The Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXVI, No. 52-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, July 23, 1976 Ten Cents Sixteen Pages By MIKE NORTON AS THE SUN went down and twi- ple were in the process of being light deepened, men, women and chil- evicted, he said. YP Constant sewage backups, shoddy dren gathered in small, quiet groups "WHAT THEY'RE trying to do is Y D S g ro u maintenance, and poor security mea- on a handball court at Sunridge and force people out and move people sures have plagued the residents of listened as Dennis Galbraith of YTU from St. Joe's Hospital in," he claim- Stinridge Apartments ever since the explained the mechanics of organi- ed. r tYpsilanti Township complex was built. ing a rent strike. The new St. Joseph's Mercy Hospital, p But now, what appears to be a con- "We carried out a successful strike less than a mile away, is in the final certed effort to evict dozens of low- here in 1972," he told them. "We stages of completion. ahe income families and individuals has should be able to do it again." "The management says that people w h o les stirred the tenants to action. Last Poor maintenance and insufficient haven't been paying their rent - but night over 50 of them met with rep- security were part of the picture; ac- tenants have been trying to pay, and resentatives of the Ypsilanti Tenants' cording to Galbraith. But the attempt the management has refused to ac- Union (YTU) and Washtenaw County at wholesale evictions on the part of cept their money," he added. e v ICtIo n S Legal Aid to consider action against the Sunridge management was the ACCORDING TO Galbraith, the Sun- the management of the 382-unit de- main issue. Though it was hard to ridge management - Schostack Bro- velopment. get the exact figures, at least 80 peo- See YPSI, Page 2 Congress enacts job bill Overrides Ford's veto By AP and UPI WASHINGTON - Congress enacted a $3.95 billion public works employment bill yesterday over President Ford's veto but failed to override his veto of a $3.3 billion military construction bill. The House had voted to reject the veto of the military construction bill that Ford said would interfere with his power to close unneeded U. S. military bases. BUT THE SENATE vote on overrid- ing was 51 to 42, or 11 short of the re- quired two-thirds majority. President Ford issued a statement saying he was "keenly disappointed" by the congressional action in enacting the poblic works bill. Ford said Congress is not sufficiently concerned about "the risks of double digit inflation," adding: "it would rather create $4 billion worth of temporary, goernment-funded jobs than let those s-' dollors go to work in the private sector to produce real, rewarding, last- ing jobs." THE HOUSE VOTE on the public serv- ice jobs bill was 310 to 96, or 39 more than the required two-thirds. Only 1S Democrats voted to sustain the veto, while 57 Republicans joined 253 Demo- crats in voting to override. The Senate voted 73 to 24 Wednesday to override, so the House action was final. To override the military construction veto, the House voted 270 to 131, two more than the required two-thirds, with 228 Democrats and 43 Republicans vot- ing to override, 37 Democrats and 94 Republicans to sustain. POLITICAL CHARGES and counter- charges marked the House debate on the Jobs bill, with emphasis on Ford's two-year record of 53 vetoes. This was the ninth veto to be overriden. The legislation authorizes $2 billion for grants to state and local govern- ment for public works that can be storted within nine days. It also au- thorizes $1.25 billion in grants for state and local governments in high unem- ployment areas to maintain essential services and avoid layoffs. Supporters said the bill will create See CONGRESS, Page 2 Daily Photo by SCOTT ECCKER Kayak enthusiasts enjoy a refreshing practice ride on the Huron River yesterday; a smart way to avoid the hot crowds at the Art Fair. CAMPAIGN ISSUES TO BE TELEVISED: Senate caniddates debate By JIM TOBIN special to The Daily GRAND RAPIDS - Seven candidates for the state's soon- to-be-vacant U.S. Senate seat last night tried to turn political rhetoric into substantive issues before television cameras here. Appearing in two separate segments for a program to be aired Sunday on WOTV-Grand Rapids were Congressman Marvin Esch, former Congressman Robert Huber, University Regent Deane Baker, and former Michigan Supreme Court Justice Thomas Brennan-all Republicans. ALSO PRESENT were Congressmen Donald Riegle, Con- gressman James O'Hara and Birmingham lawyer James Els- man--all Democrats. Secretary of State Richard Austin, the fourth Democratic candidate and the front-runner was at a charity event in Detroit. The other Democrats have attacked Austin for not presenting his stands on the issues in a public forum. The candidates emphasized their ideological stance without much focus on legislative issues. Both parties are having dif- ficulty drawing attention to a campaign which is without major emotional issues, and the candidates have been forced to jockey for appeal with proclamations of legislative com- petence, non-politician status, or governmental integrity. The generally calm atmosphere became tense for a moment when a questioner asked Democrat O'Hara to comment on his recent label of Riegle as a "political transvestite." Riegle switched from the Republican party to the Democratic in February 1973. O'Hara said it was merely a rhetorical term, but went on to say that Riegle should have waited awhile to run for the senate, and "establish his credentials as a Demo- crat." O'Hara pointed out that Riegle would cast his first Democratic vote in the upcoming primary. RIEGLE SAID, in fact, he had first voted Democratic in 1970, when he said he voted for Philip Hart over Lenore Romney-the first time he had revealed that fact, he said. O'Hara jumped on Riegle, asking why Riegle had voted for Hart when he had sought the Republican senate nomination See SENATE, Page 2