cit By JOHN MITCHELL Robert Hunter, assistant direc- tor of Ann Arbor's Human Relations Department, fired last February for alleged "political reasons," yesterday was granted a court order reinstating him to his former position. In granting the injunction sought by Hunter, Judge John Feikens of the 8th U.S. District Court in Detroit ordered that "Hunter be reinstated immediate- ly," explaining that the court thought Hunter was denied "due process" in the way he was fired. "This is not an order which should be construed as preventing the complete termination of Hun- ter's services, but the city of Ann Arbor must observe the require- ordered to reinstate Hunter ments of procedural due process" in its dismissal cases, the opinion read. Contacted yesterday, H u n t e r and his attorney Frederick Mc- Donald declined to comment on the injunction, with Hunter ex- plaining that "the decision speaks for itself." The injunction, granted pend- ing a full trial, also ordered that Hunter be paid for his position retroactive to Feb. 1, the day he was dismissed. In his four and one half years of working with the city in the human rights field, Hunter has often been the center of contro- versy at City Hall because of his radical views. Human Relations Department Director J a m e s Slaughter fired Hunter following a series of con- frontations between the two about the administration of the depart- ment. Slaughter maintained that Hunter forced the dismissal by allegedly "no longer performing the duties of his position in an effective and responsible manner." H u n t e r immediately charged that the firing was politically mo- tivated, saying that Mayor Robert Harris "wants city employes who operate departments in meaning- less ways and who cause no em- barrassment to his political am- bitions." He then filed suit for reinstatement. Slaughter said yesterday he was unaware that a decision had been reached in the injunction pro- ceedings. But after The Daily explained the court's decision, he said: "I fired Hunter because he refused to respond to supervisory direc- tives and questions. Beyond that, I do not care to discuss the matter." City Administrator Guy Larcom said yesterday that Judge Feikens' ruling "showed that Hunter's charges of racism in connection with his firing are completely ur- substantiated." "The city will review the court's recommendations, and then the decision to take further action will rest with the city attorney's office," Larcom said. City Attorney Jerold Lax said he "needed time" to study the court's opinion before taking any action. "But," he continued, "I gather from the decision that it does not force us to put Hunter back at a desk. If this is true," he added, "then we certainly will not." Lax referred to a section of the court's decision that enumerated the city's financial obligations to Hunter. The section stated that because of "administrative prob- lems" that might arise, the court would not force the city to return Hunter to "active duty," although Hunter would be paid at his for- mer salary. Lax, in presenting the city's case before the court,,nsaid that Hunter's firing "was in no way based upon his race, but was rather based upon his insubordi- nation and failure to fulfill the duties of his position. McDonald, Hunter's attorney, had tried to prove that Hunter's firing was caused by discrimina- tion and because city officials did not approve of the "aggressive" manner in which Hunter was pur- suing his job. His dismissal had enraged the black community, and with city elections approaching, the issues raised by the case became a fre- quent topic of political discussion. Mayor Harris had responded that the firing of Hunter was Slaughter's decision, and that it would be inappropriate for him to interfere' in "departmental matters."~ Harris was out of town yester- day, unavailable for comment. ~Iaiijj -Daily-Sara Krulwich Robert Hunter THE REAL BUDGET CRISIS See Editorial Page YI rL air Cig ROSY High-68 Low-39 Sunny, near tropical; perfect arb weather Vol. LXXXI, No. 153 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, April 8, 1971 Ten Cents Eight Pages U.S. AMENDMENT: State Legis la ratifies vote lure' at18 LANSING (N) - Michigan yesterday became the 15th°. state to ratify the proposed 18- year-old vote amendment to the U.S. Constitution, despite protests that the action would thwart "the will of the people." The State Senate voted 24 to 12 for the ratification resolution solution that swept through the" house 82 to 22 last month. Twenty-three more states must ratify the 26th amendment before it becomes law. Ratification opponents argued strongly in the Senate, as they had in the House, that Michigan voters rejected a lowering of the state's 21-year-old voting a g e - twice in the past three years and should be upheld. Proponents of the amendment< pointed to the recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling that allows 18-year-a olds to vote on federal questions but leaves eligibility for all state and local elections to the individ- ual states. "Today we decide whether they can vote for dog catcher as well as president," said Sen. B a s 11 Brown, (D-Highland Park). The confusion and expense of dual registration and voting pro-...................: cedures - if neither the state nor federal constitution were amend- Dancn with the ed - captured much Senate at- tention. Liberated by a light breeze, one celebrant of the r Sen. Robert Richardson, (R-Sag she greets yesterday's warm weather with a soul-sha inaw) said providing dual voting - _ _rT__rT_ facilities could cost Michigan be-L tween $300,000 and $1 million, while LA OS DRI E 'SUCCESSFUL'. the cost of a special election to SGC ''for using in erim, code By ART LERNER Student Government Council last night voted unani- mously to condemn the University administration for invok- ing the Regents'.Interim Rules and Disciplinary Procedures against John Eustis, '73, and urged students to protest the action "in any manner they see fit." Eustis is being tried on a complaint which alleges that he assaulted a University fire marshall during a demon- stration outside the February Regents meeting. The incident is alleged to have occurred when a large crowd of students who were barred from the meeting attempted to enter the Administration-Bldg. Council also voted to "insist" that the Regents vote the University's General Motors stock in accordance with pro- posals by Campaign GM. The proposals aim toward "share- acts holder democracy, constitu- ent democracy and public dis- blasts -Assoite rress Pi g Pong Parley Bufford Harrison, foreground, leader of the U.S. team at the world table tennis championship in Nageya, Japan, sits with Lu Ting, center background, and Kinjimnu Unionji of the Peking Athletics School. The People's Republic of China has invited the U.S. team to visit China for a series of matches. See News Briefs, Page 3. PLAN CHANGES: -Daily-Sara Krulwich wind and sun rites of spring lets her aking song and dance. hair and feet fly as Radicals win Berkeley vote BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) - Having gained a 4-4 deadlock on the City Council in Tuesday's election, three radical councilmen vowed yesterday to fight for the appointment of another member of the radi- cal April Coalition to fill a council vacancy. put tne lower voting age question to Michigan voters a third time- before November, 1972-could run' Ias high as $1.8 million. Some contended giving 18-year- olds the right to vote on all issues would help solve much of the prob- lem with campus radicals.j "If these young people are to' work within the system, we need to let them in," Richardson said. "If we move rapidly we can help assure the stability of the (demo- cratic) system." Nixon announces hike closure" within the giant cor- poration, the SGC resolution said. SGC members protested the use of the Interim rules against Eustis because they charge that the disci- plinary procedure demonstrates "total disregard for his human and legal rights." Under the procedure, a hearing officer appointed by the Univer- sity president decides the verdict and sentence for each case. SGC members argued that a student defendant should be tried by a jury, as in the civil court sys- tem, and that the jury should be composed entirely of students to insure fairness to the defendant. A jury of students for all stu- dent defendants is a major aspect of the proposed University judicial system, which, if passed by the Regents at their meeting n e x t Friday, would replace the interim disciplinary procedure being used in the Eustis case. Council members last night crit- icized the administration for de- ciding to hold the hearing at the North Campus Commons, which might be inaccessible to many stu- dents. President Fleming has appointed Theodore Souris, a former justice of the state Supreme Court, to hear Eustis' case next Wednesday morn- ing at the North Campus Com- mons. Eustis is also being charged on See SGC, Page 8 supported by Council Student Government Council called last night for students to participate in anti-war actions in Washington D.C., inrsupport of the People's Peace Treaty. The approved motion stated that students should show their "soli- darity with our sisters and broth- ers in Indochina" and "demon- strate to the rulers of this country that the cost of maintaining con- trol and order within American society will rise until it is in ex- cess of the loss they will suffer by giving up a part of their emn- pire." SGC voted to allocate $65.00 to cover the cost of distributing 10,- 000 copies of the motion to stu- dents. The overwhelming approval of a referendum in last week's SGC election ratifying the People's Peace Treaty was cited in the mo- tion as grounds for the SGC ac- tion. The People's Peace Treaty calls upon the American government to set a date for the withdrawal of all U.S. forces from Indochina, to be immediately followed by a .ease- fire throughout Indochina. in troop removal rate If successful, the Coalition would have clear control of the local Others said 18-year-olds today government. They are firmly supported by the newly elected mayor, are "more interested in everything Warren Widener, who is a voting member of the council. than we were 20 years ago, rn- What kept radicals from gaining complete control of council was affairs. the election of Edward Kallgren, a white attorney who describes him- Several members scored Con- self as an independent liberal. gress for sending the proposal to If the April Coalition can get its candidate, Rick Brown, 28, ap- the states. WASHINGTON (P) - President Nixon last night announced a slight increase in proposed Amer- ican troop withdrawals from Indo- china. Nixon said that 100,000 American troops would leave South Viet- nam between May 1 and Dec. 1, a monthly average of just over 14,- 000, in contrast to the present rate of 12,500. Nixon claimed the successes ofl pointed by a council vote in May, they say they will embark on a program which includes a tax on income over $12,000 to replace the present property tax. A revolutionary proposal to di- vide the police force into three sep- arate forces-for black, campus and predominately white communi-' ties-was defeated by about a 2-1 margin in the election. Kallgren, who holds the key to, the election, said he had not de- cided whether to support Brown. "It takes five votes to make an appointment, Ass't. City Attorney Robert Berkman explained. "Noth- ing can be done without five votes." The council will continue with eight *members until someone gets a ma- jority, he said. The new radical councilmen vowed they would try to restructure! the Police Department to provide \ v r v WAR PROTEST Phone tax boycott gains the Laotian and Cambodian in- from the usual quarters 1 a s t vasions facilitated the stepped-up night, with the greatest outcry troop withdrawal schedule. over his refusal to name a time The South Vietnamese govern- certain for for total U.S. with- ment said early this morning that drawal. the 100,000 American troops who After going on to claim that he will be phased out of Vietnam will get America outin a manner from May 1 to D c. 1 "will be that will give South Vietnam a gradually rplaycte.your"wnbreasonable chance to exercise free gradually replaced by our o w n coeasapplh sid f troops.,, choice as a people, he said of toos." othe alternative proposed by some Nixon's nationally broadcast ad- of his critics: "The other would dress drew cheers and criticism end it precipitately and give vic- tory to the Communists." Nixon said the United States faces. "the choice of ending o u r involvement in this war on a note of despair or on a note of hope. "If the United States should an- nounce that we will quit regard- less of what the enemy does, we would have thrown away our principal bargaining counter to win the release of American pri- soners of war; we would remove the enemy's strongest incentive to end the war sooner by negotiation; and we will have given enemy commanders the exact informa- tion they need to marshal their at- m tacks against our remaining forces at their most vulnerable time." Nixon drew these conclusions about the U.S. sponsored South <> ' ' Vietnamese invasion of Laos: -"First, the South Vietnamese Fierce battles erupt at, two S. Viet fire bases By ZACHARY SCHILLER Ann Arbor War Tax Counseling (AAWTC) appears to be gaining support in its drive to encourage area residents not to pay their federal phone tax, in protest against the Indochina war. A local demonstration April 15 in front of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) building will mark Ann Arbor's participa- tion in a nationwide schedule of anti-war protests. Those who have refused to pay their "war tax" will gather at the demon- strations next week where they will do- "Vietnam and only Vietnam makes this (telephone tax) bill necessary." Taylor calls the refusal to pay the tax a protest of the University's involvement in military and classified research as well as of government foreign policy. Taylor says, "It's costing the University a fair amount of money just to process all this paper," referring to the Standard Practice Guide of the University, which elaborates a specific procedure for the University to collect unpaid taxes which have been levied on its employes. SAIGON (AP)-Hbavy fighting yesterday erupted around two besieged South Vietnamese fire bases in the r u g g e d central highland. Saigon headquarters claimed nearly 400, North Viet- namese troops were killed in daylong fighting, most of them by U.S. air strikes. A Saigon communique report- ed South Vietnamese losses as 14 troops killed and 51 wounded in the two clashes around Fire Base Six in the northern cen- tral highlands and Fire Base Lonely about 80 miles to the gagements. T h e communique said 220 Communists were kill- ed by air strikes. Eighty miles to the south near Fire Base Lonely, 68 North Viet- namese troops were reported killed, half of them by air strikes. South Vietnamese cas- ualties were one killed and three wound ed, their headquarters said. Fire Base Six, a mountaintop artillery outpost manned by units of the South Vietnamese 22nd Division, has been under daily attack since March 31. It 4:;;::v