r The Michigan Daily-Thursday, October 20, 1977-page 5 7g- rica ilenes back oice $ EARN EXTRA CASH CASH PAID FOR YOUR BLOOD PLASMA NOW DONORS EARN $50.00-$100.00 MONTHLY OCTOBER BONUS DRAWINGS: 10-SPEED BIKES tf you donate twice o week throughout October you will hove 4 chances to win! Drawing October 31, 1977 Bring in this coupon and collect an extra 2.00 on your first donation " Free medicalsex:mination " 'Physician supervised program DONOR HOUiRS: " You can donate twice weekly Mon: 9:30 a.m.- without ill effects Tues: 9:30 a.m.- " Must be at least 18 u. r, U.S. says relatio e f l i (Continued from Page 1)' p ceu A coexisence of peoples South Africa is not disturbed by small group of anarchists." in a The Johannesburg Star, a major voice of white liberals, said the. government ."seems bent on trans- forming moderate black opinion into extremism." The crackdown, the toughest in this white-ruled nation since the early 1960s, came amid mounting attacks on the government over the Sept. 12 prison death of Steve Biko, a major South African black nationalist ac- tivist. JUSTICE Minister James Kruger said that the government was mov- ing against organizations, news- papers and people being used to create a "revolutionary climate" and a black-white confrontation. He said those detained in the raids would be held in "preventive deten- tion" until the situation has "re- turned to normal."' Warning of even tougher mea- sures, Kruger said: "The govern- ment is determined to ensure that the THE GOVERNMENT measures provoked an immediate outcry from blacks and liberal whites and raised fears of a violent backlash. Black primary school children began streaming out of classes in Soweto in protest. Armed police arrested at least 50 white students from the Witwatersrand University converging on a post office near central Johannesburg to send protest telegrams to Prime Minister John Vorster.. The newspapers banned were the World and its sister publication, the Weekend World, published in Johan- nesburg. The World, South Africa's major black newspaper, has a circu- lation of 160,000, but it is estimated to have at least a million readers. ITS EDITOR, Percy Qoboza, was seized by plainclothesmen at the. paper's offices shortly before he was nis may scheduled to hold a news conference. Weekend World news editor Aggrey Klaaste was picked up overnight. The 18 black and interracial organ- izations banned were generally re- garded as moderate and nonviolent. All the militant black organizations have already been banned and their leaders jailed. Those ordered banned included two organizations linked to Biko - the Black People's Convention (BPC) and the South African Students Organization, as well as the Christian Institute and the Soweto Students' Representative Council. THOSE DETAINED included BPC President Hlaku Rachidi and Roman Catholic leader the Rev. Patrick Mkhatshwa. The whites banned for five years were Christian Institute Director Beyers Naude and two. colleagues; Donald Woods, the out- spoken editor of the East London daily Dispatch, and two Cape Town clergymen. Banned persons are restricted to ufer their hometowns, may not have visi- tors without official permission and can't be quoted in the press. The white-owned World was sharply criti- cal of the government and highlight- ed black grievances, boycotts and unrest. But it advocated nonviolence throughotut the nationwide rioting of 1976 and this year's black school boycott to protest the segregated education system. PRIOR TO closing the newspapers, Kruger had filed four complaints against the World and other opposi- tion newspapers for their "unfair and malicious" coverage of Biko's death. But the complaints had not come before the regulatory liress Council before the raids. THE OVERNMENT'S leading critic in parliament, Helen Suzman, said the actions were a "complete admission by the government that it is -unable to govern the country without resorting to absolute despot- ism. COME IN OR CALL US AT: BLOOD PLASMA DONOR CENTER 309 PEARL STREET " YPSILANTI. MICH. TELEPHONE 487-3100 Wed: Closed Thurs: 9:30 o.m.-6:30 p.m Fri: 9:30 a.m.-4:00 p.m. Sat: 8:30 o.m.-l :00 p~m. .-6:30 p.m .-6:30 p . $ $2, l r NORFOLK NAVAL suumvamm Portsmouth, Virginia offers s ' A. 4 i . a AY ENGINEERING Regents review $130 million budget plan (Continued from Page 1) priations on the Ann Arbor campus from $100 million to $130 million this year. The request also asks for $2,400,000 increase for the. Dearborn campus and $1,700,000 more for the Flint campus. One reason for the tremendous jump in state aid is a faculty and staff raise of 12.55 per cent which costs the University $19 million in wages. The budget also calls for a $2 million increase in health insurance, workers compensation, and social security benefits for employees on all three campuses. Yesterday, after months of plan- ning, student leaders learned of a new possibility in the search for more building space for student activities -- the Argus Building, four blocks west of Main Street on East William, Lauer narrowly wins new MSA presidency (Continued from Page 1) "IF WE DO. (take the money out), we're taking a stand. That's one thing MSA has failed to do often enough," he said. Bachelder alos supported withdrawal of the money: "I would vote to divest ourselves should it be shown that the investment fund invests money in cor- porations involved in South Africa," he said: Other MSA action dealt with the allocation of office space to student organizations and the passage of guidelines concerning CIA activities on campus. A number of students from' organizations which had been denied space addressed the assembly and ex- pressed interest in a reassessment of the situation. Jasper DiGuiseppe, chairman of the Student Organizations B ard, announ- ced a meeting on Friday, October 21, at' 8:00 a.m. to deal with the complications which have arisen from the allocation of space. "We've determined that we want'to hear the complaints and con- structive criticisms of each group that has a grievance. It won't be decision time; we just want to compile data," he said. which the University purchased in the mid-1960s. The University's tele- vision center occupies part of the building. "IT'S IDEALLY suited for what we need," said Scott Kellman, former president of the Michigan Student Assembly. He added that although the size of the building and its facilities are well-suited for a num- ber of student projects and rehear- sals, it is too far from campus, about three quarters of a mile, to be used without bus service provided by the University. A shuttle bus would cost as much as $70,000 a year, Kellman said. But according to James Brinker- hoff, vice president for financial af- fairs, "There are a number of functions down there already," in-, cluding audio-visual classes and education programs. "If there isn't a shuttle bus down there already, it could be easily accommodated," said Brinkerhoff. In addition to student space, the Regents will consider adopting poli- cies on freedom of speech and campus recruitment recommended by two faculty groups earlier this yegr. IN JANUARY, the Senate Advi- sory Committee on University Af- fairs (SACUA) drew up ten guide- lines to protect freedom of speech on campus. The guidelines would give responsibility for enforcement to President Fleming. The Senate Assembly asked in March that "no career planning and placement services will be made available to any company or organ- ization that discriminates in recruit- ment or employment practices . . Unlike the faculty representatives, the student Housing Council is not asking for the adoption of specific policies, but that the Regents: -Make housing a top priority. -Take action to stop the alleged deterioration of the housing situ- ation. -Meet with members of the Coun- cil to discuss housing. Entrance salaries range from $12,947 to $13,980 with regular-0. annual increments to average salary of $18,258 fter three "years. '. 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