STRIKE - MONDAY! See Editorial Page Y L S43au ~~2IAi1 THREATENING righ-y65 Low-42 Partly cloudy, cooler Vol. LXXX, No. 21 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, September 27, 1969 Ten Cents Eight Pages seneral stri e set for 11 onda 6 STUDENT VOTE: Regents reject io autonomy for Dearborn By SHARON WEINER Students at the University's Dearborn campus have over- whelningly voted down a special study committee's recom- inendation that the campus become independent from the University. The results of a referendum held Sept. 18 and 19 show 97.9 per cent of the students voting oppose autonomy for the campus and 88.1 per cent would go elsewhere if they were not to receive a University degree from Dearborn. The referendum was handled by the Student Referendum 'Committee in response to the report of a student-faculty- community committee estab- lished last November by Vice SPresident for State Relations rp"C1 and Planning Arthur Ross. rent stri ke By JIM IIAK B ERKELEY, Calif. (CPS)- Hopes for a national campaign for inure equitable apartment arrange- mincts were enhaiced this week as c B rkeley rent strike gainedj szble student support. Student groups picketed apart- ments owned by the Values, Inc. management firm in protest over 33 per cent increases. The com- pany claims the increase is due to tax reform legislation and "in- creased costs of management" Strikers claim the increase is not j ustfied. The trend in the Berkley strike The report, currently under con- sideration by President Robben Fleming, recommends expansion and autonomy for Dearborn.. "Although the committee was asked to base its study on t h e assumption that the Dearborn Campus would remain an integral part of the University, the Com- mittee found no strong reason for an indefinite continuance of this policy," the report states. On other issues raised in the report, students: -overwhelmingly approved keeping admission standards, cur- rently the same as in Ann Arbor, at the "same high level" instead of making them more flexible as the report recommended; approved expansion of Dear- born's graduate program: special session By JIM BEATTIE and IRA HOFFMAN Almost 2000 students called for a general student-faculty strike Monday at a massive rally on Regents Plaza. The students, who first massed on the Diag '.t noon, approved the strike instanding, cheering acclamation after President Robben Fleming told the crowd that: -The Regents "are unwilling to consider further the original SGC bookstore proposal, and -"They are unwilling to hold a meeting (to reconsider the action of the bookstore issue) under the coercive cir- S cumstances that now exist." Plans for the strike swung into high gear last night as hundreds of students combed the dorms, co-ops, fraternities and sororities gy to mobilize support, and printed leaflets and painted signs at strike quarters in the Student Activities lai Bldg. and Canterbury House. The three main organizing tactics launched by 35 membersI By ALLISON COOKE of an ad hoc strike coordinating committee include a 40,000 infor- Attorneys for the 107 persons mational leaflet campaign, a mas- arrested in the LSA Bldg. began sive organizational effort among planning their defense strategy students and faculty, and a fund yesterday as all but two defendants raising campaign through the were released from jail on $25 ball. weekend. About 10 lawyers so far have donated their time to researching Organizers plan to concentrate the case. Briefs are coming In leafletting on today's football themcasrs e co inry. game, Ann Arbor theatres and the from across the country, Diag. The attorneys contend that po- The coordinating committee also lice violated the protesters' con- released a tentative schedule for stitutional rights by refusing to Monday's strike. First, strikers let them be represented by counsel at every stage of the legal process. plan to picket the doors of 13 Police have charged the pro- tatm obuildings begningat testers with contention, a misde- 8 a.m. and to continue through- meanor carrying a maximum pen- out the day. . alty of 90 days in jail and $100 At 10 a.m., small discussion fine groups will be held for striking fn t ilmettmro students 1atb various locatin Defendants will meet tomorrow around the Diag to discuss the night to lay the groundwork for strike, the bookstore and other their defense. Monday morning at related issues. Music on the Diag 8:30, District Court Judge Patrick is planned from noon to 2 p.m. Conhn will preside over a hearing The focus of the strike will shift nthe Universietyfet injunction, at 2:15 to Rackham Auditorium, is thl inefct. where a Senate Assembly meeting Under the injunction, three peo- is scheduled to consider a faculty ple congregating anywhere on position on the events surrounding University property can be ar- the bookstore issue. rested. Finhlly, an8kst.rallssAfter the hearing a preliminary Finally, an 8 p.m. rally on the examination of the defendants is Regents' plaza is scheduled to as- scheduled for 10:30, followed by Tiro presidenits cn frmi t (c/iothier ((ibove) Reg, pots Plaza r ll y (belhc) : strike in gear (rig/it) i a major factor in determining indicated they desired greater the possibility wur a nation-wide library and research facilities rent strike campain Organizers umore than housing and recrea- of the Ann Arbor rent strike tional facilities: have discussed a national rent --Voted 193 to 134 to remain a trik- conference to be held before two-year rather than a four-year the new year. Ad hoc groups in institution. The Dearborn Cam-' Madison, Boston, New York, and pus is currently one of the only Chicago have begun organization schools in the country which offers activity at the major universities "upper-division instruction," a inl thoe cities. junior-senior level curriculum with Organizers for the Berkeley a limited graduate school pro- campaign include a coalition of gram: "People's Park" representatives -Expressed satisfaction with and members of the Radical Stu- the cooperative programs in engi- dent Union, a quasi-political party neering and business administra- on campus, tion. The students in these pro- More than 250 persons gathered grams alternate terms of class-j at the initial meeting for the room instruction with related campaign held in a local elemen- ; work assignments in business and, tary school basement Sept. 11 industry for which they are com- The Berkeley rent strike has pensated by their employer, been in the air for some time, "The students here want qual- now, and landlords have wasted ity education but are tied to no time in preparing for it. Spe- Dearborn by family or financial ial "radical 'lause contracts" ties," explained chairman of the have been amended onto many referendum committee Jim Van- 1