Page Ter THE MICHIGAN DAILY I Sunday, February 9, 1969 MASS MEETING FOR ORGANIZERS TUES., FEB. 11, 8 P.M., DINING ROOM 4, S. QUAD, 600 E. MADISON. * TENANTS! If Your Landlord is One of the following and you have not been reached by the rent strike, we need your help. Debate reopens on housing bill DAILY OFT:CIAL BULLETIN ' Ambassador Ann Arbor Trust Co. Apartments Ltd. Arbor Mgt. BMR Campus Mgt. Charter Realty Dahlmann Apts. Misco Mgt. Oakland Trust Patrick Pulte Inc. Summit Associates Walden Mgt. Wilson-White Co. Post Realty By JOE HALL WASHINGTON (,P) -=Con- gressional advocates of two new housing programs designed for low-income families are watch- ing closely the Nixon adminis- tration's initial moves on finan- cing them. The issue will be joined when the House Appropriations Com- mittee conducts hearings, prob- ably in March, on a supplemen- Rent your Roommate with a Classified Ad tal bill for the present financial year. Former President Lyndon B. Johnson, who submitted the bills three days before he left office, asked $100 million additional for the two programs as a part of the supplemental. George Romney, secretary of housing and urban development, will be asked to present his ad- ministration's views on the housing items. The two programs in question are the main new features in the far-reaching 1968 Housing Act which cleared Congress last July. One contains the broadest subsidies ever voted to try to make it possible for low-income families to buy their own homes. Under it, the government wouli pay all of the interest cost above 1 per cent in order to put monthly mortgage payments in reach of such families. The other program applies the same interest-subsidy principle to rental apartments for such families. The 1968 law authorizedh 75 million in subsidies for each of the programs in the current fis- cal year which ends June 30. But the congressional appro- priations committees allowed only $25 million each. It is this cut of $50 million each which Johnson asked be restored in the supplemental. Backers of the program say that the home-ownership plan already has proved so popular that the $25 million is ex- hausted. Sen. John Sparkman (D-Alas, chairman of the Senate housing subcommittee who steered the 1968 Act through his committee, told a reporter he is confident Romney will support the $100 million program. However. Sparkman was criti- cal of statements made by the new secretary that it would n)t be possible to attain the goals of the act for low- and middle-in- come families. "I have said all along these goals are difficult," the Alaba- man commented. ."But they shouldn't go shoat- ing from the housetops that they are unrealistic and can't be reached. First they ought to give them a real good try." For the first time in history, the 1968 law set up specific year-by-year targets for prodic- tion of government-assisted housing units for the poor. These added up to a 6 million total for the next decade. Rob- ert C. Weaver, Romney's pre- decessor as housing secretary, conceded that to achieve the 6- million goal would require pro- duction at a rate 10 times that of the past 10 years, The list is NOT exhaustive. Other landlords and agencies can be struck. If you have not been reached by the rent strike contact the Tenants Union. Call 763-3102, 1532 S.A.B. SUBLET FROM STRIKERS ONLY ,Continued from Page 6) For. Langs., H.E., G.P.E., Photography. ins,, ngmt. trng.. production, purchas- Lib.. Special Ed.: Sp. Ther. E.M.R., Ed. inginsde and territorial sales Hlandlcpd. Shiell Companies. HoustonTexas and Honolulu. Hawaii (Same as above). nationwide: Bach. in Econ. and math Kalamazoo, , Mich. Elem.: Classroom. for data poroes.',i personnel, pur- 1:b, Cons Sec.: Lib. French, Engl., e ?a~singstatistics, transportation, fi- Math., Sci., I.A.. H.E., G.P.E., B.P.E, iiance. accounting and management. Art. Music. Spec.: E.M.H., Orthoped. --- Hdcp.. Sp. Corr., Eniot. Dist. S.MMER PLACE1ENT SERVICE Orangeburg, New York: (S, Orange- 212 S.A.B., Lower Level town Central District): All fields. Announcements of Summer Oppor- Dearborn Heights, Mich.: (No. 8) tunities. please inquire at 212 S.A.B. Fall: Guld., Fine Arts. L.A. NOW: Biol/ .or further information. Earth Si.. Math., Elem. Guld Couns., Winchester Excavations C'omittee, B.P.E., GP.E., Lib.' Hants. England: Offering Summer 69 Excavating program at 4 sites of mede- WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19: vial English cathedral ruins. S o m e Detroit, Mich. (Catholic Schools in prde ,butnot reqired. Plan SE Mich.): Elemi. Sec.: Bus. Draft., to sign up for 4 week period or more. Enl., German, History, Lib., Math., Ford Motor Company, Saline, Mich.: Religion, Spanish, B.P.E., Phys., G.P.E. Openings for engineering students Music. having completed Jr. year. Mt. Prospect, Ill. (H.S.): Engl., Math. Irish Hills Girl Scout Council, Jack- Bus. Ed., Phys. Sci., Ind. Ed., Spec. Sd.. son, Mich.: Seasonal Director, over 25 Lib., H.E., Dept. Chairman for Engl. pref. Good pay, required previous camp (MA & 4 yrs. of experience). admin. exper. Walled Lake, Mich.:. Elem.: K-6, Art, Continental Can Company. Chicago, P.E., Voc. Mus. Jr. Hg.: Gen. Sci., Art. Ill.: offers Summer Intern P r o graim Engl/Hist., H.E., Lib., Voc. Music. Sr. with Research and Development Cent- Hgh: Voc. Mus.. Instr. Mus., Engl er, for Sophomores, Jrs., and Seniors in Journ., Reading Eliol., Lib., H. E.. ME, EE, metallurgy, Chem., Physics,i French, I.A., Couns.,' Math. Food Sci., Material Sci. Applications Dearborn, Mich.: El. & Spec. Ed. Se- taken till March 15. condary - All fields including Art. --1 Music, and P.E. EDUCATION DIVISION The following schools will be inter-. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20: viewing prospective teachers Racine. Wisc.: All fields. in our office: Simi, Cal.: All fields. MONDAY, FEB. 17: Oshkosh, Wisc.: All fields. Glencoe, Ill.: (S. iDst. No. 35). Elem.: Gary, Ind.: Elem.: K-6. Sec.: Math. Classroom, P. E., Lib., Art. 7 & 8th: Sci., Engl., Engl/Speech, I.A., Soc. Eng. Soc. Studies, Math., Sci. Studies. H. E. Art, Music, G.P.E.. Honolulu, Hawaii. Elem.: Classroom. E.M.H., T.M.H. Sec.: Band, Couns., Engl., Ind. Arts, Falls Church, Va.: All fields. Math., Rem. Read., Emot. Dist., Ment. Ret., Phys & Biol. Sci. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21: La Puente, Cal. H.S.: Arts & Crafts, Bellvue, Wash.: All fields. Bus. Ed., Engl., H.E., I.A.. Math., Sci., Westport, Conn.: Elem. Sec.: Engl.. Geog., G.P.E,, Lib., Voc. Mus., Reading. Soc. Studies, Sol., Math., Spanish, Art, Spanish, E.M.R., Ed. Hdcp. P.E. Torrance. Cal.: Elem.: K-5. H.S.: I.A., Inkster, Mich. (Cherry Hill): Elem.: Electronics, Ed. Hdcp., Graphic Arts, K-6, Art, Vocal, Instr. Music, P.E. Sec.: Auto Shop. Art, Bus., Math., Physics, Gen. Sci., Wyoming, Mich. (Godwin Heights Biol., Engl., Speech, Reading, Sp. Corr., P.S.): All fields. Type A, Diag., H.E., I.A., Sci/Math., L.A./Soc. Studies. TUESDAY, FEB. 18: Warren, Mich. (Van Dyke P.S.): All Eellflower. Cal.: Elem.: Classroom Elem. and Secondary including Art, Teachers. Jr. High: Engl., Soc. Sci., P.E., Music, Type A, Social Worker and Math., For. Langs., G:P.E., I.A., H.E., Psychol. Fine Arts. Sr. High: Engl., Journ., To arrange appointments contact Math.Sci., Fine Arts, I.A., Bus. Ed., Mrs. Staelin at 3200 S.A.B. 754-459 m U I 0 0 I 0i 9 9 (Alias ALL-AMERICAN CITY) { i I I i I i i i 1 C i i i i ORGAN IZATION NOTICES American Institute of Industrial En- gineers: Weekly luncheon, Tues., Feb. 11 at 12-noon 229 West Engineering. Speaker: Ken Ryan, Group Head of 1E Dept., Collins Radio Company. "Dif- ference Applications of I.E. to the Elec- tronics Industry." Physical Therapy Club: Demonstra- tion of P.T. techniques Sun., Feb. 9, 1:00 p.m. Phys. Ther. Dept. University Hospital, 3rd floor. MON" DELI HOUSE Today at 5:30 P.M. Followed by Israeli folk dancing HILLEL FOUNDATION 1429 Hill St. 663-4129 Paying for the Other Guy's Accidents? Save on your Auto Insurance For those who qualify- $25,000 B.I. and P.D. $1,000 Medical Expenses and Uninsured Motorists Protection Featuring OP . . . Single Male Age 21-25 ....... $125 per year * LAX BUILDING CODE ENFORCEMENT and an understaffed building and safety department allows landlords to rent sub- standard and overcrowded housing to students. 675 uncertified multiple dwelling units are currently rented, all of which have one of more outstanding code violations. * INADEQUATE HOUSING for a growing population inflates rents, hitting the poor and the students hardest. Over 225 emergency housing cases are currently being processed by the city's Human Relations Commission, while construction of pub- lic housing units has been stalled for over three years. LACK OF AN OPERATING BUS SYSTEM (and an unwilling- ness to invest in one) puts a great burden on the poor, many of whom have no other means of transportation. Only an in- efficiently-operated, emergency bus system is now in operation. o FREQUENT ALLEGATIONS OF POLICE BRUTALITY against blacks and an almost all-white police force contribute to tense police-community relations. Recent cases of alleged indiscrim- inate search and seizure have resulted in a probe by the United States District Attorney's office. * PERMISSIVE ZONING allows student landlords to build high density apartments with inadequate floor space and insuffi- cient parking. The new 26-story apartment building and Uni- versity Towers show to which interests city government is now responsive. o TRAFFIC TICKET VOLUME (which matches that of Detroit) is climbing. The City Council is currently considering a motion to eliminate on-street parking between 2 a.m. and 5 a.m., with- out supplying alternative parking spaces for the many students who would be directly affected by the change. Married Male Age 21-25........$70 per year SENTRY. tINSURANCE The Hardware Mutuals Organization TED MAUPIN Phone 971-2100 For a VALENTINE that will last forever uTh IVJ onogrrnme CIRCLE:: PIN einraili g-u hare smedaYonreqe" S elc.fo t3 Ann Arbor Needs Leadership and Vision BOB HAR RIS needs your HELP To Be Mayor