Page 10-Wednesday, March 22, 1978-The Michigan Daily WINNING TENANT GETS FREE LEGAL AID: ontest seeks best, worst leases By RICHARD BERKE If you're tired of "Let's Make A Deal," and you find no more challenge in "The Price Is Right," then Ann Ar- bor's own addition to the array of available contests may be just for you. Ladies and Gentlemen, it's time for. "The Worst Lease and Best Lease Con- test." Sponsored by the Coalition for Better Ijousing (CBH), the contests are designed to "dramatize the severity of the problems of deceptive clauses in local leases." "BEST" AND "WORST" are, for contest purposes, defined in terms of the number of deceptive and unenfor- ceable clauses contained in the leases. The "worst lease" contest is open only to tenants, with the tenant submit- ting the lease with the highest number of deceptive or unenforceable clauses being the winner. The "best lease" contest is open only to landlords, with the winner being the landlord entering the lease with the fewest "questionable" clauses. The winning tenant will be treated to free legal advice from a housing attor- ney, over lunch at Dominick's restaurant. The winning landlord will receive a copy of the guide to local housing law, "How to Evict Your Lan- dlord." In addition, CBH members said the landlord will get "public acclaim." LANDLORDS AND tenants in- terested in entering the contest should send CBH the following information: the number of deceptive or unenfor- ceable clauses in the lease, plus name, address and telephone number. Tenan- ts should also include the name of their landlord. This information, and a copy of the lease, should be sent to: 508 Ben- jamin Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48104. The deadline for entries is March 28 and only one tenant per dwelling is eligible for the "worst lease" contest. The contests come at a time when CBH is sponsoring two tenants' rights information referendums which will appear on the April 3 city election ballot. The "Truth in Renting" proposal would make it illegal for landlords to have deceptive and unenforceable clauses in their leases. The "Fair Ren- tal Information" proposal would direct the city to publish a new tenants' rights handbook. "Ann Arbor has the worst leases in Michigan and we're trying to draw at- tention to the fact that people are abused by their leases," said Tim Kunin of CBH. "The contest is meant to illustrate the seriousness of the problem of deceptive leases." CBH MEMBERS said tenants shouldn't have much trouble discovering questionable clauses. The study also showed that Ann Arbor leases contain an average of 6.6 decep- tive clauses per lease-the highest average of any city in the state. VIETNAM TEACH-IN CONTINUES: Journalist sees hope in Viet documentary By MARTY LEVINE Journalist Tom Fox ended the second day of the Vietnam teach-in yesterday with a showing of his 60's anti-war documentary "Hearts and Minds" and a reminder that "this isn't the final word, it's only the first question." Fox spent six years off and on in Vietnam from 1966 to 1972 helping to make the award-winning film. He became interested in this project because the Vietnamese people were telling him "If you really want to help us, tell your people." The people of Vietnam, Fox said, "didn't blame the war on the people of America as much as on the government." He added that the Vietnamese had and still have faith Samoff will appeal his tenure (Continued from Page 1) about to say 'you've got to give this per- son (Samoff) tenure,' " Galler said. "Legally they could, but I don't think they will." TIE PANEL'S options include sen- ding the case back to the Political Science Department or suggesting the LSA Executive Committee settle the matter. But Galler pointed out that the ultimate authority rests with the LSA Executive Committee which is com- SPRING STEREO CLEEANUP SONY FISHER HARMON- KARDON Receivers AutoSystems IN STOCK TO off suggested list Your chance to buy the rej ection prised of six LSA professors and Dean Frye. That committee could ignore the panel's recommendation. Meanwhile, students in the depar- tment continueto voice support for Samoff and maintain that his case is still a live issuer Last week both the Michigan Student Assembly and the LSA Student Gover- nment sent resolutions to Frye suppor- ting Samoff. On Monday, some 25 Samoff backers - both students and faculty members - met to plan strategy to assist Samoff in his appeal. Participants encouraged Samoff supporters to contact LSA Executive Committee members as well as state congresspersons. in the American public. "WE WERE trying to show the effect of the war on the Vietnamese," Fox said. "We weren't trying to be a CBS news crew. . . but to interview and let the people speak as to how the war was affecting their lives." Fox said that during the war the media in general left an "environment of total misunderstanding" by their inadequate coverage. "Oneof the problems during the war was that the media, the networks, AP and UPI ... had a very strong influence and were continually taking the ad- ministrative view of the war," he ex- plained. "It was very easy for the major newspapers to record and accept (the official news briefings) as reality - when it wasn't - it was just easy news." THE MAIN problem, he said, with the media attitude - and indeed the at- titude of some of the anti-war activists - was that "the ideology was placed above human concern. I always had trouble with people who saw Vietnam as an issue." "Hearts and Minds" received only limited distribution. It was shown in theaters for a few weeks after its release and then disappeared. Fox said that the United States simply "wasn't ready for it." The recent spate of Viet- nam films will "shed very little light on Vietnam" Fox said, because Vietnam is incidental to the films, "just background for a love story or whatever." But there are Vietnam films that the public will never see. "In the late part of the war," Fox related, "they (the American government) developed bombs with cameras attached to them that filmed as the bombs dropped. Somewhere buried in the Pentagon are hours and hours of films of the bombs dropping and the people scat - tering." Surprisingly, Fox still thinks that the Vietnamese people don't blame the American people, and actually want to establish close ties with the American public. But Fox added that, "The problem is the government of the United States still follows the policies (towards the Vietnamese people) held at the time the film was made." To this end Fox says that those par- ticipating in this week's teach-in "should work toward reconciliation with Vietnam - not just because the Vietnamese people need it but because the U.S. needs it." Fox was insistent about the impor- tance of "Hearts and Minds" in the history of the war and the three nations involved - Vietnam, the United States, and before it France - and more im- portant, of the people involved. "This is going to be a film that's going to stand," Fox said. "It's a chunk of history presented in two hours."k In 1976, the American worker with a family income of between $7,000 and $9,999 lost nearly twice as many workdays due to accident or illness as did the worker with an income of $25,000 or more. Professional Hair Care SERVICES and PRODUCTS UM Stylists at the UNION ' Open Mon-Sot Daily Photo by BRAD BENJAMIN He Followed Me Home - Can I Keep Him Ma? Gregory Fiedler is under close surveillance of a bloated toad whose down vest fails to warm his ample paunch. Fiedler is using the inflatable croaker for his Journalism 405 project- "Herman Goes To College." Double decker buses to circle-Ann Arbor HOW WOULD YOU LIKE TO GET YOUR RESEARCH PROPOSALS AND REPORTS TYPED SOONER? LANIER BUSINESS PRODUCTS Will Show You How It's "no problem" At Their GRAND OPENING DISPLAY And Demonstration Of Their Word Processing Typing and Dictation Systems MARCH 27th & 28th, MONDAY AND TUESDAY UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNION 9:00 a.m.-7:00 p.m. By KEITH RICHBURG There'll be a touch of merry o1' Lon- don town in Ann Arbor come mid-May, when three brand-new, bright red, double-decker buses start their daily downtown runs. The double-deckers will run in two routes, looping State and Main streets to connect downtown with the State Street merchant area. THE CHARGE for the ride will either be a flat rate of ten cents or a suggested ten cents donation, according to Carol Sullivan of Ann Arbor Tomorrow, the group purchasing the buses. Sullivan insists that the bright red- double-decks will be there for more than just show.I "Part of the whole debate on down- town development has centered on the assumption that it would be just a marketing thing," she said, noting the opposition to the downtown trolley as flashy and too costly. "WE'RE HOPING to stop some of the congestion we see in the city," Sullivan said. " esides capturing the pedestrian traffic e want to capture the people who can park their cars far away and ride the bus downtown." The project will be self-sqpporting, as each of the new buses will sport adver- tising on its side. Already the buses have one suppor- ter, City Administrator SylVestor Murray. In a memorandum to City Council Monday night, he said, "I suggest that the City Council support the double-decker project although fortnal approval isn't necessary." Taxi bias charged (Continued from Page 1) one of these guys was just a driver," he said. "I can understand Mr. Lalonde's concern. If there's any threat that he's not getting a fair deal, we should correct it." Wheeler suggested asking Council to reclassify Kyes as the industry representative, since Spies' term ex- pired officially at the end of December. Spies, however, is still attending visA good stuff savings. at honest Purim Celebration on the Hill area & East Quad Wednesday, March 22 An Evening of Mime & Hamentaschen with KEN FEiT "The Fool" 6:15-7 p.m. Markley dorm Angela Davis Lounge 10:30-11:30 p.m. East Quad Anderson Lounge meetings and voting. Laporte said she would notify him this week that he is no longer on the board. "I think Council would understand the situation and change Kyes' designation," Wheeler said. "I don't know why Lalonde's doing this, but he is correct in that there should not be two industry representatives on the board." Head football coach Barry Switzer of Oklahoma was a two-way player at Arkansas in the late 1950s, snapping the ball at center on offense and playing linebacker on defense. PROFESSIONAL BOOK COLLECTIONS WANTED Send description/price to Library Director Maharishi international University Fairfield, Iowa 52556 PAJIJ Also SAVE on: TAPE DECKS TURNTABLES SPEAKERS VIDEO RECORDERS Chare me. Let's say you come up to my room and listen to my terrific Direct/Reflecting' speakers. You spin my belt-drive turntable. You twirl the dials on my AM/FM tuner-amplifier. All of a sudden you want me. Well, sometimes even people with good taste haven't got the bread. So Bose is making me available on credit. Master Charge, Visa, or American Express. I'm the Bose Model 360 Component Music System and I'm easy. Easy to love. Easy to own. Call your Bose Campus Manager for a free demonstration. Sorry, No We're just the sole. Phone Quotes- too busy during Hey! UAC needs new Program Directors m' i STARTS: NOW ENDS: APRIL 3 A ... w..A..L The University Activities Center (UAC) is the largest student run organization on campus. We pro- vide U-M students with hundreds of cultural programs and entertaining events each year. Responsible, cre- ative people are needed for the 1978-79 school year to manage UAC programs: FILM Eclipse Jazz I .." ; -" -- I 1 Am ICIPA 1 C