The MichiganDaily July 14, 1981 Ten Cents Twelve Pages 'U' officials to ask 18% rise in tuition rate v Daiy Photo by KMm HI'L Water Nymphs TWO STUDENTS, Theresa (left) and Sharon, take time out from their busy summer schedule to enjoy a dip in the fountain of the Michigan Union. PIR GIM asks Mich. Union tojoin boycott of Nestle's products By MARK GINDIN Daily staff writer The University will ask the Regents to hike tuition for fall by 18 percent this week. The administration finally decided on the 18 percent figure after it announced months ago that it would seek a tuition increase between 16 per- cent and 19 percent. University Vice-President for Academic Affairs Bill Frye has recommended that the Regents ap- prove the 18 percent increase for the University's Ann Arbor and Flint cam- puses and a 22 percent increase for the Dearborn campus. Tight budgetary problems this past year and an anticipated reduction in state appropriations are the major reasons for the recommended increase, said Bob Sauve, assistant to the vice- president. IF THE REGENTS approve the recommendation, tuition for resident freshmen and sophomores will rise to $808, with juniors and seniors paying $910 each term. The proposed rates rise to $2,434 for out-of-state lower division undergraduates and $2,620 for upper division out-of-state undergraduates. The 18 percent across-the-board hike was decided on last week hy the executive board, said Sauve. He said the Regents will not be surprised by the relatively large increase because they have known it would be in the range of 16 percent to 19 percent since April. Regent Thomas Roach (D-Saline) said he would not approve the increase immediately. "I would tend to probe to determine whether there are any alter- natives" before voting yes, he said. "IF I AM convinced there are no alternatives," said Roach, "to main- tain the integrity of the school, I would reluctantly agree to the increase." Regental approval is "not a rubber- stamp in this case," said Sauve, and they will consider the proposal very carefully. "I just don't know if they will approve it," he said. James Brinkerhoff, the University's chief financial officer, said that because the state would probably givea "smaller increase" in its ap- propriations to the University than previously believed, a hike in tuition would "help the general fund break even." Brinkerhoff said he was not counting on money the state has already allocated. A TWELVE PERCENT increase in state appropriations was passed by the state legislature and signed by Gov. William Milliken earlier this year. However, "nobody, including the legislature, believes the money is there," Sauve said. Last year, the governor issued an executive order reducing the state ap- propriation after the state budget was passed because the state could not come up with the money, Sauve said. "The chances are 99 to one" he will do the same this year, he said. Hopefully, he will issue the order by Oct. 1, so the budget for this year can be planned, said Sauve. "Even in the best case, that of a 12 percent increased state appropriation and an 18 percent tuition increase, we will not be able to meet all the demands we should," said Brinkerhoff."It looks to be a tough year for everybody," he said. FRYE, IN HIS recommendation to- .the Regents, listed the considerations taken into account when calculating the increase. Besides the likelihood of a small in- crease in state appropriations, Frye noted the need for the strongest salary program possible. Only a nine percent salary improvement program would be possible under the most optimistic con- ditions. Realistically, a five percent to eight percent improvement is predic- ted, with inflation at a level of 11 per- cent. Frye noted the decrease in financial aid furnished by the federal gover- nment because of budget cuts in Washington. General fund support for student aid will be increased to keep pace with the tuition hike this year, Sauve said. However, dollar for dollar compensation for federal aid lost through'cutbacks is not possible, he said. EFFECTIVE July 1, 1981, a general six percent salary budget reduction slashed the salary budgets of all units at the University, according to a memorandum included in the recom- mendation. The reduction should save $7.7 million in the next fiscal year. Institutions comparable to the University also register hikes in tuition, according to a chart provided with Frye's memo. Central Michigan University will sustain a 15.1 percent increase in un- dergraduate tuition, while Michigan Tech has a 20 percent increase and Michigan State University is con- sidering an 11 percent increase. Most private schools range between 14 percent and 19 percent increases ac- cording to the graph. Harvard Univer- sity tuition is rising 15.5 percent, and tuition at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology is rising by 19.4 percent next year. By ANN MARIE FAZIO Daily staff writer The Michigan Union has become the target of a campaign to boycott produc- ts of the Nestle's corporation conducted by both the Public Interest Research Group in Michigan and the Michigan Student Assembly. PIRGIM and MSA (at PIRGIM's request) both sent letters to the Union's director, Frank Cianciola, asking that Nestle's products be cleared from Union vending machines and the shelves of the Union store to protest the corporation's "immoral" marketing. PRIGIM DIRECTOR Rick Levick said the letters to Cianciola were a first step toward ridding the campus of Nestle's products. Levick said PIRGIM is opposed to Nestle's "force marketing" of infant formula to mothers in Third World countries. This practice, said PIRGIM's letter, "results in an i estimated one million infant fatalities annually." PIRGIM charges that Nestle's is using deceptive methods to persuade uneducated mothers to buy its formula. These people don't know how to use the formula correctly and many infants are dying of malnutrition as a result, Levick said. "IT'S BASICALLY genocide," Levick said, adding that high fatality rates could be avoided in light of the fact that 98 percent of all mothers can feed their children naturally. MSA Vice-President Amy Hartmann said MSA sent a letter to Cianciola in favor of the boycott in order to take a stand on the issue. Cianciola said that he wants to wait until the next meeting of the Union's Board of Representatives to make a decision concerning the question raised by the June 2 letter. That meeting is See NESTLE'S, Page 9