SGC PRESIDENTIAL ENDORSEMENT See Editorial Page L71 Sfribi au ~~IaitF GRAY High-46 Low--32 Mostly cloudy, chance of rain Vol. LXXXII, No. 125 STRIKE LOOMS: Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, March 17, 1972 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Docker's pay raise cut 5% WASHINGTON (A') - Braving threats of a renewed West Coast dock strike, the Pay Board yesterday trimmed a 20.9 per cent longshoremen's raise by about a quarter. There was no immediate comment from Harry Bridges, "president of the International Longshoremen's and Ware- housemen's Union (ILWU). However he has repeatedly prom- ised to shut down Pacific ports if the board trimmed so much as a penny from the pact. Bridges' administrative assistant, Charles Velson, said in San Francisco, "We're not going to have anything to say' right away." In Los Angeles, President John Pandora of ILWU local 013 said his members are under Nixon asks moratorium for on Shapiro to run for Con ress By CHARLES STEIN Walter Shapiro, a 25-year-old graduate student at the University, announced his candidacy yester- day for the Democratic nomina- tion for Congress in Michigan's second congressional district. Speaking to a group of about 100 students .in Alice Lloyd Hall, Sha- piro, the nation's youngest con- gressional candidate, emphasized his work with Ralph Nader and his year as an employe of Congres- sional Quarterly, as evidence of his knowledge of government and politics. orders to take no action until Bridges gives instructions. There was no immediate evi- dence of wildcat walkouts. The ILWU struck West Coast ports for 134 days last year to win the contract. Both the union and the employer group, the Pacific. Maritime Association, had urged the Pay Board to approve it to re-: ward dockers for past increases in productivity. The Pay Board staff said steve- doring firms saved up to $1 bililon in reduced labor costs since the union liberalized work rules in 1960. .Nevertheless, business and public members of the board outvoted labor members 8 to 5 to reject the new contract as inflationary. By board calculations, the long- shoremen now receive an average of $7.43 an hour in wages and fringe 'benefits. The board figured the first year of the new contract would increase that by 16 per cent in wages and overtime, and by 4.9 per cent in management contri- butions to pension and welfare funds. By a second vote of 8 to 6, the board empowered Chairman George H. Boldt to approve the settlement if the wage figure is reduced from 16 per cent to 10 per cent. The entire 4.9 per cent fringe package would be approved. Thus the board said it would approve a total increase of 14.9 per cent in both wages and fringes. This is higher than the 8.9 per cent increase that would have been al- lowed under the board's standard guidelines, including standard ex- ceptions above its 5.5 per cent basic guideline. "The extra allowances were made in recognition of the neces- sity of producing the income and retirement security which has helped to foster efficient industry production leading to significantly greater output with a continuously declining work force," Boldt said in announcing the action. Boldt read a statement and de- clined to answer newsmen's ques- tions. further WASHINGTON (N) - Declar- ing that some federal courts "have gone too far," President Nixon urged Congress last night to legislate an immedi- ate halt to all new pupil-bus- ing orders. Further, he pro- posed to channel $2.5 billion i into poor - neighborhood schools. In an address prepared for live television-radio delivery from the White House, Nixon coupled his appeal for an end.to busing with a proposal to "concentrate federal school-aid funds on the areas of greatest educational need" - the { Rural and Central-City school districts which do not match sub- >°|. urban standards. In outlining his program, Nixon said: "First I shall propose the legis- lation that would call an imme- Tessem diate halt to all new busing or- nt Paul ders by federal courts -- a mora- cer. At torium on new busing." report As for his companion measure. argues Nixon said administration-drafted legislation "would require that ev- . ery state or locality must grant equal educational opportunity to every person regardless of race, color or national origin." busing -Daily-Rolfe Reactions and mterreactions were many at yesterday's Regents open hearing. At top, Reger Brown (D-Petoskey) confers with Wilbur Pierpont, vice president and chief financial offi bottom left, Vice President for Academic Affairs Allan Smith reclines in his chair to peruse a on the proposed housing unit as (at right) Lee Gill, president of South Quad Minority Council for the acceptance of the proposal. Housing oplan debated In reporting that his proposal Y would "concentrate federal school- aid funds on the areas of greatest P 'educational need Nixon said, PRESIDENT NIXON gives a half-gri "That meansndirecting over $2.5 delivering a television address on scho billion in the next year mainly to- - -"- ward improving the education of "'URDER CHARGED: By ROBERT BARKIN sented to the Regents yesterday undecided on the proposed housingh r f pr meTR e yt a e is m t i t tn he i. n or on - O n o , x d o The Regents yesterday heard its completed investigation of the unit. Regent Robert Brown (R- On one point, Nixon did not arguments on both sides of the, plan - urging adoption of the Kalamazoo) and Lawrence Linde- have to wait for congressional ac- 9 proposed Afro-American housing proposed plan with strict reviewal mer (R-Stockbridge) both ex- tion. He announced he is direct-, units in preparation for a final procedures. pressed hesitations with the plan, ing the Justice Department to "in-' u ,,eu y i decision today. Lee Gill, chairman of the Mi- while Regents James Water (D- tervene in select cases where the The atmosphere of the crowded nority Council of South Quad and Muskegon) and Paul Brown (D- lower courts have gone beyond -Associated Press n for photographers after ol busing. ence in Walter Shapiro "A major reason I am running," Shapiro said, "is because I am irate that the youngest person in the House is a 31-year-old Georgia reactionary named Dawson Ma- ~this. More than one quarter of the American people-those under 30- are totally unrepresented." Shapiro's politics clearly place him in the liberal wing of the, Democratic Party, and he is run- ning as a delegate pledged to McGovern in the May 16 primary. Addressing himself to some ma- jor issues of the upcoming cam- paign, Shapiro reasserted his long- standing opposition to the war and pledged to work for the reduction' of military expenditures. In a statement yesterday, Sha- APiro said, "I believe the effective legislator is one who is willing to take some risks, one who is willing to do the unorthodox, one who is going to Washington to raise some hell." The second congressional dis- I trict, currently represented by Marvin Esch (R-Ann Arbor), has approximately 50,000 college stu-, dents and Shapiro hopes to use this group as the base for his sup- port. He stresses that he is not strictly a youth-oriented candidate, however, and hopes to pick up ' worker support with his positions on the economic issues. blacks.....and..white....expressed.....their............ .................................................................... and whienpsd their feelings on the housing proposal. "I had no idea there were (such) racial The proposed units would allow any student with a "sincere" in- tensions here. I thought we were doing so well. terest in black culture to live to- I'm just very depressed." gether in separate housing units within Stockwell and South Quad -Regent Gertrude Huebner (R-Bloom ffield) dormitories. The proposal was introduced by .............. the SupremeCourts requirements in ordering busing." The President said the busing debate embraces an "emotional undercurrent" that he defined as "the feeling that some people have' that to oppose busing is to be anti-: black."It "This is dangerous nonsense,"E he declared. ampton ki111ng CHICAGO, Ill. (u) - The Chicago Daily News said yes- terday a private commission concluded that "neither the fed- eral government nor the state sought to establish the truth" behind a 1969 Chicago police raid in which two Black Panther Housing Director John Feldcamp' who called the plan a "positive at- tempt to get at student racial problems." In addition, the Michigan Civil Rights Commission (MCRC) pre- Rep. Smit proposes 1 on state regulation of Gayle Nelson, president of Black Petoskey) both said they were Women of Stockwell explained the leaning in support of it.' purposetof the plan as "an at- Regent Robert Brown (R-Kala-, tempt to end the polarization of mazoo) was the most strongly, the races."~ opposed saying following the ; The Regents yesterday remained meeting that "blacks are looking for a nursemaid." " Regent Gertrude Huebner (R-E e 1slaton Bloomfield) summed up the board's confusion yesterday say- ing, "I had no idea there were, such racial tensions here. I rlan d u se thought we- Awere:"'d ing so well. I'm just very depressed."7 Gill said tha 'the housing pro-1 "The great majority of Ameri- party leaders were killed. cans, black and white," said Nix- The conclusion is embodied in a report that has been on, "feel strongly that the busing kept secret, the newspapers declared. of school children away from their In a copyright story, the Daily News said the report of pose of achieving raci bance s the Commission of Inquiry concluded that Fred Hampton wrong. "was shot from the doorway to his bedroom as he lay drugged The President. who for two and defenseless in bed." weeks has been pondering what he Hampton, Illinois chairman of the party, and Mark Clark, By ROBERT BARKIN In an attempt to stem the tide of what environmentalists terim 'urbansprawl," state legislators are preparing bills to regulate land use in the state. Environmentalists f e a r that farm land and natural preserves will soon be converted into recre- ational and resort subdivisions by realtors anxious to take advantage of the present zoning and taxing system. The pressure for such real es- tate developments comes from the his price, then he resells for de- ever-increasing demand of citizens velopment." for such.facilities, at the expense Smit thus believes that measures of natural settings, must be taken to cut off the specu- One of the most outspoken pro- lator. He plans to introduce to the ponents of state land regulation is legislature stringent controls thru t Rep. Raymond Smit (R-Ann Ar- statewide zoning to protect 'land - bor). In a recent speech at the for agriculture, forestry, or recre- University Smith outlined some of ation. the problems that he says must Roger Richards, a member of be considered, the governor's commission, agreed He cited "tax policies which with Smit that more stringent con- force the owners of forest lands trols are needed, but felt there (and farmers) to sell to subdivid- were other considerations. ers," as a major problem. These "We didn't think that it would policies allow land to be assessed be appropriate to put statewide for its potential value rather than zoning into' our proposals at this its present use-value. This puts time," he said. "We would like pressure on the farmer and land- SeRP ae1 owner to sell to subdividers to See REP, Page 12 avoid high taxes. Smit also decried "the appetites of local governments to encourage development because it will raise property assessments to garner a higher tax take." G Rnt t Speaking of solutions to the' G R problem, Smit said the report of Gov. William Milliken's Commis-' sion on Land Use was "notable" By MARILYN RILE but "treats symptoms, not causes" For those with the urge to of the problem. the land but no land to get ba The governor's 'commission rec- community group known as t ommended legislation to change have an answer. the present property tax structcre GROW, a community garde to the use-value system, thus en-' GOac muiygre couraging landowners to retain sponsore'd by the Ecology Cent land rather than selling to de- ous other community organizat velopers. The idea of the group is to r It also recommended a number for people with seeds and ad posals are an "outgrowth of vari- ous discriminatory practices in the dorm and the failure of the race awareness seminars." He charged that incompetency of the staff in racial matters, double standards, and a lack of library materials were evidence of the discrimination. Assistant Director of Special Programs Georgia Williams said "he program was an attempt to "sensitize students, and ourselves (administrators) to different eth-, termed "one of the most difficult a party leader from Peoria, decisions of our 'time," did not were shot to death in the con- spell out exactly how much time toesa ad e.416,o his proposed "moratorium on new troversial raid Dec. 4 1969, on busing" would continue. Nor did, a West Side apartment, con- he give details of the "equal edu- ducted by a racially mixed de- cational opportunities act" he is state's attorney's office. The submitting to Congress. tail of police assigned to the The fine print will be filled in police had a'search warrant to Friday when Nixon sends Con- check the flat for weapons. gress a special message on busing and educational opportunity. State's Atty. Edward HanrahanI The President made a direct and 13 others have been indicted1 appeal to citizens to put pressure y a special Cook County (Chi- on Congress in behalf of his pro- cago) grand jury on charges of gram. He said: conspiring to obstruct justice in "If you agree with the goals I the aftermath of the raid. have described tonight - to stop more busing now and provide The Daily News said the report equalityofneducation for all of has been kept secret for nine our children - I urge you to let months, and quoted staff commit- your congressman and senators tee members as saying "it is in know your views so that the Con- gress will act promptly to deal grave danger" of never being with this problem." made public. Bond set for suspect In arson case University freshman Mark Frie- sen - accused of setting Wednes- day's fire in Mary Markley Hall- was ordered returned to the Coun- ty Jail under $50,000 bond at his arraignment yesterday morning before Ann Arbor district court judge S. J. Elden. Friesen is charged with setting fire to his room in the dorm. nic groups." Speaking on one concern she said, Office will insure point of main "The Housing that it (the According to the police he See REGENTS, Page 12 locked the door of his room with an inside chain, set a fire in a waste basket full of paper and then fled through a window. The resulting f're spread causing an estimated $50,000 damage. ORGANIC GARDENING strives for greener city Y get back to ck to, a new GROW may n project, is er and vari- ions. provide land desire to do operation. The community organic garden on North Campus, a larger, mostly educational fa- cility, provides another precedent for the GROW gardens. Last summer, it attracted Ecology Cen- ter members, professors, farmers, and other community members, who came to work on the land and enjoy its products. GROW likewise hopes to attract a di- Although it is not believed that Friesen is connected with any of the roughly 60 fires which' have plagued the Universitywrecently, police are checking for possible involvement with several fires on the Eastern Michigan University campus. Friesen was represented yester- day by Legal Aid Clihic attorney David Goldstein who was acting as temporary defense counsel. Frie- sen's attorney, Dennis Hayes, was unable to appear at the proceed- ings due to an appointment at federal district court in Detroit. Goldstein demanded examina- Linn'~ fn .rian ,andAlderr ye~t the~ r, _ :: .. .¢. ..... N r