostly students--teach-ins held. Faculty attended teach-ins--Professor Smail. 03:23:24 - About how ARFEP got organized and started. David Feingold main organizer. What policy of organization was. HH talks about Bill Williams’ book--very influential on HH's political development. 03:26:50 - About Math students being interested in politics--not unusual at this time. 03:27:55 - HH views about CEWVN, hostile toward this committee. Compares CEWVN to SDS. About going to first SDS meeting--HH wasn't sure about attending. SDS at this time was being closely watched. HH concerned about what outside people would say--not sure why. 03:31:34 - HH attracted to SDS because it was not single issue organization--concerned with what was happening in US, i.e. civil rights not just specifically the war. Many at this time thought war was temporary issue--would go away. HH background, educational environment, and how he came to be concerned about problems in U.S. HH's parents liberal Republicans. 03:34:05 - HH again compares CEWVN and SDS, specifically its members. Bob Zwicker member from Wisconsin--SDS. Members of SDS and CEWVN strikingly different types of backgrounds. HH refers to members of CEWVN as "Red Babies", members of SDS much more radical type students. 03:36:08 - Marty Tandler, President, SDS. HH President after Tandler, May 1966. Clark Kissinger, part of conservative wing of SDS, 64-65, instrumental in first beginning SDS at UW. SDS faded. Tandler revitalized it, 1965-66. HH talks about Tandler, Evan Stark. 03:38:37 - Personalities of people involved in these groups. Some women involved. 03:40:14 - People who were involved in community work on behalf of SDS to help migrant workers, Jessie Salas; blacks, Bill Smith and Marty Tandler. Community center that was established. Jack Kittridge. 03:41:21 - More about origin of theory and policies of SDS. Midwest and western chapters. Jack Kittridge functioned as regional traveler for SDS. National Committee of SDS--anti-2S deferment. 03:44:43 - Multi-issue vs. single issue; form that SDS programs took. HH relates this to activity on UW campus. 03:48:09 - Du Bois Club. HH not involved with this group. 03:51:47 - Again about differences in attitudes and personalities of members of SDS and CEWVN. 03:52:31 - HH comments about Robert Cohen, his ability to make practical, theoretical questions. 03:54:55 - Committee for Direct Action part of SDS. Meeting called to organize demonstrations. Demonstrations had already occurred on other campuses in US as seen in New Left. Sit-ins suggested and decided upon. Commerce and chemistry buildings. 03:56:11 - Cohen and others were arrested--HH arrested and convicted. More arrested following day at engineering building--this was then Committee for Direct Action was formed. 03:59:55 - Demonstration at engineering building where recruiting was going on--sit-in at Chancellor's office protesting UW involvement with Dow Chemical. HH describes division in protesters, what they were actually protesting re Dow's involvement with Vietnam and production of war materials. 04:02:16 - Cohen and HH bailed out by student-raised funds--not Fleming. Cohen, and Zwicker did in fact sit in at engineering after Hansen had told them that recruiters had gone. They went back later and recruiters were still there. About Fleming bailing out some who were arrested. 04:03:52 - Committee for Direct Action and involvement with community groups. 04:06:23 - As President, HH immediately severed SDS connections with UW. Meetings were held in private homes. SDS banned by Student Senate. Issue of being banned was argued in Student Court--SDS put back on campus--Student Court abolished year later. What was happening with WSA at this time. 04:10:38 - More about Zwicker and Cohen. Their political activity, why they left state. 04:11:45 - HH comments on general belief that motivation of student protesters was direct result of leadership by one or two individuals--this was common belief--HH disagrees strongly. Cohen and Stark gone before trashing began at UW. 04:13:27 - Disappearance of passive resistance and civil rights tactics after Dow. Theory of movement that replaced civil rights tactics. HH comments on effectiveness of SDS movement and its actions. About trashing that occurred. 04:14:58 - Percy Julian, HH and fall Dow demonstration. Assumed by everyone involved that they would be arrested--didn't expect use of clubs by police force. 04:16:31 - About Percy Julian, attorney in Madison. 04:20:45 - HH comments about Sewell. 04:21:29 - HH discusses John Coatsworth. Good speaker, involved in CEWVN. Adam Schesch, pamphlet on history of Southeast Asia. Comments on whether there were really any true student leaders during this time--how effective were they. Bob Zwicker. Frank Emspak, national coordinator CEWVN. Steering committees and power structure. 04:28:12 - General social situation at this time, largely responsible for motivating students to protest Vietnam war. Civil rights movement, 2-S deferment. 04:33:08 - About TAA. Mulvihill Report as a statistical report--used by TAA for propaganda. 04:35:31 - Jim Stern's seminars; James Marketti; attending Stern's seminars. 04:37:02 - HH anti-union at this time, TA's not calling themselves a union at this point. Shabaz proposal, School for Workers, Frank Lyons and Fred Sherman, Muehlenkamp and meeting at 602 Club--February. Authorization Drive, bargaining began in May. When Marketti got involved and how he was involved in beginning. 04:38:40 - Meeting with Tom King, HH, and Muehlenkamp in Young's office. Jerry Marshan, state executive director WFT, Wisconsin Federation of Teachers helped with beginning of TAA, bargaining sessions. 04:41:04 - More on Jim Stern. Bryant Kearl, Arlen Christianson. Young's reaction at meeting. 04:47:22 - About paying bus drivers with funds collected on picket lines. Don Eaton very upset about this. Teamster's local business agent turned off buses in Lot 60. 04:49:01 - HH talks about Minneapolis and effort to form union there. Bruce Vandervort and HH went there in fall. 04:51:27 - TAA didn't get strike support from Madison Federation of Labor because TAA not AFL union.