;. VOTER REGISTRATION See editorial page : ' It IIE 41F :43 NEGOTIABLE See Today for details Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXX, No. 36 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, October 17, 1979 Ten Cents Twelve Pages BILL ROLLS THROUGH HOUSE, 100-1 Profs' paychecks to be public I IIkitihe peopiletI10h Oppose this Itol(1 them - seires tip as the priro(te sec tor, but. thevyre t01. 'Iii e y re iite puliblic sector.' -Joseph Forbes, 1ouse Majority- Floor eater By ALISON HIRSCHEL The state Legislature quietly settled a long-time campus debate yesterday afternoon with the passage of a bill which forces all of Michigan's public universities to release professors' salaries. State Senate Bill 504 breezed through the House of Representatives by a vote of 100-1, virtually assuring the approval of Gov. William Milliken. If Milliken signs the measure, the public's right to know will take precedence over the right to privacy of state-paid faculty. THE UNIVERSITY'S current policy is to release minimum, maximum, and average salaries by department, program, or job classification. Salary studies broken down by the race and sex of employees have also been made public. But through a decade of arduops debate, the admhinistration has never made a professor'spaycheck public on the grounds that it would be an invasion of privacy. "THE UNIVERSITY has always released all the information anyone needs to judge the wisdom of our ex- penditures," said Interim President Allan Smith. "I don't know why a public employee 'should be second class in terms of privacy," Smith added. And many professors have agreed. "I oppose it on the grounds that I don't think it really accomplishes anything," said Richard Corpron, a faculty mem- ber in the Dental School and chairman of the faculty Senate Assembly. No university in the state has released faculty salaries of its own 'Tlie tnirersity has re- leased all the intformtation a (tit nole needs tO jufige the Icisoi(n( of ur exp)en(i- lures. . . . I (OntlI knolw uIh .a hpubtic e plovee Should1(1be second(1 (lass ii t('rtis o f pritratli.' -In terim Presilent . Allanfl Smithr See LEGISLATURE, Page 9 Report clears Carters in peanut warehouse probe WASHINGTON (Reuter)-President Carter and his brother Billy were officially cleared yesterday of any wrong- doing in the operation of their peanut business. Special investigator Paul Curran, releasing a final report at a press conference, said no charges would be filed against anyone involved in the case. THE REPORT climaxed a seven-month investigation that included four hours of secret testimony at the White House by President Carter himself. It was expected to defuse any potential damage to Car- ter's political fortunes as he prepares for an announcement on Dec. 4 on his plans for next year's presidential election. The White House welcomed the report, noting that it had said "from the beginning of the investigation, that no monies ,ere diverted from the Carter warehouse into the Jimmy darter presidential campaign or from the campaign into the 4rehouse. "WE ARE VERY pleased by the special counsel's fin- dings," a White House statement said. The probe focused on allegations that nearly $7 million in loans made to the Carter warehouse by the National Bank of Georgia, once headed by the president's friend Bert Lance, had been illegally diverted to Carter's presidential campaign in 1976. Lance was himself the subject of a separate investigation that led to an indictment charging banking irregularities. His trial is expected to start in January. CARTER AND HIS brother Billy, who managed the family business in Plains, Georgia, had categorically denied that any loans from the National Bank of Georgia were diver- ted to Carter's presidential campaign. Curran, in a statement accompanying his report, said there was no evidence to establish that President Carter committed any crimes. "My overall conclusion set forth in gr'eat detail to the At- torney General is that, based on all the evidence and the ap- plicable law, no indictment can or should be brought against anyone," he said. "None will be filed." CURRAN SAID there was no evidence whatsoever that any funds were diverted from the warehouse into Carter's campaign or from the campaign into the warehouse. "Every nickel and every peanut has been traced into and out of the warehouse, and no funds were unlawfully diverted in either direction," he said. Curran, a Republican Party supporter, was named Special Counsel to head the investigation in March by then Attorney-General Griffin Bell Curran said President Carter was questioned under oath for four hours in the White House last month. He said the president had cooperated totally in the investigation and given investigators all documents that had been subpoenaed. His report released to the public yesterday was an abridged version of a more extensive one he made earlier to Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti. Curran said the investigation had been thorough. "When Judge Bell announced my appointment, I said I would do everything that had to be done to conduct this in- vestigation thoroughly," he said. Doily Photo by MAUREEN O'MAI BETTY DAVIS, One of the mothers who filed the Black English suit, explains that dialect differences cause learning problems, as daughters Theresa (left), and Jacqueline look on. Mothers encouraged U.S. Army recruits: Hollow helmets? WASHINGTON (AP)-About six out of 10 young men recruited into the Army last year "were below- average in intelligence," the Army's top training general said yesterday. Gen. Donn Starry, head of the Ar- my Training and Doctrine Com- mand, told reporters this has been offset to some extent by what he called the "greater motivation" among these soldiers to serve and succeed. "WE'RE GETTING our share of the population who are less smart," Starry said, noting reports that college entrance test scores also have been declining. Starry, who supervises the training of some 200,000 recruits a year, said volunteers with below averagementality are trainable, but that it takes more time to teach them certain mechanic-type and similar.jobs. . This, he said, has increased bur- dens borne by unit commanders, who must continue the teaching process after they receive below standard recruits from basic and in- dividual training base output. STARRY DID not have available a comparison of the mental qualification levelswin the present all-volunteer force with those of the See U.S., Page 5 f k t r C as Black English plan By MARIANNE EGRI children who live on the city's east side For two years, three mothers fought say they never expected the Black for their childrens' education. English issue alone to keep their case in Throughout the lengthy federal court court. Originally, the suit made battle, which came to trial last July, stronger allegations against the they missed work to make scheduled education of black children in Ann Ar- and re-scheduled court sessions lacked bor. but war begins schools failed to take into account cultural, social, and economic differen- ces between poor, black children and other children who attend the Martin Luther King Elementary School on Waldenwood Lane, just north of Geddes and west of U.S. 23. These, however, were thrown out of court. But despite the loss on these issues, the plaintiffs say they feel the lengthy litigation was worthwhile because Federal District Court Judge Charles See MOTHERS, Page 2 the support of their own community, and were plagued by reporters. But they won. I The plaintiffs in the Black English case, three single mothers and their 11 TODAY, THE school system will begin its plan to remedy the problem of teaching speakers of Black English tA read standard English. The initial suit, filed in July 1977, cited five other points charging the 'U' quest for state funds begins By JULIE ENGEBRECHT The University's executive officers will ask the Regents at this week's meeting to seek an increase of $30.4 million in state appropriations for the coming fiscal year. Last year, the University went to Lansing with a request for a $158 million allocation, an increase of $24 million from the previous year. In July the University received $146 million. THE OFFICERS would now like to see that alloction rise to $176 million in the 1980-81 budget, a 12.9 per cent in- crease over this year's money. The state provides just under 60 per cent of the University budget. That figure has remained relatively steady over the past several years. Student fees account for about 30 per cent of the University's budget. INCLUDED IN the suggested hike for next year is an 11 per cent program for faculty salary raises, though that figure falls short of the 16 per cent increase requested by the Committee on the Economic Status of the Faculty (CESF). CESF Chairman, Harvey Brazer, an economics professor, said faculty members are under increasing pressures due to inflation. He said an 11 per cent increase in faculty salaries while the rate of inflation is 13 per cent is "inadequate." "That isn't an increase, it's a two per cent cut," he said. Brazer also said economic forecasts predict the economy should enjoy a healthy recovery in fiscal year 1981. He said he did not believe to ask for a 16 per cent hike in faculty salaries would be unreasonable in that light. THE CESF report also states faculty salaries should be the top priority in next year's budget, in contrast with the past several years. "Clearly other claims in the budget have a higher priority," Brazer said. See 'U', Page 9 Andrew Young discussed for MSU lecture post From wire and staff reports CHICAGO-Former United States Ambassador to the United Nations An- drew Young has received an unofficial offer to teach at Michigan State University (MSU), according to Robert Green, dean of the College of Urban Development at MSU. Green said yesterday that the univer- sity is on the verge of making a decision on whether to ask Young to work as a visiting faculty member early next year. Green made the offer while Young was addressing about 5,000 people at the MSU auditorium Sunday. ACCORDING, TO MSU Provost Clarence Wender, Young would likely lecture for a course on international relations or a course on urban affairs. While neither salary nor other specific arrangements have been discussed, Wender said, the school is expected to have a final decision from Young within a month. Green worked with Young and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in late 1950's. Brazer faculty salaries inadequate Y campus fixture Dr. Diag by bellowing familiar phrases ("I am running for town council so you won't have to eat tuna casserole in the dorms") at bemused lun- chtime passersby. "It needs to be done," reflected the impersonator, who wouldn't identify hirpself. "There is an entire class of incoming freshmen who have never tly hangs out in U.S. Rep. Carl office inWashington, D.C. Fleeced Pursell's (R-Plymouth) Sen. William Proxmire (D-Wisconsin), who recently- bestowed his Golden Fleece award on a University An- thropology researcher, has himself earned a prize for his "contribution to the status quo." Proxmire was awarded the Order of the Bird for his "ambolyptic research and sholastic analysis" by James Boren, president of the Inter- national Association of Professional Bureaucrats (INATA- PROBU). Boren presented Proxmire with a thirty pound Missouri River at Bellevue, Neb., and rode easily. More.. than 1,000 people lining the banks of the Missouri to watch the launching cheered Green as he started the engines on his craft, contructed of concrete and iron. "It's what he always wanted," said his wife, Eileen Gren, who smashed the traditional bottle of champagne over the ship's hull. For his achievement, Green may soon receive one of Nebraska's highest honors on the recommendation of State Senator Or- val Keyes. Keyes said he would ask Nebraska's governor to Green, a former military man, an admiral in the Nebraska Navy. Fr On the inside ::.: M