COMPOSING THE CIA JURY See editorial page IL 411 t r t 9 a n I aii~j BRITTLE Hiigh-il7 Low--3 Mostly cloudy, cold Chance of flurries Vol. LXXXI, No. 92 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, January 19, 1971 Ten Cents Ten Pages I v Fleming, TALKS CONTINUE IN PAY DISPUTE ~VPs 'judic hit plan A strike by some 2,500 University employes began at 12:01 this morning, as negotiators for the University and Local 1583 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes were unable to reach agreement on a new contract by the midnight deadline. A statement released by the union last night said that the strike would continue until agreement was reached and ratified by the membership. While negotiations continued past midnight, AFSCME members at food service, maintenance, and janitorial posi- tions throughout the University walked off their jobs. Union members had voted the previous night to walk out if contract agreement was not reached by the midnight By DAVE CHUDWIN The University's executive officers will urge the Regents to make major revisions in the proposed University judicial system, The Daily learned yesteraay. In a memorandum to the committee that drafted the judicial plan, University Counsel Chris Christensen states that President Robben Fleming and the seven University vice presidpnts believe a key feature of the plan-randomly- Aselect~d student juries in cases with student defendants-is "the weakest link" in the proposal. The executive officers believe that juries should deter- mine just guilt or innocence, not punishment, and the deci- sion should be by majority vote only, according to the memo. The proposal drafted by the student-faculty-administra- "'t committeeano ninted las t -Daily-Sara Krulwich AFSCME EMPLOYES AT UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL walk off their jobs at 12:01 a.m. this morning and sign up for picketting duties. Some 1,600 of the union's 2,500 University members work at the hospital. The union has said it will leave a skeleton staff at work there to maintain essential services. : Lower p ot penalties proposed By CHRIS PARKS Mayor Robert Harris last night trongly urged the adoption of a. roposed city ordinance to reduce the penalty for the possession of marijuana from a felony to a mis- demeanor, but City Council post- poned action on the proposal until next week. Under the provisions of the pro- #osed ordinance the penalty for possession of marijuana would be up to 90 days in jail and up to $100 in fines. The present state laws calls for up to 10 years in prison and up to $5,000 in finer for the first offense. At its regular meeting last night, 4ouncil voted unanimously to post- pone the first reading of the ordi- nance, which is the initial step in a lengthy lawmaking proce- dure. Council scheduled a working session on the ordinance for next week, to be followed by the first *eading a week later. In addition, a public hearing was called for three weeks from last night. The ordinance, if passed would place the offense of possession of marijuana under the jurisdiction of both city and state law, with the city free to prosecute under *ther law. Currently, the posses- sion of marijuana in Ann Arbor is a felony which is under state jurisdiction only. Citing the "danger of enforcing uppopular laws" Harris said "pro- hibition was a total disaster for law enforcement, and marijuana Wws are getting to be the same thing." Harris called on Council to "join hands with the kids" in the fight against hard drugs, say- ing this could only be done by "legalizing marijuana".; 1 UVi LV1111111U4LG aiJIlV111t lCU liOt, April provides that the six- man j u r i e s determine both guilt and punishment by a unanimous vote. Referring to the eight-page memo, Fleming said last night, "It's a collection of points made by the various executive officers. The drafting committee said they would like to know the comments we made about this." The Regents will consider the proposed judiciary at their month- ly meeting Thursday and Friday, but Fleming said there was very little chance the Regents would complete action on the compli- cated plan this month. The opinions of the executive officers are highly influential with the Regents, who receive most of their information on campus is- sues from Fleming and the vice presidents. The memo suggests that punish- ment at disciplinary trials be de- termined by a panel of judges, which the executive officers be- lieve should consist of a presiding judge from outside the University community and two associate judges-one student and one fac- ulty member. The committee draft recom- mends that the trial court follow this procedure the first half of its one - year experimental p e r i o d. During the last six months, the presiding judge would be joined by two students and one faculty member for student trials under the committee plan. "Juries do not normally deter- mine sanctions, they simply de- termine guilt or innocence," the memo states. "Verdicts should be by simple majority vote, again to prevent one person from having veto power, and to maintain some balance among competing points of view."a Law Prof. Theodore St. An- toine, a member of the drafting committee, commented yesterday on the objection, "It's almost uni- versal that verdicts in criminal trials be unanimous and fairly general that verdicts in civil cases be unanimous. "In civil trials the jury often See EXECUTIVE, Page 10 Classes on, dorms stay open as U, worker s begin walkout By LARRY IJEMPERT line had been extended twice prior last night the residence halls were James Brinkerhoff, director of As the. University's service and to the walkout. , making no plans beyond - today in business operations, added 1 a s t maintenance employes went on The union has requested that the event of a strike. night, "Our attorneys have been strike last night, administrators "students do not participate in the "We'll have to stand back, ob- at work since last Wednesday pre- were planning for classes and picket lines, do not perform our serve, and evaluate," said Feld- paring papers for an injunction. other functions of the University duties, and continue their class kamp. "We'll try to stay open. Part of our homework is to gather to continue today as usual. schedules." If we can't do it, we'll have to data and prepare for such a pos- The University stated its posi- close down." sibility." President Robben Fleming said tion in yesterday's edition of the According to the statement in In order to get an injunction to last night the University had not University Record. In the event of the University Record, "The Uni- halt the strike, the University yet decided whether to seek an a strike, the Record said, "the versity's position is that a strike would have to show that the strike injunction to halt the walkout by University would attempt to main- by public employes is illegal un- would result in "irreparable Local 1583 of the American Fed- tain its operations and services as der current Michigan statutes and harm." A central part of such an eration of State, County, and best it could, including keeping that such action would do irrepar- argument would be the operation Municipal Employes (AFSCME). classes open." able harm," of University Hospital, where some AFSCME workers began leaving "All faculty members would be One spokesman for the Univer- 1,600 AFSCME are employed. their jobs last night at midnight, expected to hold classes," the sity said yesterday that an in- However, a union leaflet dis- after negotiations failed to settle statement continued. junction request is likely. "If the tributed last week said "patients differences between the University However, John Feldkamp, di- strike is illegal," he said, "what at the hospital will not be jeopar- and the union. The contract dead- rector of University housing, said else can we do?" dized. The union will maintain all deadline and not to return to work until a new contract was ratified. Charles McCracken, president of Local 1583, had indicated that this might in- volve "a period of several days following settlement." The action came after three- and-a-half months and more than 400 hours of negotiations as well as two contract extensions. The contract was originally due to ex- pire at midnight Dec. 31. The union reportedly made a final wage proposal at 11 p.m. A union member indicated that the University negotiators subsequent- ly made several calls to top ad- ministrators, but reported that the University would not agree to the demand. According to University officials, the union's wage offer was sub- stantially lower than its previous position. The union plans to maintain "essential services," including op- erations at University Hospital. Students have been urged by the union to continue to demand services from the University, at- tend classes, not to join picket lines, and not to take positions ordinarily held by union employes. Contacted last night, President Robben Fleming said the union's total package came to over a 40 per cent increase in wages. He said the University couldn't afford more than an eight per cent in- crease. "We told the union," Fleming said, "we're willing to talk about any way you want to do this- we're willing to cut the pie any way." But, he added, there is a limit on what the University can offer. "Any (pay) increase will result in a charge back to the consumer -an increase in rates," Fleming continued. "Somebody has to give some thought to the consumer. We're at the point where we can't cut services much more. "We have indicated we will re- sort *to fact finding," Fleming said. "We believe it would be fair." Saying negotiations were "at an impasse," AFSCME president Charles McCracken announced at 1:30 this morning the official start of the strike. He said he didn't know when negotiations would resume, saying the union "had left the door open" for fu- ture talks. McCracken said four issues re- mained unresolved and that the University and the union were $.20 apart on an across the board increase in wages. One union official said that the University had offered a new wage package during yesterday's ses- See EMPLOYES, Page 10 Petitions supprt AFSCME By ZACH SCHILLER and JOHN SHAMRAJ Petitions in support of members of Local 1583 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes (AFSCME) were presented yesterday to Rob- ert Knauss, vice president for stu- dent services. The petitions were presented following a Fishbowl rally and a march to the Administration Bldg., sponsored by members of the Coal- ition to Support AFSCME. After the strike began, the coa- lition's steering committee called for a noon Diag rally at noon to- day and urged students to come to the Student Activities Bldgto help in support activities. The coalition urged all students not to scab, replace AFSCME members at their jobs, and to de- mand union services from the Uni- versity. In a written statement, the coa- lition announced that it "shares the anger of the University com- munity at the administration's failure to negotiate a decent set- tlement with the workers." The coalition held a meeting last night to plan strategy for the strike by AFSCME members, and decided to press to keep dorms open - a policy which coalition members feel will pressure the University to accede to AFSCME demands. The coalition members also plan to picket the Adminis- tration Bldg. as well as ask AFSCME officials if help is need- ed on employe picket lines. AFSCME has asked that picket lines be manned by workers rather than students, with the exception of lines around the Administra- tion Bldg. and President Robben Fleming's home. The coalition also voted to hold dorm and class discussions to mo- bilize student support for the workers, and several task forces were set up to work on various support activities. The coalition meeting, attended by about 75 persons, was charac- terized by lengthy debates and factional disputes, mostly con- cerning how militant the coalition should be and the amount of au- tonomy it has from the AFSCME leadership's decisions. During the noon rally, over 100 students heard Dave Wesley, pres- ident of the Black Students Union, See PETITIONERS, Page 10 AFSCME, U' wage dispute: Major obstacle to settlement By MARK DILLEN News Analysis The key factor preventing a set- tlement between the University and Local 1583 of the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employes (AFSCME) appears to be the question of wages. And the distance between the two sides is a result of different interpretations of the economic question. Adding to the arguments over what the University can afford and what the workers deserve, a third has been added: how will the new contract compare to the con- tracts of other AFSCME locals? Both sides have tried to use wage scales at other schools to try to prove their point. The result is that the two par- ties are still far apart. The Uni- versity, according to President Robben Fleming cannot afford over an eight per cent increase in wages while the union's total package calls for a forty per cent increase. The University, for it's part, is applying a strict interpretation of contract between AFSCME locals and other state schools. By com- paring wage rates at other schools with their current contract pro- posals, the University's offers ap- pears generous. UNREST AT PACIFIC BASES With the combination of an r average 16c across the board in- crease the first year, combined with other sections of its offer,} AFSCME employes here would technically rate quite high in com- parison with other AFSCME lo- cals. However, the comparison is, considered a weak one by union officials. With the largest and most com- plicated classification structurez of any state AFSCME local, union employes are scattered through 1311 different job categories where some state schools have as few asI six. In addition, there are twelve different pay grades, further com- plicating the significance of wage increases. With only 300-500 of the union's 2500 members above grade four, the effect of large pay increases in upper grades is not as great as it would seem. Reportedly, the University is of- fering its greatest increases to the small group in the upper pay grades, with $.25 an hour to the few skilled and semi-skilled grades 9-12, $.20 an hour in grades 5-8, and only $.15 an hour in grades 1-4. The union wants the o-)posite grading. AFSCME, while demand- ing as much as $1.00 across-the- board increase, will reportedly set- tle for less. Thus, while James Brinkerhoff, director of business onerations. is essential services." Brinkerhoff said the decision on seeking an injunction would be made by a meeting of the execu- tive officers of the University. Explaining the dorm situation, Feldkamp said that services in the dormitories are "totally dependent on an adequate work force. Kit- chen operations can't be manned adequately by volunteer help and we depend on food being deliv- ered by Food Stores. Feldkamp said last week it would be impossible for the Uni- versity to relocate students living in dorms if a strike was called. "If there is a stoppage, we'll have our hands full just securing the build- ings and keeping track of things," he said. More explicit plans for the dor- mitories were enumerated at last night's Office of Student Serv- ices (OSS) policy board meeting. Robert Knauss, vice president for student services, announced there will be no hot food served in the dorms during a strike, since See CLASSES, Page 10 Peace groups spur G. . By The Pacific News Service IWAKUNI, JAPAN - Efforts by civilian anti-war activists in the Far East h a v e prompted U.S. soldiers in the Pacific to establish underground newspa- pers, political discussion groups, and associations of militant black enlisted men. According to members of the U.S. military, the civilian or- ganizers have been having at least moderate success at many law and desertion. The Hong Kong activists also run a "com- mune" where GIs can discuss politics and bed down free of charge. A pacifist group in Sydney counsels GIs on military 1 a w and edits a newspaper distribut- ed to vacationing soldiers, while at giant Clark Air Force Base in the Philippines, church-affil- iated organizers are helping to publish "The Whig," an under- and t h e Japanese anti-war movement. Japan's m a s s i v e Vietnam Peace Committee, Be- heiren, which in 1968 took four crewmen of the USS Intrepid through Siberia to Sweden, now devotes most of its efforts to working w i t h GIs. A militant offshoot of Beheiren, the Japan Technical Committee to Aid De- serters, has harbored some two dozen enlisted men o v e r the past year. di'ssen t cern in the press. In the case of Ronald McLean, a 35 year-old activist teacher, the Japanese Ministry of Justice argued that, "Because foreigners do not have the right to vote, freedom jf ex- pression, such as speech a n d assembly, is not guaranteed to them." However, recently the Tokyo High Court temporarily blocked the deportation of Barbara Bye, a 26 - year - old Pennsylvania off