& BEGIN'S GAME 4 v'1 L See Editorial page LitPi41P ;n ai DOCILE High T r2 Low- 20 See Today for details Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 84 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, January 12, 1978 Ten Cents 12 Pages COMPROMISE VERSION DRAWS PRAISE, CRITICISM Controversy surrounds tenant's booklet l think the reason why the Republicans voted for it is their hope that the public will feel that this book is all that tenants need' - Ronathan Rose, attorney By RICHARD BERKE A Daily News Analysis For months, Republican members blocked City Council approval of a revised tenant's rights handbook, saying it contained misplaced priorities and too harsh a tone against city landlords. After being tabled twice, the revised booklet weathered the partisan haggling and last month was accepted by Council - unanimously. But questions still surround the Republican about-face and the overall quality of the final product. THE REVISED BOOK1LET contains several items not included in the previous edition which Ann Arbor landlords were required to distribute to their tenants. Revisions range from the addition of a new section on city housing code require- rhents to an outline of steps a tenant can take to withhold rent. Michigan law student Connie LaClair, who authored the revised booklet, said the compromise version "isn't much different" from the one she initially drew up. "The substance is all there," she said. Councilman Roger Bertoia (R-Third Ward) said Republicans voted for the booklet because it is an acceptable compromise. "It has the legal blessing of the City Attorney's office," he said. "The earlier statement had a lot of legal hogwash ... everybody got together and worked this one out. BUT JONATHAN ROSE, attorney for the Michigan Student Assembly Housing Law Reform Project, said the booklet was approved for political reasons. "I think the reason why the Republicans voted for it is their hope that the public will feel that this book is all that tenants need," maintained Rose. With Council passage of the revised booklet, Rose said landlords and Re- publicans will claim that there is no need for the approval of a referendum in the April 3 city election which also calls for a tenant's rights booklet. CALLED THE "Fair Rental Information Act," the referendum - which Rose authored for the Coalition for Better Housing - proposes that the city pay for a booklet consisting of three sections: one written by impartial authors selected by the mayor, one written by pro-tenant attorneys, and one written by pro- See COMPROMISE, Page 9 'It has the legal blessing the city attorney's offj The earlier statement h - AIc g o1 ice. htad a lot of legal hogwash ... everybody got together and worked this one out' - Councilman Roger Bertoia (R-Third Ward) I Egyptians, Israelis confer on Sinai CAIRO, Egypt (AP)-The defense ministers of Egypt and Israel took their "battle for peace" to a Cairo con- ference table yesterday to seek agreement on Israeli withdrawal from. the Sinai Peninsula and to determine the fate of Jewish settlements that have blossomed in that wasteland. - The meeting was seen by Egypt as a key barometer in advance of parallel but wider-ranging talks between Israeli and Egyptian foreign ministers set to open Jan.16 in Jerusalem. ACCORDING to an Israeli source, the Cairo talks began on an awkward note with Egypt demanding an opening statement prepared by Israeli defense chief Ezer Weizman be withdrawn, ap- parently because it conflicted with Egyptian opposition to Jewish set- tlements in Sinai The source, who asked not to be iden- tified, gave reporters copies of the text. In it Weizman said Israel and Egypt would "examine arrangements for con- tinued maintenance of the Israeli set- tlements." There was no immediate Egyptian See EGYPTIANS, Page 12 Prk t o aid in S. Korean bribes probe SEOUL, Korea (AP) - Tongsun Park signed an agreement yesterday pledging to cooperate with Justice Department investigations into his alleged Korean influence-buying op- eration in Washington. But Park refused to say if he will testify before congressional commit- tees. THE AGREEMENT, signed before acting U.S. Deputy Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti, completed ar- rangements for the Justice Depart- ment's questioning of Park, jue to start tomorrow. Emerging from his 20-minute meeting with Civiletti, the gray- suited, 42-year-old rice dealer told American reporters, "Please try to be good to me, because I am really going through hell." Thememorandum said Park would tell the truth to American investiga- tors in Seoul and, if required, in American courts, in return - for immunity from criminal charges. PARK has been indicted by a U.S. federal grand jury on 36 counts of bribery, fraud and other charges. MOre than 20 former and present congressmen have acknowledged re- ceiving money or gifts from Park but deny any wrongdoing. Park also denies criminal guilt. Park had been a fugitive since he left Washington for London in late 1976. , He has been in Seoul since returning in August to visit his sick mother. See PARK, Page 12 StateStreet Starlight DailyPhotoby ALAN BILNSKY 6,000 RESIDENTS TO BE SURVEYED: U' to sti By MITCH CANTOR At least 6,000 Michigan residents will be involved in a two-part University study on the effects of PBB contamination. The project, which will begin in February, will be a joint effort between the University School of Public Health and the Environ- mental Sciences Laboratory of Mount Sinai Medical School in New York., PBB, a fire retardant, was acci- 7 7b 7TT day jrJJ dentally mixed with livestock feed in 1973, resulting in widespread con- tamination of Michigan beef and dairy products. Mel Ralston, a public health advi- sor for the Communicable Diseases Control Center in Atlanta who will be working on the project, said, "We don't really have a clear notion of what we're going to find yet." Ralston explained the first part of the study would include 3,000 tele- phone interviews in which Michigan contamination residents would be questioned about their health. THE SECOND part of the investi- gation to begin in April or May, includes telephone interviews with 3,000 to 4,500 children and adults who would be asked to undergo a com- plete physical examination. Although participants in the first part of the study will get no physical examination by researchers, Rich- ard Remington, dean of the School of 4 Sen atea: seat eyed byAnn Arborite By DENNIS SABO Brimming with confidence and de- termination, Ann Arborite Warren Bracy says he is primed for the U.S. senatorial race that will ensue later this year. "I am the most articulate person in the Senate race," Bracy boasted recently. "I see the Senate as a marketplace for ideas and I have a4 lot to bring with me." ALTHOUGH the liberal Democrat has not officially announced his candidacy for the seat being vacated L - ---- - --' -..i s.,. n.1... n : Public Health, is confident their information will be valuable to the study. - "We believe that such a study is feasible," he said. "There are cer- tain kinds of information you can only get by asking people, like, 'When did you last see a doctor'?" RALSTON, though also optimistic, about the telephone interviews, is concerned the publicity PBB ha received may influence the re- sponses of soie of those questioned. "It's something that we've got to consider," he said. "The slant is that some people have heard a lot about it, and some haven't. "We'll try and build in some safeguards to guard against the bias." The researchers from the Mount Sinai Medical School have already done some work with PBB, Ralston explained. "This is a pretty logical outgrowth," he said. RALSTON said, "Much of the work that has been done (with PBB) deals with the toxicity of the stuff." But he added that, "PBB toxicity hasn't See 'U', Page 9 q I Swept away Doily Photo by BRAD BENJAMIN; Actually, Jeff Blanks, a resident of Alice Lloyd, needs all the help he can get as he marches through a blanket of snow. UNPRECEDENTED 3-WAY PACT: ULUNDI, South Africa (AP) - Leaders of South Africa's Zulu, Asian and mixed-race peoples formed an unprecedented alliance yesterday against the white-minority govern- ment's policy of racial segregation. They called for a non-racial state and rtes ally in African law prohibits interracial political parties, and bars non-whites from voting. Buthelezi said yesterday the three- way agreement calls for cooperation among racial organizations but does 5. Aftca have been reluctant to back Zulu liberation efforts, but an alliance of Zulus, Asians and coloreds still would unite 8.6 million non-whites - double the 4.3 million whites. The non-white leaders said they