The Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXV, No. 36-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, July 8, 1975 Eight Pages noNxu*la* INCREASE WON'T EX( EED 10 'U' confirm PER CENT ; fall tuition hike By BILL TURQUE THE LONG anticipated fee hike became a cer- University President Robben Fleming ac- tainty last Tuesday after the State Senate ap- knowledged yesterday that a fall tuition increase proved a University appropriations package of not exceeding ten per cent has become virtually $109,803,400. The figure represents a slight in- unavoidable. crease over Governor Milliken's budget recom- "It will probably be below the percentages that mendation, but nearly $27 million less than what many other state schools have raised their tui- the University requested last winter. tions," said Fleming, "ranging from seven, Fleming, who said in early May that such an eight, to ten per cent. I think it will be below increase would be "inevitable if appropriations that figure." do not come up to what we asked for," said the "I WOULD hope that we can keep it (a fee Senate bill is lacking in several areas. increase) to the lowest possible figure with "One critical area in the operating fund is which we can still provide students with the utilities," said Fleming. "Everybody has con- necessary programs and services," said Frank ceded that utility costs are much greater than Rhodes, vice president for academic affairs. the money we are being given." "I think it will certainly be under ten per cent," said Richard Kennedy, vice president for THE tNIVERSITY had requested a $1.1 mit- state relations. lion increase to cover skyrocketing utility casts, For in-state underclasspersons, a ten per cent but will receive slightly less than $500,000. The fee hike would bring tuition to $440 per semes- difference will have to be made up through inter- ter. Resident juniors and seniors would pay nal reallocations of University funds. $495 per semester. Out-of-state freshpersons and The Senate bill also includes an 3 per cent in- sophomores would pay $1,430 under such an in- flation factor which allows the University to crease, while non-resident upperclasspeople cover such inflationary expenditures as salary would foot a bill for $1,540 per semester. See UNIVERSITY, Page 5 Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN Fleming Israeli jets bomb Palestinian bases By The Associated Press Israeli troops, jets and warships smashed suspected Palestinian terrorist bases in southern Lebanon yesterday, leaving 13 persons reported dead and scores of refugee huts destroyed. Prime Minister Yitshak Rabin vowed Israel would pursue "an uncompromising war" against the guerrillas using "the only language they understand"-the sword. Labanese Premier Rashid Karami said his troops and Palestinian guerrillas pre- vented the Israelis from aciheving their goal in yesterday's raid, which he said Negotiations in Mieast nearing " critical stages WASHINGTON ( P)-Secretary of State Henry Kissinger arranged a meeting late yesterday with Israeli ambassador Sim- cha Dinitz amid signs that efforts for a Sinai settlement are reaching a critical stage. Dinitz was hurrying back to his post here with a direct report on Sunday's Israeli cabinet session and with a quest for additional "clarification" of the terms being worked out with Egypt through Kissinger. AT A STOPOVER in New York, Dinitz told reporters "We want to move toward peace no less than the United States. What can be done and what risks can be taken is obviously the decision which the government of. Israel will have to make." Asked about reported U.S. pressure on See MIDEAST, Page 7, was to land troops to attack refugee camps. IN A COORINDATED raid lasting sev- eral hours, an Israeli miiltary spokesman said the Israelis destroyed buildings used for organizing terrorist attacks in the Lebanese city of Tyro and the Palestin- ian refugee camp of Rashidiyeh. During the raid, Israeli artillery fired into Labanon while warships dropped shells on coastal targets and ground forces struck at suspected guerrilla bases The Palestinians claimed downing an Israeli jet, and seizing an Israeli boat and killing its crew members, but Israel said all its men, planes and ships return- ed safely to base. Hours after the raid ended, Arab gun- ners fired a volley of Katyusha rockets into the northern Israeli communities of Safad and Yiron, and a small bomb ex- ploded in a Jerusalem suburb. No casual- ties or damage were reported either from the rocket attacks or the bomb. THE RAID into Lebanon came only three days after a bomb packed in a refrigerator killed 14 persons in Jeru- salem-three of them Arab women. Addressing Israel's parliament on the Friday bombing, Rabin said, "We will continue Israel's policy of no negotiations with the terrorist organizations . . . The only language they understand is the sword-and in that language we will speak to them." Rabin told parliament that Israel will "spare no effort to advance in improv- ing its methods of action against terror . .. Much has already been done in the fighting arena to deter, prevent, foil, uproot" the guerrillas. He also congratu- lated the Israeli forces indthe raid and said, "by methodical, bold and sophis- ticated actions terrorism can be over- come." See ISRAELI, Page 7 Road to Ho When the Madison, Wisconsin, City Council denied the request of some Bassett St. residents to rename their street Ho Chi Minh Trail, someone went out and did the job anyway. Police reported most of the signs, commemorating the father of a unified Vietnam, had been removed by city workers.