NyiE 31e43an rUi1Q Ninety-five years of editoria/ freedom Vol. XCV, 'No. 14-S CopyrigO 1985 TheMichigan, Doily Friday, June 7, 1985 Fifteen Cents Twelve Pages Proposal violates research guide lines By KERY MURAKAMI University Vice President for Research Alfred Sussman said yesterday that the University has asked the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency to change a proposal by Prof. Raymond Tanter, so that Tanter's research conforms with University bylaws. Tanter, a political science professor, proposed research to the Washington-based federal agency that would review previous U.S.- Soviet arms negotiations and develop an alternate approach to arms con- trol. BUT according to the proposal, "The research will require access to classified documents up to the level of 'secret,' " and that "any report produced will reflect the classification of the input material." Because the reports resulting from Tanter's research would be classified, See SUSSMAN, Page 2 Dispute ends for Kerasotes 60 movie theaters By STEVE HERZ proceed against the union," NLRB With the help of the National Labor representative Steve Glasser said. Relations Board, a six-month-old Glasser said he was confident that dispute between Kerasotes movie the dispute has finally ended. "The management and a projectionist, union has agreed to stop the picketing. union may finally be over. If they stick to their word then the The conflict arose after Kerasotes dispute will be over, he said. purchased the State, Wayside, and The union has the right to continue Campus theatres last December and an informational picket after 60 days. decided not to retain several projec- But Greg Mazur, the business agent of tionists who were employed by the the local union, said, "There will be no previous ownership, Butterfield picketing for an indefinite period of Theatres, time." KERASOTES had charged that the HE SAID the union was not backing union violated picketing rules by down from the confrontation. "We did staging a recognitional picket-one not admit to any wrongdoing...con- that asks for union recognition from sidering the choices presented to us, management-for longer than the we decided to settle out of court," allotted 30 days. Mazur said. The union claimed its picketing was The decision should end a fierce merely informational and should be battle between the two sides. Earlier permitted to continue. in the year the union filed charges Anniversary Daily Photo by AUSA BLOCK The labor board, after investigating against the management because it the charges for the past week, decided felt the Kerasotes failed to retain the Bob Foreman, President of the University Alumni Association addresses that the picketing should be halted. projectionists solely because they the class of '35 last night in the Michigan League Ballroom. The class held "WE HAVE ADVISED the em- See UNION, Page 3 its 50th anniversary. See story, page 3. ployer and the union we would NAZIHUNTERS SKEPTIC AL OF REPORT Brazilian police claim 'Angel of Death' died in 1979 EMBU, Brazil ( UPI -Brazilian police said yesterday they are "90 percent" certain that Josef Mengele, the "Angel of Death" responsible for the murder of 400,000 Auschwitz con- centration camp inmates, drowned in 1979 and is buried outside Sao Paulo. Acting at the request of police, Judge Jose Kallas ordered the body exhumed from a cemetery in the small town of Embu, 20 miles outside Sao Paulo, yesterday afternoon. Examination of the body could take days. bearing no dates, bore the name swimming accident in 1979. is that of Mengeled" ten in German by another person and "Wofgag GrhadetubyM nlae hsaid theaywaswntprvie AZcout oP ege le' In Paris, Nazi-hunter Serge Klar- He said the couple, "in their six- kept hy Mengele himself hut was writ- See BRAZIL, Page 2 sfeld said he was highly skeptical the ties," were subject to several hours of hody was that of Mengele-the interrogation hefore surrendering aJu1 s n s esu r r world's most wanted fugitive, withe diary and other documents that led t J u dg e d is- hisses -/ u e r total of $3.4 million on his head. the conclusion the man probably was Tliieiig1eie. m engele. "I don't believe it any more than the German judicial system believes it," Klarsfeld said. "I am skeptical of this report. If he had in fact died, his sur- viving family in Germany would be the first to announce it." THE GRAVE identified by police ROMEO TUMA, head of the federal sources as the one to be opened was police in Sao Paulo, told a news con- capped with two weathered plaques. ference in Sao Paulo that the man he One carried the name "Friderieke believes to be Mengele lived with a Gerhard 1895-1961" and the other, German couple in Brazil and died in a "They told us: 'Yes, he was Mengele, here are the documents,"' Tuma reported. "WE HAVE EXAMINED documen- ts, including a diary, and we believe there is a 90 percent chance that the man who kept the diary was Mengele," said Tuma. "In that case, there is a 90 percent chance the body charg against A'z womn By LAURA BISCHOFF Judge S. J. Elden yesterday dismissed the murder charges against Debra Robinson, who was accused of fatally stabbing her housemate on May 21. Elden was not convinced that a crime had been committed. Eyewitnesses Pat Patterson and James Williams both contradicted their init- ial reports to the police the night of the incidents by saying that nothing happened. "IN LIGHT of Mr. Patterson's perjury today and Mr. Williams' perjury yesterday, the people will not call any further witnesses," said prosecuting attorney Brian Mackey. See JUDGE, Page 3 Taxes Rocking Amplified Is Reagan's tax plan better than Look for mostly cloudy skies with a Arts reviews the dB's concert at the current plan? high in the upper 70's Rick's Tuesday night Opinion, Page 5 Arts, Page 8