cht r-clov. hire 16, 1977 HE MiCHiGAN DAILY Page Three I 'riaor"dcv. June 16, 197? T$E MICI-il &AILY Pbge Three- ease ori nance proposed By G"FE(GGi KRUPA of what his rights are." explain- written into area leases include process of law, forcing the ten- "Tenants are forced to- sig ed Wheeler. "Sometimes it takes forcing tenants to waive their ants to pay rent whether or not these things because they neet M vwr Albert W h e e I e r has a lit'le nudge on the head to right to a trial by jury, forcing the landlord fulfills his obliga- a place to stay," said Hadam. ), -1 an ordisance before City make a tenant understand his tenants to pay the legal costs of tion to maintain and repair the "Tenants should know they don't -ii id at i ns a r i n g hts." the landlord. waiving the right premises, and forcing the tenant have to give up their rights just a es Of e riehs among T h e -mandatory provisions to legal notice of proceedings to agree to abide by rules not to find a place to live." ea'ts in An, Arbcw. The ovdi- were suggested to the mayor by *hich wo ld allow a landlord to attached to the lease or yet to TIM KUNIAN of the Public In- Cace would rrvide fnr man- his Blue Ribbon Cimmittee Ot declare a lease void without due be written. See WHEELER, Page 19 C ti n d aore lease roisions written int every le-,se signed in the city. Tn ,rai s' noify the ten- am that "sone clauses con- tai"d in the residential leases maw he legally tiernfrceahle," thy 'e-'nts hvre the right to see "Itat corsel, that the City Cl-k shall k-ep a list of pos- sih- so rces of legal assisance fr the'-nnt who cannot afford 'ri i for It'al action and that the tenant is entitled to receive a '>mv of the booklet concerning the lant rimhts of tenants upon sitig the lease. "I WOULD like to get some la-""'nge into the lease that w *eld give the tenant an idea Fair Rental Practices, which was formed in January of 1975. Several groups representing tenants' concerns in the A Arbor area have responded fav- orably to the proposed ordi- nance, while many area land- lords are opposed to the manda- tory provisions. SUSAN HA SAM of the Ann Arbor Tenants' Union (AATU) Said the clauses were "neces- sary, because some leases in the city contain ridiculous and unenforceable c 1 a ua e s." Re- search done by the AATU turn- ed up various unenforceable provisions written into contracts by area landlords. Some of the dubious clauses Ann Arbor crie rte dwn 4 per cent By M. EILEEN HALEY With Wire Service Reports According to statistics released by Ann Arbor City Police and Michigan State Police, crime in Ann Arbor decreased during 1976. Ann Arbor Police reported a four per cent decline in major crimes such as murder, aggra- vated assault, and motor vehicle theft. The num- ber of lesser crimes, including arson, vandalism, and narcotic offenses plummetted ten per cent. MAJOR WALTER HAWKINS of the Ann Ar- bor police cited improved police work and an increased public awareness of crime as reasons for the decline. "People as a whole are more crime con- scious," Hawkins said. "Everybody is more sen- sitive to it." Hawkins also noted individuals re- porting crimes more quickly than before as beneficial. Michigan State Police yesterday released last years crime statistics in the 1976 Uniform Crime Report. The report revealed that while the num- ber of murders in Ann Arbor decreased by 59 per cent, and, that the number of brglaries dropped from 2,572 in 1975 to 2,111 in 1976, the number of larcenies jumped from 843 to 1.131. THE NUMBER of reported rapes increased by See ANN, Page 5 Local adores beer, but ust for the tin By LORI CARRUTHERS Within blocks of Ann Arbor's long defunct Michigan Union Brewery lives the owner of the world's largest collection of full beer cans, Rich Johnson. He can proudly boast of owning over 2100 different beer cans, all with their volume of beer s ill intact. Row upon raf of cans, arranged alphabetically and separated according to domestic and im- ported beer, line his living room walls, often two rows deep. "I have a lot downstairs that I just don't have room to display," said Johnson. TIE SIZE of his beer cans range from tiny seven ounce tins to gallon sized aluminum bar- rel, to the average 12 ounce cans found in grocer's coolers. "I have beer cans from every country that makes beer cans," Johnson said naming off the countries. "British Isles, France, Japan, Ger- many, Brazil, South Africa, Philippines, Singa- pore--wlerever that is-Greece Italy, and all the Scandinavian countries . . .," he continued. "I have every can made in the United States' unless it has come out just recently. I don't have a can of Quick Time-it came out four days ago in San Antonio, Texas. I found out it was coming out last Thursday and saw a picture of it Saturday in a newsletter," he said. JOHNSON'S FULL beer can collection also it- cludes a few novelty items like a ltisch can filled with golf balls and comnemorative beer can banks with the Phoenix Sun's basketball schedule. One misprinted can he owns, a iollywood diet cola, tabbed top and bottoin, professing to contain "only two calories"- ictualy is filled with Pabst's best. This collector is not without his favorites--a vintage Fitzgerald cone cap and a blue mountain- ed beer can. "These are my favorites because I wanted them for so long and because they were so hard to get," he said as he pointed out their features. But the cotlectiitg of full wer cans is not with- out its danger II four yetrs of beer can cullciiig Joh.1in su a hus had two cats explode. "one fell olf the shell on the wall and exploded all over the room. T,e other one . . . it was in awtl stiink, I didn't know what had happened. I thought a bird haid died bebind the bed,"l he said. Since then he has sealed il the tani alnuittinium cans with non-discoloring clear nail iolishi to prevent air leaks and future accidents AT THE MOMENT, Johnson isn't interested in collecting anything besides beer cans, not even other beer memorabilia. See LOCAL, Page S RICH JOHNSON STACKS a few of his favorites from his mammoth full beer can collection. Johnson, an Ann Arborite, owns 2100 full beer cans, the largest collection of its kind in the country. TODAY Weed squeezins Snuffy Smith on dope? Lukey and Elviney stoned out of their minds on the porch? Maybe not, but Riley Oxley of the federal Bureau of Alcohol, To- bacco and Firearms in Nashville, Tennessee says increasing numbers of hill country moonshiners are turning to a cash crop that pays better. than boot- leg booze - marijuana. Oxley says rising sugar prices, stricter enforcement of white lightning laws and a market that's going dry have discouraged many long-time whiskey runners. "The thing with young people seems to be marijuana and not booze - that's the market now," Oxley said. "The last moonshine we got was going for about $20 a gal- lon and that was about the wholesale price. So by the time the retailer sells it, he's about the same price as bonded whiskey." One former moonshiner apparently flew marijuana from Mexico to Memphis, and another in South Carolina bought two planes and learned to fly, agents said. "Most moonshiners are farmers," another agent commented. "The next available thing for them to grow is marijuana, and we think it'll get more prevalent as time goes on." Happenings ...if all' the bike thieves left was the chain guard, you can still do a world of good with it. The Bryant Youth Program is looking for old bi- cycles which kids in the program use for spare parts in learning how to repair bikes. If you think you may have just the clunker, call Gary Lussen- den at 971-6100 or 662-1638 ... Continuing Engineer- ing Education sponsors an 8:30 a.m. program on "Improving Employe and Product Safety and Per- formance" in the Chrysler Center ,.. a protest against the South African Krugerrand will meet on the Diag at 2:30, march to the National Bank and Trust, and then to the Regents' meeting, 3:30 in the Administration Building ... local filmmakers will strut their stuff in a Cinema/Video Series pro- gram in the School of Ed's Schorling Auditorium at 7 p.m. ... Trotter House presents an evening of drama, music and poetry with the Afro-Centric Theatre Group, 7-9 p.m. at Trotter ... the Christian Science Organization holds its weekly meeting at 7:15 in Room 4304 of the Union ... and a representative of United Surgical will speak to the monthly meet- ing of the Ann Arbor Ostomy Group at 7:30 p.m. at the Senior Citizens Guild, 502 W. Huron. - On the outside A good day to bet on the rain, because it may come and it may not, It'll be cloudy with a high of 82 and a chance of afternoon thundershowers and a low of 53 tonight. But tomorrow should be sunny again, with a high of 88. I 1