Thursday, June 10, 1976 tHE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Judge delays release of tenant funds to Reliable By MICHAEL. YEII.IN District Court Judge Richard Robinson ruled that $2.000 with- held by striking tenants w dould not be released to Reliable Real- ty owner Edith Epstein until the house in question was thorough- ly repaired. The ruling stipu- lates that the hotise be re-in- spected by the city and then be approved upon inspection by a judge. The visting judge from Ilo- well also ruled in favor of the tenants counterclaim, awarding them $975 in damages incurred while living in the Epstein house. THE DECISION to have the house reinspected by first the city and then a judge came af- ter three days of tenant testi- many. After visiting the house yes- terday, Chief IHousing Inspector Bill Yadlosky acknowledged that the premises was not tip to code and admitted that this was the second Epstein house reinspect- ed and found to be in violation of the housing code. The city plans on reinspecting all the Epstein houses in answer to complaints by tenants. One of the striking tenants and an Ann Arbor Tenant Union (TU) organizer, Kim Kimberlee, commented, "We are pleased that a judge will come out to inspect the house to make sure all the repair work is done and liim gt:sd the housing inspectors have wised ip toi Epstein and will reinspect her houses thor- oughts-." Itut. 'We are not happy with the oonetary settle- ntett, we feel we should have gotten a fIll rebate at least for the six neeks the bathroom wasn't working' TilE EIGHT tenants living at 736 S. State represented them- selves throughout the four day trial Kimberlee now believes self-representation to be a "rea- so nable tternative" to paying a lavyer ecautse tenants "know the conditions of their house bet- ter and hose a real stake in the matter." Attorney for the Epstein's, William Raymer. commented that Robinson, "recognized the tenants cotmplaints.' in his deci- sion but the house at 736 S. State was "not as had as people would have you believe." There is still no end in .iiht to the five-month old TU strike against Reliable Realty. Now more than halfway through with 19 court cases, the two parties remain firmly split over the issue of rent control. TU has de- manded a long lasting agree- ment by Epstein to a TU pro- posed rent c o n t r ol program which the landlord has refused to agree to. She also refuses to sit down to bargain for settlement unless the rent con- trol issue is dropped. Strumming out the blues Guitarist Joe Young strums out some of that good ol' blues music last night at Second Chance. Srian advance stopped BEIRUT, Lebanon () - Palestinian There was no indication whether the has been estimated at up to 12,000 gutrrillas dud Lebanese leftists yester- Soviet warning was meant also for Syria Fierce battles between pro-Syriac day halted Syria's armored drive into and other Arabs. anti-Syrian guerrillas and between Whie House hassle Iebaion, claiming they knocked out or tiaras and Moslems rated on in R Smen. in and Chris- 3eirt You can try to fight City Hall or write to your congressman if youve got a gripe, but don't complain to the White House unless you're prepared to face the consequences. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has ac- cused the Secret Service of being "a bit trigger happy" about sending peo- ple for psychiatric examinations when they bring a complaint to the President. In a suit filed Tuesday, the ACLU re- quested $300,000 in damages for a Phil- adelphia man who claims he was il- legally arrested at the White House and hustled off to a mental hospital a year ago after he tried to find out what had happened to a letter he sent to President Ford. The man was released from the hospital two days later after being found sane. An ACLU spokesper- son said that the organization had been, contacted by a number of other persons who had been detained for psychiatric examination after appearing at the White House to voice complaints. Happenings... at 7:00 the UM sky divers will hold their first jump course at 1024 E. Engineering ... there will be a GEO Steward's Council meeting at 7:30 in the E. Conference Rm. of Rackham ... at 8:00 in the Community Rm. of the Ann Arbor Library, there will be a meet- ing inaugurating a five-week campaign for an ideal society in Ann Arbor ... the play The North Beach Gang will be on tonight at 8:00 in the RC And. Weather or not It will continue to be hot and mug- - with a high today of 92. Skies will be clear and sunny and the winds will be light. Tonight's low will be near 60t and there is a 20 per cent chance of rain. captured 45 Syrian tanks in the three-day battle. Syria called a cease-fire and said token Algerian and Libyan units were on their way to Lebanon to help police it. THE SOVIET Union called for an im- mediate cease-fire and warned other na- tions not to interfere in Lebanon, the official Soviet news agency Tass report- ed. The statement noted that France has offered to send troops to Lebanon and that the U.S. Navy has sent ships to the area. "The Soviet Union is forced to declare . . . that the Middle East is much closer to the Soviet Union than to those who issue such threats," Tass said. "In any case, the Soviet Union is not less inter- ested in how the situation in Lebanon and around it develops . . . Nobody should lose sight of this." IN WASHINGTON, President Ford said of the Syrian action, "We're against any outside intervention." In response to an- other quetsion, he said he thought Syria had intervened "to get a political settle- ment." Israeli officials termed the fighting a "major international war" but did not indicate what action, if any, was planned by Israel. Two major Syrian thrusts-east of Bei- rut on the Damascus highway and south at the ancient port city of Sidon-were stopped, at least for the time being', by unexpectedly s t r o n g resistance from Yasir Arafat's guerrillas and their allies in the Lebanese Moslem-leftist alliance led by Kamal Jumblatt. SYRIA SAID a third column in north- ern Lebanon was stopped at Tripoli, 40 miles north of Beirut. The Syrian force and the capital was wracked with shell- ing. Palestinian spokesmen reported- more than five killed and 1,200 wounded in the intraguerrilla war since Sunday. The Moslem-controlled Beirut Radio said Syrian jets twice bombed and strafed the Ein el-Helweb Palestinian refugee camps near Sidon, 25 miles south of Beirut, killing 12 persons and wound- ing five. A Syrian spokesman in Damascus said Syrian forces began observing a cease- fire yesterday afternoon. But Western correspondents said Syrian tank and troop reinforcements continued to roll toward Beirut. The spokesman said "symbolic units" of Algerian and Libyan troops would arrive in Damascus last night. He said a joint military committee would be formed to police the cease-fire in Leb- anon. Pierce hits govt. waste in Diag speech By BARBARA ZAHS Democratic Congresional hopeful Ed- ward Pierce yesterday criticized what he termed the "tremendous a m o u n t of waste" in government spending and urged the nation's leaders to become more responsive to needs of the people before a small Diag gathering. Pierce, vying for the Second Congres- sional District seat being vacated by Rep. Marvin Esch (R-Ann Arbor), stress- ed defense spending, health care and economic justice in his remarks. "I'M TRYING to change the national priorities of our country," he told the sweltering crowd. Pierce blasted the government for over-spending on defense, citing the $106 billion defense spending bill approved Tuesday by the House Appropriations Committee as an example. The measure was reported to be the single largest money bill ever passed. He suggested that the government spend the money on what he considers to be more useful programs, such as national health care. PIERCE, 46, a physician who left pri- vate practice and founded the Summit Medical Center, a facility catering to low income members in the community, insisted that people should not have to "go bankrupt getting proper medical care." "I don't think it's right that a person's pocket should determine the quality of medical care he gets," Pierce said. He called for the establishment of a national health care program to provide proper medical treatment for those re- quiring it, adding that medical care for all is part of his "economic justice" pro- gram. "ECONOMIC JUSTICE means that everybody in our society who partici- pates - men, w o m e n, and children - should have decent housing, food, edu- cation, and medical care," Pierce ex- plained. "Nobody in this country should be de- nied an education on the basis of a lack of wealth," he said. To attain this goal of economic justice, Pierce suggested that Congress work to tackle the problems of unemployment and inflation. See PIERCE, Page 10