Page Eight HE MICHIGAN DAILY I uesday, January 2U, 19 i b T'c~ge Eight tHE MICHIGAN DAILY 1 uesday, January LU, P9I~ _ Y EG3AD YOUR CAR'S LIFE 1 IN DANGER!!_ WILL Ir BE SA'VED OR WILL X w$I PREVAIL? a-+- LI2ERTY CAS VAR -- TO TH4ERESCUE WITH*- HEATED FLOOR5 S~OAP, RINSE, WAX HtCI4 HPRES SURE S OPEN 24 HOuRS SELF-SERVE K 318 W. LIBERTY _(JUST WEST OF R.R. TRACKS? Without enzymes nothing! would grow - there would be' no food, or grass, or trees. Without enzymes, the activity in every living cell would stop. Without enzymes we wouldn't be able to digest food. And en- zymes, working as catalysts, aren't just efficient - they're fast, too. In fact, one single en- zyme may change more than 100,000 mompounds in one sec- ond. Have a flair for artistic writinq? If you are interest- ed in reviewing poetry, and music or writing feature stories a b o u t the drama, dance, film arts: Contact Arts Editor, c/o The Michigan Daily. i Tenants reject settlement w a It Pays to Advertise in The Michigan Daily" I' v 'mm J ® il Wed. only $3.00 2 shows 8 & 10:30 p.m. A S 4w Why not join the DAILY ? THE DAILY IS A GREAT PLACE TO: * meet other good people * drink 5c Cokes * learn the operations of a newspaper write stories 0 see your name in print 9 earn a little money Come on down to 420 Maynard anytime and join the business, news, sports or photography staffs! SPEPARE FOR: .** . ..9 . @*sese ee E C FMG-FLEX NAT'L MED. & DENT. B'DS FLEXIBLE PROGRAM and HOURS -H. ANN ARBOR, M1. 48103 N 1945 PAULINE, SUITE A " * un mw.CErm 662-3149 " " ~4 Southfield-354-0085 " TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 *" "g*"" " RANCI IN nAUA 'Us cIIs *"" e " By JAY LEVIN} In a show of strength, 541 striking Sunrise Management tenants last night overwhelm-I ingly rejected a settlement package that would have endedj a two-month old rent strike. In a 44-10 vote, tenants said the proposal neglected many specific issues, and called the, proposed eight per cent rent cutI too little.I "IF THE landlords don't come up with a good deal, the strike will go on and we'll get stronger," said Robert Miller, a member of the Ann Arbor Ten- ants Union (AATU) steering committee. The rejected package, for- mulated last week by negotia- tors for AATU and Sunrise, would have granted the tenants -an eight per cent rent re- duction, effective immediately; -complete, certified compli- ance with the city's housing code by September 1 for all Sunrise rental units; -no retaliation against the strikers ; -the right to bill the landlord for repairs if the company fail- ed to meet complaints within 48 hours, -and numerous specific re- In last night's closed meet- pairs to various Sunrise build- ing, the tenants and AATU ings where strikers are com- formed a new committee to out- plaining of maintenance and line stronger demands. security problems. According to AATU, five addi- tional Sunrise tenants have MILLER said the AATU will pledged to join the group of seek "as much as we can get" about 100 who are already on in a rent reduction and did not ! strike. offer a figure that would be satisfactory. THE STRIKERS will placeE "They (the tenants) have their February rents in a court- been so humiliated and discour- administered escrow f u n d aged by the treatment they've which already contains aboutI received, they won't be satis- $15,000 in withheld rent, AATU fied unless they receive more spokespersons said. compensation," he added. At the meeting, strikers re- Last Thursday, a meeting of portedly said specific problems 30 striking tenants voted down not touched by the rejected the same package defeated last package include lack of heat, night, but AATU leaders sought lack of showers, and non-func- a second meeting to secure a tioning toilets. larger vote. THE STRIKE against Sun- rise, formerly Trony Associates, began, in November to protest what the tenants call deplorable maintenance and security mea- sures. CORRECTION -The Daily incorrectly reported Sundas in an article on the gay studies course that the Course Mart subcommittee requested the words "lesbian and gay" be in smaller type on a leaflet. However, according to Teach- ing Assistant Dan Tsang, co- ordinator of the course, it was Associate Dean Jean Carduner of the LSA Curriculum Commit- tee who refused to approve a leaflet advertising the course, unless the words "lesbian and gay" were in smaller -type. j Carduner, contacted yester- day, said he had no recollection of specifically requesting the words be less prominent on the leaflet. He was more concerned that the political aspect behind the gay liberation movement be emphasized rather than sexual preference in particular. DAVID BROMBERG. A benefit for the ARK [Doors open at 7:30] 1421 H ILLST. 761-1451 Secret Service drawing Ford, proposes big, tax cu'tfor July 1 (Continued from Page 1) AMONG HIS specific proposals: " A change in federal' tax laws to encourage plant expension and equipment purchases, concentrating "this job creation tax incentive, in areas where unemployment now exceeds 7 percent. He did not spell out the terms of the legislation, but it clearly would involve an increase in the investment tax credit. The national unemployment rate is 8.3 per cent. 1 Dr. Paul C. Uslan OPTOMETRIST Full Contact Lens Service Visual Examinations 548 CHURCH ST. 663-2476 I m 11 Ii " ?givuufI-s1Housing assistance for 500,000 families, to spur construc- ®.VIII ny17tion and help low and moderate income families. There were no details of that plan in the Ford- address. WASHINGTON (AM - En- tangled in a confusing web of 0 A limited national health insurance plan, to guarantee coincidences, the Secret Serv- that nobody over 65 years of age will have to pay more than ice is coming under public scrut- $750 a year for medical care. mny for the first time in nearly 12 yfears. f An increase in social security taxes of six-tenth of 1 per cent, half to be paid by workers and half by employers. The The agency, best known for total would be $4.2 billion. its assignment -of protecting the life of the President of the Unit- ! A "Broadened Stock Ownership Plan" under which low ed States, has never come un- and middle income workers would invest for at least seven years der stringent congressional in- in mutual funds or common stocks, with contributions to be de- vestigation. ductible from taxable income and the proceeds to be taxed only AND SINCE the Warren Com- when withdrawn from the plan. mission looked at the work of the Secret Service when it in- FORD SAID he could not recommend major welfare pro- vestigated the 1963 assassination gram changes "while we are still recovering from a recession." of President John Kennedy, no And he said the nation "cannot realistically afford federally dic- government body has taken a careful look at the agency. tated national health insurance , .. " But on Tuesday, a Senate sub- In discussing what he sees as the need for a belt-tightening committee whose duties include federal budget, Ford said: appropriating funds for the Post- al Service the Treasury and "By holding down the growth of federal spending, we can "general government," will be- afford additional tax cuts and return to the people who pay gin an investigation to find out taxes more decision-making power over their own lives." how the Secret Service can be made more effective. The tax cut he has in mind for individuals, he said, would Propelled by two attempts to reduce by $227 the taxes paid for a family of four making assassinate President Ford with- $15,000 a year. in 17 days, the subcommittee "Hard-working Americans caught in the middle can really members plan to hear from use that kind of extra cash," Ford said. African leaders seek Angola peace ~ ment - MPLA - and the pro- Western National Union :- UNI- TA. The plan, however, would ex- clude UNITA'S current ally, the National Front - FNLA- which has suffered serious mili- tary setbacks in northern An- gola. FIGHTING continued in the southwest African country, with UNITA, forces planning a two- pronged offensive in the north and south, according to field reports reaching neighboring Zambia. UNITA sources said the movement is planning to airlift several battalions numbering oyer 2,000 men to northern An- gola to aid the FNLA which has been mauled by Cuban troops leading MPLA forces. The MPLA at present con- trols a broad strip across the center of the country, divid- ing the two Western-supported movements. TAKING part in the effort to form a coalition are the 22 Af- rican states which at the re- cent meeting of the Organiza- tion of African Unity opposed recognition of the Soviet and Cuban - backed MPLA as the sole representative government of the former Portuguese terri- tory. Zambian sources say the plan to make UNITA's leader, Jonas Savimbi, the No. 2 man in the coalition government led by the MPLA'S Agostino- Neto, would m'eet the demands of Africa's more militant states which have already extended diplomatic recognition to the MPLA. Such an agreement could be what Kissinger had in mind when he recently told African diplomats in Washington he be- lieved the conflict would be over within a month. CUBA NOW has an estimated 9,000 troons in Angola support- ing the MPLA while South Afri- ca has an estimated 4,000 troops bolstering UNITA, which is s'nnlied with U.S. arms. Some S--- - I