Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, May 19, 1971 Army moves against racism in Germany FRANKFURT, Germany lP)- Last month an investigating team of the National Associa- tion for t h e Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) re- ported that discriminatory rent- al practices in West Germany were so serious that they "caus- ed black soldiers to regard Ger- many as an unfriendly country and to wonder aloud why they should be stationed there." Though this change may have surprised some of the Army staff which was to later read the re- port, it was nothing new for the black servicemen stationed in West Germany. Off and on, the problem of discrimination in renting off-base living quarter has been one of his complaints. An Army major, talking heat- edly about the trouble he en- countered as a black in trying to find an off-post apartment for his family said, "It's something whites can't understand - the frustration of being turned away because of your race." The Army h as developed a campaign to secure fair housing for service families, though. It set up 50 housing referral of- ficrs to locate and monitor off base housing and confronted German landlords with t h e choice of pledging to accept black as well as white families or being placed off-limits. Officials at Theater Army Support Command in the City of Worms have final authority to declare apartments off-limits. They say the new system has resulted in a drastic decrease in charges of landlord discrimina- tion. "Of the more than 2,500 Ger- man apartment owners a n d agents we've contacted, only three refused to sign the non- discrimination pledge," report- ed Brig. Gen. John Pierce Jr., deputy commander. "Apartments owned by these three landlords now are off lim- its to U.S. military personnel and U.S. citizen employes of the military," he stated. "We have not had one complaint of racial discrimination against land- lords or rental agents who sign- ed the pledge." First Lt. Anthony Atenasio of Watertown, Mass., housing re- ferral officer for the Frankfurt area says "We're trying to elim- inate the middle-man by get- ting landlords to list directly with our office. This is going to take a year or two because the agents have a stranglehold on the local market." Two agents doing large busi- ness with American soldiers in Frankfurt say the system hasn't hurt them. One of these, has a minimum fee of 1/ months' rent. "Not every landlord is willing to rent to military peo- ple - or to colored people, Ital- ians or Spaniards," he said. Agent Wilfried Vollmerhaus observed: "Germans are not basically discriminatory, b u t given a choice between a white and a black, they'll rent to the white because they know how whites will react. It takes an agent to talk to landlords - to convince them that the great majority of blacks are good ten- ants. Up to n o w I've always been able to, f in d apartments for blacks." Maj. Washington Hill, a 32- year old obstetrician from cam- den, N.J. is skeptical about the army's program. "The Army had to do some- thing to correct a bad situation," he said, "but nondiscrimination pledges aren't enough. The r e are many landlords you aren't A SPORTS CAR YOU CAN AFFORD WHILE YOU'RE STILL YOUNG ENOUGH TO ENJOY IT. going to reach that way. Talks have to be initiated at the high- est level - between Bonn and Washington - and pressure has to be put through German channels." Hill was one of seven black servicemen in W e s t Germany who petitioned the Department of the Army for a court inquiry into the housing problem. Hill alleged he personally had been refused leases on racial grounds by four landlords on a semiof- ficial Army housing list. Three days later, on Dec. 28, the army issued a directive that discriminatory landlords an d rental agents would be placed off-limits. The Army rejected the peti- tion in March, asserting the re- ferral system was countering the problem. To date less than h a1f the private dwellings have been in- spected by Army rental offices to insure they meet minimum standards. "We're inspecting by attri- tion," one official said. "When a soldier moves out, the apart- ment is inspected and the land- lord is required to sign a non- discrimination pledge before an- other American military tenant can move in." Channing Hall, civilian chief of housing for the Army support command, says problems often arise because Americans are not familiar with German language and customs. "So many cases we have in- vestigated in which racial dis- crimination was alleged have boiled down to nothing more than landlord-tenant disputes," he said. Robert Redford -con on the lam Marlon Brando -good-guy sheriff Jane Fonda -the con's wife E.G. 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