TUITIOIN HIKE See Editorial Page \:Y L , tr4 tft ~aiti BLASPHEMOUS High-8* Low-48d See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No' 162 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, April 17, 1976 10 Cents Eight Pages plus 2 Supplements u f IOU SEE NEWS APPN CALLrDALY The short goodbye For those of us here at The Daily who haven't cracked a book in four months, or who hunger for a little splendor in the Arb's grass, it's time for a bit of a rest. For those of you who will be around to experience the pleasures of an Ann Arbor spring and summer, we'll be returning, in tabloid form, on May 5. If you're shipping out, have a pleasant and profitable summer. We'll be back for business as usual in September. 0 Organize If you are sufficiently incensed-about yesterday's Regental announcement of yet another tuition hike (this time nine per cent), you might have a chance to do something about it. Several Michigan Stu- dent Assembly (MSA) members who will be in town for the summer are attempting to plan a fall tuition strike. If you are interested in helping out, call MSA at 763-3241, or visit their offices on the third floor of the Michigan Union. " Checkout' time Now that finals are looming ominously on the horizon, students, lemmings and other social ani- mals are planning for their annual mass migration. Some dorm residents are upset that they must' vacate their rooms by 9 p.m. on April 28, the last day of finals. Students with tests on that last Wed- nesday fear they'll be too burned out from last minute cramming to pack and leave in time to meet the deadline. Housing Director John Feld- kamp said earlier this month, "this is the same date that we've used in previous years. By the final day, few students are still in the dorms and we can't guarantee fire safety and security." The way housing rates have been rising, guaranteeing Feld- kamp's security is probably an equally dubious proposition. 0 GEO The Graduate Employes Organization (GEO) elected a new slate of officers Thursday night. The new president is computer and communications science TA Doug Marian. The vice president and treasurer respectively are Womens Studies and engineering TA Nancy Kushigan, and mathematics TA Barbra Weinstein. Randy Ernest, a political science TA, is the organization's new secretary. " Happenings ... are fairly anemic during this The Week of Seige. La Raza is sponsoring Burt Corona, a Los Angeles community organizer, who will be speak- ing in the Lawyers Club Lounge at the Law Quad on Monday, April 19 at 7:00, as part of Chicano Awareness Week ... On Tuesday, April 20, Science for the People will meet at 7:30 in 3056 Nat. Sci. Bldg. . . . On Wednesday, April 21, Paolo Soleri will speak on "The Second Generation of Arcolo- gists: A Radical and Viable Solution to Our Energy Problems," at 8:00 in the Rackham Auditorium . If you are not going to be in town this spring, but are registered to vote here, be sure to pick up an application for an absentee ballot at the, city clerk's office in City Hall, telephone number 994-2725 . . . And last but definitely least, the folks at the UGLI remind us to remind you that their hours from April 17-28 will be 8:00 a.m.-5 a.m. See you there. No pardon The state of Utah has refused a posthumous pardon for legendary labor organizer Joe Hill, who was executed by a firing squad in 1915. The Utah Attorney General's office said yesterday that posthumous pardons were banned by state law. One had been requested by an E. G. Anderson of Oakland, Cal. Hill, whose real name was Joseph Hillstrom, gained fame as a leader of the militant "Wobblies," or International Workers of the World (IWW), and as a songwriter and poet. He was convicted on two counts of murder, largely on the basis of circumstantial evidence. IWW leaders claimed he was framed by Utah's copper kingpins because of his organizing activities. 0 On the Inside ... Editorial Page- has Chris Kochmanski exam- ining Ann Arbor's film co-ops . . . Arts Page features James Fiebig's review of jazz artist Cecil Taylor . . . And Snorts Page presents a charac- REGENTS INCREASE APPROVE FOR FALL Daily Photo by SCOTT ECCKER Rites of sprin Two dancers celebrate spring and the last day of classes in yesterday's Second Annual Madison Street Party. ASIAN GROUP'S ACTIVISM 001 S: By MIKE NORTON The University Board of Regents yesterday unani- mously approved a fall tui- tion increase averaging nine to ten per cent. Presi- dent Robben Fleming attri- buted the hike to insuffi- cient funds from the state legislature, which h a v e dropped $100,000 below the amount allocated two years ago. Resident underclassper- sons will now pay an an- nual fee of $928, $80 more than the current fee. Resi- dent juniors and seniors will see, their tuition rise from $960 to $1052. Out-of- state undergraduates will pay a yearly tuition which exceeds the $3000 mark. INCREASES FOR Law School and non-resident Public Health students will be higher than ten per cent. Yesterday's tuition increase is the second such blow for University students in as many years. Last August, the Re- gents boosted rates by six per cent for the current year. "We have a great deal of fear and regret about this busi- ness," said Fleming upon pre- senting the tuition proposal to the Regents. "But it's happen- ing all over the country." FLEMING TOLD the Re- gents that the state has not completed its proposed budget for education, but added that the University could expect no extra money next year and should construct its own budget on that gloomy assumption. An additional $10-$11 million in expenditures are expected next year, according to Flem- ing, to cover increased utility costs, student financial aid and a salary increase for faculty and staff personnel of approxi- mately five per cent. About half of the $10 million could be obtained through cut- backs in present University programs, Fleming claimed but the remainder would have to be raised increase. FLEMING ti fear that neither students nor employes of the University would be pleased by the deci- sion. "I realize that the salary increases we've recommended are not going to be happily re- ceived - but we're trying to be fair to everybody," he said. Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) President Calvin Luker announced MSA's intention to fight the increase on behalf of the student body. "We're discussing what ac- tion to take right now. It'll probably be something in the nature of a tuition holdback strike in the fall." L U X E R ADDED that stu, dents interested in organizing against the hike should con- tact MSA as soon as possible. A "tuition strike" organized in thetfall of 1973 by the now defunct Government Council (SGC) fizzled when SGC was hrough a tuition expressed his unable to garner a substantia number of students to witn. hold the increased portion of the tuition. The Regents voted unani- mously to adopt the tuition hike, but made clear their distaste in doing so. "I DON'T THINK there's anyone at this table who wants to see tuition increased," said Regent Thomas Roach (D-De- troit). "But if we want to pre- serve the quality of this insti- tution we're going to have to get money. We're between a rock and a hard place but this is the only alternative I see." Regent Robert Nederlander (D-Birmingham) proclaimed the need for "drastic surgery" in University programs (citing affirmative action and finan- cial aid programs in particu- lar), adding, "I don't see how we can continue to raise tui- tion." f In a written statement on the See REGENTS, Page 8 '76'77tuition, rates at-a-glance Here is the breakdown of the tuition hike approved by the University Board of Regents yesterday, to take effect in the fall. The figures represent tuition for two full-time terms. East Wmind refocuses By MARGARET YAO East Wind, an organization devoted to "bringing about solidarity among Asian Americans in Ann Arbor," has until this year apparently alienated many of the 400 Asian Americans on campus, according to several of the group's present lead- ers, who are trying to reorient its goals. The founders of the four-year-old organization, in power until just last term, spearheaded much political activism and "preached quite a lot of leftist rhetoric," says Carl Chen, a member of East Wind's current steering committee. BUT ASIAN Americans more interested in the group's cultural and social activities than its political leanings "shied away" from the organi- zation, especially after publicity of its participa- tion in an Administration Building sit-in last spring, according to Bill Wu, a graduate student, also on the steering committee. The the group a false image of being political and very radical," Wu says. sit-in gave "extremely However, since the beginning of this term, a "friendlier, less politically-oriented" leadership has taken control as the last of East Wind's original leaders graduated and left the com- munity, according to LSA junior Brian Lee. Folk singing, poetry readings and social func- tions, now carry importance equal to political activities under the new seven-person steering committee or "core group." THE NEW leadership is also careful to avoid any moves that would enhance its past image of radicalism. Two dominant figures in the group, Wu and Mike Dagg, hope to introduce two See EAST, Page 8 Residents 1975 1976-77 Freshpersons & sophomores $ 848 $ 928 Juniors & seniors 960 1,052 Graduate students 1,160 1,272 Candidacy 712 780 Medicine& Dentistry 1,680 1,840 Public Health 1,600 1,648 Law 1,316 1,500 MBA (Master, Business Administration) Out-of-state 1975 1976-77 $2,756 $3,016 2,968 3,252 3,008 3,300 712 780 3,360 3,680 3,240 3,648 3,000 3,496 2,756 3,016 Students left angry, poorer by rate hike Boat capsizes in storm, 13 die By AP and Reuter CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex. - A capsule - lifeboat packed with workers who escaped a sinking oil rig capsized in the stormy Gulf of Mexico, and 13 men died as rescuers battled waves two stories high and gale force winds in an attempt to right the craft. Officials said yesterday that a rapidly developing storm trapped the $20 million Ocean Express oil rig and 35 crew- men in high seas on Thursday night. It sank in 187 feet of wa- ter as it was being towed to a new location. THE CREW tried to escape in two saucer - shaped capsules similar in appearance to the spacecraft used by the Apollo astronauts. One of the capsule - lifeboats turned over and the hatch op- ened, allowing six of the occu- pants to escape butedrowning 13 others as the water rushed in. A tugboat tried in vain to pluck it from heavy seas. A sec- ond capsule with 15 aboard was hoisted to safety by a tug. The captain, Peter van der Graff, was the last man to leave the rig. He was pulled off by a U. S. Coast Guard heli- marine inspection for the Coast Guard in Corpus Christi. Nobody could say exactly what happened, although offic- ials said rigs are most vulner- able to storms during a move because their 250-foot legs are pulled from the water and are sticking up into the air. AN OFFICIAL of Ocean Drill- ing & Exploration Co. (ODE- CO) of New Orleans, owners of the rig, was asked what hap- pened. "It was apparently over- turned by the waves." He said the rig was new and had gone into operation in December. Earlier, another company of- ficial said, "It's just a freak accident. We don't know exact- ly what happened. These cap- sules are supposed to float head up." A Coast Guard spokesperson said the first distress call was received Thursday night about 8:15 p.m. The message said: "Taking on water fast; un- known danger, need assist- ance." W H E N RESCUERS arrived, Navy divers tried unsuccess- fully to get inside the capsized capsule but were prevented from doing so by the heavy seas and strong winds. Finally, the Navy c a r r i e r Lexington which had raced to the scene got a cargo net under the cap- sule and hauled it onto the flight deck.- As is did so, four bodies fell out of a hatch but were re- covered by divers. Nine other bodies were found inside the capsule. During the storm winds howled at 60 miles per hour and whipped up waves up to 25 feet high. The rig went down about 40 miles northeast of Corpus Christi as it was being towed to its new location about 50 miles east of that city near Mustang Island. By SUSAN ADES and ANN MARIE LIPINSKI Students reacted to the Uni- versity Regents' annduncement yesterday of a ten per cent tui- tion increase with both outrage and surprise. "My family income has gone down in the last year, but tui- titrn has gone up," said LSA freshman Mark Lowenthal. "I can't say it wasn't necessary that they needed the money-. everyone is hard pressed. But it seems like they could have cut more from something else 'if they have to raise tuition that much." "I THINK it's pretty raunchy for them to do it this late in the year," said LSA freshwoman Joy Redmond, who, like many other students, feels the an- nouncement came too late for her to consider alternatives to attending the University this f all. Freshwoman Diana Davis said she had already made the de- cision to transfer before yester- day's announcement due to in- creasing financial strain. Her brother, however, will be at- tending the University next fall, and even though he will be on partial scholarship, "my parents are really going to be hurting for money and when they hear about another tuition increase they're going to hit the roof." "It's an outrageous capitalis- tic scandal," said Steven Gru- ber, an out-of-state student. "It's typical of the Regents' lack of concern for students. I really feel like they're trying to get me out of this Univer- sity." See STUDENTS, Page 8 Senate hopeful Don Rile call fo e conomic overhaul By PHILLIP BOKOVOY U.S. Representative Don Riegle, a top contender for the Democratic Senate nomination in the August primary, blasted the current state of the economy yesterday during a question-and-answer campaign appearance at the Michigan Union. "Everyone who is able-bodied should be able to work ... I'll go one farther - everyone should ever, differ little from those of other candidates in this election year. "We haven't figured out how to do it (housing) yet . . . but there's value in dispersing it as best one can,", he said. ONE SOLUTION to Detroit's housing problem, according to Riegle, is to "turn over the sound houses (to the city) so that people can live in them and he ones that are too far gone should be torn down." He suggests implementation of