Ninety-One Years of Editorial Freedom Lit ian l43latig SOGGY Scattered thunderstorms and windy today.' High in the low 70s, low in the low 50s. Vol. XCI, No. 11 Copyright 1980, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, September 16, 1980 Ten Cents Ten Pages t Grad student brutally murdered; 'police fear link with other killings By MAUREEN FLEMING A University graduate student found stabbed to death outside her west Ann Arbor apartment Sunday morning was the third local woman in five months to die under similar circumstances. The body of Rebecca Huff, 30, was discovered at 8 a.m. Sunday on the steps of her Walden Hills apartment on South Maple Road. POLICE CHIEF WILLIAM Corbett said at a press conference yesterday that no suspects had been apprehended but that there were similarities bet- ween Huff's death and the stabbing deaths of two other Ann Arbor women. Police said they are investigating suspects in the two earlier killings but have made no arrests.' The first murder victim, Shirley Small, 17, was found dead last April 20 near her home in the Georgetown Townhouses on Page Avenue. On July 13 the body of Glenda Rich- mond, 23, was discovered outside the front door of her University Townhouse apartment near Braeburn Circle on Ellsworth Road. Richmond had plan- ned to enroll at the University this fall, Corbett said. HE EXPLAINED THAT suspects are under investigation in the first two murders but there is "insufficient evidence for their arrest or issuance of a criminal warrant." He added, however, that "by eviden- ce and associations we've developed, they (the murders) could all have been committed by one person. There are similarities." If that theory is correct, then police may have been watching the wrong -,suspects, because Corbett said that police were observing the suspects at the time of Huff's death. "WE KNOW WHERE one of the suspects was (the time of Huff's death) and we're quite certain about the other's whereabouts," Corbett added. Corbett cited four similarities in all three homicides: " All three victims were stabbed in the chest area. " There exists no evidence of sexual molestation. " There is no evidence of robbery as a motive. - All three women were young, at- tractive, unescorted females who lived in large apartment complexes with high population densities. In two of the murders, witnesses overheard arguing, moans, or screams from the vicinity of the crimes at about the time they were supposed to have taken place, Corbett said. IN TWO OF the cases the same type of knife was used, he added. Corbett said there are other similarities in the cases but he "was not at liberty to discuss them." One dissimilarity Corbett mentioned is that the location of the murders are widely scattered. THE POLICE HAVE established that the first victim, Small, was acquainted with the person suspected of killing her. In the Richmond case, the victim knew who her attacker was but was not personally acquainted with him, Cor- bett said. "From evidence, all three victims were on their way home and were ac- costed in front of it," he continued. POLICE HAVE TRACED the ac- tivities of the victims on the nights before their deaths, Corbett said. He added that virtually all of his detectives are working on the case and the state police and the Washtenaw County Sheriff's office have been called into the investigation. Witnesses reported hearing a con- frontation and screams about the time of Huff's murder at the apartment complex, police said. The witnesses also heard someone say, "No, please go home." Carol Kahn, a neighbor who lives directly above the walkway where Huff's body was discovered, said she See GRAD, Page 3 Stabbing brings back memories of area kill1ings 1 By JULIE SELBST Eleven years ago, women in Ann Ar- bor and Ypsilanti lived in an at- mosphere of tension as seven women, five of them college students, were found murdered and apparently abused after they had each mysteriously disappeared one by one over a span of several months. While the local community has ap- parently put that series of slayings into its past, a murder discovered yester- day-which police say may be the third in series-has no doubt brought the chilling 1969 slayings back into the minds of many residents. In an effort to keep a sharp eye out for any additional incidents, local security has ben tightened. University Director of Safety Walt Stevens said all campus security officers have been informed of the murders. At the same time, Ann Arbor Police Chief William Corbett said all police officers on beats have been cautioned to be particularly observant. About 30 investigative personnel currently are working on the case. The latest murders appear totally unrelated to the 1969 slayings, and John Norman Collins, who was convicted of killing the last of the women to disap- years, ago. pear, is currently behind bars in the Upper Peninsula. However, there are some similarities to the John Norman Collins case, said Washtenaw County Prosecutor William Delhey yesterday. In both cases, he said, all the victims were young, white, and were brutally murdered. But there are dissimilarities, too. The Collins'vic- tims were all sexually molested and none of them were stabbed, Delhey ad- ded. Collins was a 22-year-old senior at Eastern Michigan University when the 1969 murders were committed. Karen Sue Beineman, an 18-year-o1l freshwoman at Eastern Michigan University, was the last woman mur- dered in the 1969 episode. A clerk in an Ypsilanti store who was one of the last to see her alive said she overheard Beineman make the remark that she had done two foolish things in her lifetime. One of them was buying a wig, and the other was accepting a ride on a motorcycle with a stranger. She then left the store with a stranger on a motorcycle. As had Beineman, all of the women in the 1969 episode had either been hit- chhiking or had accepted rides with men they had not known. Doily Photo by JIM KRUZ TERESA LEDERA (with dog), Carol Kahn, and her son Jehan, all residents of the Walden Hills apartment complex in west Ann Arbor, stand next to the spot where Rebecca Huff's body was found Sunday morning. Huff, 30, (shown in a 1972 photo) was a University graduate student in business administration (inset courtesy of Vanderbilt University). OSU alums aid marching band By BETH ROSENBERG The Ohio State University marching band alumni have shown they're really true Blue. The former Buckeye musicians-who tout themselves as "The Best Damn 'Band In The Land Alumni Group"-have passed the scarlet and grey hat for the Michigan Marching Band to help guarantee a Wolverine trip to Columbus Nov. 22. OSU alumni band treasurer Walter Neff said yesterday in a telephone in- terview from Columbus that $124.04 was raised last weekend at the band's reunion to aid the Wolverines. He said a certified check will be mailed to Ann Arbor today. Neff said he wasn't charged for certifying the check when the bank was told about the cause. The Michigan Marching Band has been unsure since early August whether they could scrape together enough money to travel to the Ohio State game because private con- tributions reportedly have dropped Raise whopping $124.04 to send band to Columbus significantly. But last Saturday, band members were told they would be going to Columbus. Music School Dean Paul Boylan said yesterday that Vice President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye promised funds to the band for travel. University Vice President and Chief Financial Officer James Brinkerhoff said yesterday the band will receive $15,000 for basic operational costs. Boylan said the money will be used toward expenses to the Ohio State game. The $15,000, according to Brinkerhoff, will come from a "non-recurring" fund from which money is dispensed on an ad hoc basis. The money *in the fund comes from interest on non-designated gifts to the University. The athletic department already allocated $15,000 to the band-an amount which music school officials claimed was insufficient to pay for the band's 225 members. Boylan said the Buckeye band con- tribution was "a nice gesture. It's too bad the word didn't get there sooner that we have the money." He -said he was unsure of how the check would be used. The collection was publicized yester- day when the OSU alumni group's secretary called WJR radio in Detroit to tell announcer J.P. McCarthy about the cause. "It would be a dreadful shame if the Michigan band weren't to come to Columbus," Janet Ebert told McCarthy on his 7:15 a.m. show. Ebert, who has been the group's secretary for the past decade, holds three degrees from OSU. She said her late father also had three degrees from the University. The Urbana, Ohio native said the fund was started when one OSU band reunion participant passed around a copy of the Daily publicizing the Wolverine band's financial plight. Ethel Geist, whose husband Norman is chairman of the OSU band alumni, said the collection started as a joke. "In between marching through four 'Script Ohios' (marching formations), someone said 'Why not take up a collec- tion?'," she said. The friendly but fierce rivalry Ebert said, is part of the Michigan-Ohio State tradition. "I'm going to cheer for Earl's (coach Earl Bruce) boys. We love Bo every day of the year except that one." 1 - s5 A' THE THREE WOMEN w -re ;tabbed to death at the points indicated on the map. The most recent murd er occurred Sunday morning when University graduate student Rebecca Hirff was stabbed near an apartment complex at Pauline and S. Maple Streets ( pper left). Shirley Small was killed last April 20 near townhouses on Page Avenue (center) and Glenda Richmond died July 13 near her apartment on Ell-swcrth Road near Braeburn Circle (lower right). TODAY Disco units? O PUBLICATION is immune from the occasional embarrassment of typographical errors, but the ymistakes can at times be a great source of amusement. Consider this week's University Record, for example. The front-page includes an announce- ment of a national conference on "Discovering Workers' Culture in American Society," sponsored by the Univrsity's Institute of Labor and TndustriaI ReIations So what's the reason to expand valuable energy in whistling at passing Barbour's food is usually trucked from nearby West Quad, but the sick driver couldn't make the deliveries last night So the Barbourites and their colleagues from Helen Newberry had to trek over to the West Quad cafeteria for their evening meal. Barbour resident Venessa Sucre said some of her neighbors were upset because the food is. allegedly "worse" when it is served in the two West Quad dining rooms. She said some of her neighbors cited the "im- personal atmosphere" and "rowdiness" of West Quad. But it's happened before, she said. "We're all pretty used to it by now." 1 reason to expand valuable energy in whistling at passing women." Q Expensive drips. That dripping faucet in your bathroom or kit- chen could be costing you more than you think. Some students living in an off-campus house. irritated at their 11,970 gallons per month, and a whopping 143,445 gallons per year, all from one leaking faucet. With the city charging $1.59 per 750 gallons, the leak is costing the students an extra $24.99 per month in water and sewage fees. If the leak were to continue for the duration- of the one-year lease, the cost of the drips would total $304.10. A cryptic "I've seen the work order" was the only response the residents got when they complained to a representative of Old Town Realty, the owner of the house. Meanwhile, it looks like it's just money down the drain. 0 AIL i