Page 4-Wednesday, May 10, 1978-The Michigan Daily 2michigan DAILY Eighty-eight Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, M. 48109 Vol. LXXXVIII. No. 6-S News Phone: 764-0552 Wednesday, May 10, 1978 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Geralds' fate up to the people L ATER THIS WEEK the state House will decide whether or not to oust Rep. Monte Geralds (D-Madison Heights) because of an em- bezzlement conviction in March. Those who seek Geralds' removal claim that his conviction tar- nishes the image and undermines the credibility of the House-but this misses the -oint. Geralds was convicted of embezzling $24,000 from a law client several years before he was elec- ted. There is no evidence that the House has in any way been compromised by Gerald's actions as a represenative, so it is not for the House to decide whether or not he should remain in office. On the contrary, the voters in Geralds' district have been injured. They were not aware of the embezzlement when they elected him, and since he has been convicted, the voters deserve a chan- ce to rescind or reaffirm their support. The law provides the voters with this opportunity. They may launch a recall drive. If his constituents can garner enough signatures they can force a recall election in which they may vote him out of office. If the constituents are not sufficiently outraged by Geralds' conviction to initiate ia recall drive, then it is not the House's place to decide the mat- ter. Geralds is the elected official of the people of Madison Heights. Since he has committed no crime while in office he has done no disserv- ice to the legislature. He is guilty only of embezzlement and of failing to provide his con- stituents with all the relevant information about himself prior to his election. If he is to be punished for the second offense, it should be done by the voters, not the legislators. It is the fundamental right of the people of Madison Heights to choose their own represen- tatives, and as state law provides, they are not prohibited from electing someone who has been convicted of a felony provided it was a private crime, and not a violation of the public trust. In short, if the voters want Geralds they may keep him and if not, only they should expel him. SPRING EDITORIAL STAFF BARBARAZAHS Editorin-Chief RICHARD BERKE KEN PARSIGIAN Editorial Directors JEFFREY SELBST Magazine Editor OWEN GLEIBERMAN Arts Editor ANDYFREEBERG JOHN KNOX PETER SERLING Photographers STAFF WRITERS: Mike Arkush, Rene Becker, Brian Blanchard, Eisa Isaac- son, DanOberdorfer, Tom O'Connell,Judy Rakowsky, R.J. Smith SPORTSSTAFF BOB MILLER.................Sports Editor PAUL CAMPBELL. . . . ..Executive Sports Editor HENRY ENGELHARDT ............. ... ..Es uttive Spo rts Editor CUB SCHWARTZ........................EsecoiveSorts Editor Gory Kicinski, Geoff Larcom, Brian Martin, Dan Perrin. Dave Renbarger, Jamie Turner.BoWarren Cx IGHT EDITORS A ISTANT NIGH EDITORS Tenan By Stephen Hersh The Ann Arbor tenants' move- ment is on the go. About 70 percent of the city's voters recognized the problems of local tenants and cast their ballots in favor of tenants' rights, when the "Truth in Renting" and "Fair Rental Information" proposals were passed into law April 3. The landslide election victory proved two important things: that the citizens of Ann Arbor are ready for action to solve the city's housing crisis, and that the tenants of Ann Arbor are capable of recommending concrete solutions to their problems and seeing to it that these solutions are implemented. THE PASSAGE of "Truth in Renting" and "Fair Rental In- formation" will have an impor- tant, positive effect for tenants. The two new laws will spread in- formation about tenants' legal rights, and will clear up miscon- ceptions tenants commonly have about their rights. But the two laws are only a beginning. The problems in the local housing market run very deep, and it will take much more citizen action to solve the problems completely. What are the problems local tenants face? There are three basic ones: rents are too high, houses and apartments are too scarce, and the quality of the city's housing is too low. And there is hard statistical data proving that in Ann Arbor, each of these three housing problems have reached emergency propor- tions. (For a look at some of the statistics, see box.) HOW CAN LOCAL people help ts still fighting fight the housing crisis? One of people just willing to learn. the best methods is to join the In order for CBH to become a Coalition for Better Housing permanent part of the local (CBH), the group which spon- community, the group needs a sored the "Truth in Renting" concerned membership. Without and "Fair Rental Information" continued and increasing support campaign. from students and other local CBH built up a strong cam- residents, change in the city's paign organization during the housing situation will be im- election battle. But now, the possible. And the housing crisis group is seeking to broaden its will be with us as long as the base by recruiting larger num- housing market is aimed at Facts about the Ann Arbor Housing Crisis " HIGH COST OF HOUSING: When the last U.S. Census figures on the subject were taken, Ann Arbor's median rent was 72 per- cent higher than the national median. The figure is now higher than 72 percent-but we don't know how much higher. " SCARCITY OF HOUSING: Fewer than 0.6 percent of the ren- tal housing in the central city area was vacant, when the most recent figures were taken by the University's Off-Campus Housing Office last winter. But the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development says that a minimum vacancy rate of 7 percent-over ten times the Ann -Arbor figure-is needed to give tenants the freedom of choice necessary for a healthy housing market. " POOR QUALITY OF HOUSING: Almost every building in Ann Arbor violates the government's minimum health and safety standards, and 35 to 50 percent of the city's housing has serious fire and safety hazards, according to the city's director of Building and.Safety Engineering. BSE director George Gard- ner made these statements before the Mayor's Fair Rental Practices Committee on December 3, 1975. bers of people who care about Ann Arbor's housing crisis and want to help solve it. CBH needs all kinds of members-people who are willing to do volunteer work, or people who just want to join to show their support; people with experience in political groups, or newcomers to politics; people with special skills in writing, artwork, political organizing, or economics, or generating profits, instead of meeting people's needs. Join CBH, by calling 994-0555. Stephen Hersh is com- munity education director for the Michigan Student Assem- bly Housing Law Reform Project. LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Demonstration was in order To The Daily: The Daily, in criticizing the demonstration that occurred at commencement while Mondale was speaking, misses the impor- tance of the demonstration. At a time when the people of Africa are rising up, when the liberation forces in Zimbabwe (Rhodesia) control 95 percent of the countryside, and when armed guerrilla warfare has begun in South Africa (as reported in the Daily May 5), we see a sudden "reversal" of long-time U.S. sup- port of apartheid and white minority rule: CARTER, MONDALE and Vance are scurrying all over to negotiate a "compromise" bet- ween the liberation fighters and the reactionary governments that would allow the U.S. im- perialists to continue their ex- ploitation and oppression of the African people. This "new" policy is just new patches on old rags-and has only come because of the heroic struggles of the African people. For the demonstrators to stay quietly and politely outside while Mondale had full freedom inside to run his speech-the main point of which was how much the U.S. rlers.are -cowerned about the injustice and inequality that exist pressed South African workers both in the U.S. and around the were exploited to help pay our world (specifically mentioning bills. Graduation could not have Africa), to say we stand with the been a "happy event" for this African people as long as it reason, unless you are selfish, "doesn't offend anyone" (in- racist, or failed to make an im- cluding Mopdale! ), is to back portant connection; part of any down from the necessary fight to University of Michigan education expose the U.S. rulers as the is possible because others were common source of oppression in denied theirs. Africa and here in the U.S. IT IS CLEAR from your The demonstration was not the editorial that you are indeed "childishness" of a few, but the hypocrites. Your choice of the determined action of a growing word "immoral" to describe the number of students and others investments sounds hollow after who are not afraid of the con- you paraphrase Fleming's defen- troversy that ensues when bold se of dissent. This is a man who action is taken, profits from oppression, but when -Revolutionary Communist he pays lip service to dissent you Youth Brigade conveniently forget his "im- moral" practices. Rather than To The Daily: applaud him, he should be booed As one of the participants in and hissed offstage and out of his Saturday's demonstration at position. Crisler, I would like to respond to It was not, as you suggest, that the editorial that found us "out of we wanted attention. We were order." and we remain outraged by It should be made clear that it American imperialism. We want was not the protestors who an end to it. We are not trouble- marred graduation; it was some makers; we are trouble-shooters. of the so-called dignitaries on the If we "antagonize" or seem stage. Because of them, no "childish" and "out of order" it is student could say, "I put myself because we do not respect through college" neparent could ,legalized cr' genor, the thieves say,."paid allthe'expenses wIh pcac5ticQ happened differently because-o . - . :, ,;rKe n Kpight ke