The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by Students at the University of Michigan Friday, August 1, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 Smokinghazardous to all THE NINTH government report on cigarette smoking and health has reaffirmed that exhaled cigarette smoke is dangerous to the health of non-smokers, and asks Congress to legislate a ban on manufacture and sale of those brands of cigarettes which have high tar, nico- tine and carbon monoxide levels. Cigarette smoking can no longer be minimized or justified as merely a nasty personal habit. It is evidently a cause of air pollution that menaces the public health. The right to life is one of our inalienable rights. It cannot be subordinated by a minority puffing in pursuit of personal happiness. usin Israel no solution ('URRENT RAMBLINGS in world diplomatic circles have it that a large chunk of the African bloc is prepared to line up behind the moneyed Arab states in an attempt to oust Israel from the United Nations. According to a report by Bernard Weinraub in yes- terday's New York Times, the Arab nations may be in a position to command the loyalties of a majority of the 41 African states in any point of international controversy. As one East African cited by Weinraub put it, "The Arabs, if they pick an issue, everyone has got to fall behind them. They have the oil . . . the means for our survival." For all their petro-power, the Arabs' conflict with Israel will not simply vanish with the removal of. the Israeli delegation from the floor of the U.N. Isolating the Israelis cannot break that stubborn nation's will to per- severe. If anything, it could prompt a premature and unaffordable end to the peace all parties have struggled so hard to preserve. Letters:Hearings unr To The Editor: C'mon, folks, let's get serious. If° keeping campaign promises strikes you as worthy of atack, as in the editorial on Wednes- day, they maybe Al Wheeler and some of the rest of us ought to resign so we can return to those thrilling days of ^ampaign rhetoric which is quickly for- gotten once you're in office. Democrats said, during t h e campaign, that if the voter regis- tration charter amendment fail- ed and we had either a majority or a coalition possibiliti, we would work to re-institute door- to-door registration in this burg. Notice I say re-institute. Be- cause not too long ago, w h e n Bob Harris was Mayor and Har- old Saunders was City Cle t, we had door-to-door. With he elec- tion of one James Stephenson as Mayor and a majority of Re- publicans on Council and the re- signation of Mr. Saunders, that was put to a stop fast, because the then-majority thought that students were second-class citi- zens who should not have the right to vote unless they proved themselves worthy. Democrats think we should bring government and the means of participating in it to the people, rather than requiring the people to go to the govern- ment. One of the reasons the char- ter amendment failed is that neople who would have voted "yes" (if they'd had the oppar- tunity to register) had been ef- fectively disenfranchised by the lack of door-to-door. By intro- dcing the resolution. 0e Mayor th.oight (wrongly, perhaps, but sincerely nevertheless) ihat he was giving voice to the wishes of those who had ben pro':ibit- ed from exoressing their opinicn themselves, because the power structure had been set up to exclude them is the first place. Somehow I thought that this was one of the duties of people like the Mayor who ran on a re- cord of representation of t h e powerless. It is not sufficient to represent the people wh) have expressed their. opinion at the polls; it is also necessary, in my view, to advocate the views of people who have been denied participation in the process. Let's talk about "bact-room, power politics." The Mayor in- troduced that resolution as the chief elected official of his par- ty. I could have introduced it, or any of the other Democrats on Council. The City Party has been working on this issue. re- presentatives talked to "tth the Clerk and the Attorney's office about .the specific reolution; and Democrats campaigned on a "plank" of support for d)or- to-door registration. The f a c t that the resolution was gol ig to be introduced was broigh: up at last Wednesday's agenda ses- sion and the resolution itself was available in the Monda -pack- et at the public library for in- spection by anyone who cared. Let me finally mentian tat technically the resolution as ir- relevant. Under State law, the City Clerk, on his/her awn re- cognizance, has the right to determine, within c e r I a i n bounds spelled out in the law, how, where and when people can register to vote. There was no resolution from the Harria administration instituting, door- to-door, as there was no resolu- tion from the Stephenson dmin- istration nrohibiting it. In both those cases, the Clerk made his own decision. But since t h e Clerk is hired by Council, rhe decides to follow the carse of action supported by the major- ity of Council (if s/he waits to Letters should be typed and limited to 400 words. The Daily reserves the right to edit letters for length and grammar. iecessary keep his/her job). Since a ma. jority of Council supported door- to-door when Harris was May or, Mr. Saunders set uo te m chanism to carry that out. The charge of lack of public hearing from the Reputicans and your echo of the charge is a red herring of the brightest cl- or. It was simply a tactic to delay what they )resume will be a fact when it comes to a vote. If anyone thinks that opinions on the issue will be changed by a ptblic hearing, that pers )is crazy. We heard all the argu- ments during the campaign. The public hearing will be a sham. Folks who support door-to-door anyhow will come out and say how good it 's which will ron- vince the Council members wts think it is a good idea anyhew that they are correct in voting for it. Folks who oppose dor-t¢ door will come out and say how terrible it is which will con- vince the Council members who think it is a bad idea that the are correct in voting against it I can't imagine Democrats and Harpies who campaigned for it voting against it any more than I can imagine Republicans who campaigned against it now voting for it. From myt prin' o view we are merely putting oft the inevitable and will be spend- ins time listening to the s3are old arguments when avet we sholld really be doing is li;stcn- ing to peonles' opinions on is- sites that have not had meach nrior discussion, and/or dealing with minor matters like what to do with $2.5 million worth of CDRS money and .f2 million worth of C'ETA money. Sorry this is so long. Yours n the hope tha tihe world's Supp] of straw doesn' t run outlei there be a shortage of s r.w men, -Elizabeth Keogh, Demovrat Ann Arbor City Council July 23 TENANT'S CORNER Eviction without cause PONO 1K A STIKE W 01 HAEWO IL'P ORYU£ HAYW IfYODR~I Y 11 i T W K-I -!! rf/FFWUKFE JUR ? By LARRY COOPERMAN Last Friday, at about 3:30 p.m., David Culler returned to his apartment in Tower lPlaza to find his lock had been chang- ed by the management. Ha had nothing on him but the clothes he was wearing. All his posses- sions, including his Me ic:A:d card, were locked inside his apartment. If he had been young, the sit- uation would have been more an- noying than dangerous, but Dav-J id Culler is a middle-aged nan living on a barely adeqia'a3 fix- ed income, and he depends on crutches to.get around. Being forced to live otit of a hotel with one change of coh- ing is a degrading situation. What could possibly have made the Tower Plaza management so callous as to have locked him out? There is even more tragedy in the answer to this question. t.ast December, David Cufler's ;ent was raised from $160/month to $230/month, a more than 40 per cent increase. He could not afford this rent increasi and, although he had paid him rent faithfully every month before that, he was faced with the al- ternatives of leaving his home or staying put, fighting any evic- tion proceedings initiated against him. Since that tiie, he has continued to pay $t60 for rent, except that he has paid it into escrow rather than to Tower Plaza. A court date had ailready v set when Tower Plaza dcidct to became judge and ary by themselves by locking Mr. Cal- ler out of his apartment ie management has been arroga. t in this matter; their attitude has been that they are merely try- ing to speed up the court pro- cess. They have also attempt/d to justify taking the lawi to their own hands by making rats- er scandalous charges -.>ut his desirability as a tenaCn cain- ing they could not allow him to live there anymore. There are two issues involv- ed here: the callous y vss with which David Culler was put n the street and the delibrate cir- cumventing of the legal process by the Tower Plaza manage- ment. The first issue, while it- portant, is only one more indi- cation of the tendency of man- agement companies to p 1 a c e profits above the welfara of ten- ants. The second issue is some- what more important. Te oily protection that tenants have from the whims of these cor- porations are their righ.s a guaranteed by law. "I was going to make it a Supreme Court case " s a ; d Mr. Culler. When David Culler fights his eviction, he helps every tenaet and deserves our support. Larry Cooperman is a member of the Ann Arbor Tenants Union.