ZZW Sfr4igan &titu Vol. LXXXI, No. 40-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, July 7, 1971 Ten Cents Eight Pages 1 ''officials ask increase in funding By ALAN LENHOFF University officials yesterday concluded a series of talks with the State Senate Appropriations Committee in an attempt to gain additional state funds for the Univer- sity for fiscal 1971-72. Yesterday, University vice presidents Allan Smith, Fe- dele Fauri and Wilbur Pierpont met with committee mem- bers and asked for additions of $407,000 and $80,000 to Gov. William Milliken's budget requests for the University's Dearborn and Flint campus- es, respectively. Govt. ells of Last Wednesday, the vice O I e l presidents, along with Deans William Mann of the dental ] school and John Gronvall of the holVday medical school went before the committee to request an addi- h s l tional $3.8 million for the Ann Arbor campus. The governor's budget re- The State Department has quest, presented to the Legisla- issued a warning to Ameri- ture in February, recommended cans traveling abroad that ser- only an additional $2.8 million ious consequences may result for all University campuses over from arrests outside the coun- the previous year's appropria- try on charges of possessing, tion, with $1.7 million earmark- trafficking in, or smuggling Il- ed for Ann Arbor. legal drugs. Last week, Smith and Pier- U.S. officials can do little pont detailed before the com- about the severe penalties im- mittee needs for $13.4 million in posed for these offenses, and new funds for the Ann Arbor have no way of alleviating the campus for fiscal 1971-72, while sometimes primitive penal con- identifying sources of funding ditions the sentences are im- for the needs amountings to posed under. $9.5 million-leaving the Uni- Many young Americans a r e versity $3.8 million short, under the impression the foreign The funds would in part be governments are more tolerant used by to provide University of drug use and more permis- staff with'an average 8.1 per sive in both their drug laws and cent raises-equal to those re- enforcement of them than in cently won by state civil service the United States. However, employes. sentences in some countries for Gov. Millikes had previously narcotics and marijuana range suggested6.81 per cent increases, up to the death penalty. The University last fall asked At the end of May, there for 10 per cent. were 747 Americans under de- See OFFICIAL, Page 2 tention in the jails of 50 fore- Satchmo is dead Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong died yesterday, aged 71. (See Storp, Page 6) FEMALE FACULTY ACTS: iscri mmnation cite against universities By P.E. BAUER to complaints and agrce to rE tive action program at tae As at the University, female view their operating procedures versity, $7.5 million =n fed faculty members at other major perhaps because of the ax Pit- contracts was withheld last colleges and universities through- tinger holds over their heats. pending development of an out the nation are bringing Colleges and universities viict ministrative plan to end sex charges of sex discrimination do not measure up face the pose- crimination. T h e Univer against academia. bility of losing federal con'rfees, agreed to pay $6 million i. b Complaints have been filed with a key source of income, partic- pay, retroactive to 1968, to the federal government against ularly for research. women faculty members. Brown, Harvard, Yale, Maryland. As a result of such an affir'tr See FACULTY, Page 2 Pittsburgh, Wisconsin, Tufts, and Stanford as well as the Univce- sity by women employes attack- ing hiring and promotion o dures', salary levels, su .>. for admission to g r a d t a r e schools, and tenure - which many female faculty members- say they find difficult to oain. In addition to comulains rr- garding the treatment of faculty members, women here are also concerning themselves with cne problems of non-academic sT:.. such as typists, librarians, r other non-union workers. So far, 250 complaints of sex- ual bias have been filed against 36 institutions throughout the country. Federal officials have initiated 45 investigaions, and won compliance from at least wo major schools. J. Stanley Pottinger, diree"Or :i of the Civil Rights Divisioy1 of the Health, Education and Wel- fare Department, says sex dis- crimination has become a sub- stantive issue since women acti- vitists started presing fur cn- : forcement of a '68 presidential order prohibiting sex discrimina- tion by government -contractors. Before then, he says, govern- ment enforcement of the 1964 , Civil Rights Act had concentrated . on areas of racial discrimination Scores of institutions have sub- mitted to HEW "affirmative ac- tion plans.' specific remedial Indians hit V arms goals and timetables aimed at bringing more women into higher Protesting the continued U.S. sales of armaments to Pakistan in levels of the educationad estab- has left hundreds of thousands dead and millions homeless, Indi lishment. yesterday shortly before the arrival of President Nixon's nations Pottinger said- most colleges Kissenger will remain in India two days conferring with Premie and universities. usually yield Pakistan tomorrow. leral fall ad- dis- sAy ack its ign countries for violating local narcotic and marijuana laws. Two years before, this figure was only l9ft With more than two million Americans expected to go abroad this summer, the D e - partment of State is making a determined effort to spread the word that the drug picture abroad is not as rosy as might be thought. In many countries, accord- ing to the State Department, drug peddlers are also police or customs informers. After mak- ing a sale, the seller will de- scribe the buyer to the police as a possible user. The buyer is thon detained, usually found in possession of the drugs, and arrested and charged with a serious offense. The seller bene- fits two ways: he makes money on the sale and receives a re- ward from the police for in- forming. Many countries have no pro- vision for bail, so pre-trial de- tention can be prolonged to as much as a year. Possession alone can result in a jail term of six years and a heavy fine in some countries, while in others the offender is placed in a mental hospital for one to three years. Trafficking sentenc'-s range from 10 years to life. State Dept. statement issued to the press says that, "Prison conditions in some countries are primitive: overcrowding, lack of sanitary facilities and bedding; limited, poor-quality food; little or no heat or light; damp, underground locations; rats and virmin; sometimes solitary confinement," ssales the wake of the civil war there which ans demonstrated outside Delhi airport al security advisor Henry Kissenger. r Indira Ghandi before journeying to