CIVIL DEFENSE- WHY BOTHER? See editorial page 43U iE ai1 REALLY CRAPPY High-53s Low-low 30s See Today for details Vol. LXXXIX, No. 59 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, November 14, 1978 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Tenants assail landlord seeking housing project By MARSHA L. GINSBURG An Ann Arbor landlord who needs city approval to build senior citizens housing downtown was charged with negligence and poor maintenance by some of his renters last night at an Ann Arbor City Council meeting. University students Richard Stacewicz, Donald Oppenheim, and five other tenants at 924 Oakland have withheld rent for the past few weeks because they said their landlord, Dan Kaplan, was not living up to contract obligations and illegally entered their apartments without prior notification. KAPLAN LAST WEEK admitted that workmen entered the apartments without prior notification but said it was legal as long as they entered to make repairs on the apartments. Kaplan wants to build a combination housing and commercial office building on top of a parking structure at the corner of Ashley and Main Streets. Some 30 per cent of the 120- apartment portion of the complex would be used for senior citizens, Kaplan said. Oppenheim, a graduate student in Business Administration, who is interested in alternative living for senior citizens, recently said, "I don't want'to see that man housing senior citizens. Based on the type of irresponsible landlords he and his whole outfit are, I can't see him dealing with such a vulnerable group as elderly people." DURING LAST night's public hearing, he echoed those views and added, "We can't imagine senior citizens dealing with him as well as we have. We hope the council will lead a quiet investigation as to what kind of landlord he will make." Councilwoman Leslie Morris (D-Second Ward), said in an interview, the charges against Kaplan were relevant to the City Council's approval or non-approval of the project because "the city would be almost going into a partnership with him" should it approve the project. She also said it is illegal to enter an apartment without prior notification. MORRIS SAID even though she felt it was relevant that Kaplan's reputation as a landlord be examined, right now his proposal didn't look very feasible. In his packaged deal, Kaplan has offered to pay about $600,000 toward a $2.5 million parking structure which would be located under his building. About 100 spaces, or one-third of the lot, would be used for occupants of the building. The rest of the lot would be open to the public. "Right now, the city doesn't have enough money to go around helping developers like that, so the project isn't necessarily near being passed anyway." But she added that if the council were to approve the project for Kaplan, "I personally think they (the charges against him) should be looked into. See TENANTS, Page 5 ________________________ I 'U' succumbs to 'Class Struggle' By HOWARD WITT The five players hunched over the board, eyeing one another suspiciously. The capitalist started the game, moving his piece around the board in the wrong direction. "Capitalists always move to the right," someone sneered. The group chuckled. In a shrewd strategical move, the small businessman offered an alliance to the student, promising him a job after graduation. The players laughed. THEGAME was Bertell Ollman's "Class Struggle," a game which "gives a clear and simple view of capitalism from a socialist's stan- dpoint," according to Ollman. Ollman, an associate professor of political science at New York 'University and Marxian political theorist, stopped in Ann Arbor ,yesterday to give a lecture and publicize his game. "class Struggle" can be played by 'two to six players. Each player rolls -:a "genetic die" to determine whether he or she will be a capitalist or worker (the two major parties) or a- professional, student, small businessman, or farmer (the four minor parties). Through a combination of chance, cards and rolls of dice, players collect debits and assets, make and break alliances, and debate political theories. The winner is determined by an overall evaluation of each player's assets. "TO BE HONEST, I was tempted to make a game in which workers would usually win, but I realized this wouldn't be realistic. Workers and capitalists each win about the same number of games," Olman smiled. Ollman has been working on "Class Struggle" for about seven years. It first appeared last May, and so far has sold about 20,000 games. "We hope to double that figure during the Christmas season," he said. AN ITALIAN version of the game is now being created and sales in Italy are expected to reach 100,000 in the first year. Since the game's rules prohibit a capitalist-worker allian- ce, its creator expects some changes will have to be made in Italy to ac- commodate the country's political system in which the Italian Com- munist Party supports an alliance with middle class parties. "I have become a socialist businessman," Ollman observed as he pointed out the irony in businessmen in capitalist countries earning profits from a socialist See 'U', Page 9 Carter tries to0 block Mideast talks collapse By The Associated Press By telephone and in meetings on two continents, President Carter and his diplomats sought yesterday to head off a breakdown in the Egyptian-Israeli peace talks. Egypt's Anwar Sadat reportedly considered but then dropped the ideal of calling his negotiators home from Washington. Egyptian Prime Minister Mustapha Khalil said, however, that the talks were going "not badly." PRIME MINISTER Menachem Begin, meanwhile, arrived back in Israel after a U.S.-Canadian tour and said his government would be reviewing American and Egyptian proposals for resolving the central dispute in the negotiations - whether and how to link an Egyptian-Israeli treaty to a solution of the Palestinian issue. Begin would not reveal to reporters at Ben-Gurion Airport what he would recommend when he convenes his Cabinet later this week to discuss the status of the peace talks. "We are listening to all viewpoints," he said. HE GAVE NO details of what he called a "long and serious meeting" Sunday night with Secretary of State Cyrus Vance in New York. At that meeting, Vance presented an American proposal for settling the "linkage" question. The American proposal has not been disclosed. But it is understood to in- volve both a provision in the draft treaty's preamble and an exchange of letters between Egypt and Israel regarding future negotiations over the status of the West Bank of the Jordan River and the Gaza Strip. In Egypt, President Sadat and his advisers met in the Suez Canal city of Ismailia and a top Egyptian source who asked not to be identified said there was "bad news" and that the recall of the delegation from Washington was "possible." BUT KHALIL later denied that Cairo was summoning its negotiators home, though official Cairo Radio said one member of the team, acting Foreign Minister Butros Ghali, would return to Cairo tomorrow for consultations. Khalil said Sadat had spoken with Carter by telephone for the second time in two days, and Vice President Hosny Mubarak telephoned the head of Egypt's Washington delegation, Lt. Gen. Kamal Hassan Ali. Sadat also met with U.S. Ambassador Hermann Eilts. On the Israeli side, Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan was returning. to Jerusalem to attend the Cabinet' meeting. Defense Minister Ezer Weiz- man remained here. In Washington, yesterday's peace talks schedule called only for a meeting between special U.S. Mideast envoy Alfred Atherton and Egyp.tian negotiators. Daily Photo by BRAD BENJAMIN BERTELL OLLMAN, creator of the "Class Struggle" game now being marketed across the U.S. and in Italy, demonstrates how his diversion is played. New nuclear shelters proposed WASHINGTON (AP) - The Carter administration said yesterday that more than'half of all Americans would die in a nuclear war, many because of outdated fallout shelters, and it ap- proved a plan to save up to 146 million people by large-scale evacuation of ur- ban centers. The shelters currently available in American cities are not sufficient to meet the modern nuclear threat posed by the Soviet Union, said Bardyl Tirana, U.S. civil defense director. AND, TIRANA said, the Soviets are better prepared to protect their citizens in the event of nuclear war. He confir- med that President Carter gave his ap- proval to the new evacuation plans on Sept. 29. Civil defense officials estimate that 90 million of the current U.S. population of 220 million would survive a nuclear attack. The aim of the new program is to increase the number of survivors to as many as 146 million. MILLIONS WHO live in cities would have to rely on makeshift shelters in subways or the basements of public buildings. In the future, those shelters are seen as becoming less adequate. "Times have changed and the needs have changed," Tirana said in a telephone interview. "A shelter is valuable against fallout. But unless you have a very expensive blast shelter, which we don't have, there's little protection in the area of a strike.", HE SAID future Russian weapons will be more numerous and more ac- curate than those that threatened when U.S. officials began designating public fallout shelters in the early 1960s. Those shelters could hold 118 million Americans, officials said. Women need more self-help to gain high posts, says 'U'prof Tirana said the new approach to U.S. civil defense is in the formative stages and would not give firm information about it. He said planners have yet to decide how many millions of Americans could be transported from their communities or where they would stay in the coun- tryside. He also could not say how much such a program would cost. White House spokesman Jody Powell said the new civil defense effort will be "no new crash program" and that spending increases will be moderate. Tuesday " Marxist Professor Bertell Oilman confronts the problems of radicals in two appearances. on campus yesterday. See story Page 9. . MSA President Eric Arnson says MSA will make its final decision tonight on whether to en- ter the, presidential search process. See story, Page 12. Read the new, M expanded Today column, Page 3 BY SHELLEY WOLSON Members of the House Officers Association (HOA) voted yesterday to investigate the possibilities of taking a job action. The approximately 100 members at last night's meeting selected a commit- tee to look into how much HOA support exists and what forms the job action could take. HOA is an association representing all interns and residents at the University Hospital. MEANWHILE, THE HOA bargaining committee will also go back to the table and bargain over contract language with the University and a state mediator. "The job action committee will clearly define the ways other house members can involve themselves in let- ting the University know the working conditions and how they are affecting the patients. We have to clearly be upgrading" (patients' condition) said HOA spokeswoman Pauline Reisner. Reisner said the job action may not include withholding of services due to the house staff's fear of losing its jobs. "Their careers could be ruined," she said. REISNER SAID HOA plans to put pressure in as many areas of the University as it can. "Our people just don't see their position as a solution, Reisner said. The last HOA-University contract expired August 31 and was extended on a day-to-day basis until September 21, when HOA voted to terminate the agreement. HOA votes to. look. at job action possibilities By BETH ROSENBERG Muriel Ross, co-chairwoman for the Academic Women's Caucus and an associate professor of anatomy at the University, said yesterday that women "must stop blaming others all together and promote women into positions and build a sense of community." Speaking as part of the "Report of U- M Women," a lecture sponsored by the Center for Continuing Education of Women (CEW) before a group of 30 at Rackham Amphitheare, Ross said that although not many women hold Univer- sity adminsitrative posts, they are more active in the lower echelons of the school's hierarchy. Currently, there are women holding the posts of regent, associate vice- president, and policy coordinator. There, are two women deans (nursing and education), four associate deans, six assistant deans, and three chairper- sons at the Flint campus. Ross added that 1977 statistics in- dicate 170 men earned $30,000 or more compared to only 11 women at the University. She said that most women are situated in the lower paying jobs, in the $19,000-$24,000 range. Other speakers at yesterday's forum included Mary Edwards, assistant to LSA Dean Billy Frye, Susan Weiskopf, the director of the Women's Studies Department, and Nellie Varner, associate dean of the Rackham School of Graduate Studies. Maintaining that women currently enjoy their greatest chance for promotion, Edwards said "we find people from all niches in society" and there is no clear path to the top. Although no women hold any of the Unviersity's six vice-presidential slots, Edwards said the present structure needn't change because the office- holders are chosen by credentials, not sex. She added that finding women deans may be a more severe problem because "we're not simply fighting sexism but fear of change."' Weisskopf said the Women's Studies department, now in its fifth year, averages approximately 900-1,500 students per term. She pointed out that financial Rack ham is finally accessible By RON GIFFORD Even though he has lived in Ann Arbor all his life, John Weir had never seen the inside of Rackham Auditorium before last night. He has been confined to a wheelchair since he was 16, the g Hig court to hear press. rghts, case WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court said yesterday that it will decide whether states may prosecute constitutionally infringed on freedom of the press. Kanawha County Prosecutor Cletus shooting of a 14-year-old student at a St. Albans, W. Va., junior high school last February. TWU1 VU~ i Vll AXT noNarC sTu '~ ;. _ n