RC IN CRISIS See editorial page Y Sr t!Jzrn 43 A46F attly MISERABLE High-15 Low-12 Snow flurries, with strong, gusty winds Vol. LXXXI, No. 102 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, January 30, 1971 Ten Cents T' f Ul W Iw -TI -i - -T- Eight Pages I L 0 HAM IA CIDENT. Jury convicts T. R. Harrison By ALAN LENHOFF A Washtenaw County Circuit Court jury yesterday con- victed Thaddeus (T.R,) Harrison, '73, of felonious assault in a case stemming from last year's Black Action Movement (BAM) class strike. Harrison had been charged with "assault with intent to do great bodily harm less than murder," after he allegedly threw a brick at an Ann Arbor policeman during a disturbance in front of the Administration Bldg. March 19. President submits 1972 budget plan to new Congress Electrica allure hits 'U' campus By KRISTIN RINGSTROM A power failure yesterday Sevening plunged much of the central campus . area into darkness as an explosion oc- curred in insulators on an electrical transformer. The blackout was caused by a slight explosion across the in- %sulators on Detroit Edison trans- former No. 2, according to Uni- versity :power plant Chief Engi- neer Charles McEndre. An electrical'worker said that the explosion was probably caused by concentrations of salt used to help melt icy roads near the trans- former. "This can happen during a wet spell which is preceeded by a per- iod during which there was a con- centration of salt in the air," a power plant official explained. The jury, however, reduced the charge to felonious assault - ap- parently deciding that Harrison's action was without intent of great bodily harm or murder. Harrison has claimed that during the inci- dent he was the victim of police brutality. Presiding Judge William Ager announced that Harrison will be sentenced on Feb. 19. Under state law,.felonious as- sault carries a maximum penal- ty of four years in prison. The original charge had a maximum sentence of ten years. The jury began deliberating on Thursday, and announced its ver- dict at 4:15 p.m. yesterday after considering the case for almost twelve hours. At noon yesterday, the jury in- formed the court that it was dead- locked, but Ager ordered the jur- ors to continue their deliberations. Defense attorney Morton Leit- son said that an appeal is being considered. Evidence presented to the jury during the trial often appeared contradictory. Five city policemen had testified in the case. present- ing different versions of the inci- dent. There were disagreements between them on questions about where the defendant and the po- licemen were and what each was doing at the time of the incident. The policeman who was hit by the brick, Detective Paul Bunten, -Associated Press Number, please Alan Phillips walks out of the J.L. Hudson Company in Detroit Thursday with a four-foot telephone. He purchased it at the company's annual sale hell to dispose of unneeded props and display objects. The sale ends today. CONCERN OVER LAOS BUILDUP: Rogers pledges U.S. bolnbing to prevent Viet Cong massing A Detroit Edison supervisor ex- had said that the man throwing WASHINGTON (P) - Warning plained the failure differently. the brick was not wearing a hat. the U.S. faces a critical period in "Wind caused high tension wires However, a photograph submitted troop withdrawals from Southeast to come together which momentar- by the defense showed that Har- Asia, Secretary of State William ily caused a slight interruption," rison wore a hat during the inci- Rogers said at a news conferenc he said. dent. yesterday that the United States The failure caused electricity to It was also charged that Har- will use airpower in any way nec go off and on through much of rison had been holding a brick essary in Indochina to prevent the central campus area for a few when he was wrestled to the Communist forces from massing ninutes around 7:50 p.m. Lights ground by police officers prior to strength for attack. were reported out at South Quad, his arrest. Defense photographs Rogers specifically expressed East Quad, the Union, the Michi- seemed to refute this allegation, concern about a reported large gan Daily, Cinema Guild, Martha also. buildup of North Vietnamese sup- Cook and houses on State Street. Other prosecution testimony de- plies in the panhandle area of Many other University buildings scribed the man who threw t h e Laos which borders Northwestern were affected only by a slight brick as appearing to weigh about South Vietnam. flickering of lights. At University 165 pounds. Harrison, according to Rogers repeatedly ,ruled out any 4ospital, emergency power w a s a friend, weighs only 130 pounds. use of American ground forces employed. Student reaction was generally +ITJ one of amusement. wo Faur Tr and ran around. It was black i ' Fa rpmo "People ran in circles. screamed drnaon.I a lc ed out for only two minutes at the ost,"saidPerryBullarda resi- of International Br "It was kind of funny, people were laughing, and the looks of By W E. SCHROCK teaching fellow, "I was just shock on people's faces after the Displays ranging from African checking out China." first flash were priceless," com- ,talking drums to Chinese egg rolls Although China may be close mented one junior, "I was light- captured the attention of hun- to one third of the world's popu-- ing matches other kids wire run- dreds of members of the Ann Ar- lation, it is just one of the ex- fiing around with flashlights and bor and University communities hibits run by the 22 foreign stu talking about getting candles." yesterday as World's Fair 1971 dent organizations. "The reaction was typical," said opined with a theme of interna. Other nationalities exhibited a, a South Quaddie, "no panic, peo- tional brotherhood. the Fair include: Korea, Japan. ple stayed in their rooms, a few winding around two floors at Israel, Scandinavia, 'Lithuania. things got thrown around, but that East Quad, booths and displays of Ukraine, India, the Philippines, was about it." aroundtsut that Latin America the Arab countries. forignstuent shw te cltualFrance, Ceylon, Greece, Thailand, "I was sitting in Cinema Guild." diversity of the participants' home Africa, Iran, Pakist hailand, id Carolyn Atkinson, a senior liv- countries. The Fair will continue Singapore, and Malaysia.y," ing in South Quad, .,"people through midnight tonight. i started making funny remarks, The exhibits were received en- World's Fair 1971 is sponsored and the lights were off for only thusiastically by the crowds of by the Foreign Students Board about five minutes." neop'e streaming in throughout (FSB) and is largely the product The best comment however came the day. "Is this ever extensive; of efforts of foreign students with from a sophomore in S o u t h it goes through the whole build- assistance by two Americans with uad: "I slept through it." . in- !" exclaimed one anthropology( University Activities C e n t e r (UAC) affiliation. c'a. "' 3 TT~~~~AC ha- n n no + For;,1 g outside of South Vietnam and s f- activity on the ground, yet a time n firmed the administration posi- when drier weather favors in- 't tion that even there the troops creased offensive operations by will be out of combat by May 1. Communist forces. e But when he was asked what the Rogers repeated emphatic de- s United States view would be of a nials that the Nixon administra- strike by South Vietnamese troops tion will use ground combat forces t into Southern Laos, he said it again in Cambodia but said he g would depend on the circum- could understand the unwilling- stances at the time. He held open ness of members of the Senate the prospect that the United! so e bersomte e e States would give airpower sup- Fre Relatioss Co ie port to the strikeaccept the assurance because of 0 t.otestie h way in which war has expand- e The critical period in the Viet- thebefore in Southeast Asia. namization program was defineds by Rogers as "between now and! "I think the Senate Foreign May 1" which he said will be a Relations Committee does live time of decreasing U.S. combat with memories of the past," Rogers - - - - -- - -said. WASHINGTON (M - Presi- dent Nixon sent to the ne Congress yesterday a recorc $229.2 billion spending budge for fiscal 1972, with plans fo large deficits which he said will s t i m u 1 a t e the nation' slow-paced economy. Casting aside his pre-electior advocacy of budget-planning, Nix- on called his new spending pro- gram a "full employment budget.' He said his program will peg fed- eral spending at the level of rev- enues which would be expected ir times of high prosperity. The planned budget for the fis- cal year that begins July 1 carries a deficit of $11.6 billion. Aside from that, Nixon disclosed the deficit for the current fiscal year will reach $18.6 billion, the second highest in a generation. The heavier pace of federal spending enabled Nixon to step up proposed b u d g e t s for defense health, welfare, antipollution pro- grams, reorganization of the gov- ernment. and his top-priority plan for sharing federal revenue with state and local governments. Tn presenting a budget aimed at expanding the economy, Nixon C adopted an economic technique I used-but not advertised-by some of his Democratic predecessors. He assured Congress he is now an activist "in bringing about the kind of prosperity that has rarely existed in the American economy -a prosperity without war and without runaway inflation."'As he pledged earlier, he offered no new major tax proposals. The 1972 deficit he projected. however, may not turn out to be as large as he planned, Neither Nixon's revenue-sharing plan nor his welfare reform legislation has I excited great enthusiasm on Capi- tol Hill. The President said he is using the "full employment budget" technique to stimulate the econo- my without inflation in order to reach by mid 1972 his goal of full employment, defined by him as 4 per cent joblessness. The unem- ployment rate is now 6 per cent. The full employment budget idea is in the nature of a self ful- filling prophecy," he said. "By op- erating as if we were full employ- ment, we will help to bring about that full employment." This is the budget that will be in force when Nixon starts his bid for re-election, if he seeks a second term, and he crammed it with key programs of the "new Ameri- can Revolution" he outlined in his State of the Union speech last Friday. At the heart of it is revenue- sharing. Nixon called for $4 bil- lion in new money for the program in fiscal 1972 and detailed pro- posed reductions in a mass of ex. isting grant-in-aid programs that also will be diverted to revenue sharing. In all, he called for $13.6 billion! in shared revenue in fiscaln1971. Although the first full year of the program is pegged at $16 billion, not all of that would be spent in the 1972 bookkeeping period. Nixon proposed a new defense budget of $75 billion, the first increase in three years - need- ed, he said yesterday, to maintain military superiority for pursuing "the nation's strategy for peace" through negotiations. See NIXON, Page 8 -Associated Press WILLIAM MILLER, doorkeeper of the House, receives President Nixon's $229 billion budget at the Capitol yesterday. Ronald Geisler, right, brought it from the White House. . . Inflation remains near 6%c annual ate WASHINGTON (A) - Americans in 1970 suffered the second steepest rise in living costs in 20 years to cap two years of inflation that cut the value of the dollar nearly 12 per cent, the government reported yesterday. The final report said consumer prices rose 5.5 per cent last year on top of 1969's 6.1 per cent rise, resulting in the most inflationary two-year period since the Korean War. December's rise of five-tenths of one per cent indicated a renewed upswing in prices of food, housing, automobiles and medical care. The result of the year's price--- es theme itherhnOnd' Rogers defined U.S. policy to- wardthe wardin Cambodia in a! way that appeared to put him in conflict with statements made by; Secretary of Defense Melvin 5./N U/ .Y U/L/ There have been reports within4 the Quad residents should pay to that igovelrmenti recent weeks see the Fair because the Fair was pressing to xpand torities were paying a rental fee. And a few U.S. involvement in Camboediree d residents resented the Fair's "tak- thiat the State De tment a sa ing over our building." eoppsing such pressures.n However, everyone else was en- Ro gsulhesesc e thusiastic, and a number f East ogers told the news conference Quad residents, in addition to that "the United States is not other visitors, expressed delight in fighting for the defense of Cam- the exhibits. bodia. The United States," he said, Nevertheless, East Quad facili- "is fighting to protect the Ameri- ties "are not ideal," said Wilhel- can forces in South Vietnam." my. "It is really a hassle some- At another point he said it times." A good number of Fair of- would be "an adverse development ficials and Quad residents had to if Cambodia fell to the Commu-, "pitch in"-acting as guides to a nists . . . so we hope Cambodia public that was not familiar with survives. "But our objective," he I the complex dorm layout. asserted, "is not the survival of 1 Also, Wilhelmy said, a numbei the government in Cambodia." k of foreign students were sleeping Briefly discussing the Middle overnight because of theft prob- East crisis Rogers expressed en- lems. couragement at the exchanges so Last year the Fair was housed! far between Israel and Egypt over hikes, along with a sharp business slump that cut hours of work and earnings, left millions of work- ers trying to make ends meet on fewer, shrunken dollars. Another 4.6 million works were out of Jobs altogether for the worst un- employment total in nine years. The report by the Bureau of Labor Statistics said that although average earnings of some 45 mil-' lion rank-and-file workers edged up $1.03 a week to $122.43 l as t month, inflation left them about $1 a week behind in purchasing power over the year and $2.39 be- low two years ago despite wage increases. "For 1970 as a whole, increases in consumer prices eroded all of! the $5.17 over-the-year gain in average weekly earnings," the bur- eau said. Although 1970's rise of 5.5 per cent slackened from the 6.1 per! cent rise in 1969, the latest report indicated renewed inflation. Dr. Joel Popkin, assistant commission- er of the bureau, said prices rose at an annual rate of 6.3 per cent! the first quarter of last year, slow- ed to 5.8 per cent the second quar- ter and 4.2 per cent the t h i r d quarter, but headed back upward to a rate of 5.7 per cent the final three months. Man killed in LA. bombing LOS ANGELES W) - One per- son was killed yesterday after- noon when a bomb exploded in a second-floor restroom of the Fed- eral Building in downtown Los Angeles, police said. Officers said the victim, a 19- year-old janitor was the only per- son in the room when the blast went off. He died en route to a hospital. The blast blew a 4 by 5-foot hole in a wall. Firemen said the explo- sive was a "high velocity" device which left little evidence of its type. The blast was the third to rock public buildings in the Los An- geles area this month. A fire bomb destroyed a chamber of commerce office in Palos Verdes Jan. 13 while another explosive device, heavily damaged the Municipal Court Building in El Monte Jan. 1. iu nas sponsored ther Fair i .-. past years, but is now appears that in the Union. but "the Michigan a Middle East peace settlement, this year foreign students are Union transformed last year's saying that at least their docu- moving towards complete controe See WORLD'S, Page 8 ments were "non-polemical." of the World's Fair program. Maren Wilhelmy, a German stu- In made office addition, an attempt was Jan. 22 to bomb a welfare in downtown Los Angeles. TY REFORM COALITION dent and a Resident Fellow in the Residential College, explained that World's Fair last year was one of the few big profit-making af- fairs sponsored by UAC, but that foreign students received none o'- the profits. Wilhelmy said the recently formed FSB would "use this year'sI profits to set up a foreign student' emergency fund". She explained that foreign students cannot ob- tain scholarships for spring terir at the University from their home countries and can never obtainI scholarships, loans, or work study grants from the U.S. government programs. ' To comply with the interna- tional brotherhood theme, the FSB had reauested that displavs r1v A u LT Profs hIi By ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ An in-depth report on the University budget by members of the Faculty Re- form Coalition proposes a method for achieving next year's budget cuts which would allow the controversial cutbacks in instructional costs to be reduced by one-third. In a report which has not yet been made public, the coalition's Task Force on Budgeting Processes and Priorities stong- ri ni7s ac 1 U--.c- arm- cuts in nounced last November. In ordering the cuts, the administration maintained the reduction was necessary to free funds for an adequate increase in faculty salaries. However, critics maintained that the sal- ary increase could be achieved without reducing the number of faculty members, teaching fellows, and non-academic staff members in each school and college. Subsequently, the Faculty Reform Coal- ition, an organization whose membership includes many influential professors, as- academic In its report, the task force maintains that cuts in the academic budgets "should be substantially smaller than those lev- ied on administrative and other support- ive services." "The teaching and academic activities are the raison d'etre of this University and should be the last things to be cut, being reduced if all else fails," the report states. The administration, however, maintains that if the budget has to be cut to free budgets General Fund," Smith says. "There wasn't enough time to do a complete job." In its report, the budget task force pro- poses that the budget cuts in the schools, colleges, centers and institutes be held to two per cent. One per cent of the freed funds would go into a central fund which the administration would use to fund the salary increases, plus other costs. The other one per cent would remain with the particular school or college, which would spend it as it wished. -~N\*S.C~ -.-