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By NBC News and wire services
CHICAGO -- Chicago Teachers Union delegates will meet on Tuesday afternoon to decide whether to end a strike that has closed the nation's third-largest school district for more than a week and prompted Mayor Rahm Emanuel to seek a court order to stop it.
Some 800 union delegates representing the 29,000 teachers and support staff in Chicago Public Schools met on Sunday but continued the strike for two days so they could review details of a proposed new contract negotiated with Emanuel.
The meeting on Tuesday will be the second attempt by the union membership to try to get approval from delegates for the compromise deal, which must be approved by a simple majority to suspend the strike.
Union President Karen Lewis said no formal vote was taken at the Sunday meeting but a clear majority wanted to continue the strike.
On Monday, some union delegates were reporting strong support for the proposal. One delegate told NBCChicago.com than an informal survey he had taken of his members showed that "it looks like about 90 percent of them want to go back to work on Wednesday."
The outcome of the Tuesday meeting might depend not only on how union delegates feel about the tentative agreement, but also how they react to Emanuel's decision to go to court to stop the strike. A judge scheduled a hearing on the request for Wednesday morning.
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