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April 04, 1978 - Image 9

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Michigan Daily, 1978-04-04

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The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, April 4, 1978-Page 9
NAR ROW MARGIN MARKS MAYOR'S R ACE:
Beleher called winner

(Continued from Page 8)
SPRING/SUMMER--S bedroom house located 1
block south of Law Quad. Furnished, 2 full baths,
parking, fireplace. Will consider a group or indi-
yiduals. Call 764-8754 or 764-8759. 68U404
SPRING/SUMMER Sublet--2 bdrm. apt. A/C, dish-
washr, aundry reat furniture Close to Arb,
663-260r,. ___72U404
MAY-AUGUsT SUBLET-One block from campus.
CCRB across the street. A/C. Rent negotiable. Call,
Greg: 665-7778. .dU404
SPRING/SUMMER Sublet-One bedroom available
infrnisedoue. CA CTED 7 mm. from Campus.
SUMMER SUBLET. Fall Option-Two-person
furnished efficiency, parking space, washer-dryer,
one block from law quad, $140/mo. Call Barbara,
665-0344 or Diane, 663-3787. 31U407
sUBLET-2 bedrooms, furnished, laundry, park-
ing, A/C. $200/month. Available mid-May-August.
May FREE. Near CCRB. Call 663-7041. 49U406
FALL OPTION! One Bedroom Apartment. Near
Tech-Hifi, campus. Call 665-2973, till 1:00 a.m.
38U407
SUBLET-Best location. 2. bdrm., A/C, G-disp.,
1 baths, bi-level, laundry rm., sfree parking,
vacuum. Carriage House Apt. 665-7021. 36U416
SPRING/SUMMER Sublet-Share large 4 bdrm.
house. Own room. Huron & Seventh. $125. 663-
7726. .39U407
SPRING AND SUMMER SUBLET - Furnished
modern apartment, double room, laundry, facili-
ties, dishwasher, parking, A/C. stephanie-994-9302.
53U406
SPACIOUS MODERN APARTMENT
Sublet, Spring-Summer. 2 bedrooms, living room,.
kitchen, basement, laundry, parking, fully fur-
person) Inerested: call Lewis. 665-6638.$742. 12
poa/c, earcampus May-Aug. 662-6029.n18U04
LARGE ROOM in 5 person house. Church & Hill-
very cool May-Aug. Call Kyle. 662-4877. 09U404
ros fr Sumr Wse/reRfigatro
every floor. $75 per month. Call 662-4257. 00U403
SUBLET MAY-AUGUST. Trn-level 3 bedrooms, 112
baths. Air cond,, dishwasher, garbage disposal.
Excellent campus location behind P & A. Free
parking. Renit negotiable. 663-9656. 93U4Q4
MAY-AUGUST. MALES ato share 3-bedroom eapart-
parking, furnished. Call after 6,995-4954. 92U406
SUBLET-O M FOR GRAD, orking person i5
lcation, good people, prvat 769-0798.ws 17xc4
Campus Area
Sublet Service
A free service to assist
our tenants
Complete selection of furnished summer apartments
from onie to five bedrooms in modern bldgs. and
older houses. Central Campus and Medical Center
locations.
stop by or call:
Campus Rentals
1335 S. University
665-8825
cUtc
TWO APARTMENTS in house; Top floor: one
bedroom, living room, fireplace, big kitchen, modern
bath, carpeting. First floor: 6 bedrooms, fireplace',
huge kitchen. Fall options. Call Matt or Chris-
LARGE LUXURIOUS 6-BEDROOM HOUSE-2
bathrooms, sun porch, close to campus. 663-4369.
35U406
EFFICIENCY-Free parking, free laundry, fur-
nished, lots of book shelves, near West Park, fall
option. $99/month. 769-4500. 70U406
OPEN APRIL 20th-i bedroom in 3 bedroom house.
Quiet neighborhood. Chemist, biologist roommates.
Cheap! Call 971-8754, persistently. 66U408
MODERN 2 BEDROOM furnished apt. Many
extras. Close to campus. $200/mo. 668-8138. 57U404
SUMMER SUBLET--2 males needed in 4-man, 2-
bedroom, bi-level apartment-air conditioning,
huge living room, 2 bathrooms, quiet, 5 minutes
from campus, 30 seconds from grocery store. Cheap.
Call 63-7190. 50U405
LAW STUDENT needs one bedroom or studio sublet
for summer. May-August preferable. Apartments in
older homes encouraged.434-6638. p51U408
MAY-AUGUST-Rent large, single (comfy for two)
room in house: big windows, huge closet, front porch
with swing. Great location! Close to campus. close to
downtown. Furnishings, utilities included. Price
negotiable. Call Amy orSandi. 665-0608. dU405
May-August--2 males needed in 4 man, 2-bedroom
apartment. A/C. dishwasher, 2 bathrooms, quiet, 5
min. from campus. across 'from CCRB. Rent
NEGOTIABLE. CALL DAN OR DAVE, 663-2980.
96U408
Summer sublet-Pool, A/C, modern; quiet residen-

tial area, 2 blocks from campus. 1.bedroom of 3
bedroom apartment. balcony. negot. rent, protected
parking. male or female. 665-7228; after 6. 662-9770.8
MAY-AUGUST Own large room in modern 2
bedroom furnished apartment. A/C. laundry,
parking. South Forest and Oakland-8 minutes from
Diag. Male. VERY REASONABLE. 668-0500. 87U408
SUBLET-SPACIOUS 2 bedrom, bi-level located I
minute from Arb, 5 minutes from central campus',
AC, dishwasher, furniture, porch and free parking.
MAY-AUUST SUB L-neblock fro caps
Rent negotiable. Call 995-2954! dU404
BEAUTIF UL OLD ER 4-5 Bedroom House. Available
May-August. Fireplace. sunporch, dishwasher.
cso'esoQi anR-a7O1 67U405

(Continued from Page B>
ting parking structures in the clown-
town area. The Republican opposed the
two housing ballot proposals which
were passes yesterday, and has often
come to the defense of landlords in
Council debates.
WHE ELE R, 63, has been a professor
omirobioogyat th Universty for
the forefront of the struggle for social
services in the, city and had claimed
pride in his role as an lntermediary
between the city government and the
state and federal governments.
Wheeler has in the past been
criticized for being "too cautious" to
)~ ". "- '~<allow housing~ developments to enter
the city. It was his position that poor
-~ and the old are easily taken by
- i., , :~'developers. Wheeler was in favor of
both housing ballot proposals. In fact, it.
was he who offered the "Truth in Ren-
ting" proposals as a Council resolution
this past summer only to have it turned
down on a straight Republican party
Tenant advocates got what they
wantd fom he oters who, apparen-
f ly approved two initiatives aimed at
improving the plight of city tenants.
E PROPOSAL A, "The Truth in Ren-
tigAt," which prohibits landlords
from including illegal and unenfor-
4ceable clauses in their leases, was
Daily Photo by BRAD BENJAMIN being approved by a 10,070 to 3,301
margin with 60 percent of the vote
tallied. Though Proposal' B, "The Fair
A TIRED AL WHEELER prepares to leave Democratic headquarter s at Bacchus Rental Information Act," didn't fare as
Garden late last night, not knowing whether he had won or lost his second close well as its counterpart, it still met

3,842. Proposal B calls for a new city
tenants' rights booklet.
The apparent tenant victories mark
the first time in city history that
housing-related 'city charter amen-
dments have been approved by voter
initiatives. Tenants' rights activisits
met severe defeat in 1974 and 1975 when
voters soundly defeated rent control
proposals. The charter amendments
can only be repealed by a future voter
initiative.
Members of the Coalition for Better
Housing (CBH), which sponsored the
proposals, were jubilant at a victory
party last night at Dominick's
restaurant.
"WE'RE SO happy, but it's only
fair," exclaimed CBH member Sally
Greiner. '"It's been quite a struggle and
it's really nice that we got our

struggle."
CBH leader Tim Kunin said CBH has
nothing planned in terms of future
housing proposals, but said hs
organization "is not presently con-
sidering disbanding."
Aside from prohibiting landlords'
from including illegal and unen-
foreceable clauses in their leases, the
Truth in Renting Act requires them to
give tenants specific information about
their legal rights.
The "Fair Rental Information Act"
requires the city to 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. AN' city lan-
dlords are required to distribute the
booklet to their tenants.

Mayoral race against Lou Belcher.

decisive support in a vote of 9,501 to

EARN'300.00 his umme
If you are . .. Independent, a hard worker, looking
for a challenge, able to move from Ann Arbor..
you may qualify.
Call for an inteview
CAR ER AT" FACION LATIERl
evaluation NOW.
Knowing your natural abilities can
help you make the right decisions.
If you are considering choices that will affect your career future, an
ASSESSMENT OF APTITUDES is a useful first phase in your plannirng. It'
can provide you with the criteria necessary for, making EDUCATIONAL
PLANS, CAREER DECISIONS, and LIFE GOALS.
JOHNSON O'CONNER RESEARCH FOUNDA TION
HUMAN ENGINEERING LABORA TORY
aptitude measurement since 1922

GOP wins
(Continued from Page 1) '
nine votes.
The upset of the evening came in the
unpredictable Fourth Ward, where ex-
University football star David Fisher
slipped by Democrat Leroy Cappaert to
votve oneCouncil. Fishera 33-ea-old
engineer and certified public accoun-
tant, edged out his favored opponent by
ascant 5 votes - 322 o Caaerts
vote for me this time does next time,"
Fisher said. "The challenge is on to do
something.
"You'll find out I'm not a big time
politician - .I just want to do
Upon hearing of his apparent loss,
Cappaert said that "fear" instilled in
the voters by Belcher campaigners was
enough to bring 6ut a slight Republican
majority. Cappaert said, the mayoral
campaign could have hurt his race.
"FISHER DIDN'T even campaign,"'
said Cappaert. "With Al Wheeler, I
think there is a hatred on the part of
former Republican Mayor James
Stephenson and others. -
"It wasn't a question of issues, it was
a question of allegiance," said Cap-
paert adding, "I'm not sorry to run in a
race with Al Wheeler. I'm highly sup-
portive of him and we won't stop doing
what we're about."
Outgoing Councilman Jamie Kenwor-
thy, who will be replaced by Fisher,
said Cappaert's Fourth Ward defeat
could hurt the Democrats in the next
few years. With Democrats represen-
ting the First and Second Wards, Ken-
worthy said the "image of the party will
be shaped by the image of that part of
th ciy.
In the student-domina ted Second
Ward, Democrat Earl Greene coasted
to an uncontested victory with 2,006
votes in a race where the popular in-
cumbent literally had no opposition.
The last-minute campaign of
Republican write-in candidate Debra
Smith gathered only three votes and
barely made a dent in Greene's lan-
dslide victory in the ward that encom-
passes most of the Central Campus and
North Campus area.
GR EENE'S ON LY statement upon
hearing his reelection victory count
was, "My main objective is to get out
the vote for Al, not for me. The Second
Ward came through, though, and again
I think it will tell the tale."
Smith, who had challenged Greene at
the last minute in a futile write-in effort
said, "Next time I'll plan ahead and I'll
know to do it in nine mhonths instead of
Having no Republican candidate in
the Second Ward prompted charges by

big in 3 Co
Greene and other Democrats that the
lack of a race was a Republican ploy to
keep the predominantly Democratic
voters at home. That would have helped
the mayoral candidacy of Republican
Louis Belcher, where, in a contest that
had already once been decided by a
sngle ballot, literally every vote coun-
GREENE, 41, is a two-year veteran
of Council. He was the only other in-
cumbent besides Allen up for reelec-
tion. The soft-spoken native Virginian is
a music teacher at Willow Run Elemen-
since 196Heo ins also a Democraticr
precinct captain and an official in the
Michigan Education Association.
As expected, the Third Ward went
traditionally Republican, giving Clif-
ford Sheldon a 1,741-vote majority over
Democratic contender Patrick Mit-
chell, before the absentee votes were
tallied.
At midnight, Sheldon had 3,746 votes
to Cappaert's 2,005.
The student-shy Third Ward has
never elected a Democrat.
That contest had been plagued by a
lack of issues,' since both winner
Sheldon and loser Mitchell conceded
said they say eye to eye on everything
from road conditions to housing
availability.
Sheldon holds an MBA from the
University, and has been president of

uneil races
the Ann Arbor Jaycees and a division
chairman for United Fund.
Republican James Cmejrek captured
Lou Belcher's former Council seat as
representative of the city's Fifth Ward
by a margin of 3,640 to 2,240 .over
Democrat Joel Goldberg.
H I Fl STUDIO
Stereo & T.V Service
Fast-Competent
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215 S. Ashley 769-0342
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between Washington and Liberty

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Boston Detroit

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Washington
Tulsa

This story i4as written by Keith
Rich burg with files from Julie R ov-
ner and Sue Warner (Democrats),
Paula L ashinsky and Shelley

Wolson (Republicans), Mitch
tor' and Mark Parrent (City
and Margaret Johnson and
Rako wsky (Ypsilanti).

Can-
Hall)
Judy

G ERBI L:: T H
U.N (~1N CALE N

MI
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NOW
in the
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""" 4 44% 4 I 44I 4 4S
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