- michigan DAILY Ann Arbor, Michigan Ten Cents Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 4-S Saturday, May 6, 1978 Twenty Pages I House panel urges Geralds' expulsion Sanjay Gandhi goes to jail AP Photo Sanjay Gandhi, son of former Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, is taken to prison by a policeman. See story page 7. MeKinley firm aske to come before board By MICHAEL ARKUSH The House Policy Committee voted overwhelmingly yesterday to recom- mend to the State House of Represen- tatives that Rep. Monte Geralds (D- Madison Heights), convicted by a jury in March of embezzling $24,000 from a former law client, be expelled from of- fice. The committee decided in a 9-2 vote that "Geralds' continued service in the House calls into question the integrity and actions of the entire legislature and seriously undermines the confidence and trust of the citizenry in the in- stitutions of their government." THE RESOLUTION will be sent to the full House where a two-thirds majority vote is required for expulsion of a representative. It is expected the House will announce a final ruling sometime next week. Should he be ex- pelled, Geralds would be the first lawmaker in state history to be ousted from the legislature. Yesterday's vote followed two weeks of bitter debate between Geralds' sup- porters and opponents. The committee has listened to 23 witnesses during five days of hearings. An aide to the committee said yester- day's vote was totally expected. He said every committee member had ex- pressed their opinions during the five hearings. "EVERYONE KNEW what the vote would be. It was only a matter of reaching agreement on the particular amendments to make," said Rich Van- dermolen, the aide. Geralds, also, expected the commit- tee to vote against him. He said he was hoping a few committee members would change their opinions after the witnesses gave their testimony. "I was very disappointed, not that I didn't expect it. I guess the members had decided long before against me," said Geralds. By R. J. SMITH A dispute in an Ypsilanti apartment complex between a group of tenants and the McKinley Associates property management firm has resulted in the Ypsilanti Township Board requesting that McKinley representatives speak before the Board at the next meeting. Threatening to revoke McKinley's oc- cupancycertificates, one township board member said, "We've fooled around with them long enough." Managing 3,300 to 3,500 units in the central Michigan area, McKinley Associates is one of the largest apar- tment landlords in the Ann Arbor area. THE 220-UNIT Roundtree Apartment complex is the site of the conflict, which originally centered around the questionable efficiency of the com- plex's central heating system, and problems tenants had with insufficient insulation. According to tenants, cold air from outside was getting mixed in with the heated air circulated throughout the building, so that heating ducts delivered air to rooms which of- ten were not warm. Apartments facing into the wind in the winter were often insufficiently heated as well, especially those with no buildings or trees outside to block the winds. "It got so bad that they (residents with rooms facing into the wind) could have their thermostats set all the way up when it is windy and cold and the room temperature would get up only to fifty or sixty degrees," said Paul Valkuchak, a spokesman for the striking tenants. IN JANUARY, 28 units within the complex went on a rent withholding strike, which included many strikers like Valkuchak who were not affected by wind exposure. McKinley took the strikers to court, and in March an out- of-court settlement was agreed upon. Strikers agreed to pay all back rent, and in return, McKinley promised to fix the heating system. The company also agreed not to deny lease renewals to any of the striking tenants without proof of "specific reasons." Hut since that time, the tenants claim McKinley has done little to change the heating situation. "We have followed everything in the agreement - but they continue to ignore the situation," said Valkuchak. "What it looks like is that See McKINLEY. Page 1_i S . Africa bombs PRETORIA, South Africa (AP) - South African forces -made a smoldering ruin of the headquarters of black nationalist South-West African guerrillas in neighboring southern Angola during a 12-hour airborne raid, military authorities reported yester- day. Foreign Minister R. F. Botha said South Africa's white government still seeks a peaceful independence set- tlement for the predominantly black territory of South-West Africa - called Namibia by the nationalists and by the United Nations - which has repudiated the mandate under which South Africa rules. LT. GEN. JACK DUTTON, chief of staff operations, said South Africa lost five men in Thursday's attack on Cassinga, the headquarters town about 150 miles inside Angola he said is code- named "Moscow" and against two bor- der bases. He said these losses were "not com- parable to the larger losses incurred by the terrorists," as the South Africans call the guerrillas of the Marxist- oriented South-West Africa People's Organization. Dutton declined to give a guerrilla casualty figure, saying the raid was in- tended to discourage the guerrilla organization rather than kill its forces. The raid followed a series of attacks and assassinations in South-West Africa blamed on the group. THE SOUTH African military denied the assertion of the organization's president, Sam Nujoma, who said yesterday in New York that "hundreds of womenchildren and elderly people" were killed in the raid, which he said hit at civilian camps. South African military sources said there were 600-1,000 guerrillas at the Geralds GERALDS SAID he would im- mediately begin collecting support against the Committee's recommen- dation. He indicated, however, that he was pessimistic about his chances before the full House. "I think there are many people in the House who will vote against me," said Geralds. Rep. George Cushinberry (D- Cherrylawn), who introduced a resolution proposing the committee "censure Geralds" but not recommend See GERALDS, Page 12 Angola base, including women. They said none of these were civilians. Dutton said "Moscow" was the main headquarters as well as a training base for the group. He said it was "well defended and surrounded by a trench system with bunkers." Army photos showed soldiers inspec- ting tunnel entrances as well as piles of weapons allegedly made in Communist- bloc nations. THE SOUTH-WEST Africa People's Organization (SWAPO) is thought to have about 3,000 guerrillas involved in the 11-year-old war against South Africa. About 650 persons have been killed in the war. Dutton, briefing reporters at the defense ministry, described the operation as a joint army-air force at- tack, but military sources denied See S. AFRICA, Page 7