Page Two6w"Student Life THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, September 2, 197th Page Two-Student Life THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, September 2, 1 97~ r - - M Student-run bookstore created (Continued from Page 1) s t a t e educational institutions selling books to "bona fide en- rolled" students are entitled. But the Regents' foremost concern was for the store's fi- nancial viability, and they saw the large discounts and student control as barriers to this sta- bility, in spite of SGC's argu- ments that other student dis- count s t o r e s are financially stable. This was the situation in September as SGC called for a Diag rally and a march on the Sept. 19 R.egents meeting to pro- test the Regents refusal in July to set up the store. The rally was attended by about 800 stu- dents, 400 of whom subsequently entered the meeting to protest a regental decision earlier in the day to establish an administra- tion-run University bookstore. It was the University's first large-scale disruption of a Re- gents meeting and the Regents were visibly shaken. There were calls among them to adjourn the session, but the students domi- nated the floor as they explained their disagreements with the regental plan. In the plan, the Regents stipulated that the store would be controlled by the vice presi- dent and chief financial officer, with students serving in an ad- visory role. Students found this immediately unacceptable, in clear opposition 'to their belief in student power. Secondly, the regental pro- posal stated that the Univer- sity's schools and colleges-not SOC - should sponsor a second referendum to approve the fee assessment. The provision was added be- cause a number of Regents be- lieved that the SGC referendum only reflected the views of the minority of students who had voted and therefore unfairly bound the s t ude nt body into paying for the assessment. But student leaders believed a second referendum unnces- sary. They contended that the second. vote would destroy the validity of the initial referen- dum and, more importantly, be- lieved it would undermine the right of SGC to poll the stu- dents it represented in the fu- ture. Additionally, they did not recognize the right of the ad- ministration to dictate policies to'students, and believed that Council - not the schools - was the duly-electedamechanism to sponsor referenda. The opposition to this section, however, played second fiddle to the students' abhorence of ad- ministration .c.o n.t r o 1 of the store. It was this section that paved the way for a major con- frontation. Several SGC members organ- ized a rally with the tacit -pur- pose of taking over the Admin- istration Bldg. The first day the turnout was poor and the building locked. The second time the protesters tried, they encountered more success. A large crowd attended an early afternoon rally and marched this time into the only available main building - the Literature, Science and Arts Bldg. The crowd, which was close to 700, decided to stay as President Robben Fleming an- nounced the building was clos- ing as usual and the demon- strators, if they did not leave, would be served with a tem- porary restraining order enjoin- ing them from continuing the sit-in. The restraining order was obtained, but when Ann Arbor Police Chief Walter Krany at- tempted to serve it around 10 p.m. he was shouted down and blocked from entering the build- ing to read it, as the law stipu- lates, to the protesters inside. The University later dropped the injunction. Around 3:30 a.m., state and Ann Arbor p o l i c e m e n with Washtenaw County Sheriff dep- uties-called at the request of Fleming-arrived at the build- ing and ordered the people out- side to clear out in five min- utes. Almost immediately after the order was given, the police charged the crowd as they en- tered the building to arrest the 107 remaining people. Nine per- sons were injured. The 107 were charged with creating a contention-a rather vague crime which is a misde- meanor and carries a maximum penalty of 90 days in jail and/or a $100 fine. Trials for the 107 students arrested in the LSA sit-in lasted through the summer, and pro- ceedings arising out of the arrests are still going on. However, the completion of the remaining trials will not sig- nify an end to the incident. As of the beginning of April, 48 of those students convicted were appealing the convictions, and 16 had not yet been sentenced. As expected, a noon Diag rally was called following the arrests, and an ad hoc coalition was formed to organize a campus- wide strike for that Monday. However, the strike fared poor- ly, with class, attendance down only about 10 or 20 per cent in the literary college, and other schools were largely unaffected. At the same time, though, faculty m e m b e r s - generally alarmed by the arrests and the presence of police on campus- sought to allay the situation. The f a c u I1t y decision-making body, Senate Assembly, called on its executive committee, the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA) to meet with students on the issue. And at the first meeting SACUA indicated informal sup- port for the controversial con- cept of a student-faculty con- trolled bookstore. SAUA and the members of the coalition and SOC hammered out a new proposal, with several changes emerging f r o m Council's orig- inal plan. The most important change altered the funding arrange- ments. Instead of financing the store through a $1.75 fee assess- ment, as SGC originally pro- posed, the new plan called for a $5 rolling assessment to be returned at the donor's request. This sidestepped the question of holding a second referendum, which the students opposed and the Regents had called for. Now, a second referendum was com- pulsory as there was a new assessment-creating a constant reservoir of money-that had to be voted on by students. A campus - wide referendum, coordinated by SOC but with polling booths in the schools, would be held to determine stu- dents' willingness to be "assess- ed." Students would be bound by the. total vote - which over- whelmingly supported the crea- tion of a student-run bookstore funded by the rolling $5 assess- ment. The new plan, which had garnered the support of leading faculty members, was presented to the Regents at their October meeting. The Regents voted 5-3 to establish a bookstore along the lines that the plan recom- mended, but with two condi- tions: -That the University would' be isolated from liability from any debts the store incurred; and -That it would qualify for the exemption from the four per cent state sales tax. Although the former condi- tion was fulfilled by a legal opinion issued by a Detroit law firm, the latter is presently up in the air, due to bills pending in the state Legislature. The Regents approval of the bookstore, with student control, was based on several different factors. In the view of Regent Lawrence Lindemer (R-Stock- ridge) who cast the deciding vote, the crucial factor was the addition of the section isolating the University from financial liability. Thus, w h i1e students would run the store, the Uni- versity could not be held ac- countable for any p o t e n t i al losses. And there was also the sup- port that faculty members gave to the store. No longer was the issue just the product of a group of students in the minds-of=the Regents; now it was supported by a number of prestigious lac- ulty members. There was also the intrinsic importance of the building take- over, for its "shock value". is believed to have put some ;pres- sure on the administration to adopt a proposal more concilia- tory to students. Whatever the reason's, the University will have a bookstore -located in the ; Union-this fall, although textbooks may not be sold until the winter term. Perhaps the most important result of the bookstore issue was the realization a m o n g faculty members that new avenues of communication between them- selves and students had to open. Following the bookstore issue's conclusion, SACUA has taken a more active role in campus issues, involving itself in ,dis- cussions on control ove' the budget and the fate of other referenda, and it has generally made itself more accessible to students. In addition, there is a regular- ly-scheduled open meeting prior to each regental session to give students and professors an op- portunity to air their views with the Regents. To radicals, the issue did m o bilize and "radicalize" a number of students. And to moderates in the stu- dent body and the administra- tion alike, the University now has a discount bookstore. INTERNATIONAL PRESENTATIONS, 1970-1971 i _7I STUDENTS-SAVE UP TO 50%, by purchasing series subscriptions NOW Choral. Union Series : 1 s makes the sports-scene! HILL AUDITORIUM DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA . ,.. 2:30, Sunday, September 27 SIXTEN EHRLING, Conductor, JUDITH RASKIN, Soprano L'ORCHESTRE NATIONAL FRANCAIS 9. .,.. . Monday, October 12 JEAN MARTINSON, Conductor MELBOURNE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA . .. .99.. 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