VSfritriian Daihj Vol. LXXXI, No. 63-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, August 7, 1971 Ten Cents Eight Pages Indians file sui against 'U'on treaty By P.E. BAUER and CHRIS PARKS t In an attempt to force action on demands for greater educational opportunities for Indians, Paul Johnson and the Chippewa, Ottawa and Potowatomy tribes have filed suit against the University. The Indians base their suit on the 1817 Treaty of Fort Meigs in which the three tribes ceded land to the "corpora- tion of the college of Detroit"-later the University-with Too many troops? Sen. Mike Gravel (D-Alaska) talks at a news conference yesterday on the U.S. troop level, which he says is close to half a million men over its legal limit. He said that since the draft law has ex- pired the total has exceeded legal maximum. DEMOCRATS CRITICAL: Rise shown In state, national unem loyment rates last mont h the understanding that their children w o u 1 d receive in return a chance for better education. Subsequent sale of these lands, according to Johnson, head of the campus' American Indians Unlimited, was the major source of funds for the University in its formative stages. The suit, filed Thursday in Washtenaw C o u n t y Circuit Court, charges the University with mishandling these funds. According to the suit the Uni- versity has failed in its obliga- tions under the treaty to pro- vide the state's Indians with educational opportunities. On the basis of this charge, a legal brief filed by the Indians calls on the court to force the University to determine the amount of money derived from the sale of the land, and deposit this amount in a trust fund. Further, the suit demands that the University account for all investment of these funds. If this is not done, the Univer- sity would be forced to pay in- terest on the money into the trust fund at 15 per cent com- pounded annually since Jan. 1, 1826. Johnson has estimated this could amount to "at least a mil- lion dollars." University finan- cial officers were unavailable to comment on this figure. William Fenstemacher, assist- ant vice president for academic affairs, said yesterday that the legal struggle which could re- sult from the suit "won't help either the University or the In- dians." He noted the suit could be settled out of court and added that several administra- tors desired such a solution. The legal proceedings "would only give a black eye to both Indians and the University," he said. See INDIANS, Page 2 AA Model Cities head* sues News The chairman of the Ann Arbor Model Cities Policy Board has filed a suit seeking payment for damages allegedly sustained as a result of printed charges against him. The Ann Arbor News recently reported that Ezra Rowry si- multaneously accepted sick leave pay for his job in a University laboratory and Model Cities con- ference pay for several days in 1969 and 1978. Rowry is seeking a total of $250,000 to be paid jointly by the defendants for alleged viola- lion of Rowry's civil rights. The defendants in the case are the University, the Regents, Uni- versity Personnel Director Rus- sel Reister, Booth Newspapers, Inc., The Ann Arbor News, its editor, and the paper's reporter, Ron Cordray. Apparently, the Michigan Civil Rights Commission is also in- vestigating discrimination char- ges filed by Rowry. Rowry's suit to the U.S. Dis- trict Court in Detroit charges that two Ann Arbor News articles and an editorial were printed "for no other reason than plain- tiff was a member of the Black Race and of African descent and color." Furthe-, it states that "it is not true that plaintiff fraudulent- ly and wrongfully took money from the University of Michigan and the Ann Arbor Model Cities Agency." From Wire Service Reports The nation's unemployment rate rose in July as high school and college youths entering the economy found jobs lacking, the government said yesterday. Accompanying the rise in the jobless rate was an increase in A total employment in the coun- try. Most of the 1.2 million gain in jobs was among teenagers, but that group also suffered the biggest rise in unemploy- ment, Labor Department fig- ures showed. Meanwhile, Michigan's unem- ployment rate skyrocketed to 10.3 per cent of the total labor force, the highest jobless fig- ure for July in 23 years, the Michigan Employment Secur- ity Commission reported yester- day. Democratic National Chair- man Laurence F. O'Brien, r e - acting to national statistics said, "The Nixon Administra- tion's hsead in-the-sand ap- proach to the national economy continues to take its deadening toll in the lives of millions of Americans." 1 "There is no indication of any recovery." said Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-Minn.), Nix- on's Democratic opponent in 1968 and again a potential contender. Dr. Geoffrey Moore, commis- sioner of the Bureau of L a b o r Statistics, acknowledged under questioning from Humphrey and other Democratic members of the Senate-House Economic Committee, that if an estimated 740,000 "hidden" unemployed too discouraged to hunt j o b s were added, the jobless r a t e would have soared to 6.7 per cent. Only the jobless who ac- tively seek work are counted. But Moore disagreed with Humphrey on the state of the economy, saying, "There are a number of idications of recov- ery" including a ree in housing sa rt and a modest mprove- ment in unemployment since last winter. Another witness before t ie committee disagreed. "The current recovery is clearly -the slowest and feeblest in the last 25 years," said Pro- fessor Charles C. Killingsworth of Michigan State University. The July national employ- ment report, after seasonal ad- justment showed an increase of 500.000 in total employment to 78.9 million, a rise of 200,000 unemployed to 4.8 million and a jump of 700,000 to 83.8 mil- lion in the total civilian labor force. The report also said average hourly earnings of 45 million rank and file workers remained unchanged at $3.42, but their average weekly paycheck drop- ped 35 cents to $127.22 because the strike of 500,000 telephone workers brought down the length of the average work week. The Michigan jobless rate was lip from June's 9.3 per cent, and the state commission attributed the sharp rise to increased lay- offs by the auto industry for model changeover. Some 387,000 persons were un- employed in Michigan last month, compared to 347,000 in June. In the tri-county Detroit area, unemployment was 10.6 per cent last month, the highest July figure since 1963. Some 189,000 were unemployed compared to 171,000 in June when the job- less rate was 9.5 per cent. According to Labor Dept. na- tional statistics, the average See NATIONAL, Page 6 Salary equity sought for women By P.E. BAUER In keeping with University goals set last Sep- tember to eliminate sex discrimination on cam- pus, members of the Women's Commission are currently conducting a review of University per- sonnel files in order to unearth cases of salary inequity. Zena Zumeta, the University's women's repre- sentative, working under the auspices of the Commission, is trying to find cases in which men are paid significantly more than women when doing the same job. Such cases could then be remedied through negotiations with the em- ploye's supervisor, through filing a suit through the federal Fair Labor Standards Act or through the yet-to-be-formulated File Review Procedures. Assisting her is Employment Representative Meryl Eriksson. "It's a very time-consuming job;" says Zu- meta. "We examine each file for the salary level of the employe, education level, age, previous employment, clerical tests, personal recommen- dations from previous employers and supervisors, duties of the current job, and sex of the em- ploye. This serves to give us an adequate picture of the employe. "Then the files of other employes in the same classification are examined. After evaluating them we can form some opinion as to whether salary levels in a particular area are suitable for job tasks, and make some attempts to remedy any inequities which we find." To date, Zumeta has found seven of what she terms "clear cut cases of salary inequity" after examining the files of 150 non-union University employes. In addition to performing the file review, Zu- meta and Eriksson also investigate complaints of suspected ineqgity which are made by em- playes. Despite the enthusiasm shown by, the Women's Commission toward this project, certain prob- See WOMEN, Page 3 Zena Zumeta