THE AMERICAN WAY OF DEATH See Editorial Page Y S ir i an DAitiP IMIPROVINC ? High--76 Low-so Showers and thundershowers, clearing by afternoon Vol LXXIX, No. 53-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, July 29, 1969 Ten Cents Four Pages SEVENTH BODY FOUND: Police Federal press search suit for clues JOHN SINCLAIR struggles with a guard yesterday away to begin serving a ten-year sentence for marijuana. Sinclair senten to 10years in pi From Wire Service Reports White Panther leader John. Sinclair was se to 10 years in prison yesterday for possession Sinclair was denied appeal bond by Re Judge Robert Colombo. Spokesmen at Trans- ,4id yesterday that Sinclair is planning an ar Ike was convicted Friday by a jury of giv juana cigarettes to undercover police agents Dec. 22, 1966. Proceedings have been delayed then. It was Sinclair's third - conviction 'for possession of marijuana. Dnsen "They set me up," Sinclair shouted as he was led away. "They, ' don't want me out on the street. report "They put Huey Newton in pris- on and it didn't stop the Black Panthers. They put John Sinclair City Council Ia in jail and it won't stop the White report from City Panthers." Lax concerning "This is it, moan, I'm glad," he tion against obs said, his voice full of emotion. "I graphic literature. can do the time, I can wait. The Lax said in his people know now: There's no way ed the greatest you can hide 91/2 to 10 years for community was two marijuana cigarettes." Panther Party an Before the sentencing, Colombo and spoken obsc included a moralistic lecture, say- parks ing, "John Sinclair is out to show But, in his op that he and his ilk (can) violate that many of th the law with impunity. Well, his tributed in Ann day has come. You may laugh, but protected by recen you will have a long time to rulings. "This is laugh." literature may be Colombo later said Sinclair that prosecution would be eligible for parole in six much success," s years. Lax will consu Sinclair's attorney, Justin Rav- mendation of cou itz, had requested leniency noting tists and experts that Sinclair has a one-year old concerning the e child and his wife expects another. graphy on minors Sinclair will serve the sentence further discussion at Southern Michigan Prison at tion until the cit Jackson. pletes the study. in slaying By JUDY SARASOHN What began as a search for Eastern Michigan University coed Karen Beineman is now a search for her murderer, who may be the young man from whom the coed took a motorcycle ride when she was last seen Wednesday after- noon. Beineman's body was found Sat- urday afternoon face down in a ravine in the woods off the inter- section of Riverside and Huron River Drive by Prof. Conrad Mason, who notified County Sher- iff Douglas Harvey. Harvey did not announce pub- licly that the coed's body had been found until Sunday morning. He said the reason for the delay was that the girl's parents had to be notified first. The sheriff's department placed the area where Beineman was Ifound under a tight security ring. Hervey did not notify anyone ex- cept County Prosecutor William Delhey and deputies who kept a hidden watch over the ravine. Due to a mixup in communica- tions, Ann Arbor Police Chief . ~Walter Krasny was not informed w of the finding until a reporter spoke to him Sunday morning. The body was taken to Univer- sity Hospital Saturday evening and a store mannikin was put in its place. Sheriff's deputies watch- -Associated Press ed over the area throughout the as he was led night on the suspicion that the as h wasled murderer might return. possession of Officials in the sheriff's depart-_ ment said yesterday that a man was seen to go straight up to the ravine and then rush off into the_ woods. Deputies bolted after him llllldbut-were unable to find him in the i woods and undergrowth. One official said the man did rison not go farther than within 30 feet of the body but that he appeared to know the body had been dump- ed there. °ntenced to 9%/2Both Harvey and Dehey have tencdaritoan12officially denied these reports. of marijuana. Assistant C o u n t y Prosecutorc ecorders Court Casper Kast said yesterday thata -Love Energies there were some interviews but ppeal. there are no "real suspects" yet.t fing two mari- Krasny also said he did not knowt of any particular suspects.v in Detroit on Delhey said last night that some in court since clothes were found in the area buto - officials are not sure yet if they belonged to Beineman. ity "I never realized how much 9 clothing is lying around Wash- tenaw County," said Delhey.t h r "Thereis enough found i thoseb hovers' lane to fill a lingerie store." Delhey also said that deputies st night heard found some thin wire and burlap, st nghthead Abut that they were unrelated to Attorney Jerald the murder. possible legisla- An autopsy performed by Dr. scene or porno- Robert Hendrix of the University- pathology department showed that report it appear- Beineman's death was caused by concern in the strangulation. She had also been' over W h i t e sexually molested. Her head was nd Argus papers, beaten beyond recognition and cenity at public identification was made only byl finger prints compared with those pinion, Lax said taken from her dormitory room.. ie materials dis- Dr. Hendrix placed the time of Arbor would be death at sometime Wednesday nt Supreme Court evening.; not to say the Ray Loeschner, EMU vice pres-f unpalatable but ident of administrative affairs. would not stand said yesterday the university is aid Lax. requesting that all female studentsv ilt under recom- sign out when they leave thec ncil social scien- dormitory and indicate when th'ey in the University will be back and where they ares ffects of porno- going. The girls will also then sign . Council delayed in when they return. on any legisla- Beineman is the sixth slain coed *y attorney corn- in the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti area since March.! -Daily-Jerry, Going O L I lack Odyssey' George Norman, creator of the "Black Odyssey" pictorial history exhibit, poses before one of the several hundred panels of the exhibit. It will be on display from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. today and to- morrow on the third floor of the education school building. 'ULTIMATE TRIUMPH:' ConTference on student unrest on landlords dismissed fBy NADINE COHODAS A federal antitrust suit filed last March against Ann Ar- bor landlords by eight local tenants was dismissed Saturday by District Judge Fred W. Kaess in Detroit. Kaess also dismissed a countersuit filed by the landlords charging the tenants with conspiring to violate leases and to encourage others to do so. Kaess, who heard arguments from both sides on Thurs- day, ruled that the tenants''suit did not involve interstate commerce as required for prosecution under the Sherman Antitrust Act. Instead he told the tenants to "seek their rem- edy under state law." "The state of Michigan specifically provides regulations for and safeguards against! 'restraint of trade' through its' a * own and adequate laws," the Vic110 judge said. A similar case is already going on in Circuit Judge William Ager's 1 court in A n n Arbor. Landlords have filed a suit charging the "so- called" Tenants Union with con- ! spiracy to violate future and ex- I 1iTh u s isting leases by withholding rent aion and to obtain libelous articles in The Daily. The tenants have filed A $35 reduction in $900 rent a counter suit charging the land- owed o Campus Management lords with conspiring to violate was awarded yesterday to leases and antitrust statutes. Court proceedings are scheduled rent strikers Elizabeth Hueb- to begin Aug. 21. ner, Susan Willis and Marlene In his judgment Saturday, Milewski. Kaess dismissed the tenants' claim After approximately 30 minute rbor has an effetbusinessint rstat of deliberation the six-man jury commerce because high rents re- issued the verdict. The foreman sulting from the landlords' alleged to two pairs of Willis' shoes valued violations of antitrust laws-com- t w ar f ils he vle """""''" "*""at $15 and $20. bining to restrain competition in the Ann Arbor housing market- Robert Reed, attorney for Hueb- restrict potential out-of-state ten- ner, Willis and Milewski, said the ants from ;coming to the area. girls 'were not obligated to pay the "It is clear from the complaint full rent because= the landlord had that the restraints alleged relate not fully met his obligations. Reed only to the rental of real estate cited thebatyw hwaeste pred ictseventu lSocialc ange:n the Ann Arbor area.'Thisai the batyoom wicaied yte ventualCgcal commerce and the compe-wtogfm tition allegedly restrained and in- freezing cold, EAST LANSING tJ --A group and have little patience for any recommendations of a group of 21 terfered with vs local in nature," Brian Urquhart, attorney for" of college administrators, students other kind of~setting. Republican congressmen who re- Kaess said. Campus Management, suggested and legislators meeting at Mich- Julian Bond, a black legislator ported to President Nixon. Pettis The federal antitrust suit was the water problem was "somewhat igan State university agreed yes- from Georgia, agreed that young and the others toured troubled not officially connected with the of an exaggeration. n tUne-people are going to remake societycampuses..Tenants Union or the rent strike, Also yesterday in district court terday that the new generation because the adults lack the "moralTh uded although some Tenants Union testimony was presented in a claim will eventually change society. capacity" to change t e gup recommen crea- members were plaintiffs in the for $666 back rent filed by Cam- The session cage soty, cpit"oit. tion of a higher education com- federal suit. 'pus Management against rent Teed sesionn campu turmoil Bond warned that both univer- mission, draft reform, expanded The suit was undertaken as a strikers Anya Gendler and An- opened yesterday. sities and corporations are aloof opportunities for youthful partici- "class action" by eight Ann Arbor nette Johnson Boer. Final argu- I'm not talking just about a to the real needs of the people. pation and involvement and low- tenants. "Class action" means that ments and the verdict will be given few eloquent radicals, but a whole Colleges still resort to the "whip ering of the voting age in addition the tenants represented all those today at 10 a.m. generation of youth," said Dr. and spur" toikeep students in line, to taking of no repressive meas- Reed, who also represented William Boyd, president of Cen- Bond said. ures against student protesters. Gendler and Boer, maintained the tral Michigan University. "I'm "None of the old ways of doing Pettis added, however, that non- A mass meeting to discuss girls were not obligated to pay full be g ntheir ulimate tri- things work any more," Bond said disruptive students must be allow' foreign students' problems and rent because the landlord "has m eRep. Jerry Pettis (R-Calif) ed to use university facilities with- their relationship to American breached his obligations." Boyd said the youth of today agreed that repressive legislation out interference. students at the University will Reed cited eleven housing code were brought up in a family at- E is not the answer to student pro- be held at 7 p.m. tonight in violations including no screen door mosphere of openness and honesty tests. Pettis said he endorsed the Robert Powell, president of the Room 3524 of the Student Ac- 'on the kitchen window; no wall - - National S t u d e n t Association, tivities Bldg. light switch in the kitchen and * charged that universities are not one of the bedrooms; one electrical only symbols but fundamental outlet in one of the bedrooms-- ca H arv ey d riv e causes of the ills plaguing Amer- who are living in the area now or city housing code stipulates two can society. 'hve lived here in the past four are needed; lack of adequate hot t he to hodms etn Powell charged universities con-! tribute to social problems not only because of what they teach, but also because of what they fail tor years. . water and heat; and use of one By LAURIE HARRIS teacn. A mass meeting of RECALL, a drive to remove Washteriaw "One of the bitterest anonaliesj ounty Sheriff Douglas Harvey from office, has been calledis that universities are so barrenI of real teaching. The knowlegei The plaintiffs in the federal suit which was dismissed were Steve Marston, Barry Rubin, Jon- athan Moselle, Helen Cooper, Drew Bogema, Daniel Zwerdling, Kurt Wiener and Laura Magzis., Their attorney was Mrs. Virginia Davis Nordin. The case being beard in Ager'si court was filed directly against room as a bedroom which is at least 22 sq. feet under minimum housing code standards. Dwaine Lighthammer, president of Campus Management, said the apartment in question at 317 E. Ann St. No. 4 is/ "represented ;t being for one bedroom and a study.' Boer, called to the ; stand by for 8:30 tonight at RECALL headquarters, 203 E. Ann. The meeting will be an effort to organize volunteers to work one evening each week, explained Cindy Kleinsmith, chairman of RECALL's petition committee. She said the group presently has only 1100 of the 15,000j signatures needed to force a recall election. The signatures must be collected within a three month. period. Kleinsmith said another 600 petitions are now in circulation, A flyer containing what RECALL members say is docu- mented material which vindicates charges against Harvey _ will be circulated along with the petitions, she added. technicians have driven true edu- cation from the campus," he said. The universities, Powell said the "so-called" Tenants Union and Reed, said she was told by a secre- its associates, although 12 persons tary from Campus Management are "governed by force and coer- were named as defendants in the that the apartment could be used cion." conspiracy charge. as a two bedroom place " SGC, SACUA FORM COMMITTEE Bylaw negotiations planned By LAURIE HARRIS The S e n a t e Advisory Com- mittee on University Affairs (SACUA) has agreed to estab- lish a negotiating committee with Student G o v e r n m e n t Council in order to resolve dif- ferences in drafts of the pro- posed Regents bylaws approved by SOC and by Senate Assem- bly. SACUA is the executive com- -mittee of the Assembly. SGC approved the proposed bylaw draft last week, but also ficient agreement exists to war- rant sending the draft to the Regents anyway. The major disagreement be- tween the two groups concerns section 7.07 of the proposed by- laws, which deals with student conducthstandards related to academic activities. Specifically SGC citeci sec- tions 7.09 (1) and (3) as un- acceptable. These sections give the faculties of the schools and colleges the authority to set standards for and determine curriculum, levels of compe- policy board tighter control over the vice president for student services (now vice president for student affairs), requiring the vice president to follow and ex- ecute its' decisions. This amendment relates to a current controversy b e t w e e n SGC and the administration. SGC is demanding that the poli- cy board be given power to man- date the vice president to sup- port the board's p o s i t i o n when before the executive of- ficers or the Regents. be chosen at the end of the week. One administrator, to be ap- pointed, will sit in on the meet- ings with no vote. According to Payne, "This will help both sides to become better informed." Marc Van Der Hout, SGC ex- ecutive vice president, said that "both sides will have to be flex- ible" in discussing the amend- ments. However, Knauss said he was confident there would not be much disagreement except in the area of committee structure. He said he hoped the commnittee RECALL member John Bowers said that a research committee is working on finding out facts about Harvey previously not made pub- 1ic. He said a brochure containing this data should be printed with- in the next few weeks. Dr. Edward Pierce, a past Ann Arbor Democratic Party chairman and present member of its execu- tive board, is trying to convince the party to take a stand on the issue. Pierce believes that the party will support RECALL. Bowers said that RECALL needs students to work on the drive be- cause most people working on the campaign have jobs which take top priority and keep them away from the drive. He believes stu- dent support could give the move- ment the momentum it needs. _ __ __