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September 23, 1975 - Image 2

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1975-09-23

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Page Two

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Fuesday, September 23, 19-75

Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY [uesday, September 23, 1 97~

Tuition to double by
1985, survey says

U' officials voice
doubts on pro posed
faculty salary hike j

Alert-

spectator

foils
Slife

(Continued from Page 1)
The state report concluded
that among the alternatives to
raising tuition include:
-allocating a greater portion
of the state budget to higher ed-
ucation. But with public insti-
tutions already collecting 15 per
The Oregon Territory was ac-
quired by treaty from England,
terminating joint occupation of
255,580 square miles in 1846.

cent of the budget, a tax hik
would be necessitated or other
programs would have to be cut.
-reviewing the state's higher
education program to determine
whether there is duplication of
programs. Any such duplication
would be eliminated. A potential
problem with this, says the re-
port, is that schools claim a de-
gree of autonomy and would
probably reject an attempt at
consolidation.

e*

By MARGARET YAO

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Available at
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High University officials yes-
terday expressed doubts con-
cerning a proposed 12.4 per cent
faculty salary raise for next
year.
The salary request, which
would cost the University $6.1
million, was formally presented
by Professor of Economics Saul
Hymans, Chairman of the Com-
mittee on the Economic Status
(CESF) at the Senate Assembly'
meeting yesterday.
THE PROPOSAL next must
} face the 'scrutiny of the admin-
istration and the Regents next
month. The Regents will then
submit their recommendation to
the state legislature for consid-
eration.
Vice-President for Academic
Affairs Frank Rhodes, cam-,
menting on the possibility of
legislative approval, said there
will always be a difference be-
tween "what we request and
what can be implemented."
Lawrence Fincher, assistant
vice-president for state rela-
tions, stressed that other em-
ploye groups in the University

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will have an influence on the
amount the professors receive.1
ACCORDING to Harold John-
son, chairman of the Senate As-
sembly, some faculty members
also had misgivings about the
12.4 per cent figure. Says John-
son, "a few felt that we were
asking for too much."
The amount of the salary in-
crease is based on a comparison
between the University and 13
other top-ranking schools, ac-
cording to the report on faculty
compensation by the CESF.
Pay for University full profes-
sors ranked eighth in the group,
while University associate and
assistant professors ranked high-
est, placing the University fifth
overall.
CESF hopes to remedy the sit-
uation with a three-fold compen-
sation plan: "maintenance, res-
toration, and improvement."
Hymans claims that the main-;
tenance and restoration factors,
8.5 per cent of the total 12.4 per
cent increase, are "intended to
move the pay scale up." The
improvement factor, 3.9 per
cent, is "intended to tilt the
scale" in favor of the eighth-
ranked full professors and as-
sociate professors who barely
hold first place in salary com-
pensation.
Last year, the CESF recom-
mendation for an 18 per cent in-
crease was cut down to a 13.23
per cent hike by the Regents.
State appropriations for the sal-
ary increase totaled four per
cent for the 1975-76 fiscal year.

attem
(Continued from Page 1)
charging a second time.
"IT WAS probably the most
frightening thing that ever hap-
pened to me," Hettrich, 26,
recalled later.
"I was approximately five
feet away - five or seven feet
away - from a woman who'
brought her right arm up and
extended it, and as she did so
I observed a chrome-plated re-
volver in her right hand," he
said. "She fired a shot in the
vicinity, in the direction of the
President.
"At this time an ex-Marine
who is retired on a 100 per cent
disability by the name of Oli-
ver Sipple forced her arm down
after the shot was fired."
AFTER THE gunshot rang
out, police bulled their way
into the crowd and grabbed the
woman, carrying her bodily into
the hotel.
As the motorcade sped away,
a young boy apparently picked
up the spent bullet and handed
it to a policeman.
Her head bowed, Moore was
taken from police headquarters
about four hours after the in-
cident and transferred to the
federal building here for ar-
raignment.
POLICE SAID Moore was
born in Charleston, Va., and
lived in the city's primarily
residential Mission District.
The Secret Service agent in

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charge in San Francisco, Ken-
neth Iacavoni, confirmed that
Moore had been jointly inter-
viewed Sunday by Secret Serv-
ice representatives and police
after a gun was taken away
from her. She was charged with
illegal possession of a weapon
and released, police said.
Deputy White House Press
Secretary Jack Hushen, who re-
layed Iacovni's comments to
newsmen, said he had no fur-
ther information on why the
woman was released.
THE WOUNDED spectator
was identified as John Luda-
wig, a 41-year-old San Francis-
co cab driver. He was treated
at a local hospital for a super-
ficial groin injury and re-
'leased.
"She was standing between
35 and 40 feet away from the
President," said police Lt.
Frank Jordan.
Charles Miles, 24, of Mil-
waukee, said he saw a young
girl fall to the pavement in
front of the suspect, apparent-
ly having fainted. He said Ford
only seconds before the shot
was waving to the crowd of
about 3,000 waiting to greet him
outside the hotel where he had
just made a speech.
ANOTHER witness, Rick Sa-'
porito, 27, a San Francisco
waiter, said he was also stand-
ing near the suspect for about
an hour before the President
emerged.
"Someone shouted 'gun,' then
I heard the shot and police sur-
rounded us," Saporito said.
Presidential adviser Robert
M e a d e, who was walking
alongside Ford when the inci-
dent occurred, called reporters
from air force one to describe
what took place.
HE SAID as the presidential
party emerged from the hotel,
all they saw was a puff of
smoke.
"A secret service agent told
the president to get down and
agents hovered over him and
hustled him into the car," he
said.
Meade also suggested that
Ford was unfazed by what hap-
pened, saying that as his motor-
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cade raced to the airport he
made some comments about the
nice weather.
EARLIER in the day, just
seven minutes before Ford was
to begin his first of two ad-
dresses at downtown hotels, a
young man identified as Ronald
Carlo, 24, of San Francisco, was
taken to custody and booked on
suspicion of threatening the life
of the President.
Agents said Carlo had at-'
tempted to deliver a threatening
note to an employe of the St.
Francis Hotel, a short distance
from the Hyatt and the second
stop on Ford's one-day visit to
the city.
Carlo first approached a cash-
ier at the St. Francis with a
vaguely worded, hand-printed
note that contained a threat on
the President's life, said White
House Press Secretary Bill
Greener.
WHEN the cashier went to
summon aid, the man left,
Greener said. He later ap-
proached a doorman at the ho-'
tel and made a threatening
comment, Greener said. The
doorman reported the threat to
Secret Service agents and the
man was apprehended in Union
Square.
Special agent-in-charge Ken-
neth lacovoni told newsmen that
the note mentioned no place or
time but did refer to a gun.
Carlo was not carrying a gun,
however, agents sad.
Just 16 days ago in Sacramen-
to, Secret Service agents
wrestled Charles Manson follow-
er Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme
to the ground after agents said
she pulled a gun on the Presi-
dent. She has since been
charged with trying to assassn-
ate Ford.
THE ATTEMPT occurred as
Ford was making a brief walk

from his hotel to the state cap-
itol where he delivered a speech
focusing on law enforcement.
Back at the White House,
shortly before midnight after a
San Francisco visit that ended
with a shot fired by a would-be
assassin, Ford said if a Presi-
dent cannot go among the peo-
ple "something has gone wrong
in our society . .
"The American people are
good people," he said. "And un-
der no circumstances will I -
and I hope no others - capitu-
late to those who want to under-
cut what's good in America."
POLITICAL leaders joined in
expressing relief that the Presi-
dent escaped unharmed.
Sen. Ernest Hollings, (D-S.C.),
said there definitely should be
a congressional examination of
the Secret Service. Sen. Henry
Bellmon, (R-Okla.), said he
thinks the Senate subcommittee
that has jurisdiction over Secret
Service appropriations will look
into the security question.
Hollings said that while "there
are a lot of real dedicated
agents," there has been a break-
down in the agency's failure to
follow up on initial tips in the
cases of Lee Harvey Oswald, ac-
cused of assassinating John Ken-
nedy; of Lynette Fromme, who
brandished a gun at Ford in
Sacramento, Calif., Sept. 5, and
of Sarah Jean Moore, 45, ac-
cused of firing at Ford yester-
day. San Francisco police said
she had been questionedi and
passed - by the Secret Service
on Sunday.
"I WOULD think it needs a
good old shaking up over there,"
Hollins said. He said it would
be difficult for a President to
shake up the Secret Service
since he has to deal with its
agents every day.

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Chairman, The Study Commission on Pharmacy
Chairman and Director,
The National Fund for Medical Education
Chancellor Emeritus, Case Western Reserve University
4 P.M., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1975
U-M RACKHAM AMPHITHEATER
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Joel Geier, National Chairperson, l.S. Jus
returned from Portugal.

Incident provokes
surprise, outrage

,

~-
f
t

(Continued from Page 1)
the history department, said, "II
can't think of two assassination
attempts on a President - cer-
tainly in this short a time. It
seems a little bizarre."
"It's incredible, especially
since the secret service talked,
to her recently," he added.
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University President Robben
Fleming hadn't heard of the
most recent attempt. until in-
formed by The Daily, but com-
mented that "it's really literally
impossible to protect a person if
that person is going to mingle
with the public."
" Wow - it's really terrible.
It shows a lack of something on
the part of the secret service,"
one Stockwell freshwoman com-
xneiied.
"They could do more," she
added.
Paul McCracken, a Univer-
sity economist and an advisor
to the President on economic
affairs commented, "I'm appal-
led that this kind of thing could
have happened once, let alone
twice. It's an incredible thing."
"We ought to do what can
be done to beef up security -
but this is a democratic society
and I don't think they (the se-
cret service) should wrap the
President in a bullet proof co-
coon," he added.
Kathy Fojtik, a Washtenaw
County commissioner comment-
ed, "I hope it (the attempt) im-
presses on him the need for
guin control."
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