TENANTS UNION: THE REAL TRIAL See editorial page Y 41it iA an Ia it1 ECSTATIC High near 80 Low--45 Sunny and windy; showers tonight Vol. LXXIX No. 23-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, June 10, 1969 Ten Cents Six Pages Mi lage scores upset by 270 votes Johnson, WarnerBishop win school board seats 4 By NADINE COHODAS In a surprise vote yesterday, residents in the Ann Arbor School district passed the 6.67 mill proposal for funding public schools by nearly a 270-vote margin. The nearly $5 million bonding issue for a new junior high school passed by 3000 votes and the half-mill addition to toe present half-mill tax for special education passed by almost 6500 votes. Voters also elected Henry Johnson, Cecil Warner and Dr. Ronald Bishop to the Board of Education. Although only one-third of the registered student voters turned out for this election, compared to the April mayoral contest, the 6.67 mill proposal passed by more than a two to - ,-one margin in heavily student Sxth body found E By TOBE LEV The body of a young woman was found early yesterday in a secluded area about seven miles north of Ann Arbor. Police said the woman w a s sexually molested, stabbed in the heart, shot once in the head, and stabbed' several times in the neck. Douglas Harvey, Washtenaw County sheriff, said the slaying "appeared to be a carbon copy" of five area slayings in the past two years. Harvey said the victim was ap- proximately 5 feet, 5 inches tall, about 135 pounds and wore her brown hair in a ponytail. She wore a purple blouse, a white mini- skirt, a multi-colored shawl and a gold pin enscribed with the let- ter "A". Police are waiting for relatives to claim the victim before any identification is announced.. Harvey said police are making a state-wide effort to locate the killer. About 45 state police de- ,,4* tectives and the state crime lab are currently investigating. Harvey said he'has not gotten the results from the crime lab and thus far he knows of no clues. Harvey says the woman was murdered some time Sunday night. The area is reputed to be a lover's lane. He says the police have been making efforts to check all such areas in Ann Arbor. He does not know if the murder was comjmitted where the body was found. All the girls reported missing from the University are being checked. "Any time is critical for this case, not just the next few days, says Harvey. This case could break three months from now." Bodies of five other young girls have been found within 15 miles of the spot during the past two years. There have been no arrests in any of the cases. Apts., Ltd. Unio ree" By JOEL BLOCK Kenneth Barnhill, a manager o Apartments Limited, rejected yes- terday a demand by the Tenants Union that he recognize it as the bargaining agent for Ann Arbor tenants. Barnhill's statement came in response to a list of demands pre- sented to him after last Friday's protest march conducted by the Tenants Union. One of those de- mands was immediate recognition of the Tenants Union. Barnhill stated, "Until this small minority of activists (the Tenants Union) can prove they can help me more effectively oper- ate my business and provide better services to my tenants and owners, I will continue a policy of non- recognition." He added, "They (the Tenants Union) attack the system while making no positive suggestions for reform." Stuart Katz, a member of the steering committee of the rent precincts.v The 6.67 mill package adds 3.3 mills over a five year period to the present 3.37 mill assessment. This means a tax hike of $3.30 per $1,000 of state equalized valuation. The bulk of the millage-3.6 mills-is slated to pay for prom- ised salary increases to teachers and predicted increases for custo- dial, cafeteria and other staff not covered in the agreement with the teachers association. "It's good news," said Super- intendent of Schools W. Scott Westerman of the 6.67 mill pass- age. "We knew it would be a close outcomebecausenofthe pressure for funds." He. indicated that the last few days of campaigning for the proposal helped pass it. Earlier reports had predicted possibly a, two to one defeat for the millage proposal. Henry Johnson, who topped the winning candidates unofficially with 9,183 votes, said he was "very pleased" with his victory and with the passage of the millage. "I'm also gratified to see that the student population is interest- .ed in making a quality system here," Johnson added. "And I'm grateful for their support." Cecil 'Warner, who ran a close fourth in last year's election, was the second leading vote-getter un- officially with 8,835 votes. LastE night he said he still believes the school district can operate ade- quately by adding only 1.43 mills to the 3.37 renewal. Warner added he still wants "to take another lo'k" at the proposed budget. I f it is not finalized, Warner said he would still try for, a smaller levy than the 6.67 mill.- See MILLAGE, Page 2 -Daily-Peter Dreyfuss Dr. Bishop checks election results MORE CUTS POSSIBLE: Advisory draft s Thse Release to Regents only By LEE KIRK In a closed door session last night, the Intramural Advis- ory Board drafted, a secret proposal for two intramural buildings for presentation to the Regents, possibly at their June meeting next week. After the meeting, the bo a r d refused to comment on the con- tents of their proposal. Rodney Grambeau, board member a n d head of intramurals, explained that the board believedi the Re- gents should be the first to see the proposal. When asked if the report in- cluded any specific recommenda- tions on the controversial ques- tions of funding through a tui- tion increase and the need for a student referendum on the issue, board members refused to com- ment. Several board members who had favored some type of recommend- ation on the question of funding, especially through the use of stu- dent fees, as well as a firm stand on seeking further student input, were out of town and unable to attend last night's meeting. Athletic Director Don Canham, chairman of the committee, has said he believes these matters are not the concern of the committee. The board's decision to have a closed meeting was "only typical of the total disregard this com- mittee has had for student opin- ion," noted Marty McLaughlin, Student Government Council pre- sident. WASHIN "Not only do they want the stu- al yesterday b dents to have no say in the final Burger to be decision, they appear to want The roll ca them to have no knowledge of it voting present. when it is made," he added. Gambeau, however, said that Minn.), Gaylor the committee believed the clos-Min)Galr ed session to be necessary, ex- The action, plaining that members felt they judicial decisio would work better if the meet- Dirksen predict ing was closed. coming neither Grambeau also noted that the But action closed meeting guaranteed that criticized the s the Regents would be the first to successfully to see the proposal. "We want the Regents to read it Burger wil first. We don't want them to read as the Suprem it in The Daily, the Ann Arbor court's decision News or any other newspaper," liberal. he said. Burger, 61, The Regents may release t he District of Colu board's proposal after their meet- ing. Vice President for Academic He is Nixo Affairs Allan Smith may also is now expecte make it public since it must pass ceed Justice Ab through his office' before being Dirksen, an sent to the Regents. confidence tha Grambeau said that he believed court intrusion it was "highly unlikely" that the of criticism of t Regents would take any action on He said Bu the proposal at their June meet- "He knows ing. For a proposal to be con- " sidered by the Regents, it must hands of an ar See IM, Page 2 sen said of Bur Ku I board plans session Laird says withdrawal includes combat troops Warren Burger with Nixon WASHINGTON W)A -- The 25,-? 000 U.S. troops being pulled out of Vietnam w i ll consist mainly of regular combat veterans, and will include both Ariny and Marine units. Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird, announcing this yesterday declined to say when the approx- imately 10,000 National Guard and Army reserves s e n t to Vietnam! after the 1968 Tet offensive will Laird flew back from the Mid- be brought home. way Island conference w h e r e Laird said t h e administration President Nixon announced Sun- will be deciding on further troops:day this country's decision to withdrawals between now and withdraw 25,000 troops from Viet- early August, but he emphasized nam.i that the United States is not mak- The announcement failed to ing a unilateral pullout. quiet some war critics, but other "We will only pull out w h e ,n senators a n d house members South Vietnam can replace U.S. viewed it as a ray of hope. Ufr". ni netInU A erni rIpUIjL orcesgn e t o 1 a an impromptu Pentagon news conference. City to releaseHRC report; Harris requests more studies By ERIKA HOFF The city administrator's office announced at last night's City Council meeting that a confiden- tial report concerning the actions< of Human Relations Commissionj staff member\Ray Chauncey, who1 was arrested on assignment andi allegedly beaten by ex-police of- ficer Wade Wagner, will be re-1 leased to Council members tomor- row. Information concerning the con-t tents of the report will be releasedt to the public Thursday. refuses . 0 )giton lectively fight oppressive living{ conditions in this city."t Barnhill said the Tenants Unionl takes "the legitimate complaintsF of a few and parleys them intot what they call massive and wide- spread neglect on the part of allt apartment owners." Katz said this was a "misrepre- sentation of the facts" in that "there is a long record of wide- spread violations and complaints against Ann Arbor landlords even before the rent strike was organ-F ized." Barnhill did not officially re-; spond to the Tenants Union's oth- er three demands because "I do! not recognize the Union and coi- sequently can not answer a n y questions they pose to me." Barnhill, however, did commentf informally on the other q u e s - tions of disclosure of financial re-r cords, relation to the John Bircht Society, and dismissal of the con- spiracy suit he and six other land-T lords have brought against t h e The council also heard Larry Hochman, a physics professor at Eastern Michigan University, who asked if the city intends to bring charges of assault 'against Wag- ner. He said, "(City Administra-! tor Guy) Larcom and (City At- torney Peter) Forsythe have ad- mitted that the beating accusa- tion against Wagner has beenI substantiated." Mayor Robert Harris modified this, saying the city recognizes that Wagner struck two blows against . Chauncey, but that no legal conclusions can be drawn without examining extenuating circumstances. In response to Hochman's ques- tion, Forsythe said, "Striking does not automatically constitute as- sault." In other action, City Council heard a request from Harris to the City Administrator for a "descrip- tion" of thehrelationship between HRC and the police department and current rules and practices concerning HRC testing. Harris asked that the City Ad- ministrator consult appropriate d e p a r t m e n t and commissioni heads, and report to council on: -"Current co-operation or non- co-operation between the HRC and the police department: What are the sources of current fric- tion? What can be done to reg- ularize this relationship? -"Current rules and practices1 concerning "testing' by HRC per- sonnel: Is testing limited to ef- forts to detect illegal ethnic dis-! crimination? May testers engage in provocative conduct to try to elicit a hostile response? What! restrictions are there on who is to be tested how, when, and by whom? Are these decisions the responsibility of the HRC com- missioners or the City Adminis- "Policemen already have this,"1 Harris said, "but other city em-I ployes do not." Harris specifically requested an examination of ''current rules and' procedures for handling situations in which an employe allegedly en- gaged in conduct which merits discipline, but sharp disputes of fact must be resolved to know what discipline, if any, should be imposed." Contacted after the meeting. Harris said he does not expect results from his request for quite' a while because of the many dif-' ferent city bureaus involved. "I don't even know if I will get a compilation in one report, or sev- eral separate reports," he said. I Laird said most of the returning units will be brought back to the United States, although he left open the possibility that some of them may be detoured to strengthen American bases in Ok- inawa and Hawaii. "The 25,000 will be very heavily weighed as far as combat forces are concerned," he said. This dis- counted early assumptions t h a t most of them would be drawn from support-type elements which make up a b o u t 40 per cent of American servicemen n o w in South Vietnam. Laird said "our U.S. forces have to supply support for the South Vietnamese forces" w h o replace American combat units. As the Pentagon began prepa- rations for the pullback, expected to start in early July, Democratic Sens. Eugene J. McCarthy of Min- nesota and George S. McGovern of South Dakota termed the with- drawal inadequate. Sen. Edward M. Iennedy (D- Mass.), declined to join in this criticism, saying "It's too early to make any broad characterization." 0t irger wins nfirmati~on GTON (M - The Senate gave resounding ap ov- to President Nixon's choice of Judge Wa ren E. chief justice of the United States. [1 vote was 74 to 3, with Sen. J. W. Fulbright, (D-Ark.), ve votes were cast by Sens. Eugene J. McCarthy, (D- d Nelson (D-Wis.), and Stephen M. Young (D-Ohio). , which could open a possible new era in the trend of ns, came after Senate Republican Leader Everett M. ed Burger will take a middle road as chief justice, be- an arch conservative nor an arch liberal. was delayed for a time by some Senate liberals who peed of the drive for confirmation. They sought un- delay a vote 1 succeed Chief Justice Earl Warren, who is retiring e Court concludes its term this month. The Warren is have been criticized by conservatives as being too is now a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the mbia. n's first nominee to the high court, but the President d to act soon on a second court appointment, to sue- e Fortas who resigned. Illinois Republican and a friend of Burger, expressed t the nominee will avoid the "legislative thicket" of into the powers of Congress. This has been a source ;he court under Warren. rger will stay on "the judicial side of the fence." full well that the judicial power, when lodged in the rogant judiciary, can be a strong force for evil," Dirk- ger in advance of the vote. BLAMES 'NIHILIST' MINORITY Report urges use of police on campus WASHINGTON (A-The President's commission on vio- lence yesterday issued a hurried report urging campus adminis- trators to call police to put down "the dramatic tactics" of ter- ror of the "nihilist" minority. The report insisted that the vast majority of more than seven million students "neither participate in nor sympathize with campus violence." However, the report also urged Americans "to reject hasty and simplistic answers" and asked restraint on "those who would punish colleges." The commission, headed by Milton S. Eisenhower, brother of the late former President, and president emeritus of Johns Hopkins University, warned that punitive measures such as cuts The commission explained that the report was issued be- cause of the urgency of the sit- uation. A final report will be published in the fall. Eisen- hower delivered the interim re- port. The report was the first issued by the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence, established by Presi- dent Lyndon B. Johnson last year in the hours after the shooting of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. Previously, the commission issued, without comment, task- force studies on violence. A spokesman said the com- mission had been urged by a number of college presidents to issue the report now. The commission took note of the basic structure of our de- mocratic system," the report said. "Their main desire is to im- prove its ability to live up to its stated values." The study, however, recog- nized that a small but deter- mined minority aims not at reform but at the destruction of existing institutions. These are the nihilists. They resort to violent disruption as the means best suited to achieve their ends. "By dramatic tactics of ter- ror, they have focused wide- spread public attention upon themselves and have often in- duced university authorities to either surrender or to meet force with force." "They are the agent that con- >:: 3i . . .. . .. . .. .. .... .. :