The tcht'an 144 Vol LXXXIX, No. 60-S I Tuesday, August 7, 1979 e M gan Da y Twelve Pages Ann Arbor, Michigan Ten Cents I IWCCAA Daily Photo by JIM KRUZ Acrobatic antics Actors cavorted for their audience at the Medieval Festival last weekend. The annual event was held at the lawn of the School of Music this year. MSA president predicts group may regain financial control 'within weeks' By SARA ANSPACH After a summer of working with the University administration, the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) may regain control of its finances from the Office of Student Services "within a couple weeks," according to MSA President Jim Alland. Vice-President for Student Services Henry Johnson has had the power to monitor MSA funds since last May when the University Board of Regents directed him to hold the Assembly's money - obtained through a man- datory student assessment of $2.92 per 'U' Cellar emp trk1e vote un By PATRICIA HAGEN University Cellar employees voted last night to delay a strike authorization vote until next Tuesday because of several "'generous" proposals made by two members of the bookstore's Board of Directors, according to a union negotiator. The board members, Business Prof. Tim Nantell and Assistant to the Vice- President f or Student Services Kathleen Dannemiller, pledged at a negotiating session Sunday to ask the board at its mext meeting Monday night to adopt two proposals. ONE WILL ASK the directors to form a committee of Board and union mem- bers to discuss the decision-making term - until a report on MSA's accoun- ting structure and fund allocation process was completed. The review was prompted by a controversial elec- tion that was eventujally certified by the administration after the conven- tional MSA process had rejected it. ONE OF THE main procedures under question is that under which a student organization may obtain a monetary allocation from the MSA general fund. Johnson and representatives of the Office of Student Development (OSD) have been meeting with MSA members over the last few months suggesting that they make more stringent loyees delay til Tuesday structure of the store, an issue that has slowed negotiations between the newly- formed union and management since - talks first began last March. The store directors also will be asked to change the structure of the board to include some union members, accor- ding to union negotiator Bill Vargo and Nantell. The proposals were made, Nantell said, because "I think the employees ... are more than capable of running a retail store. They ought to have some voice in it." "THEY ASKED us in a show of good faith to delay the strike authorization vote to a week from Tuesday (today), Vargosaid. requirements for an organization to become a recognized student organization. The also have been working on a set of guidelines to govern activities that could be funded by the student government. In addition, MSA members were told that they should set up an appeals process for student groups that feel they have not received a fair allocation. "I'VE LEFT IT with them (MSA)," said Johnson, referring to the revision of funding guidelines for student groups. "I'm very impressed with the efforts of both parties (MSA and OSD)." This summer, as a result of the Regents' action, said Johnson, OSD and MSA have been "mutually screening" where the Assembly's allocations go. OSD will continue to have the authority to monitor MSA's funds closely until MSA revises its procedures for gran- ting funds to student organizations "to guarantee as much objectivity as possible," said Johnson. Currently, MSA -and the ad- ministration are "trying to nail down an agreement," said Alland. "It looks like we are not too far away," he said, adding he expects to "get the go- ahead" from Johnson by fall. EARLIER IN the summer, some Assembly members said, com- munications with the representatives from OSD were often marked by con- fusion on both sides. MSA members reported that OSD representatives were trying to establish guidelines to revise MSA policies when they did not See MSA, Page 2 statement filed with state Court of Appeals By JULIE ENGEBRECHT A written argument was filed with the state Court of Appeals yesterday after- noon supporting the contention by a group of students and others that the University Board of Regents should not be able to move its meetings when they are disrupted by protesters. The Washtenaw County Coalition Against Apartheid (WCCAA) filed an appeal with the state court last April, asking that the judge overrule a local decision that allowed the Regents to move their meeting to an undisclosed location after a breach of the peace. THE WCCAA led a disruption of the Regents' meeting last March, deman- ding that the University sell its stock in firms that conduct business in South Africa. To avoid the disruption, the Board ob- tained a court order allowing them to move the meeting behind locked doors, with only members of the press and selected individuals allowed to attend. The 27-page brief, prepared by WC- CAA attorneys Thomas O'Brien and Michael Moran, argues that the.Open Meetings Act does not allow the Board to move its meetings in the face of protest. A DECLARATORY judgment issued last April 11 by Washtenaw County Cir- cuit Court Judge Ross Campbell said the Regents could move their meeting without violating the 1977 Act. The judgment was requested by Peter Davis, an attorney hired by the University. Campbell's ruling was the first judicial interpretation of the Open Meetings Act. O'BRIEN AND Moran request that the Court of Appeals overturn Cam- pbell's ruling, award the WCCAA attor- neys fes incurred in the proceedings, and dismiss the University's complaint against the WCCAA. The brief also asks for the rein- statement of a counter claim made by the coalition shortly after the Regents obtained the first order allowing them to move their meeting. According to O'Brien, WCCAA filed a claim protesting the Regents' move, which the lower court dismissed without any argument. O'Brien said the counter claim, which "alleged serious violations of the Open Meetings Act and several federal and state protections," was ignored by the court. IN THEIR BRIEF, O'Brien and Moran contend that "if a public body changes its meeting place from the posted location - either before a meeting begins or after a meeting is convened but recessed - the meeting See WCCAA, Page 2