Druggist gets trip for suing Edison Co. By DENNIS SABO Copyright 1978 The Michigan Daily Second in a two-part series Southfield drug store owner Lawrence Can- tor, whose suit against Detroit Edison will end the firm's light bulb exchange program, was solicited as a client and received a ski vacation from his lawyers in exchange for lending his name to the lawsuit, according to sources close to Cantor. The practice of soliciting clients and paying them to bring suit is a violation of the Illinois professional code of ethics and possible groun- ds for disbarment. ('ANTOR'S Chicago-based attorneys, Michael Sklar, Burton Weinstein and Robert Holstein, and Southfield lawyer David Nelson, stand to collect more than $1.5 million in legal fees, if Federal Judge John Feikens rules in their favor. In the antitrust suit, Cantor said he, as well as other Southeast Michigan light bulb retailers, were deprived of profit-making because of Edison's bulb program. Under the program, customers exchange their burnt-out bulbs for new ones at the company's service outlets. The program costs are added to Edison customers' electric bills. According to Cantor and his attorneys, the lawsuit originated in 1972 when attorney Sklar met Cantor on the ski slopes of Aspen, Colorado. After the meeting, Sklar introduced Cantor to Ron Stone, a Chicago light bulb dealer. Cantor was later introduced to the other Chicago lawyers, and Cantor said after several conversations he decided to file suit against Detroit Edison.' BUT ACCORDING to several family sources, including Cantor's daughter Nancy, the attor- "One of the lawyers was taking it to other states. They needed a Detroit businessman 's name (for the lawsuit)." -Nancy Cantor neys were more instrumental in initiating the suit than Cantor. "One of the lawyers was taking it to other states," said Ms. Cantor, 16. "They needed a Detroit businessman's name (for the lawsuit)." "The fact Larry (Cantor) owned the drug store only spurred things on," said a family friend. Cantor, 47, denied the accusations, but along with his attorneys, remained vague about how the suit began. "I don't know what their intent was," Cantor explained. "We got to talking and they said it (Detroit Edison) doesn't look like a bad case. and they would do it (bring suit) on a con- tingency basis." (A suit without monetary risk for Cantor). "I had no idea that I was part of a script," Cantor said. "I was involved in something that mushroomed." TWO OF CANTOR'S attorneys, Weinstein and Holstein, were involved in a 1970 lawsuit contesting a similar light bulb exchange program by Chicago's Commonwealth Edison. The suit, filed by a school teacher named Marilyn Gowdey, contended that the exchange system was improperly administered and that many customers were unaware of the program. Gowdey, who was a friend of another of the case's lawyers prior to litigation, won the suit in 1973 and Commonwealth Edison revamped See DRUGGIST, Page 2 LEAKYN _PARTS OF CLOUDS O VERENT. 38Ann4ArbtorayMrhSee Editorial Page29TC See Tody for details Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 138 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, March 25, 1978TeCnt8Pas ICity tries to avoid '77 voter foul-ups By JULIE ROVNER Voters are asking a new question this campaign season in addition to traditional street repair and federal. funding issues: How does the city in- tend to avoid making the same mistake it made last year when a number of non-city residents were mistakenly registered to vote? Because a number of registrars used faulty street guides-a list of all the city's streets and what ward and precinct they are located in-almost 150 residents of township islands and peninsulas were accidentally registered. These islands and penin- sulas are small pieces of land that jut into, or are surrounded by, the city. Township island residents don't pay city taxes and are not eligible to vote in city elections. SUSAN VAN HAT'TUM, the Univer- sity junior whose refusal to reveal her vote led to a Michigan Supreme Court decision, was a resident of one of these township islands. City Clerk Jerome Weiss, whose department was responsible for last year's foul-up, says he has taken great pains to make sure Ann Arbor has a good election this year. "Every year we try to run a perfect election," Weiss said, "but there's no such thing as a perfect election. I think this year's is going to be the best ever because we have more tools." ONE OF THOSE tools, a new com- puter program designed by Weiss' staff and the city's planning department, has already printed out correct street guides, and allowed the clerk's office to check registrations and aid in distributing absentee ballots. "The computer will be able to assure us that any one who votes in this elec- tion will be a properly registered, voter," Weiss said. Weiss said that with the computer's help, his staff has already identified 13 improperly registered voters and has sent those voters letters notifying them. He also pointed out that the computer can check voter's addresses with com- mercial property in the city to avoid allowing people to register at their business address. Weiss attributed this year's sharp in- crease in registered voters - registration from January to March in- creased by 4,000 - to the mayoral can- didates and the drive by supporters of the tenant's rights ballot issues. "It's going to be a big election, but we can handle it," he said. Strike end near as coal miners accep t c By United Press international Broke and frustrated coal miners apparently decided to give their families an Easter present yesterday and end a 109-day strike that had much of the nation in its grip. An unofficial UPI count from 457 or 63.6 per cent of the UMW's 719 locals, had 39,796 or 56.7 per cent voting "yes" and 30,425 or 43.3 per cent voting "no." "I Dll IN'T VOTE for a contract, I voted for a paycheck,' said John Shumar, a coal miner from California, Pa. That sentiment was repeated across coal country on Good Friday as a strong turnout of members of the United Mine Workers seemed on the way to accepting a contract that-had touched off hot arguments in many a union hall. Arnold Miller, the beleaguered president of the UMW, said that the three-year pact was not totally to his liking even as he was claiming it had been ratified by a "substantial margin." "I DON'T hI NK WE gained all that much, but we kept what we had,. Miller told UPI by telephone from Washington. .ont.ract Besides, he added, "I worked for a lot of them I didn't like." Miller, a dour mountain man from Cabin Creek in West Virginia, was unflappable in the face of critics who had labeled him "a Benedict Arnold" in the tedious negotiations with the Bituminous Coal Operators Association. "TIJESE ARE PEOPLE who don't believe in the principles this country is based upon," he said. The vote ended a brutal strike that had lasted much longer than anyone expected and left many of the 160,000 UMW members in a financial bind. Egidio Ferro of Courtney, Pa., voted for the contract, but he didn't expect it to be ratified. "I'F CHRIST CAME down on this earth and negotiated a contract, it still wouldn't satisfy everyone," he said. The miners are satisfied with the pay raise -- $2.40 an hour over the next three years - but they are unhappy with the pension program and the health insurance plan which AP Photo United Mine Workers Local 1054 President Dewey Christian of Cedar Grove, West Virginia makes a show of his ballot yesterday before voting on a proposed contract to end the 109-day coal strike. See NEW, Page 8 Battle not ruled out for tenants' rights proposals, By RICHARD BERKE and MITCH CANTOR Though organized opposition to two tenants' rights proposals on the April 3 city election ballot has yet to surface, backers of the referendum aren't put- ting that possibility to rest. In 1975, local landlords formed "Citizens for Good Housing" and pum- ped over $50,000 in a last minute media blitz to soundly defeat a rent control proposal. But opinion differs as to whetherthe present legislation would have enough impact on city landlordsto instigate a coalition against the ballot issues. THOUGH BOTH proposals are spon- sored by the Coalition for Better Housing (CBH), they appear to have different levels of support among local politicians. The "Truth in Renting Act," which seems to be the more favored initiative, would prohibit landlords from including illegal and unenforceable clauses in their leases. Also, it would require them to give their tenants specific infor- mation about their legal rights. At the start of each lease term lan- dlords would be required to give tenan- ts a written notice stating that: " certain clauses the tenant signs may be illegal, therefore unenfor- ceable; cItYelections '78 " tenants have rights and obligations which may not be described in their leases, such as the right to withhold rent and live in a dwelling in need of repairs; * tenants can get detailed infor- mation on their legal rights and duties by contacting their own lawyer, a free legal aid service, or a Tenants Union lawyer. THiE SECOND referendur, entitled "The Fair Rental Information Act," proposed that the city pay for a tenants' rights booklet consisting of three sec- tions: one written by impartial authors selected by the mayor, one written by pro-tenant attorneys, and one written by pro-landlord attorneys. All city lan- dlords would be required to distribute the booklet to their tenants. The city already has a tenants rights booklet which was revised by City Council last December. With the election only nine days away, supporters of the proposals say they are still in the dark about organized opposition. "I DON'T know what to anticipate in terms of opposition," said Tim Kunin of CBH. "I'd certainly like to think the proposals are so fair that we won't have any opposition." See BALLOT, Page 2 Daily Photo by PETER SERLING Al haber and Marilyn Katz spoke to a group at the Guild House yesterday about the past and future of political activisn in the United States. Rene wed campus, Saturday BULLETIN President Carter yesterday approved a $2.6 billion urban policy to aid America's ailing cities, according to the Associated Press. Earlier in the day, Carter approved a proposal calling for substantially less spen- ding, but sources close to the White House said Carter was "+ *oa+sr xA t in a c th Vance denies U.S. plan to dump Begin activism BY LEONARD BERNSTEIN In an atmosphere reminiscent of the nascent days lof the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), one hundred people jammed into the Guild House yesterday to discuss the future of political activism in the United States. The meeting was the culmination of the week-long teach-in on the Vietnam War. Students and others heard Al Haber, one of the founders of SDS and an organizer of the first teach-in is urged from the days of the war. One par- ticipant said a "multi-issue organization" was being formed. The organization would embrace "issues affecting student power and issues affecting students as human beings." Marilyn Katz, national policy secretary of the New American Movement (NAM), a nation-wide socialist-feminist group, said it is "our responsibility to oppose U.S. policy that oppresses other peoples" by "building a socialist movement that opposes and limits the power of from wire service reports Looking drawn and weary, Prime Minister Menachem Begin returned home yesterday from his "difficult" talks with President Carter to a growing Israeli leadership crisis and reports of an American-inspired "dump Begin" movement. V EUUaII~'P~'! I 7 .I A