THE PRESIDENT AND THE POOR See editorial page Y Lw igau :4Ia it i FLIGHTY High--i Low--53 Sunny and windy; becoming warmer Vol. LXXIX, No, 7-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, May 15, 1969 Ten Cents Eight Pages Eight Pages KIrasny HR c i hits IX0 OFFERS PE CE PACKAGE; arge of beating CALLS FOR TROOP ITHORA ALS By JUDY SARASOHN Ann Arbor Police Chief Walter Krasny lashed out yester- day against the Human Relations Commission for charging that a policeman beat HRC staff member Ray Chauncey after his arrest while on assignment last Friday night. Krasny refused to reveal the findings of a police investi- gation of the ,incident and said he would not be "intimidated by statements made to the press." HRC Director David Cowley' said Chauncey was "mis- takenly arrested while on a legitimate assignment" and then IWolfson ties bared *hit twice in the mouth at the H .Hospital bias case continues By TOBE LEV The. State Civil Rights Com- mission held its, second public hearing yesterday on a charge of racial d is c ri min a tio n against the University Medi- cal Center by Mrs. LaVerne SHill. Mrs. Hill claims that when she requested the withdrawal of her resignation as assistant operating room supervisor at the Medical Center in June, 1966 she was re- fused and instead offered an in- ferior position because she is ~'black. The next hearing will be held in Detroit on June 4, at the Cadillac Square Building. This is. the earliest date hearing referee Louis Rosenzweit, William Bledsoe, attorney for Mrs. HTill, and William Saxton, attorney rep- resenting the hospital can meet together: At the hearing yesterday Sax- ton cross-examined the testimony of Mrs. Hill given on Tuesday. On Tuesday, Mrs. Hill testified she felt she had been excluded from a training film done with the School of Nursing. Saxton em- phasized that the decision on in- volvement in the film was made by the nursing school, not 'the hospital. Saxton asked Mrs. Hill if she had accepted the rotation plan at the hospital at a meeting on Nov. 31964. Mrs. Hill could not re- member. police station. Chauncey then WASHINGTON (,T-Attorney received stitches at University General John Mitchell turned Hospital for his wound. over evidence to Chief Justice Ki-asny said, "A blow in the face Earl Warren yesterday that does riot constitute a beating. The reveals extensive contacts be- person in question (Chauncey was treated for lacerations of his ween stock man pulator Louis Flip."= Wolfson and Justice Abe For- Krasny has not released the tas after Wolfson's illegal fi- name of the policeman accused by nancial dealings were exposed. HRC. The officer has been sus- The evidence has not been made: pended with pay pending final public at present. investigation of the case, Krasnyd h said. Mitchell made the information Howvever, Krasny refused to pre- available to Warren so that he and dict whether the officer will face other court members could take .a police trial board. Krasny claims action on the controversy. that he does not yet have all the The House Judiciary Committee' facts. was also asked formally yesterday Furthermore, Krasny said he to take a first step toward pos- has not received any formal com- sible impeachment action against plaint from Chauncey and that Fortas. all information he has received Fortas maintained his silence in the face of a demand from Rep. Police chief Krasny's - Clark MacGregor (R-Minn.) that co- the committee launch an inves-; plete statement on the HRC in- tigation beginning next Tuesday, DEFINITION OF cident appears on Page 2. but there was an intriguing an-_ nouncement from the Supreme has been "submitted by a third Court that his mail is running: person." about 4 to 1 in his favor. As of yet, Chauncey has not de- There has been mushrooming cided whether to press charges, criticism of Fortas's acceptance his attorney, Frederick McDonald, of a fee from the Louis Wolfson- said yesterday. Family Foundation while serving, stu d elt Krasny also said yesterday that on the high court. MacGregor being a city employe does not wants the House committee to de- L grant a person amnesty from termine whether his conduct war- sels for universities and colleges arrest. rants impeachment proceedings. will be meeting here tomorrow The police have signed a com- Fortas's office has steadfastly and Saturday to discuss legal as- plaint against Chauncey for al- refused to speak publicly on even pects of studyt dissent. leged disorderly conduct at the incidental matters since the jus- ss Star Bar, 109 N. Main St., last tice's May 4 statement acknowl-. The two-day conference will Friday night. edging he was tendered a fee by examine the existing legal fram-r Krasny said yesterday that he the family of Wolfson. now serv- work surrounding the politics off expected "an employe on assign- ing a prison sentence. student-administration confronta- ment to conduct himself as a Celler, in a House speech, did tion and will explore new avenus gentleman." not respond directly to MacGreg- for the solution to these conflicts. "I was under the impression," or's request but pleaded with The aim of the conference is Krasny said, "the staff of the HRC members to be patient and prom- to clarify the powers and rightsI was trained to use restraint and ised to take "the proper action at of the universities in maintaining solve problems, not create them." the proper time." order on campus and the powers# Although Krasny said he was. PROPOSES EETOS MUTU.AL PIULL - OUT WASHINGTON (--President Nixon "proposed last night that American and North Vietnamese troops stop fighting in South Vietnam after a gradual, 12-month withdrawal of most of their forces. Staking his political future ion his quest for peace, Nixon recalled a campaign pledge to end the war with honor, and he told the nation, "If I fail to do so, I expect the American people to hold me accountable for that failure." The chief executive outlined what he termed new in- itiatives for peace in a majorpolicy address carried live from the White House by radio and television. As a first step, he proposed that as soon as formal agree- ment or credible understanding can be reached, there should begin a mutual withdrawal from South Vietnam of major Americans, U.S. allies, and North Vietnamese. . This would continue by agreed- upon stages over a period of ato speech ,year.after which the remaining non-South Vietnamese f o r c e s would move into designated base f111X 1 areas and would cease combat operations. From Wire Servlce Report Under Nixon's proposal, this. ixn aor a mutual withdrawal would be su- President Nixon's call for a pervised by an international body phased pullout of U.S. and North acceptable to both sides. Vietnamese troops from South He suggested that the with- Vietnam ,received praise in Con- drawal followed by internationally gress yesterday, but GIs in the field were more skeptical of the guaranteed free elections in South feasibility of the plan. Vietnam.FeoftoeGsitriwdn Administration sources billed Few of those GIs interviewed in Nixon's peace proposals as the a random sampling had specific most comprehensive, flexible and criticism, although some expressed conciliatory ever advanced by the the view that any mutual troop --:wciated Press dent Nixon adI(dresses the natlioni RIGHTS: iference to (explore 4 TinistratiOll 'C'O T Ill U.S. govern "I would and rights of students in making protests. It also will explore new avenues for the solution of conflicts, such as use of the student judiciary, use of sanctions as an alternative to expulsion or suspension, and the general adaptation of exist- ing institutions for more effec- tive use. Specific topics to be discussed include the dimensions of legiti- mate student dissent, judicial' remedies for campus problems, protest and discipline in the pri- Vate institutions, and constitu- said, "that tofnal protection of protest. offered on The conference is sponsored by basis. We a the Institute of Continuing Legal sider other Education and will be held i with our pri Rackhain Lecture Hall. Underlyin The institute is a joint project ever, wasa of the Law School, the Wayne mination to State University law school and drawal from the State Bar of Michigan. disguised d Conference participants include "Let meI Neal R. Stamp., counsel to Cornell said. "Our: University: William W. VanAl- going to be styne, counsel to the American As- tiators arer sociation of University Professors; down; oura William M. Beaney, professor of do nment. stress," the President' these proposals are not a take-it-or-leave-it; te quite willing to con- approaches consistent inciples." ng his peace plan, how- a statement 'of deter- avoid unilateral with-' m South Vietnam or "a efeat." be quite blunt," Nixon fighting men are not worn down; our nego- not going to be talked allies are not going to '' ! not refer'ring to C'hauncey. he The rotation plan alternated continued, "The police are always Mrs. Hill and the other assistant accused of harassmhent and in- operating room supervisor, Miss timidation. But, the very same Matney, .in the roles of trainee in- people making the accusations structor and corridor nurse. used this method on a local mer- Mrs. Hill contended she deserved chant to prove their point, and the job of corridor charge nurse then decided to press the police on a permanent basis and was officer into a confrontation." City school board candid ates to speak tonigit at open meeting denied it on grounds of racial dis- crimination, Saxton emphasized Mrs. Hill was not aware that the two posi- tions of corridor nurse and trainee instructor were equal. Mrs. Hill % believed the position of ,corridor l nurse was a superior position to which she was entitled on a per- manent basis. Saxton also asked Mrs. Hill is! she had applied for a position at St. Joseph Hospital in October, 1964, six months before she resign-, i ed her post at the University Hos- pital. Mrs. Hill replied yes although she could not recall the positionI she had applied for. See BIAS, Page 2 Ed act By LORNA CHEROT Students for Education Inno group of education school ac holding a series of seminars begi day aimed at developing position the future of the undergraduate student role in decision-making urban education program. The papers will be presented t propriate committee or Dean- Wilbur Cohen. The students hope to improve dergraduate program so that it t than meet thv state's require. Cowley maintained that Chaun- By NADINE COHODAS Two other proposals also will be. valuation, or an increase of about cey was in no way disorderly at Nine candidates for three avail- on the ballot. One asks whether $33 per year on a home assessed any time and did not resist the able positions on the Ann Arbor the operating millage for the Ann at $10,000. arresting officer. According to his Board of Education will speak at Arbor public schools should be in- The board had originally ap- preliminary investigation. Cowley a public candidates meeting at 8 creased to 6.67 mills for a period i proved a 6.88 mill package at its claims that witnesses have cor- p.m. tonight in the A n n Arbor of five years. April 23 meeting, despite vehe-' robrated this. , Public Library. The election is ! The other is a bonding propo- ment opposition from three board Chauncey had decided not to June 9. sition which requests that the members. The proposal later was reveal his identity when he was Robert Barnes, administrative public schools borrow no m o r e changed to 6.67 mills at the May arrested to see how he would be assistant for special education than $4,950,000 to build, furnish 7 meeting. treated by the police, Cowley said. seryices for the Washtenaw Inter- and equip a junior high school. School Board President Joseph Chauncey's arrest and alleged mediate School District, also will; 6R. Julin said the budget was not! beating, Cowley said, prove , that speak on the half mill special edu- he 6.67 mill proposal for the "the black person never knows if cation proposal on the June 9 bal- pubeic schools includes a 3.37 mill crease, inbstimated state equalized he will be treated with justice or lote valuation of the city and the; if he will be beaten." The proposal asks that an addi- The renewal would involve no tax:m Cowley claimed that what hap- tional half mill be added to the icrease over the 1968-69 tax bill. twsi thsame amount that 6.88 pened to Chauncey is not an iso- present half mill property tax for Approval of the 3.3 additional mills would have. lated incident. "It is symbolic of the education of handicapped mills would mean a tax hike of The terms of incumbent school See POLICE, Page 2 children in the area. $3.30 per $1,000 of state equalized b o a r d members Julin, Hazen J. e uUWn1,. law at the University of Denver; See NIXON, Page 2 Richard A. Lippe, counsel to stu- - e X dent associations; Tom A. Paper, professor of law at Columbia Un- versity: Paul D. Cariington, Uni- Che m Bldg. versity law professor; and John P. Holloway, counsel. to the Uni - f} ,vesifireolrao Other particpants are: Richard L. Cates, counsel to the University i of Wisconsin; Edward C. Kalai- The chemistry building on North djian, who has served as counsel University Ave. was hit by fire re- to Columbia University; and Rob- sulting in about $100,000 damage ert L. Knauss, University law pro- early yesterday morning. fessor. The fire was in a storage and President Robben W. Fleming dispensing area for organic chem- will open the conference. icals on the third floor of the The conference will not be open building. to the public, although the press, The dispensing room was heav- will be covering the entire meeting. ily damaged. Its entire stock- Participants pay a $50 registra- $12-15 thousand of chemicals- tion fee, which includes a special was destroyed. issue of the Denver Law Journal Thirty men and six fire vehicles devoted to the problems of pro- answered the call at approximately tests. 1:14 a.m. and stayed until 4 a.m. withdrawal would be violated by the North Vietnamese. "I'm skeptical about how honest a bilateral pullout would be," said 1st Lt. Richard Markham of Wav- erly, Kan., an adviser with South Vietnamese troops in the Me- kong Delta. The South Vietnamese Foreign Ministery said there would prob- ably be no. official comment at least until after U.S. Secretary of State William P. Rogers confers with South Vietnamese leaders later today or tomorrow. Rogers is in Saigon on his first visit since taking office. Many Congressmen believed Nix- One of the leading critics of U.S. Vietnam policy, Sen. J. W. Fulbright (D-Ark.), chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, described it as "rea- sonable" and said, "I'm glad he made the contribution." W. Averill Harriman, the Paris peace negotiator under the John- son administration, said the U.S. commanders in Vietnam should have their orders changed so they would not put pressure on the North Vietnamese on the battle- field. He said he feels sure "We can negotiate a reduction in the vio- lence," based on his experience. The general feeling among the soldiers appeared to be that while Nixon's troops withdrawals pro- posal was good, the likelihood of its acceptance by the Hanoi gov- ernment was questionable. i i f t 1 . w E sl [UDY UNDERGRAD S ROLE ivists conduct seminars vation, a tivists, is nning to- papers on program, and the o the ap- designate the un- does more ment for betted training of teachers to deal with the problems of inner city education. Only certain aspects of the Trippe- Milazzo plan include undergraduates. It is largely a.,graduate program, while the urban education commission plan is for undergraduates. The Trippe-Milazzo plan will be fed-- erally funded. Although there are student representa- tives on the various faculty committees. they do not vote on any policy decisions. There are no student representatives on the executive committee. Stan Bennett, former president of SEI, drawn up at the seminars should deter- mine whether there has been a change in this attitude. Eisner and Bennett and other members of SEI, which has a membership of about 10 students, met with Cohen yesterday' Eisner said that Cohen was "receptive to our ideas" and that he had a "posi- tive attitude towards student involvement" in the education school. Bennett said that he was encouraged by the meeting. He added, "Cohen impressed the as a warm, considerate guy, genuinely concerned about the school and anxious to work with us to make it an exciting Schumacher and William C. God- frey expire June 9."All"three have announced they would not seek} re-election. The candidates for their seats are: James W. Anderson, a foirm- er member and vice chairman of r the Ann Arbor Human Relations Commission; Dr. Ronald C. Bish- op, a professor of internal medi- cine at the University: John C. Cruz, assistant supervisor of lab- oratory animal medicine at the University; A. Gerald Gottlieb, sales nanager for Godfrey Moving and Storage in Ann Arbor a n d 9 president of the Lakewood School P a r e n t Teacher Organization; I Henry Johnson, director of group care and counseling at the W. J. Maxey Boys Training School in Whitmore Lake. Also seeking board seats are: Ivan Kemp; John Schneider, op- erator of an Ann Arbor filling sta- _ . _ $