The Michigan Daily-Friday, September 5, 1980-Page 7-, Eviction, financial woes loom over Paper Chase well. On IJUl 17 Gnrn d fil d fnrUI. bhnj auk i i.;UiI By JOYCE FRIEDEN Robert Gordon, owner of the Paper Chase copying center located in the basement of the Union, is currently running his business while thefdouble threats of eviction and financial problems hang over his head. On March 19, the University filed suit against Gor- don for "termination of tenancy," claiming that he had been operating the store without a lease for nearly a year. BUT GORDON CLAIMED the University intended to re-lease the property to him and continued sending him bills for the rent even after his lease expired on April 30, 1979. "If they did not intend to renew my lease, then why did they send me a rent bill for May?" said Gordon. Gordon then took action, filing a counter-suit against the University on May 2, charging that the University had created a "hostile environement" for the Paper Chase to operate in. "The management is renovating the Union, and they wanted to expedite the termination of our lease," Gordon said of the suit. Earlier in the sum- mer, Gordon said that his disagreements with Union management over the operation of some foosball games had turned his relations with the Union sour. "THE FOOSBALL GAMES (located next door to the shop) needed supervision, and they weren't get- ting it," he explained. So Gordon took matters into his own hands, leasing his own set of foosball games and moving them into the copying center. Union officials soon presented him with an order to remove the games within 30 days, an order with which he prom- tly complied, he said. A District Court ruled in favor of the University in the termination of tenancy suit in early May. Gor- don's attorney has since appealed the case to the cir- cuit court, but no new trial has yet been scheduled, Gordon said. Gordon's damage suit against the University is scheduled to be tried by a circuit court jury next May. Gordon's attorney has asked for the University to pay $300,000 in damages in addition to renewing the Paper Chase's lease for the next five years. IN ADDITION TO his legal struggle, Gordon has been having financial problems with his business as wi. vnHy i, oruonneu zor oan rupcune Chapter 13 of the bankruptcy act. "This does not mean I am liquidating the business," Gordon explained. "There are two kinds of bankruptcy-you either liquidate your business or your reorganize it. I have to submit a plan for reorganization and I don't get any harrassment from my creditors in the meantime." In April of 1979, Gordon received a loan of $135,000 from the Small Business Administration. Gordon has yet to make any payments on the loan. SBA, concer- ned over the non-payment, sent an accountant from. the Detroit accounting firm of Alam, Morris, and Co. to investigate Gordon's business. The report, sent to Gordon July 25, states: "during his first year of operation, Mr. Gordon accumulated debts in excess of $100,000. Considering the size of his enterprise, this is a remarkable amount." The report also stated that "bankruptcy seems inevitable." Despite these problems, Gordon says he would like to continue operating the Paper Chase. "I care about this University, and I think business here could be good. I tried my best, and they gave me an eviction notice. It's a miracle I'm still in operation," he said. University Information Services Photo )EDUCATION PROF. PERCY BATES is holding on to his Ann Arbor home, waiting for his appointment to a directorship in the Department of Education to become more secure. Bates will fly to and from Washington, D.C. until the presidential elections in November. Ed. school prof *traveling to job - wl PT u4 764 ORK ILED UP? rake a Ctg~ in Washington By JULIE ENGEBRECHT Percy Bates is probably hoping Nov. 4 comes soon. But chances are that he'll be busy enough that he won't have time to worry about the approach of election day. le probably won't even think about it while on the plane that shuttles him between Ann Arbor and Washington, D.C. each Monday and Friday. After all-among other things-he's got a $1 billion budget to worry about. mUNTIL, BATES, AN assistant dean and professor in the School of Education, knows who's going to be living in the White House come. January, he will be sitting tight in his Department of Education office. But he's not living in Washington-yet. As the new director of the Office of Special Education, Bates is taking a leave of absence from his job in the School of Education until January. The way he-looks at it, there's no sense in moving lock, stock and barrel to Washington until his job is more secure. Bates would not automatically lose his job if Jimmy Carter is not re- elected. But he was appointed by the Secretary of Education, who would almost certainly be replaced if another presidential candidate were-elected. BATES, 48, ASSUMED the Depar- tment of Education post Aug. 1. "The Secretary (Shirley Hufstedler) called one day and they said there was a osition open," Bates said Wednesday from his Washington office. "My name had been mentioned. I went and talked to the people there," he said. The Office of Special Education is the "federal shop" to monitor activities under the federal special education law, Bates said. Special education deals not only with problems of the handicap- ped, but also serves gifted and talented children. The office was formerly the Bureau of Education for the Handicapped as part of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. Bates' predecessor, Edwin Martin, is his new boss. Martin is the assistant secretary for special educationand rehabilitation services under the newly organized department. BATES IS NOT a newcomer to the special education scene. He has served as assistant dean since 1973, in addition to holding a post as a special education professor. He also directed the School of Education's Special .Education Program. Bates joined the University faculty in 1965 as assistant professor and director of the Mental Retardation Teachter Training Program. Bates said that despite the fiscal crunch being extensively discussed in Washington and elsewhere, special education will be a high priority. At the moment, he said, the office's $1 billion budget hasn't given him too many problems. He wouldn't be surprised, he added, if his office receives a small in- crease once the federal budget is passed. The program's money goes for special education projects sponsored by states, training of special education teachers, developing "media" for the handicapped, and researching new programs such as those for preschool children. WITH THE PRESIDENTIAL elec- tion upcoming, Bates isn't sure how long he'll be with the federal gover- nment. And School of Education of- ficials have not yet decided how to fill his temporarily-vacated position. "I come down Monday on the 8:05 and go back Friday on the 3:30 or 6:15-- depending when I get out of the office," he said, sounding as though he had got- ten used to the idea-for now. bscribe today 4-0558 WOODLANUILS $100 OFF First Month's Rent On 1 Bedroom Apartments 6 or 12 Month Lease * tennis courts * heat included * 24 hour maintenance * conveniently located between Ann Arbor & Ypsilanti 971-2132 4300 Packard MON.-FRI. 96 SAT. & SUN. 11-5 Presented by Mid-America Management 11 Be A Volunteer At University Hospital We Have Something To Offer Yout You Hove Something To Offer Others! 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