Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 6-S Thursday, May11, 1978 4-m Sixteen Pages Ann Arbor, Michigan Ten Cents Geralds expelled for embezzling By MICHAEL ARKUSH the Madison Heights Democrat's fate. dicated that he expected the House to insisted the newspapers and other The Michigan House of Representa- Geralds said he expected the expulsion. oust him, said yesterday he believes media expect "incredibly high stan- lives, after four hours of bitter and "I think the House did the necessary many representatives voted against dards from state officials." tense debate, voted yesterday to expel thing but I stil feel very sad for Monte," him to avoid political ramifications. "IF WE HAD voted to keep Geralds, Rep. Monte Geralds (D-Madison said Rep. Joseph Forbes (D-Oak Park), The 43-year-old lawmaker blamed the media would have attacked us and Heights) who was convicted in March chairman of the House Policy Commit- media disfavor and constituency anger claimed that ,we whitewash our own of embezzling $24,000 from a former tee which voted last week to recom- law client. mend Geralds' expulsion. The 84-20 vote easily surpassed the Yesterday's resolution states that two-thirds majority required to remove "Geralds' continued service in the a state legislator. It is the first time in House calls into question the integrity Michigan political history that the and actions of the entire legislature and House has expelled a legislator. seriously undermines the confidence MOST HOUSE members said they and trust of the citizenry in the in- were not surprised by yesterday's stitutions of their government." ruling but said they were saddened at GERALDS, WHO had repeatedly in- EPA orders AMC to recall From Wire Service Reports WASHINGTON-The federal govern- ment yesterday ordered American Motors Corp. (AMC) to recall most of its 1976 vehicles, 310,000 trucks and autos, for exhaust system repairs, an action that could cost the smallest of the U.S. carmakers $3.1 million. The Environmental Protection Agen- cy (EPA) said the vehicles have a defect in the pollution control system which could cause excess emissions of nitrogen oxides. In issuing the order, the EPA said it raised to 12 million the number of cars and trucks recalled since 1972 to correct flaws in emission control systems-one in every five new vehicles sold. "AS A RECORD of compliance with the law and as an expression of concern for public health, this marks a dismal showing by automakers," said EPA Deputy Administrator Barbara Blum. A spokesman at AMC's Southfield, UNITED STATES O\L- 10.ANT Memorandum TDrCTO;I, CII (100-459225) SAC, DETROIT (100-37274) (C) SUJC: GAY LIBEILATION MOVE!,ENT MNIVERSNITY OF MICHIGAN ASSN1555h, MICHIGAN IS - fsC '76 cars Mich., headquarters said the company was prepared for the EPA announce- ment, although the cost of the recall has not been computed. "We had been working on our own and with the EPA for some time on this," the spokesman said. 'I think we would have gone ahead with our action regardless of what course the EPA chose to take." THE LATEST massive recall affects only AMC cars and trucks meant for sale in the United States. Cars involved include 1976 model Hornets, Gremlins, Pacers and Matadors with 258 cubic in- ch engines; CJ-5 and CJ-7 Jeeps with 232 cubic inch engines, and 1975 and 1976 dispatcher trucks used by the Post Office. The recall does not involve 1976 model AMC cars and trucks sold in California, where the vehicles have dif- ferent exhaust control systems because See EPA, Page 5 Gerald s AP Photo for pressuring the House for his people and can't govern ourselves," removal. said Collins. "It wasn't actually a reflection of Collins also said she believes the their real feelings but the political thing House should have waited until Geralds to do. If they hadn't voted against me, appealed his conviction before deciding the media and the people in their whether to expel him. districts would have attacked them,' "The House decided a decision which said Geralds. should be left in the hands of the Rep. Barbara-Rose Collins (D- judiciary and not the legislative 'Leland) also attacked the media for process," she said. contributing to Geralds' downfall. She See GERALDS, Page 10 DATE: 7/10/71 FBI spied on local gays Re Detroit letter to the Bureau, dated 2/22/71. EMclosed for the BuCeau arM Mive Mopis MM In LIII settingf tC informticoncernigcaptionedA dIoA TIes SLIN isMM egcssifiMeco , ntialto protectI the ident11111 MM sourMceGIsAutMAizdIMheMin77 ho are ofcon- tinuing value to the Bureau. Sources utilized in LHMI are as fellows: DE T-1 is a well placed source I DE T-2 i DE T-3 i r UvrsyAbove sorces reorted captioned groupatthe Universiy ofMihn(M)17 ,11 A nn Arbor, ichigan, haveNMis- continued plans to hold aidwest confIrence on homosexuality UIM iials. SuSceGrepArted1f ur thr h SN AG N m ter rNematiC 11 G ie NMcCMland 11r11 cial tA han polical finances, or members. n view of the above information, no further in- bM MISeIetoitD iisionathi tS ime.This1mtt17111 ing plcdi acoe tau obc r-pndatsc ie when k z ureau (Enc.-E 64.PUEn 1- Detroi JMRIA1 C-6 ---- -- \o' US.S I7 J1 By DAN OBERDORFER The FBI monitored activities of the University chapter of the Gay Liberation Front (GLF) during the early 1970s but called off its watchdogs after determining that the group was more social than political in orientation, according to FBI documents released last week. The heavily-censored documents were obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request by GLF member Dan Tsang, a University employee. The documents show the FBI employed at least two informants to gather information about the group. TSANG SAID HE was not surprised by the disclosures. He added that he thought the FBI had not yet revealed the full extent of its dealings with GLF. University Gay Advocate Jim Toy, who is men- tioned in the documents, said he had thought that the FBI was surveilling his-activities. "We were pretty sure we were being watched. I had worked for a group in Detroit a few years before and we had been watched then so I thought we were watched here, too," said Toy. IN A MEMO to former FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover on June 17, 1970, the Detroit field office of the FBI said it would, "through sources, follow ac- tivities of this group (GLF) to determine whether it becomes a viable 'new left' organization at Univer- sity of Michigan." A few weeks later FBI headquarters ordered Detroit to "continue to obtain information" about GLF because it "is a self-described New-Left type student organization at the University of Mithigan." Another document says GLF "worked with SDS and other campus groups in recent disorders." ONE INFORMANT WHOM the FBI said "fur- nished reliable information in the past" and whose name was deleted from the documents, said GLF was "working - towards legalization of homosexuality." The FBI seemed most concerned with a regional convention GLF planned for Ann Arbor in the sum- See FBI, Page 10