jffe 410rian Bally Eighty-one years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Whueler; bort on l caw vIctim 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials orinted in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1971 NIGHT EDITOR: GERI SPRUNG Landlords violate freeze QLN AUGUST 15 President Nixon an- nounced to the nation that he was freezing wages, prices, and rents. Ap- parently the majority of landlords in the Ann Arbor community decided t h a t the national policy didn't apply to them. Most landlords in this area are charg- ing and collecting higher rents than they were charging last year for the same housing in direct violation of the freeze. While the guidelines laid out by the President's Cost of Living Council (CLC) are very specific, some landlords are ig- noring them completely and are trying to find loopholes to exempt themselves from the freeze. The greatest help the landlords are re- ceiving comes from the tenants them- selves. The majority of tenants are not aware of the guidelines nor of their rights under them. Because of this it is easy for the landlords to convince their ten- ants that they really have no complaint. The landlords have their lawyers work- ing hard at trying to find loopholes in the guidelines and the most effective way to combat this is for the tenants to fa- miliarize themselves with the guidelines and their rights under them. 'Tenants may also be fearful of eviction if they refuse to pay the increases. Under the freeze guidelines, however, any at- tempt at eviction because of non-pay- ment of illegal rent increases is outlaw- red. THE GUIDELINES clearly state that it makes no difference when a contract was signed, yet landlords are telling their tenants that since the contracts w e r e signed before the freeze the increases have to be paid. This is not true. The guidelines also say that landlords must keep records of what they charged last year and make these records avail- able to their tenants, yet some landlords are claiming that they don't have any re- cords. This is illegal. The main tactic the landlords seem to be using is to tell their tenants that they are waiting for further rulings. They ,also claim that they will give rebates at the end of the year if there is a ruling unfavorable to them. Yet the Cost of Living Council h a s "the latest and mosh current guidelines available", says Mrs. Donna McCauley of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), which is functioning as the CLC in Ann Arbor. Another tactic used by the landlord is delaying any action on their part towards compliance with the freeze guidelines un- The city inc til the whole issue is forgotten. In the meantime they are continuing to collect rent increases that they are not entitled to. TENANTS, UNDER the guidelines, have several ways to counteract any illegal increases by their landlords. They can and should demand to see the tax records on their housing to find out what the rent was last year. Land- lords are required under the guidelines to make these records available. If their rent has been increased they should refuse to pay the increases. They should also deduct any increases they have already paid, from their next rent payment. Tenants should deduct any in- crease they have paid on their damage deposit. Deposits are also frozen under Nixon's guidelines. Next they should also file complaints with the IRS here in Ann Arbor. These complaints wil be investigated by the IRS. If the landlord is found guilty of "willfully and maliciously" violating the freeze guidelines he can be fined $5,000 and face other court action. OTHER FREEZE guidelines are: -rent for new units can be no higher than rents on comparable units in the area. -landlords who have lowered their rent during the summer are allowed to raise their rents if they have tax records to prove they have done this for at least three years. -landlords are allowed to raise their rates if they have spent at least three months rent or a minimum of $250 in capitol improvements. The monthly rent increase can then be no higher than 1.5 per cent of the amount spent on improve- ments. -tenants of co-ops and condominiums are treated as homeowners and the monthly service charge may be raised if services are increased. Even though the guidelines are v e r y specific and restrict the circumstances under which the landlords may raise their rents, the landlords continue to try to delay any reimbursement until all is forgotten. TENANTS IN Ann Arbor should not ex- pect any quick move by the landlords to comply with the national policy. Ten- ants will have to take matters into their own hands and withhold payment of any more rent increases. -PAUL TRAVIS )me tax fight based on the assumption that inflation and the city's population will continue to climb as they have in recent years. It seems highly unrealistic, however, to make those assumptions. T HE REPORT PREDICTS that the city's population will increase by about one- fourth over the next five years - des- pite the fact that the growth rate of the Univeristy - the city's largest employ- er - is leveling off and the city is rap- idly running out of room for expansion. Inflation rates also, would seem to be dropping, as the war is nearing an end and President Nixon's 'wage-price re- straints - though hardly an economic panacea - should slow inflation. Taken as a whole, Larcom's report merely adds fuel to the fire of the Re- publican charges of mismanagement of money in City Hall - instead of build- ing popular support for a much-needed city income tax. The result has been that Mayor Harris was prompted to appoint a citizen's tax commission comprised mostly of Repub- licans in the hope that they would re- commend the city income tax and the Republican councilmen would be encour- aged to change their minds. It appears more likely, however, that the commission, due to issue its report in early November, will suggest only the passage of a lesser "stop-gap" tax. This will force the mayor to ask for another tax sometime in the next year -- all to the joy of the politically-minded Coun- By PAt BAUER SHIRLEY WHEELER IS a delicate, soft- spoken Florida housewife who is cur- rently awaiting a prison sentence of up to 20 years. She was convicted of a crime committed by thousands of American women every year-having an illegal abortion. In recent years, there have been few similar cases due largely to liberalized abortion laws in some states and official efforts to arrest and prosecute abortionists rather than their clients. But the Wheeler case, a giant step back- ward on the road to abortion reform, represents everything which members of the nation's women's movement are try- ing to eliminate. In July, she was tried under an anti- quated 1868 anti-abortion statute which had never before been used and which has been declared vague by the State Supreme Court. She suffered an invasion of privacy, and was denied her legal rights as a citi- zen. And she is awaiting a sentence far disproportionate to any crime she might have committed. MOST IMPORTANTLY, though Wheel- er was denied what women around the country have called their "most basic right" - the right to choose, to make decisions which govern their own bodies. As an example of government control over women's lives which exists in most states, Shirley Wheeler's case has become a rallying cry for women around the coun-. try. According to Sherry Smith, a spokes- woman for the National Women's Abortion Action Coalition (WONAAC), "Shirley's case is uniting women across the country, women who used to be too- afraid to do anything about the laws that are op- pressing all of them. "I think that this case will help build the women's movement and make it much more powerful." allowed to make your decisions for you. It's really none of their business. A wo- man has a real right to decide. She should know best when she wants a child, and if she can support it." SO WHEELER was brought to court and charged with a felony under Florida law. The 1868 statute states that any person convicted of having or perform- ing an abortion, unless it is "necessary to protect the life of the mother," and can be punished by" up to 20 years in prison-- a sentence designed to be the same as that for manslaughter. Wheeler's attorney, James Rogers, says the 20-year maximum sentence applies to her case because she was convicted of aborting a "quick child," a fetus in the latter stages of development. "We're not really sure, what the term means," he says. "It's one of those words that the legal profession borrowed from the Bible and then turned over to the medical profession to define because we couldn't do it." "Basically, it refers to a fetus in the mid-term of pregnancy, after the first dependent movement has been felt by the mother." Cases of abortion which occurs earlier in pregnancy would receive a maximum sentence of seven years, he says. This very ambiguity in the law has been a controversy in recent times, and even the Florida Supreme Court has expressed concern over the law's lack of clarity. I Shortly before the end of Wheeler's trial in July, the court criticized the state leg- islature, which tabled a liberalized abor- tion bill last session, and urged it to re- examine the 1868 statute. Despite the doubt thrown upon the law, however. Wheeler was tried and con- victed. Rogers argued against the law in court on the grounds that it was too vague. "But the jury didn't buy it after Shirley testified she had had the abor- tion," he says. real right to de- cide. She should know best when she wants a child "A a oiiart haIs a I and if she can support it. -Shirley Wheeler -Associated Press him. I wouldn't have told them even if I could." The state prosecutors might have been disinterested, Rogers suggested, because the abortionist was practicing outside their jurisdiction. Although many women around the country have been complaining about Florida's unfair treatment of Wheeler, some observers were not even surprised at the outcome of the whole affair. Many have said that her conviction merely re- flects the political leanings of much of the state. Women march in Lansing for abortion repeal.. . WHILE IT IS becoming increasingly ap- parent that the city of Ann Arbor must institute an income tax in order to meet the budgetary demands of the coming years, the actions of both City Council and City Administrator Guy 9 Larcom surrounding this issue have cor- respondingly grown more and more dis- ~tasteful. Council members -- and most predict- ably the six Republican councilmen - have given every indication that they intend to place the "blame" for any new taxes squarely on the shoulders of Mayor Robert Harris. There is little doubt that these council members are fully aware of the need for new taxes, but they are hesitant to support any ordi- nance that may alienate voters. Their actions might have been under- standable had they offered viable alter- natives to the mayor's suggested one per cent personal income tax, but thus far, none have emerged. Larcom, meanwhile, has issued a "Five- Year Fiscal Projection" that can only be described as "alarmist." The report con- tends that the cost of maintaining the present level of city services will almost double by fiscal 1976-'77 and estimates that revenues will lag behind by $7.5 mil- lion. Larcom's conclusions are, in part, -'M- Wheeler's problems all began when she and her husband Robert decided they could not afford to have another child. "We already have one son," says Wheeler, "and we don't really have enough money to bring another one up right. "I care a lot about children, but I think it's cruel to bring a child into the world if you can't take care of it." IN ADDITION, Wheeler was concerned about the health problems another preg- nancy would cause. She completed her first pregnancy four years ago, despite a doctor's warning that she should not have children because she had had rheu- matic fever. Complications caused by the pregnancy led to toxemia which "nearly killed" her, she says. The decision against having another child led Wheeler to search for an abor- tionist in the middle of her third month of pregnancy. But six weeks and two un- successful abortions later, Wheeler began to suffer severe hemorrhaging and was admitted to a hospital. The abortion method used was a rela- tively simple one, which usually works within a matter of days. A small tube called a catheter was used to pierce the amniotic membrane. It 'was left in place to drain some of the amniotic fluid away, thus introducing bacteria to the uterus which causes infection and the eventual expulsion of the fetus. BUT FOR SOME reason, the method was not immediately effective. It was not until hemorrhages forced Wheeler to the hospital a month and a half later that the fetus was finally expelled. And it was at this time all of her claims to privacy ended. Although medical personnel are barred by professional ethics from discussing their patients this did not stop two hos- pital employes from talking about the events of the day at a bar after work. A police detective overheard their con- versation. He followed un the lead found So the trial was apparently carried out on an emotional basis, rather than a legal one. Although the law itself is extreme- ly questionable, the jury saw fit to con- vict the defendant of an indefinable crime using an antiquated statute. Advocates of abortion reform around the country became even more convinced of the law's obsolescence when they learned that Wheeler's case was the first to be tried under it. While the law has been on the books for 103 years, a spokesman for the Flori- da attorney general's office said he had no knowledge of anyone ever being pro- secuted or convicted of having an abor- tion. The procedure usually taken in Flor- ida, as in many states, is to search for abortionists in an effort to break up abortion rings. ROGERS APPROACHED the state prosecutors about dismissing charges against Wheeler in exchange for informa- tion about the abortionist, but, he says, "Shirley was not specific enough about where to find them for the state to pro- secute --- or even make an arrest." "I could have help them find him ," she says. "But I understand that he's a doctor. I believe in what he's doing, and I don't want to make things difficult for FLORIDA HAS BEEN conservative in its view of abortion reform in recent years, with the state legislature defating liber- alized abortion bills regularly for the past five years. And, although another at- tempt to change the law is currently in the works, few expect a liberalized law to pass. According to Sen. Harold Wilson (R- Pinellas County), a member of the com- mittee currently drawing up a new bill, there seems to be no real change of at- titude among the legislators. They are going through the routine of drafting an abortion bill only because of the ac- tion taken by the state Supreme Court. "I'll predict that the bill will be passed this year," he says, "but only because I've been predicting the same thing for five years now and it hasn't happened yet." Meanwhile, Wheeler's conviction under the 1868 statute has opened a Pandora's box of other problems. Because people are now being convicted and punished for having abortions, as well as performing them, officials now have to worry about cases of "aiding and abetting" abortion. Now people who loan women money for abortions and even abortion counselors could receive the same sentence under the 1868 law as- a person committing a felony. UNDER FLORIDA LAW, according to the State Attorney's office of Dade Coun- ty, Fla., a person who contributes money to another to have an abortion in a state where it is prohibited is guilty of the felony. Both the donor and receiver of the money would be guilty of conspiracy to commit the crime as well. If the money were donated for an abortion which would take place in a state where it is legal, however, neither person would be guilty of a crime. The question of the legality of abortion counseling has been tested recently in a Florida court, when a grand jury in Talla- hassee heard a case of clergymen coun- seling women to get legal New York abor- tions. In an opinion written by Circuit Court Judge Ben Willis, the clergymen were said to be not guilty of breaking the law. Written information supposedly issued; by the clergymen telling women how to manage trips to New York was "not spe, cific enough." "To break the law, written abortion in- formation must itself at least service to guide a person reading it to either a per- son who is available for performing the disapproved activity or to a place where such activity or information is available," Willis wrote. In' other words, a person cannot be convicted under Florida law for giving spoken advice to a woman seeking abor- tion. But if specific written material is provided, the person offering advice is guilty of the same felony as the woman getting the abortion. In response to Wheeler's conviction and to the general rigidity of abortion laws, in Florida and across the country, women are beginning to make themselves heard. MEMBERS OF WONAAC expect Wheel- er's name to become the rallying cry of their Nov. 20 march in Washington and San Francisco. The marches are intended by WONAAC leaders to press for the re- peal of all abortion laws, and end to forced sterilization and the repeal of all restric- tvie contraception laws. Wheeler has said that she plans to attend the Washington march. Joyce Broughton, a member of WON- AAC's Ann Arbor chapter, says "I expect everyone to march around saying 'Free Shirley Wheeler.' She's just another ex- ample of traditional society's refusal to let women make their own decisions, and that's exactly what we're trying to fight. WONAAC, a national organization with chapters in 29 states, is also circulating petitions demanding Florida's governor, Reubin Askew, to pardon Wheeler. "Of course, I doubt that he'll do any- thing," commented one member. "He's the one who vetoed Florida's last liberal abor- tion bill." And, in addition to offering Wheeler fin- ancial aid, WONAAC is currently in pro- cess of assembling a class action suit in Florida which is intended to prove state abortion laws unconstitutional. They hope to achieve this on the grounds that such and that it is unconstitutional to have laws invade a' woman's right to privacy, state control over a woman's body. Simi- lar class action suits are currently under- way in a number of states, including Mi- chigan. The Florida chapter of the National Or- ganization of Women (NOW) and the Na- tional Women's Political Caucus have of- fered assistance to Wheeler in the form of financial support and aid. In addition, the American Civil Liber- ties Union has offered legal assistance, and the Playboy Foundation has stated that it will do "everything in its power," to help .4 . .. . j:E