Page 4-Saturday, July 21 1979-The Michigan Daily 4Michigan Daily Eighty-nine Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI. 48109 Vol. LXXXIX, No. 49-S News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Tuition hikes must not keep out poor T HE REGENTS approved the annual bad news Thursday: tuition rates increased an average 8.75 per cent fot the coming school year. To top off soaring costs, additional charges of $23 for Health Service, $16 for registration, and $4 for the Michigan Union and student space remodeling will be incurred by students. The price hikes are inevitable when viewed realistically. Inflation has taken its toll on the price of acquiring a college diploma, and this University is not isolated from such trends. Although state appropriations are increasing somewhat in real dollars, the state's portion of the University's support is shrinking. State funds pay for about 59 per cent of Univer- sity expenses, while tuition covers around 33 per cent, and private sources finance the other nine per cent. Realistically, the level of state funding is not likely to rise significantly in the future. However, it is hoped that education is considered an even higher priority by state officials than it is already. Fortunately, state and federal financial aid has been expanded in the last year. It is hoped that aid can be hiked commensurate with rising costs. Despite the relatively low cost of education here compared to our prestigious peers, this Univer- sity is expensive relative to many other public in- stitutions. Maintaining financial aid and student loan programs at the maximum level possible is essential to keeping this school open to all segments of society. As a state-assisted institution, University executives and Regents must exercise their authority to keep costs low enough to avoid ex- cluding less privileged students. Of utmost con- cern to authorities should be eliminating waste. But these activities must be undertaken with great sensitivity and care, so as to avoid judgement of services solely on a cost-efficient basis. Although this University rates as one of the best privately-financed public schools in the country, private support must take up the slack left by declining state support. Students are least capable of compensating for funding shortfalls. Therefore, private contributions-mainly alumni and corporate sources-are the logical alter- natives. But University administrators must not let inordinate influence accompany increased private support. Just as administrators are sen- sitive to increased state control of University af- fairs, private interests can be just as dangerous. University officials must resist attempts by cor- porate contributors to set the research agenda, just as they do not permit outside parties to con- trol the curriculum. Executive officers made laudable state lob- bying efforts which helped bring home the 9.3 per cent inerease in state annrnnriations. Unlike the THE WEEK IN REVIEW I I Tuition hikes TATE LEGISLATORS strug- gled for a week and a half over the state budget and higher education approipriations before finally allocating $146.4 million to the University. University vice- presidents this past week sweated through cram sessions on the University's total $584 million budget. Thursday the University Board of Regents, despite Regent Thomas Roach's (D-Saline) careful, last-minute examination, made quick work of approving that budget, which includes an average 8.75 tuition increase and a seven per cent salary raise for faculty and staff. "They did yeoman's work in those 10 days," said Interim University President Allan Smith, referring to the legislators.- STUDENTS ALSO will be assessed other fees: $23 for Health Service, $16 for registration, and a new charge of about $4 for the Michigan Union and the remodeling of office space for student organizations. In-state tuition jumped more than nine per cent for both upper- and underclasspersons, while out-of- state tuition increased a flat 7.1 per cent. In-state freshpersons and sophomores will pay $607 per term; in-state juniors and seniors, $678; out-of-state underclasspersons, $1,820; out-of-state upperclassper- sons, $1,960. Non-resident medical students will be charged the University's highest tuition rate - $2,950per term. The seven per cent salary hike is the maximum allowed under President Carter's wage and price guidelines, but, said University Vice-President for Academic Af- fairs Harold Shapiro, "The most critical thing is not wage-price guidelines, but the limit of our fiscal capacity." According to Shapiro, the $64,000 deficit scheduled for the 1979-80 budget is the closest the University has come to a balanced budget in several years. Shapiro added that the deficit should be erased by the fiscal year's end. Black English T APPEARS that the Black English case is far from set- tled due to the Ann Arbor School Board's decision to appeal U.S. District Court Judge Charles Joiner's recent ruling against the school system. The Board voted Wednesday night in a closed session to appeal the verdict as soon as possible because the % RESIDENT NON-RES. RESIDENT NON-RES. 12- 11- £44 -10- 7 '9 8-- -7- FR.-SOPH. FR.-SOPK. JR.-SR. JR.-SR. "decision is too fuzzy," as the board's president, Kathy Dan- nemiller, said. However, on Thursday Dan- nemiller said the closed portion of Wednesday night's meeting violated the state's Open Meetings Act. School Board At- torney John Weaver said he thought the meeting complied with the law. "RATHER THAN make waves, we'll just have the board take a public vote. It seems to me verystrange that some people are afraid to have this case ap- pealed," Weaver said. Dannemiller said the Board's secret vote violated two sections of the open meeting law. That law requires public bodies to deliberate in public and make its decisions public. Dannemiller further admitted the school board unknowingly has been violating those provisions for two years. She added that the new vote may change the decision since some board members will be out of town during the rescheduled meeting at 4:30 p.m. today. Judge Joiner's decision found the school system at fault in teaching standard English without taking Black English into account when instructing its speakers. The judge gave the school system 30 days to devise a plan for identifying children who speak Black English so that it can be'considered in teaching. If that is done, the judge ruled, the dialect will not become a barrier for those - children in learning standard English. Cable television ANN ARBOR'S financially troubled cable television system may get a new lease on life following the passage Mon- day night of revisions to the city's ordinance regulating cable TV. Ann Arbor CableVision, the company now running the city's cable system, is some $4.5 million in debt, and the city has been trying to find a company willing to take over the system. TWO MONTHS ago, represen- tatives of Daniels and Associates, a Denver-based firm that had ex- pressed interest in buying the cable TV system, walked out of a city council meetingdisappointed after council refused to liberalize the cable TV ordinance. Revisions passed Monday night include allowing the company running the cable TV system to set its own subscriber rates. If 70 per cent of the city's residents ever subscribe to cable TV however, council will again take over the function of setting rates. Another revision allows a com- pany buying the system to ex- pand the system to other parts of the city at its own pace. Before passage of the revisions, the company would have been required to lay a cer- tain amount of cable per year, but now it is only required to have service available to 85 per cent of the city's residents before the 15- year franchise granted by the city expires. OTHER REVISIONS require the company to connect Ann Ar- bor schools to the system, and force the company to make available first two, and then four, public access channels. An official of Daniels and Associates contacted yesterday said the company was "still in- terested" in purchasing Ann Ar- bor's system. He said that although the com- pany knew of the ordinance changes, it still had yet to see a certified copy of the ordinance. "A lot of things in the ordinance are interpretive," he said. One chapter of the ordinance which the company disliked, he said, was the requirement that the company provide public access channels. He stressed, however, that the company had made no decisions on a purchase yet. ] Week-in-review was written by Editor-in-Chief Elizabeth Slowik, Editorial Director Judy Rakowsky, and City Government reporter John