KEEPING THE PRESS FREE See Editorial Page Sir i an !Iait LOOK OUT'SIDE High-3G Low-1 Fair and sunny, turning partly cloudy by tomorrow IViol. LXXX, No. 106 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, February 6, 1970 Ten Cents Eight Pages . f ILLIKE CUTS 'U, PPROPRI TIO REQUEST Ill *7 * * * * * * * * * * * tIW r iti A TI h TI Blacks present demands to Fleming ALLOT $75. M IU IE VMLLION KRAFTOWITZ 1 Ask more recruitment, 'U'financal support By SHARON WEINER and W. E. SCHROCK Black students presented demands last night to President Robben Fleming and Student Government Council for in- creased recruitment of black students and faculty, increased financial aids and supportive services, and expansion of the black studies program and center. L Specifically, the demands, which were drawn up at a mass meeting of black students Wednesday night, call for: -The admission of at least 9O0 new black students next Gov. William Milliken asked the State Legislature yes- terday to appropriate $75.7 million to the University's general fund for the 1970-71 fiscal year - $8.3 million less than the University had requested. The governor's recommendation was contained in his annual budget message to the Legislature, which called for total state expenditures of $1.737 billion. University officials were reluctant to speculate yesterday whether the lower figure requested by Milliken - if adopted by the Legislatu'e - would make a tuition increase for the 9 SC its1 1 ld. jH eoary By LYNN WEINER Student Government Council urged Central Student Judiciary last night to refuse to consider any case which may also be tried in any other court. Council passed a motion main- taining that prosecution in both civil courts and student courts; is a violation of the legal prohibi- tion against double jeopardy. The action was taken in re- sponse to President Robben Flem- ing's statement that he will at- tempt to prosecute in civil court I all those identified as participants in the disruptions involving Navy and DuPont recruiters, and the ROTC disruptions. In addition, Fleming said the fall, including 450 freshmen, 150 transfers and 300 graduate students;, -An increase in the proportion of blacks in the University to ten per cent by 1973-74; -Additional annual increases in this percentage until the propor- tion of blacks "shall approach, if not exceed" the proportion of blacks in the total state popula- tion ; -The hiring of several full-time! recruiters to aid this increased en- rollment; -The establishment of "an in- tensive supportive services p r o- gram" to serve the new black stu- dents; -An increase in University fi- nancial aid to black students; -The establishment of a black student center; --The establishment of a Uni- versity-wide appeal board to deal with financial aids; -The revamping of the parents confidential statement to allow' for "hidden costs"; -The granting of tuition wavers: to in-state black students to be admitted under special programs. The statement also supports next academic year necessary. However, Vice President ;4 Smith admitted as for back as last summer that prospects - -for avoiding a tuition increase for next year' are not good. A hike in student fees will be * -necessary if the administration is - 4 unable to attract enough revenue from other sources, including the :. state, to cover items ultimately budgeted for expenditure from the "general fund. Since the state appropriation usually provides nearly two-thirds ofithe general fund's income, its size is considered by admninistra- tors to be crucial in determining whether or not to increase tuition. The University's appropriation request for 1970-71 projected a general fund operating budget totaling $126.7 million-an in- crease of $15.5 million over this year. The state was asked to allo- cate $84 million to the general fund. The state appropriation would provide $15 million of the $15.5 million increase. However, the governor, who -Daily-Randy Edmonds made sharp reductions in appro- Of, lfei' SOUI'ly views SDS ~ttC3priation requests for many state programs, recommended $75.7 million for the University-an in- crease of only $6.7 million. The governor also recommended prevent SDS lock-in an allocation of $6.3 million for capital construction - about half of the capital outlay requested by the University for 1970-71. The governor's capital outlay bk recr ter leaves:: request would providefofar con- . .J struction of only one new project -a building to house the archi- Lecture and design college. The balloons, played with toys, and ilis message was greeted by The decisioni to bring police to ter yand desin ll. Te 1 I first year's construction will be sang. cries of "where's your warrant?" the SAB was made by Ann Arbor Others held paper in fronit of a and assorted epithets. Police Chief Walter Krasny who 'o video tape recorder which was be- After another five minutes, a said, "I felt it was in the interest The other capital outlay re- inlg us5e d to take identification {girl camne into the room and an- of society to have police there." quests submitted by the governor films. nounced there w e r e fifteen or Several police remained at the include: At 10:45 a.m. one of the officers twenty armed police in the base- SAB throughout the day. -$1 million to renovate the radioed for a unit to stand by out- ment. During the afternoon, a group General Library; side the SAB. A few minutes later The protesters decided to leave of about 40 blockaded the door of -$150,000 to begin long range he announced to the demonstra- the Texaco recruiter in West planning for modernization and tors, that they would have to leave muttering regrets at not having Engineering Bldg. for approxi- expansion of the Medical Center. the area or be arrested for con- been able to get to the recruiter mately 15 minutes, then left with-! -$150,000 for renovation of the tention. and promising to be back today. out incident. -Natural ScienceoBldg.t --$1.7 million to continue con- .(r;struction of a new Modern Lan- XT' 1 : guages Bldg. -$825,000 to complete con- Police for Academic Affairs Allan LANSING IB - Gov. Wil- liam Milliken recommended to the State Legislature yes- terday a $1.737 billion general fund budget for 1970-71, say- ing his figures reflected a sagging economy and antici- pated strikes in the auto in- dustry this fall. The proposals marked a $197.1 million increase over current spending, with $35 million desig- nated for new programs. But the increase served notice of economic slump, totaling only 12.8 per cent more than this year's budget, compared with average 19 per cent annual increases over the last five years. More than 52 per cent - $898.4 million - of Milliken's proposed budget would go for education, $334 million for welfare and $208.8 million for mental health. Milliken warned lawmakers that his general f u n d budget faced tightening to the point of "aus-" terity," however,if they. failed to raise $143 million in additional revenue this year. Budget director Glenn S. Allen Jr. said such a failure would elim- inate a budgeted $17.6 million surplus and could throw the state $125 million in debt, But Milliken said that before that happened he would have "no alternative but to submit to the Legislature a formal austerity budget,,.., "Under the state constitution, spending in any given year may not exceed available revenues and accumulated surplus," Milliken noted. "In the proposed budget, existing resources are $143 million less than. proposed expenditures." Without increases, the Governor said, the state would have to cut funds from such. programs as school aid, university and com- munity college grants and pay- ments to senior citizens and veter- ans-programs which he said ac- count for 80 per cent of state expenditures. The Governor again called for the. passage of revenue bills pro- posed in his earlier (State of the State) message. They included a four cent hike in the seven-cent- a-pack cigarette tax, closing so- called "loopholes" in the sales and use tax exemption rolls, and par- :tial elimination of the property tax credit against the income tax. names of those identified would "our brown brothers and sisters, be given to literary college Dean the Ohicanos, in their more than William Hays for possible dis- ireasonable demands for one re- , " ciplinary action by the college's cruiter and fifty Chicanos stu- administrative board, and that he dents on campus this fall.'' would bring charges against Stu- Fleming said last night he had By LiNDSAY CHANEY dents for a Democratic Society not sufficient time yet to evaluate i A Chase Manhattan Bank re- before CSJ. the proposals. Student Govern- cruiter left his office in the SAB Fleming said Wednesday that ment Council has endorsed similar under police protection yesterday bringing charges in both civil ;proposals in the past morning in the face of a threat- courts and the literary college "We do not expect the Univer- ened SDS lock-in. 4 would not constitute double jeo- sity to procrastinate and subcom- . pardy, and said he could cite mittee these demands," says the The recruiter left on orders statutes defending his position, statement. "They are for imme- from his New York office more SGC also resolved to solicit diate and positive action." than an hour before the demon-' SCm a loresolve n to slict "The proposals drawn u are; strators arrived. tram the iterary cortege and the LSA Student Assembly statements that they will not "collaborate with Fleming's repression." In addition, Council endorsed the picketing of Fleming's house today at noon. The action is spon- sored by the.. "Ann Arbor 107" in protest of "discrimination against the poor*" in terms.. of possible scholarship loss for those convict- ed in district Court for conten-' tion in the Sept. 25 LSA Bldg. sit-in, the minimal reasonable demands we can make of the University," SGC member Darryl Gorman, a group spokesman, said last night. "I see no reason," he said "why these demands shouldn't be in- cluded as an integral part of the University's general budget fund." Meanwhile police remained at the Placement Service to confront athe demonstrators when they came. An SDS spokesman later claim- ed a victorybaed on the On today's. Page Three . SGC asked Fleming not to turnj the names of those involved in: non-academic discipline in to state and federal authorities so that their scholarships would not be revoked. . I. In other action, Council con- demned the i.se of aca lemic pen- alties for any non-academic of- fenses by students, specifically the withholding of academic credit as! penalty for withholding of rent. U.S. planes continue to bomb North Vietnam in re- taliation for anti-aircraft attacks. Another delay in th. Senate on confirmation of Judge G. Harrold Carswell to the Supreme Court draws criti- cism from GOP leader Sen. Hugh Scott. sumption that Chase Manhattan' "(3 ""j had been intimidated enough to l 1 iJ (.,'; withdraw its recruiter. Flemin on b laws disute None of the 12 students who had appointments with the re-,l cruiter yesterday were interviewed. By MARTIN IIIRSCIIMAN Under the plan, a, student-fac- until the bylaws were approved Student and faculty representa- ulty policy board would control because, until then, he could not When the SDS group of about tives gave generally optimistic the internal functions of the tell candidates for the post what 40 entered the Placement Service assessments y e s t e r d a y. of the office. their functions would be. in the SAB yesterday morning, chances for an early agreement This plan had been included n SGC had responded by charg- they were toldphemb tw aspnoce- on the Regents bylaws dispute, the bylaw proposal ratified by SGC ing Fleming was "blackmailing" meny wo toldvem aitt wastnec after a closed-session meeting and Senate Assembly last summer, them into accepting the Regent's sary to have an appointment to with University President Robben Fleming, however, s a I d no draft of the bylaws. However, Mc- see he rcruier.Fleming on the issue. agreement on control, of the OSS .Lauin semd or saifd After a few arguments with the Stu d e n t Government Council adreeentn achieve . e s he hdyesterday with what he said he be- police, it was apparent there would President Marty McLaughlin said mad it cear he se had , be no chance to see the recruiter. Fleming had surprised him by ap- made it clear to those present thatlieved tas the president sintent The group still under the im- parently accepting a student pro- that section of the bylaws andI pression that the recruiter was in posal on the section of the bylaws that he would have to confer with soon. one of the back rooms then spread dealing with control of the Office other members of the administra- out a giant monopoly board, broke of Student Services (OSS .Lionbefore any proposal could be rr ' T__.._ _;acepted. ; in acc. J IBnE ATION T When the Regents considered that section of the bylaws last -r- struction of the new Dental Bldg. Te-$6.T 7million increase in the sta.(e appropriation to the Uni- versity's general fund-if adopted by the Legislature-would cover little more than a projected in- crease in salary and staff benefits costing $6.45 million. The bulk of this projected expenditure would cover a seven per cent increase in faculty salaries, which is near the' top of the administration's pri- ority list. The remaining $8.5 million of requested increases in the general fund operating budget w o ul d include expenditures for: -A variety of programs in the See GOV., Page 3 WOMEN'S L] uses Judge Hoffman 50 meet to discuss child center By ANITA CRONE Some fifty students prepared last night to present President Robben Fleming with demands for free child day care facilities available to all University em- ployes, students and faculty. The Women's Liberation's child-care committee, which sponsored the meeting, plans to present its demands to Flem- ing next Thursday. Besides the establishment of the day-care center to be financed by t h e T~niversitWu the~ rbemo incrl incltnde sentation of demands with dis- cussions with Ann Arbor work- ing mothers not connected with the University. Speakers pointed out that the lack of facilities in the Ann Ar- bor-Ypsilanti area. At the pre- sent time there are only four types of child care facilities available, speakers claimed. These include private b a b y- sitters, licensed child care fa- cilities, nursery schools and li- censed home mothers. These types of facilities not only are month, they suggested that policy for the office should be set "joint- ly" by the student-faculty board and the vice president for student services. The suggestion was one of a number ofgchanges made by the Regents which have drawn strong' criticism from SGC. Prof. Joseph Payne, chairman of the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA> , said the general attitudes and I statements which SGC members and Fleming have expressed have< made him optimistic that an; agreement on the policy board. question would be reached. Payne said Fleming had told the, group that if the vice president re- By JENNY STILLER lawyers Leonard Weinglass a n d Special To The Daily William Kunstler on a motion to Conspiracy seven defendant restore Dellinger's freedom. Jerry Rubin yesterday accused Hoffman cut Weinglass off in the federal government of "try- the middle of a sentence to deny ing to pick us off one by one," the motion, and refusing to let and vowed that the six defend- Kunstler even begin h is argu- ants still out of jail would n p t ments. bow to "intimidation" by J u d g e "This is disgraceful," Kunstler Julius J. Hoffman. shouted, jumping to his feet. Defendent Rennie Davis added "You're revoking Mr. Dellinger's a call for a week of demonstrations bail because he made a speech at against the court system Feb. 14 Marquette University."3 to 22. Kunstler was referring to the He said the demonstrations judge's threat last Thursday to re- would include a week of protest at voke the defendants bail because law schools and court houses he had made a speech in Mil- ___.. .- _l______.i _ L ltnvln ~~im~ttc -onnCi- of intimidating court defendants successfully to persuade Hoffman to. sign a formal order revoking Dellinger's bail so that they could start the appeals process. The judge delayed until late in the afternoon, thus assuring the de- fendant of at least one more night in Cook County Jail. Judge Hoffman ordered the de- fendants and their lawyers to re- frain from mentioning Dellinger's incarceration before the jury, but at least one defendant, John Froines, disobeyed. In response to a comment by the judge about "agitation" at the defense table Froines replied ': :.