THE Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXIV, No. 40-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, July 13, 1974 Ten Cents Twelve Pages EHRLICH A FOD] 0 GUIL TY Three others also convicted WASHINGTON (ill'-John Ehrlich- man, once one of the ranking F' members of President Nixon's White House staff, was convicted yesterday of conspiracy and per- jury in the Ellsberg break-in case. Ehrlichman, 49, Nixon's chief domestic adviser until he resigned in April, 1973, amid rising Water- cate scandals, said after the verdict he had doubted all along he could et a fair trial in Washington and said he would appeal. THE VERDICT made Ehrlichman one f the most powerful government offi- Nitls ever convicted of a crime. Interior / Secretary Albert Fall went to jail for a yr in 1931 in the Teapot DOme scan- lts. iOthers of such high rank have been a rthnezharged in the past but never convicted, ncluding Nixon's former attorney gen- ral and re-election campaign manager, John Mitchell, and former commerce secretary and campaign fund-raiser VMaurice Stans, who were acquitted by a 'try in the Robert Vesco case in March. Former Atty. Gen. Richard Klein- lienst pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor 'ot his testimony in the ITT case but y vas given a suspended sentence. THE JURY convicted Ehrlichman, Gordon Liddy, Bernard Barker and Eugenio Martinez of a civil rights -harge of conspiring to enter the Beverly Hills, Calif., office of Dr. Lewis Fielding and examine his files on Daniel Ells-q" berg, the man who leaked the Pentagon papers. This count carries a maximum prison AP Photo sentence of 50 years. Ehrlichman also FORMER PRESIDENTIAL aide John Ehrlichman and his wife, Jean, leave the was convicted. of three other counts, District of Columbia Court of Appeals after a federal jury convicted him for Barker (right) with attorney - See EHRLICHMAN, Page 10 his part in the Ellsberg break-in. Legislature OK's 'U' budget By JEFF SORENSEN The state legislature yesterday over- whelmingly passed a bill hiking the Uni- versity's budget nearly $9.3 million over last year's total. University officials saiy the large in- crease means there will likely be no tuition hike for the '74-'75 academic terms. 'I don't think there will be a tuition increase of any kind this year," said Fedele Fauri, University vice presi- dent for state relations and planning. THE HIGHER Education Bill, which contains fi g u r e s for the University budget, was passed 32-2 by the Senate and 88-I by the House. The total state education appropriation was $427.5 mil- lion, with $105.5 million specifically granted to the University's Ann Arbor campus. The increases in this year's budget are slated for salary hikes of at least seven per cent for all University personnel and at least a four per cent increase on all non-salary items, including financial aid funds. Fauri s t a t e d that "compensation (salary) increases will take first pri- ority" for the additional funds. GOV. WILLIAM Milliken recommend- ed last January a $9 million increase in the University's budget. Last week, the Senate passed a bill calling for a $8.8 million increase ovetr last year's figure. Wednesday, the House passed a ver- sion of the same bill allocating a $9.3 million increase. Thursday, the Senate rejected the House bill and sent the measure to a joint Senate-House confer- ence committee to iron out differences between the two versions. The committee's recommendation yes- terday closely followed the House pro- posal for the larger $9.3 million increase, and it was near-unanimously approved by legislators eager to convene so they can begin campaigning for the Aug. 6 primaries, See STATE, Page 9