I LOBBYING See editorial page Eighty-Nine Years of Editorial Freedom ±1 ftLIGHT & BRIGHT fl*High-35° SeLow--25° SeToday for details r...l vvv Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, March 16, 1979 / VoI LAAAIA, No. 131 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, March 16, 1979 r Ten Cents Fourteen Pages Sublet search starts-dumps, havens up for grabs By AMY SALTZMAN A few have already begun to pop up on kiosks, libraly bulletin boards, and even bathroom stalls, offering anything from free beer to dinner for two at the Gandy Dancer. For the thousands of students who live in off-campus housing, it's one of the most competitive contests of the year-the subletting season is here, and with it the annual barrage of gimicky sublet signs. For the average University student who has signed a 12- month lease on an apartment or house and doesn't wish to spend the spring and summer months in his or her Ann Arbor dwelling, subletting is a must. And in Ann Arbor's com- petitive housing market, that is often no easy task. THERE IS NO magical formula for anxious apartment dwellers desperate to sublet their abodes. "You just have to make an effort," said Jo Williams, advisor at the Off-Campus Housing Office. "Let everybody know you are looking for a tenant-whenever and wherever you can." A subletting report compiled by the Tenants Union offers a few helpful hints to mention when. advertising an apar- tment. The report states that diversions from the hot sum- mer weather, such as air conditioning, proximity to the Arb, and access to swimming pools, have proven to be good selling points for past Ann Arbor subletters. Distance from campus also helps attract summer tenants. As a general rule, Ann Arbor landlords don't object to allowing their tenants sublet. "Landlords must allow tenants to mitigate their losses. We have never had a landlord refuse to let a tenant sublet," said Williams. THERE ARE TWO types of formal agreements that can be worked out between tenant and landlord when sublet- ting-the "sublet lease" and the substitute or replacement lease. The sublet lease is the most common, with which the original tenant remains responsible for the entire monthly rent and the subletter is responsible to the original tenant for the agreed-upon share of rent. In some cases, the landlord may be willing to act as agent or mediate, assuming responsibility for apartment inspec- tion and collection of the rent. Vernon Hutton, who owns several campus apartments, is one landlord who acts in this mediator role. He said he likes to meet the subletter and advise his tenant on the various "pitfalls" of subletting. WHEN AN AGREEMENT has been reached by all three parties, the tenant, subletter, ind Hutton sign a special sublet form. This method has been reasonably successful for Hutton. "I have had no more problems with subletters than regular tenants,," he said. . Another, less frequently used method of subletting, is the substitute or replacement lease. As its name suggests, the replacement tenant is substituted in the place of the original tenant and the landlord assigns all rights and responsibilities for the apartment to the summer tenant. This type of lease provides the best deal for the tenant, but is rarely used by Ann Arbor landlords. Some landlords do offer the optiod of- an eight-month lease. Although the tenant usually must sign such a lease when he or she originally decides to take the dwelling, some understanding landlords are willing to let their tenants switch to such a lease much later in the year. See SUBLET, Page 2 Protesters halt Regents meeting Angry group demandsl S. Africa divestiture By MITCH CANTOR Providing one of the fiercest displays of activism on campus in several years, 180 shouting students, faculty members, and other citizens marched yester- day afternoon into the Ad- ministration Building where they forced the Regents to halt their meeting 45 minutes later after the \Board refused to discuss the South African issue. Several hours later 20 studen- ts, most of them black, received assurance from Regent Sarah Power (D-Ann Arbor) that she would submit a proposal today on behalf of James Waters (D- Muskegon)-who will be absent from today's session-calling for an action request to be ad- ded to today's agenda concer- ning the issue. POWER WILL also submit another proposal for Waters, asking that an ac- tion request item be placed on next month's agenda concerning the issues of black enrollment, student awards, and the black attrition rate. After the Regents left, the protesters assumed control of the chambers, where they proceeded to hold a strategy session. The Regents, along with the executive officers of the University, had moved to Interim University President Allan Smith's office on the second floor of the building. Ann Arbor police and University security personnel were on the scene, but did not make any attempt to remove the demonstrators. The protesters made themselves comfor- table in the chambers, with several sit- ting in the plush seats and helping themselves to water from the table as they mapped out their strategy for the public comments session and today's Regents meeting. THE GROUP specifically demanded the Board reexamine the University's holdings in corporations which do business in South Africa. The protesters claim the Regents haven't yet ac- curately determined whether or not the corporation are actually instituting an- ti-discriminatory measures. The protesters, arriving from an hour-long rally in the Diag, came to voice their disapproval of Regental review of corporations in which the University has investments which deal in South Africa. According to a resolution last March, the Regents decided to keep investments in all cor- porations operating in South Africa provided they take "reasonable steps" in a "reasonable amount of time" toward eliminating discriminatory. practices on the part of the cor- porations.. The Board members said at that time See PROTESTERS, Page 5 Depart-men merger official By JULIE ENGEBRECHT In a move that made merger plans for the Journalism and Speech Depar- tments official, the University Regents yesterday separated the theater curriculum from the Speech Depar- tment, and created the Department of Communication and the Department of Theater and Drama. The newly-approved departments will become official July 1. In a report to the Regents, Harold Shapiro, vice president for academic- affairs, and Billy Frye, dean of the Literary College (LSA), cited economy and the need for improving programs in com1- munications as reasons for the depar- tment reorganization. THE DEPARTMENTS had been reviewing the merger since 1977. See JOURNALISM Pagems Daily Photo by CYRENA CHANG UNIVERSITY VICE-PRESIDENTS Henry Johnson and James Brinkerhoff and protesters at yesterday's Regents meeting. The group eventually took control of Regent Thomas Roach (D-Grosse Pointe) are confronted by some of the 180 the board room after forcing the Regents to halt their meeting. Egyptian cabinet OKs peace pact From AP and UPI The Egyptian Cabinet approved the proposed Israel-Egypt peace treaty yesterday, taking the pact a step closer to an historic signing ceremony in Washington as early as next week. But Arab furor and Palestinian protest escalated and the worst violence in almost a year rocked the West Bank of the Jordan River. Israeli troops fired into a rock- throwing crowd of Palestinian protesters in the West Bank, killing one young man and a 17-year-old schoolgirl. the Israeli military command reported. The separate Egyptian-Israeli peace does not guarantee the independent state the Palestinians demand. EGYPTIAN President Anwar Sadat, sounding optimistic, told reporters he hoped he and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin could sign the treaty in Washington next week. "I think we have achieved peace, thanks to Jimmy," he told reporters in Cairo. "I think it is quite natural that we make the main celebration there in Washington, especially after President Carter has done the whole thing, really, in such a marvelous way.'' STATE-RUN Israeli television, without citing its source, said the Washington signing would take place March 23, a week from Friday. But a Begin spokesman denied a date had been set, and White House spokesman Jody Powell said in Washington it would be difficult to have a signing ceremony before March 26 -until after Carter returns from a trip to the U.S. southwest. Powell also noted that Begin is ill, having been ordered to bed by his doc- tors because of a cold and said this and the Israeli Parliament's debate on the treaty could delay a signing. ISRAEL, MEANWHILE, sent Defen- se Minister Ezer Weizman to Washington to negotiate the final details of the treaty's military annex with Egyptian War Minister Kamal F 7 4 Hassan Ali. The talks, involving such matters as the maps for the phased Israeli pullback from the Sinai Penin- sula, are expected to last two days. Weizman also will discuss U.S.- finan- cial aid to Israel with American of- ficials, Israeli radio said. American aide - essential "glue" for the peace agreement - is estimated at about $4 billion in military assistance divided between Egypt and Israel and $1 billion in economic aid to Egypt. THE CABINET vote, viewed as a formality, cleared the way for Sadat to sign the treaty. The Egyptian Parliament, also expected to rubber- stamp the treaty, will not vote until af- ter the signing. Israel's Cabinet is expected to give its endorsement to the full treaty Sunday, and the Israeli Parliament soon after- ward. Begin says he wants parliamen- tary approval before he can sign. Egyptian officials said Sadat probably would arrive in the United States next Thursday, bringing with him a long list of Egypt's economic and military requirements. He reportedly wants West Germany and Japan to join the United States in a Marshall Plan- type effort, and add $10 billion in aid over five years to the $5 billion in U.S. guarantees. rowei accusect oj mis leading reporters BULLETIN HALIFAX, Nova Scotia (AP) - The British oil tanker Kur- distan broke up in heavy seas and sank in the Cabot Strait about 44 miles north of North Sydney, Nova Scotia, last night, authorities said. The 32.531-deadweight-ton Kurdistan was carrying 203,000 barrels of bunker C oil when it split in half, said Reg Towers, spokesman for the Nova Scotia transport department. There was no immediate word on how many crew members were aboard. The coast guard ship Sir William Alexander was on the scene, and a marine radio operator said an unknown num- ber of survivors were picked up from rubber life rafts. PEA CE TA LKS SLA By AMY SALTZMAN Charging that the housing platform presented by Louise J. Fairperson - the Coalition for Better Housing's (CBTT) fictitious mayoral candidate - fails to address the key issue of building more moderate income housing in the center city, Democratic mayoral can- didate James Kenworthy spoke to over 30 representatives from CBTT and the Ann Arbor Tenant's Union in the Michigan Union last night. In a statement issued later in the evening, CBTT and the Fairperson campaign said they support any moves that Kenworthy might make if elected mayor that would increase the housing supply for low and moderate income tenants. IN A SWITCH from their original contention that neither Kenworthy nor his opponent, incumbent Louis Belcher, had adequately addressed the city's housing problems, CBTT members said the ideas outlined by Kenworthy last night "may be promising." "It's clear that Kenworthy has begun to address the housing problem," said Dan Rueban, a CBTT representative. In his talk, Kenworthy said that "the Fairperson campaign hasn't addressed the problem of increasing supply. There is no way that Louise - if Louise were mayor - would be able to follow through on the points raised in her plat- form." KENWORTHY stressed that the focal See KENWORTHY, Page 2 Kenworth its Fairperson pat orm 2 WASHINGTON (Reuter)-White House Press Secretary Jody Powell is at the center of a blazing controversy over whether he stage-managed tfie news for political purposes during President Carter's successful peace mission to the Middle East. Of all the dramas played in Arab- Israeli diplomacy, Carter's talks with Prime Minister Menachem Begin in Jerusalem were the real clif- fhanger-in'the tradition of "The Perils of Pauline," a popular weekly serial in the days of silent movies. THE GLOOM and doom that dominated the talks were dispelled suddenly at a final meeting between the two leaders, just as the helpless Pauline used to be rescued at the last minute in Israel. THE SESSION was on "deep background"-a formula under which the White House guides reporters in making judgments but bars them from attributing what they are told, even to such a vague source as informed of- ficials." After the briefing, a number of repor- ters filed extremely gloomy assessments about how the president's peace initiative was failing. Some went as far as to say that it had actually collapsed. Reuters attended the briefing but honored the rule barring attribution or disclosing that the briefing even had been held, until after the rule had been broken by others. Kenworthy TED FOR NEX T WEEK: China completes Vietnam troop withdrawal TOKYO (AP) - Chinese Communist Party Chairman Hua Guofeng (Hua Kuo-feng) said China completed its withdrawal of troons from Vietnam GUA WAS quoted .as saying the Chinese had been engaged in "defen- sive counter-attacks" in Vietnam since the invasion began Feb. 17. The with- said Vietnam proposed peace talks with China begin a week after Chinese forces withdrew across "the historical bor- der" between the two countries. changing the historical boundary." THE CHINESE reportedly plan to hold some border posts they said the Vietnamese used as bases for raids into