HOPE FOR AMERICA See editorial page LwF 41 41P :43a t SUN! High--67 Low--60 Sunny and slightly warmer Vol. LXXVIII, No. 36-S Ann Arbor, Michigan, Friday, June 28, 1968 Ten Cents Six Pages I i I r. Legislature gives 'U' $63.3 million By STEVE NISSEN The state Legislature passed and sent to the governor yesterday a Higher Education, appropriation bill which in- cluded an allocation of $63,272,392 for the University. The Regents, polled by phone yesterday, agreed on a University general fund budget of nearly $104 million for the coming fiscal year. The figure reflects an increase over last year of $4,111,394 i legislative appropriations and $4,310,448 more in estimated STAMLER CASE: NEW TUITION LEVELS Court drops HUAC constitutionality sut I Following are the University's new ant UNDERGRADUATE (Michigan residents) UNDERGRADUATE (out-of-state) GRADUATE (residents) GRADUATE (out-of-state) LAW (residents) LAW (out-of-state) MEDICAL, DENTAL AND PUBLIC HEALTH SCHOOLS (residents) MEDICAL, DENTAL AND PUBLIC HEALTH SCHOOLS (out-of-state) nual tuition levels. f Increase over 1968-69 last year $ 480 $ 60 $1,540 $240 $ 540 $ 80 $1,648 $248 $ 680 $ 60 $1,740 $240 Non-resident increasel$24 By URBAN LEUNER Co-Editor From Wire Service Reports A three judge federal panel dis- missed Wednesday a suit chal- lenging the constitutionality of the House Committee on Un- American Activities without ever getting into the constitutionality question. .R student fees. The $104 million figure reflects a change in accounting to in- clude $10.1 'million formerly list- ed under a different budget. The adjusted budget is $8.4 mil- lion more than last year. The appropriation is about seven per cent higher than for 1967-68, but is about $12 million less than the University request submitted last October, and $1.5 million below Gov. Romney's rec- ommendation. The compromise measure was worked out by a conference com- mittee between the House and Senate, each of which had ap- proved separate appropriations bills differing by $2.3 million. The House version listed the Univer- sity for $63.5 million and the Senate $61.3 million. The bill finally approved by both groups was about $325,000 less than the House figure. The cuts came from funds for the University's joint computer sys- tem and a decrease in the ap- propriations for the Flint campus. However, since the Flint branch has already hired additional fac- ulty and admitted 200 more stu- dents for next year, the Univer- sity was forced to replace the cut by using general operating funds. The budget includes a $4 mil- lion increase in academic and non-academic salaries. Faculty wages were given the highest pri- ority for the coming fiscal year, University President Robben W. Fleming said yesterday. Faculty salary hikes will be "at or better than the national av- erage" increase, Vice President for Academic Affairs Allan F. Smith said. Nonsalary items such as equip- ment and supplies were given the lowest priority for increases in See 'U', Page 2 Republicans question corto WASHINGTON (/)-The ques- tion whether a legitimate vacancy exists on the Supreme Court was raised yesterday and Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark was summoned to give his views to the Senate Judi- ciary Committee on July 11. A Republican group claimed growing support meanwhile for the argument that a "lame duck" President should not nominate members of the Supreme Court in the waning months of his' term. Senate Majority Leader Mike' Mansfield said last night that Earl Warren "might well" have to stay on indefinitely as Chief Jus- tice of the United States be- cause of a deadlock over his suc- cessor. Sen. Robert P. Griffin of Mich- igan, leader of the Republican group, raised another objection to President Johnson's action in naming Justice Abe Fortas as chief justice and Homer Thorn- berry as associate justice. The nominations, Griffin der clared, "smack of 'cronyism' at its worse-and everybody knows it." Both Fortas and Thornberry are longtime friends of Johnson. What brought up the issue of whether there is a vacancy on the court was the wording of Chief Justice Earl Warren's let- ter of retirement and Johnson's reply. Warren said his retirement would be effective at the pleasure of the President and Johnson re- plied he would accept Warren's decision to retire "effective at such time as a successor is quali- field." After its meeting, Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr. (D-NC) came out to say the argument can be made that no vacancy on the court exists. "There ought to be a vacancy before an appointment is made," Ervin said. "I don't think you can fill a vacancy until it exists." Another committee member, Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois, told reporters the question had been raised and he commented: It is a fine question. If no va- cancy exists, there is nothing to fill." Ervin later said Clark had been called to testify July 11 on the question. And he said hearings on the nominations of Fortas and Thornberry might start the same day. In a 2-1 decision, the judges ruled the committeemen, as Con- gressmen, are immune from suit while engaged in legitimate legis- lative activity. Dr. Jeremiah Stamler, Chicago heart specialist, and two others, had charged the committee with violation of their First Amena- ment rights of free speech and associatignand contended "con- tinued conduct" of the committee in exposing witnesses "to public scorn and intimidation" rendered the 1946 act authorizing the com- mittee unconstitutional. Although the constitutionality of the House committee has been contested before, Stamler's case is the first to challenge the com-- mittees conduct as a basis for ruling the enabling act uncon- stitutional. But the court held that in a conflict between first amendment rights and the doctrine of legis- lative immunity, immunity "out- weighs the similar protection of the First Amendment." Stamler's lawyers said they would appeal directly to the Su- preme Court to order the Chicago panel to rule on the constitution- ality. They hope to get a ruling by mid-October.' Sullivan said he did not ex- pect an "immediate victory" in the Supreme Court. He anticipates a long legal battle dragging from the Supreme Court back to the Chicago panel to a final appeal in the high court. SUPERVISORS: Two women declare candidacy for board $ 9 60 $2,140 $ 60 $240 Two cit The Regents yesterday, approved non-resident yearly tuition increases of $240 for undergraduate, law, medical, dental and public health students, and, $60 increases for students in the =same schools who are Michigan residents. Out-of-state graduate school fees were raised $248, in-state graduate fees $80.,- The size of toge increases marked a decision to abandon the ratio between out-of-state and in-state fees of 3 to 1 l ty women, one an econo- mist and one a prominent spokes-' man for low-income groups, an- nounced yesterday they will seek seats on the Washtenaw County Board of Supervisors. The Board of Supervisors is a legislative body which controls all budgetary matters for county! services. Mrs. Marjorie C. Brazer, a lec- turer in economics at Eastern Michigan University, will be the Democratic candidate in Dis- trict Seven, a predominately stu- dent district coinciding with the city's Second Ward. Mrs. Gloria Fuller, an inter- viewer in the Ann Arbor Youth! Commission Summer Employ-I ment program and part-time stu-! DISPUTE CONTINUES Seek radical orientation By ANN MUNSTER The dispute between the Of- fice of Orientation and two stu- dent groups seeking to conduct their own "radical orientation program" continues, despite a clarification of procedure for ac- cess to the freshmen issued Wed- nesday by the office, and the agreement of Voice Political Par- ty to that arrangement. , The two dissenting groups are Ann Arbor Resistance and People Against Racism (PAR). The procedure outlined by the Office of Orientation in conjunc- tion with Voice provides "One table shall be placed in the lobby of Mosher Hall and one table in the lobby of Jordan Hall. These tables shall be available to any student organization currently recognized by SGC." It also provides that the liter- ature of any recognized student organization will be made avail- able to the freshmen and that orientation leaders would an- nounce their programs. Tom Beukema of Resistance and Linda Johnson of PAR have complained that the freshmen are not being informed of activi- $20,6 00 to county aid Unit The Washtenaw County Citi- zen's Committee for Economic Opportunity (CEO) has been awarded a $20,000 summer pro- gram grant by the federal gov- ernment 'for recreation, educa- tion and job opportunities for low-income youth. Money for the program comes out of a special hiring fund set up by President Johnson last summer to help stave off violent outbreaks in the nation's cities. ties scheduled by their groups and that they have not received the leaflets, as they believe the orientation office promised.' Beukema also said that Resis- tance does not consider itself bound by the agreement between Voice and the orientation office. "Whenever we agree with the orientation people about any- thing, it seems not to work out," Beukema said. Beukema said Resistance hopes to confer with the other two groups involved and agree with them on some reasonable proced- ure. It also hopes to confer with officials from the Office of Orien- tation but has received no offi- cial communication from them. Resistance does not feel that the housing department policy 'w h i c h prohibits solicitation in university housing applies to organizations which are not com- mercial. Furthermore, it feels that the policy is invalid anyway be- cause of the residence halls' home rule, passed by SGC last spring. Orientation director Thomas H. Butts said, "It has always been the policy of this office With respect to student organiza- tions that any student organiza- tions wanting an opportunity to speak to freshmen could do so. We would announce all of their activities to the freshmen. "The problem came," Butts said, "with the last minute situ- ation of the groups involved. All of the organizations whose activ- ities form a part of the regular schedule called in advance, and there were no problems finding time for their programs." dent at Washtenaw Community College, will oppose John L. Teachout for the Democratic nomination in District Five, which coincides with the First Ward. The District Five primary will be Aug. 6. No Republican candidates have announced in either of these dis- tricts. Mrs. Brazer. was consulting economist for the U.S. Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations from 1961 to 1964 and consultant to the Washtenaw County Metropolitan Planning Commission in 1964 and 1965. She participated in a study and pro- jection of state revenues and ex- penditures for the Michigan De- partment of Commerce in 1965 and 1966. Mrs. Brazer also was a member of the Washtenaw County Citi- zen's Committee for Economic Opportunity from 1964 to 1966 and was its 'program chairman. She is presently a member of the League of Women Voters, the Citizen's Association for Area Planning and the Coalition for, Racial Justice. Mrs. Fuller was a local organi- zer and a participant in the Poor People's Campaign in Washing-1 ton, D.C. She is president of Humanizing Existing Welfare, an agency rep- resenting persons receiving pub- lic assistance, and is active in the Congress of Racial Equality, the National Association for the .Ad- vancement of Colored People, and the Black Forum. Mrs. Brazer cited her profes- sional and civic experience as givin her a "strong baekground in cdunty governrhent" but did not make specific suggestions for improving the present govern- ment which she said she will do during her campaign. Mrs. Fuller in her statement was critical of the social service aid program, stating that "Wel- fare families are penalized for their efforts to get off welfare; their allowances are cut if their earnings are over $20 per month." which previously existed. The Legislature for the past few years has insisted that out-of- state students should pay,75 per cent of the cost of their, education. This is the second consecutive year in which student fees have been raised. The fees are the highest among state-supported colleges in the Big Ten and the state,' and second highest in the nation behind the University of Vermont. The 1968-69 general operating fund, in which student fees are included, will make available an additional $550,000 in student aid funds. Total aid available to stu- dents from all sources will be ap- proximately $10 million in schol- arships and $12 million in loans. Automatic supplements will be granted students with grants from the Michigan Higher Education Assistance Authority. The University traditionally has attempted to compensate for tui- tion increases by providing addi- tional student aid funds. The 'rest of the student fees are added to the general operating fund. The gross total of student fees this year, before subtracting total student aid funds of,$2.5 million, will be $29.3 million, an increase of $4.3 million over last year. This year's tuition increases were lower on all levels than last year's execpt for the increase in in-state graduate fees, which was again $80. Last year, all non- resident fees were raised $300, in- state law, medical, dental and public health fees $100, and in- state undergraduates $72. President Robben W. Fleming said ,"We regret that it has been necessary, for the second consec- utive year, to make up the differ- ence between the funds appro- priated by the state and the amount needed to sustain ade- quate operations." Although the Regents again by- passed considering an "ability- to-pay" plan modeled after the one in effect at Michigan State University, Fleming said, "In the future, it has to be thought about." The Regents feel that increased aid funds are as equitable as the ability-to-pay provision, and wish to avoid the extra bookkeeping: they feel it would involve and its "questionable constitutionality." Postpone action on President Fleming r .' gun curbs WASHINGTON (AP)-The Ben- ate Judiciary Committee post- poned action yesterday on bills calling for strict gun controls. A principal sponsor called the vote a defeat and said it greatly weak- ens prospects for legislation in this session. By a 7-5 vote, the committee put over until July 9 any decision on legislation which would require registration of all firearms and the licensing of those who use them. Seil. Joseph D. Tydings, (D- Md), told newsmen, "It was a de. feat any way you look at it." He added that prospects are greatly weakened because the postponement will make it easier for opponents to filibuster or otherwise delay and kill the bill in the closing weeks of the session, tentatively scheduled to end Aug. 3. Sena~ Thomas J. Dodd (D- Conn), another leading sponsor, refused to concede that the delay virtually has killed chances for passage In this session. Three senators believed to favor stricter controls were absent from the closed session. They are Sens, Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass), George A. Smathers (D-Fla) and Hugh Scott (R-Pa). An opponent, Sen. John L. McClellan '(D-Ark) also was absent. Dodd told reporters the motion to postpone action was bffered by Sen. Quentin Burdick, (D- ND) and supported by Demo- crnats Sam .T rvin .Tr, of North COMPARATIVE TUITION LEVELS Following are 196'-68 undergraduate tuition figures, for state-supported universities comparable in quality or' size to the University. Mrs. Elaine Hawkins, relations director for the said plans for use of the Iin.it public CEO, funds The University (1968-69) University of Colorado Michigan State University University of Wisconsin Resident $480 $369. $350-501 $350 &m y Out-of-state $1540, $1217 $1200 $1150 1(i5A1 } } *; t r :"fi - S . 'f1 _r________f: . __________ :cf:__F >:y:?:.;:'r.::r~: : f; . I