ETHICS IN CONGRESS: DOUBLE STANDARD See editorial page Y 5k ta IA6F tt COOL High--75 Low-45 The only problem is that it might rain Vol. LXkIX, No. 9-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, May 17, 1969 Ten Cents Six Pages Realtors a sk temporary injunction State Senate stalls By MARCIA ABRAMSON Co-Editor The attorney for seven Ann Arbor landlords who are seeking a perma- nent injunction against the rent strike yesterday decided to also seek a pre- liminary injunction against the with- holding of rent. Attorney William Barense reversed his earlier agreement with Tenants Union lawyers ,to drop' the tempor- ary suit'in order to avoid duplication of effort and speed up the court case. "Apparently Barense was not sat- isfied with the way things were going,"f explained Dale Berry, legal spokesman for the rent strike. Barense declined to comment on the case yesterday. , Barense's- action came. at what was to have been a pre-trial hearing for the permanent injunction and conspir- acy case. Besides the injunction, the landlords are 9eeking $10,000 in in- dividual damages, $300,000 in exemp- Lary damages and recovery of more than $100,000 rent being held in es- crow. The conspiracy suit charges that the rent strike is an attack on the concept of private property.' The landlords claim that the strike involves conspir- acy to violate existing and future leases and to obtain libelous articles in The Daily. As a result of Barense's decision, a show-cause hearing for the temporary injunction has been scheduled for Thursday. Circuit Judge William Ager will hear the case. "This will probably delay the con- spiracy trial," Berry explained. The conspiracy case is currently scheduled to begin on May 26. Berry predicted that Thursday's show-cause hearing would develop into an extensive legal battle. "The Ten- ants Union is preparing volumes of material," he siad. Among the evidence will be\ a state- rnent of support signed by local lead- ers. City councilman Nicholas Kazarin- off (D-3rd Ward) 'and LeRoy Cap- -paert (D-5th Ward) have already signed the statement which supports the Tenants Wnion's rights to organ- ize in order to obtain collective bar- caining rights. Other prominent citi- gents -are also expected to sign the statement of support. Berry said that it is also likely that the landlords will drop their claim of $10,000 in actual damages as a result f a decision, by Ager yesterday. "The landlords are claiming that their business has been damaged by $10,000, so the Tenants Union at-, torneys have asked for the right to see their books to determine whether there are damages," Berry said. "Ager told Barense that he would grant the Tenants' Union request if the individual damages were asked," he explained. Berry said that Barense had told Tenants Union attorneys that the in- dividual damages would be dropped. The seven plaintiffs in the case are Apartments Limited, Arbor Forest Apartments, Charter Realty, Brady Anderson, Charlotte Van Curler, Wil- liam Van Fossen and Robert L. Ship- man. The suit charges 91 rent strikers. Twelve of the 91 are charged with actual conspiracy. They are Berry, David Goldlstein, Stuart Katz, 'Peter Denton, Nancy Holmstrom, Barry Co- hen, Janet Handy, Mary Crawly, Alan Kaufman, David Shapiro, Steven Mar- ston, and Maria Mazzaloni. In addition to the 91 strikers, the complaint covers "all organizations the strikers represent or belong to, includ- ing the so-called Tenants' Union and anyone involved in it, and all co-con- spirators whether named or not." student votinlg bill / f Krasny sees discipline in HRC incident By JOEL BLOCK Police Chief Walter Krasny last night said "recommen- dation of disciplinary action is expected" against the officer involved in the arrest and alleged beating of Human Rela- tions Commissign staff member ,ay' Chauncey. He added', however, that "details have not been' worked 'out yet." Krasny met with Mayor Robert Harris, City Attorney Peter Forsythe, aid City Administrator Guy Larcom in a series of meetings at' City Hall earlier yesterday. HRC officials have charged that the, unnamed policeman LANSING (P-A bill permit- ting college students to vote in the precinct where they at- tend school was sent to the State Senate Appropriations Committee yesterday, a move that some said spelled defeat for the measure., The bill, endorsed by Ann Arbor City Council, would make it eas- ier for college students to register to vote at their school residence. Senate minority leader Sander Levin (D-Berkley), co-sponsor of the bill, argued that it had no fis- cal implications, and therefore, should not be bottled up in the appropriations committee. Proponents of the move, how- ever, said the bill could affect out-of-state tuition payments be- cause of residency requirements. The measure was referred to committee by a narrow 16-14 vote. "This bill concerns voter regis- tration laws - not tuition laws," said Levin. "If we do not fairly and promptly open up the poli- tical channels to students who meet age qualifications, we must share some of the burden for ex- pressions of their restlessness." The residence requirement for tuition purposes is a wholly sepa- rate requirement which demands that a person reside in the state,1 while over the'age of 21, and while not attending school for a period of six months prior to. hisncon- templated date of registration. Levin pledged to renew his ef- forts to permit college students to vote in their university pre- cincts. He said he will appear be- fore the appropriations committee Wednesday or Thursday to present testimony of both election of fi- cials and students from varous state universities. "We have just started," he said. The bill would remove wording from the state law which says a person neither gains nor loses residency while a student at any institution of learning. The proposed bill states, "For voting' purposes, a student at any institution of learning is presumed to be a resident of that place where he habitually sleeps, keeps his personal effects and has a regular place of lodging if the stu- dent is: -"married, or -"pays property or other local taxes at that place, or -"does not receive the greater part of his support from his parents, or -"lives at that place during the summer vacation of the institu- tion of learning, or -"does not maintain a regular place of lodging at any other place, or -"is not registered to vote at any other place." Prior to registration, the bill also states, the student must swear or affirm "that he does not have a fixed or definite intention to return permanently, upon comple- tion of studies, to his former home or residence." A student who does not so swear or affirm does not lose his residency while a student1 at any institution of learning. At the request of Senator Stamm, Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley, last February, delivered an infor- mal opinion on the state election law. "In my opinion," Kelley said, "the election law should be changed to permit college students to vote at the place where they habitually sleep, keep their per- sonal effects and have their place of lodging." -Associated Press Lodge arrives at Pans talks Hanoi, NLF study Nixon peace pack(age PARIS (N-North Vietnamese and Viet Corig representa- tives sharply criticized President Nixon's eight-point peace plan yesterday but U.S. diplomats noted a slight change in atmosphere and some observers expressed belief that the Vietnam talks may have reached a turning point. Both the Hanoi and National Liberation Front delega- tions agreed to continue studying the Nixon proposals. It was obvious from comments a the 17th full-scale session of the talks that the two sides remained far apart on key issues.But Harold Kaplan, the U.S. delegation spokesman, said the meeting conteasted r ..r beat Chauncey after arresting A rrest two " 0 In p01ce ~ sqabbl By HAROLD ROSENTHAL Two men arrested Thursday night for obstructing city po- lice have been released after a special session of Ann Arbor District Court. The court session was held Thursday night after city officials and a leader of the city's black community interceded for the two men in what was called an at- tempt to quiet growing racial ten- siops in the city. John A.,Abrahams, 22 and John H. Bingham, 26, were arrested Wednesday night in a scuffle with city police. They were released that night, but were arrested again; Thursday night, this time on war- rants charging they hindered, ob- structed and resisted police, a high misdemeanor., Abrahams was released Thurs- day night on $75 dollar bond. Bingham was released yesterday. Mayor Robert\ J. Harris,, State NAACP Chairman Dr. Albert Wheeler, and.Deputy Police Chief Harold E. Olson arrived at the County Jail shortly after Abra-i See ARREST, Page 3, i g him last Friday night while he was on an HRC assignment investigating charges of rac- ial disc'rimination at the Star Bar, 109 N. Main. The'policeman has been sus- pended with pay on Krasny's orders.i. Denying reports in yesterday's Ann Arbor News, Krasny and City Councilman, LeRoy Cappaert (D- 5th ward) said the suspended po- liceman's job is in jeopardy. Krasny will meet this morning with Forsythe to discuss some legal questions involved in the recom- mendation for discipline. Krasny pointed ' out that Larcom and Harris will review his final report and one of the two-will soon make a ' public announcement of the city's action on the matter. Harris declined to comment 'on the Chauncey case last night ex- cept to say that theissue continues under investigation and that some conclusion will be reached soon. Harris met with HRC Director David Cowley yesterday. "I told him my point of view on the case and that I haven't changed my mind on Chauncey's behavior at the bar," Cowley said last night. He said he still believes Chauncey acted appropriately. "In fact, after speaking with1 several more witnesses, I feel the+ case is stronger than I thought1 in a number of ways," Cowley said. He would not elaborate on the' new evidence.3 Krasny said he is being careful to stay within fair labor practices+ in relation to his handling of thei officer's suspension and his own investigation.e 4n. I -Associated Press POLICE USE CLUBS to haul away a protester at the Berkeley campus of the University of Cali- fornia. Demonstrators yesterday marched on City Hall and held a rally in the wake of Thursday's riots over use of a vacant lot owned by the university. - d ' 'clashwtdeostrators By The Associated Press Police used tear gas yesterday to break up a demonstration by about, 400 persons, most of them Stanford University students, pro- testing war-related research at the Stanford Research Institute. At, Berkeley, Calif., highway pa- trolmen clubbed four or five dem- onstrators and threw three tear gas canisters Ito break up a group, of about 500 students at the Uni- versity of California's Sproul Plaza. The series of scuffles at Berk- eley broke up a rally scheduled in the aftermath of Thursday's riot over possession of a vacant lot. WEST PARK LIVES! Rock concerts to return By NADINE COHODAS "On with the music," they - told them at City Hall yester- day . And Ann Arbor officials agreed that the show must go on .as planned Sunday in the West Park Band Shell. t After a meeting yesterday afternoon between city fans of Sunday afternoon band concerts in West Park and Assistant to the City Administrator Don Bo- rut, both parties announced there will be a concert there this ..Sunday at 2 p.m. Last summer the concerts had been prohibited effective July Y 29 when City Council voted ",. " :... seven to nne to han the "use nf The lot had been held by Berk- eley's "street people" who had converted it into a "Peoples' Park." The "street people" were cleared from the lot Thursday morning. The riots broke out after a noon rally on the Berkeley cam- pus. Over 50 were injured as police used shotgun blasts to break up a march on the lot. In Stanford, Calif., about 150' policemen resorted to tear gas after the protesters set fire to a street barricade, broke windows and ignored a warning that there would be arrests if they did not disperse. There were several arrests. Another protest against war- related research came at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, on Long Island, as about 50 students, identified by a college spokesman as -members of Stu- dents for a Democratic Society, interrupted meetings, cut tele- phone lines and battered doors. At Cambridge, Mass., Harvardi graduate student Carl' L. Offner of Darien, Conn., was given a one-year jail sentence for assault- ing Dean Robert B. Watson dur- ing seizure of 'University Hall April 9. Offner was the first person charged with assault in the case. About 170 defendants have been convicted of trespassing in the building takeover and fined $20, as was Offner. At City College of New York, preparations were made by Acting President Joseph J. Copeland to resume negotiations with dissident Negro and Puerto Rican students seeking a separate school of black headquarters, were repulsed after fist fights, shoving and pushing. "It was strictly a student-to- student confrontation," a campus police spokesman said. Morris B. Abram, president of Brandeis University at Waltham, Mass., warned against harsh crackdowns against dissident stu- dents on college campuses- Abram told the 63rd annual meeting of the American Jewish Committee in New York: "The records will show that the United States is the only great power n world history that has been en- gaged in a bitter war in which vigorous dissent and massive dem- onstration hav6 been allowed, without trials for treason or even agreeably with some previous sessions. He described the meeting, which lasted 3 hours and 55 minutes, as "relatively moderate and lacking in vin- dictiveness of tone." "Nothing was categorically re- jected," Kaplan said. The situation is that the Nixon proposals and the 10-point for- mula of the NLF are now on the table and that the parties are con- sidering both. This is what Am- bassador Henry Cabot Lodge ask- ed for in formally presenting the Nixon plan. After the meeting, Lodge told newsmen that "the other side gave every indication they will con-, sider" the Nixon proposals. This' was confirmed by North Viet- nam's chief delegate, Xuan Thuy, and Tran Buu Kiem, NLF repre- sentative. Kiemfsaid: "Certainly we pro- pose to continue the examination of these proposals." Thuy commented: "It g o e s without saying that we will con- tinue to make other remarks on Mr. Nixon's speech at later meet- ings." Both, however, strongly criti- cized key points of the Nixon plan -especially the proposal for mu- tual withdrawal of U.S. and other outside troops from South Viet- nam in 12 months-and pressed for the NLF plan.. imprisonment for opposition." <" Say flin onAl giers deolay ed From Wire Service Reports MASON, Mich.--Former De- troit policeman Ronald August waited three days before re- porting the fatal shotgun kill- ing of a black youth in the Algiers Motel, a fellow officer testified yesterday. The testimony was given by officer Gerald Kiss to a jury of 13 men and one woman, August, 31, is charged with the first-de- gree murder of 19-year-old Au- burey Pollard, one of three blacks. killed at Algiers :Motel during the 1967 Detroit riot. August's attorney freely admit- ted in his opening statement that August had killed Pollard, but added he would disprove the pro- secution's contention that it was a murder committed "with pre- meditation and malice afore- thought." "Simply because he shot and killed a man does not make him a murderer or guilty of man- slaughter," defense attorney Nor- man Lippitt said Thursday. "We intend to show" that this was not an insurrection, not even a riot. "We intend to show that .ye had a war ... everyone was acting under battlefield conditions." A 20-year-old convicted prosti- tute testified yesterday that she did not see anyone shot at the motel. Miss Malloy was one of two white girls found at the motel among about a dozen black men when police and National Guards- men entered the building in a search for alleged snipers. Under cross-examination Miss Malloy admitted she has been ar- rested for and convicted of prosti- tution since the incident. :. .. TAnnitt exnlnined to the= court