M4 Sir4 igau &tity Vol LXXXI, No 62 S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, August 6, 1971 Ten Cents Eight Pages State changes V guidelines on college funds Obscenity a touchy subject Police move in to clear demonstrators out of the precincts of the Old Bailey jail in two hours of protest yesterday. Demonstrations followed the passing of prison senten leaders of Britain's hippie underground for publishing an obscene magazine written by s FULL REPORT EXPECTED: Panel urges faculty caut4 By ALAN LENHOFI Although the Legislature has not yet finalized the University's appropriation for the current fiscal year, Uni- versity officials ,have already received discouraging news about next year's general fund allocation from the state. In a letter sent to all state colleges, John Dempsey, director of the Governor's budget bureau, has announced that appropriation requests from the colleges for fiscal 1972-73-due Sept. 24,-will re required to include re- sponses to a number of newly adopted policies designed to save money and possibly avert further tax increases. Among the new policies is one that wold serve to level off un- dergraduate enrollment in the state's larger universities while placing greater emphasis on ex- pansion of graduate programs. Specifically, the letter mentions the expansion of medical educa- p t off b u t tion as a top priority. -Associated Press In addition, the budget bureau is seeking to "minimize or elimi- io tt 0 nate general fond support for erLI London after activities which can and should aces on three be funded by direct user charges. WASHINGTON (') - Men born Included in this category are chool children. such activities as inter-collegiate Dec. 4, Jan. 25 .15, athletics, parking, bus transpor- 1952 were assigned Nos. 5, 2 and Catonhelthsevicsalumni 3 respectively in yesterday's tation health srvices, u drafte lottery to headetherdine activities, bookstore, university datlteyt edteln press, dormitory advising," and facing- possible call to military other services. service next year. ~ Although the President's so- in "Whilermost of these activities thority to draft men expired June are worthwhile, the 1 e t t e r 30, the lottery for next year's states, "competition for public callup was held because the law funds dictates that they have a governing it remains in effect. JP t lower priority than those activi- Meanwhile tse Senate yester- ipts ::h ties which are closer to the es- sence of high education objec- ady built up to es." See Page 2 for a complete list tage in other The letter also stresses that of birthdates and their corres- e requests for new and expanded ponding draft lottery numbers. I faculty mem- programs be accompanied by ning election proposals for reallocation of day put off until Sept. 13 con- yie support of funds from existing programs sideration of a two-year draft agency until "as a means of partially fund- bill that calls for a negotiated a clear under- ing them. deadline on U.S. withdrawal ituation at the Response to each policy But Senate Democratic Leader should be in narrative form, con- Mike Mansfield said that dec- round the coun cise and specific. Vague generali- laration was no substitute for his around the ties, lengthy exhortations and amendment to declare as U.S. d to collective warnings of disaster should be policy a nine month deadline on inted themsel- avoided," the letter advises, troop withdrawal, p r o v i d e d ossibilities and "It may not be as bad as it American prisoners of war are ive bargaining See STATE, Page freed. t i E collective barganing By JIM IRWIN The Senate Assembly com- inittee studying the possibilities of collective bargaining or alter- native methods for the faculty to "more decisively affect Uni- versity of Michigan financial and organizational policies" has urged University faculty mem- bers to be cautious about tak- ing active steps towards insti- tuting faculty collective b a r - gaining at the present time. In a communication recently sent to the faculty, the Com- mittee on the Rights and Re- sponsibilities of Faculty M e m- bers, 1971, stated that "well- financed efforts toward organ- ized (faculty) collective bar- atten gaining have alre an advanced s parts of the Stat They cautioned hers against si cards for tentat any bargaining they had gained standing of the s University and a University and country in regar bargaining, acqua ves with the pt limits of collect: Court turns down presi entia eandidaey SAIGON (A') - South Viet- nam's Supreme Court yesterday disqualified Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky as a candidate in the presidential elections, narrowing the field to President Nguyen Van Thieu and tetired Gen. Duong Van "Big" Minh. The court ruled Ky failed to pualify because 39 of his 102 endorsements duplicated those already given to Thieu, and thus were invalid. Ky needed 100 to gain a place on the ballot for the Oct. 3 election. Shortly after being notified of the court's ruling, Ky said he had made -no decision as to what action he would take next. Under the election law Ky can appeal the court's decision within the next eight days. Such an appeal would be ruled on by the full nine-member Nguyen Cao Ky court within seven days a f t e r that. The final list of candi- presidential race and leave dates - to which there is no Thieu as the sole candidate. challenge - will be posted Aug. In a statement issued by his 24. press secretary, Minh said re- Ky has charged that Thieu ports from the countryside coerced province and city coun- showed that his campaign cilmen to sign blank forms even workers "have been kept under before the election law was surveillance and terrorized." promulgated or Thieu declared The U.S. Embassy is known his candidacy, and' that t h e s e to be worried that Minh might endorsements are therefore 11- pull out and turn the election legal. into what one American official Meanwhile, Minh repeated a yesterday called a "colossal threat to withdraw from t he farce," and of various bargaining agen- cies. and considered local alter- natives to formal colective bar- gaining. The committee exoects to make a full report and f i n a 1 recommendations on collective bargaining in September. Faculty unioniation, tradi- tionally scorned by cllee pro- fessors as a means to "nip now- er, has been an isue of widen- ing interest at the University during the past year. A poll taken by the local chap- ter of the American Association of University Professors of U n i v e r s i t y Professors (AAUP) last January showed considerable faculty interest in the possibilities of collective bargaining and yet some reser- vations. According to Prof. Wilbert McKeachie, at that time pres- ident of AAUP, comments writ- ten on questionnaires indicated that there Were "quite a num- ber of faculty who feel that collective bargaining would de- stroy the concept of the aca- demic community." In response to local interest in collective bargaining, a sym- posium will be presented on September 17 and 18 in the Michigan League Ballroom by the Institute of Continuing Le- gal Education to discuss "fast- moving recent developments, legal questions and practical problems of collective bargain- ing for professionals on c a m- puses." New sales technique This coffee advertisement which has appeared in Sweden is a phony, say owners of the Gevalia coffee company for which it ap- peared. The picture, however, is not-with one small exception. The hand is that of a swedish blosde who originally modelled for the ad. A poster artist says he copied an official Nixon portrait from the U.S. Embassy and coupled it with part of a Gevalia coffee ad.