Group demands low-cost housing The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, November 22, 1988- Page 3 Court may delay *BY TARA GRUZEN Ann Arbor is in a housing crisis and the city must provide adequate low-cost housing for all its citizens, members of the Homeless Action Committee told the Ann Arbor City Council last night. ; "If you deny decent housing to all people, you have denied your right to office," HAC member Renuka Uthappa, a University LSA senior, told the councilmembers. "The city government does not lack the resources to end home- lessness. It lacks the will," HAC members said in a list of demands presented to the council. Yet Councilmember Terry Martin (R-Third Ward) said the city already provides many homeless shelters. She said there is currently a great deal of subsidized housing in the area and that many of the homeless in Ann Arbor are actually people who are not from the area but who are here because of all Ann Arbor offers in terms of shelters. "I resent demands," Martin said. "There's got to be a time when peo- ple take a little more responsibility for themselves." Both Mayor Gerald Jernigan, a Republican, and Councilmember Jeff Epton (D-Third Ward) said the HAC demands didn't show a complete awareness of what the city is already doing in terms of increasing low- cost housing. "Some of the things Kennedy'S *BY SCOTT LAHDE The assassination of John F. Kennedy, one of the United States' most inspirational presidents, means a great deal to people who were alive on November 22, 1963. Twenty-five years ago today, on a sunny Dallas afternoon, Lee Harvey Oswald murdered Kennedy. But his memory lives on, through the tragic accounts from parents and friends who were alive for the event that shook the world. Many citizens remember Ken- nedy's idealistic family and his "New Frontier" plan for the nation. But those who watched him speak 28 years ago on the steps of the Mich- igan Union remember him for creating the Peace Corps. At the Union, Kennedy unveiled his idea for the Peace Corps to an enthusiastic crowd of more than 10,000 students who had been wait- ing hours for him to speak. KENNEDY formed the organi- zation to allow experienced Ameri- can citizens to share their knowledge by traveling to developing countries, helping with their education, agri- culture, health, and trade. When Kennedy finally addressed the crowd in the middle of the night, he urged students to join the Peace Corps. "How many of you who are go- we simply can't do," Jernigan said. Epton said he was happy that HAC came to the meeting because concern about the homeless can slip into the background. However, "they can raise the issue without being so adversial," he said. "They should be less confronta- tional and more consistent." Uthappa said homelessness in Ann Arbor, as well as nationally, is on the rise. In 1987, 800 people came to Ann Arbor shelters. In the first nine months of 1988, there were 800 people who came to Ann Arbor shelters and there were a total of 88 beds available in all of the shelters combined. The demands of HAC, which re- quested a response from the council by Dec. 2, are as follows: -the city must establish a perma- nent site for the day shelter; -the city must make no further plans for private or city development projects until preparations and a bud- get allocation are made for the con- struction of an adequate number of low-cost housing units; -a city council majority must pass a resolution making the con- struction of low-cost housing the city's first priority; and -the city must make provisions for an additional emergency night shelter that will serve clients this winter and which could later be con- verted into a restoration center. toxics ci BY ED KRACHMER The ongoing legal saga between the State of Michigan and a local manufacturing firm may well delay toxic waste site cleanup statewide, as a result of a circuit court hearing to be held Nov. 30. Gelman Sciences, Inc., an Ann Arbor manufacturer of industrial fil- tration products, requested the hear- ing to halt Michigan Department of Natural Resources cleanup programs until specific rules for waste site identification are established. It will be the latest step in the dispute between the firm and the DNR over groundwater contamina- tion near its plant. LAST YEAR, the DNR ranked Gelman the second worst toxic polluter in the state under the Environmental Response Act. Gelman alleges that the DNR failed to hold a public hearing on the pollution list and failed to imple- ment formal rules for the distribu- tion of money for toxic waste cleanup. In a ruling last month, Washte- naw County Circuit Court Judge Patrick Conlin ruled in favor of Gelman, but the battle wages on. Edward Levitt, special counsel for Gelman, said the company will seek court action restraining the DNR from carrying on further toxic waste site identification and cleanup until procedural rules are established. Such a ruling would also impact environ- mental programs. THE DEMAND that the DNR discontinue its Environmental Re- sponse Act activities, said Assistant Attorney General Edward Reichel, is beyond the scope the original suit filed by Gelman. ean-up Two years ago, 16 families re- portedly had their well water contaminated by 1,4-dioxane, a by- product of Gelman's work, which is a carcinogenic compound, according to county health authorities. The state was forced to supply the fami- lies with bottled water until munici- pal water lines could be re-routed to their area. Gelman paid the state a portion of the expenses, but not all. The 16 families affected have filed a lawsuit against Gelman, but that court case will not be heard in the near future. IN A SEPARATE lawsuit, the State of Michigan is seeking to order Gelman to clean up the con- taminants near its west-of-Ann Arbor facility, reimburse the state for its expenses from the 1986 incident, and pay for any damage the company may have caused to the state's natural resources. Gelman contests the charge. Levitt said the state has not been able to prove that Gelman is responsible for all the damage in the nearby aquifer. However, Levitt said, "To the extent that Gelman has con- tributed to (the damage), Gelman has stood ready to clean it up." Levitt said the state has repeatedly rejected Gelman's offers to clean up portions of the waste which they feel responsible for. He called the state uncooperative by demanding a full cleanup plan, which would include, according to Levitt, cleanup of non, Gelman related dioxane pollution. Reichel said Gelman has submit- ted no studies to prove it is not the sole dioxane polluter in the area. He said a lot of the data collected around the site showed that Gelman was re- sponsible for most of the waste. - The Associated Presi contributed to this report Fraud trial Associated Press Former presidential aide Oliver North leaves Federal Court in Washington yesterday. U.S. District Judge Gerhard Gessell told one of North's attorneys that he was going to try his client and three co-defendants on fraud. peace corps legacy lives on tention and the support of youth... [as] a way in which you could do something for your country." Critics of Kennedy's administra- tion say despite his popularity, he was not an effective president. In fact, Grassmuck cites the Peace Corps was one of Kennedy's few ac- complishments. "When it comes to foreign pol- icy, it's hard to find a great deal that he achieved, except the Peace Corps," Grassmuck said. TODAY'S Peace Corps receives little media attention, and it has suf- fered a gradual decline since it was created. But while it now has only 5,700 members and lacks some of the original enthusiasm infused by Kennedy, it continues to assist un- derdeveloped countries as Kennedy planned. The Reagan Administration has recently endorsed a five-year growth plan which will expand the Peace Corps' budget, which could once again place10,000 volunteers around the globe by 1990. Alice Cooper, the Peace Corps' Detroit Area Manager, cited some of the group's recent achievements: "Because of the level at which Peace Corps has worked overseas, we have begun to be the prototype for a lot of international development pro- grams." File Photo Former President John F. Kennedy stands on the steps of the Michigan Union in 1960, announcing the creation of the Peace Corps. Americans nationwide are remembering Kennedy today on the twenty-fifth anniversary of his assasination. t t F k ing to be doctors are willing to spend your days in Ghana?" he asked. "On your willingness to con- tribute part of your life to this country, I think, will depend the an- swer to wehther a free society can compete." The popular reception and re- sponse to the Peace Corps sparked a nationwide interest in the new orga- nization. By June, 1964, the organi- zation had more than 10,000 volun- teers in 46 countries. UNIVERSITY Political Sci- ence Prof. George Grassmuck, chief of research for the Nixon-Lodge campaign in 1960, credits Kennedy with much of the Peace Corps' suc- cess. Kennedy "held (the Peace Corps) very closely into the White House," Grassmuck said. "It caught the at- 'U' helps schools fight child'. abuse, CORRECTION Dr. Barbara Argumedo, chair of the Hispanic Alumni Council, was mis- identified and misquoted in Friday's Daily. Her statement should have read, "(Students) should not have to interrupt their studies in 1988 to bring to the Board's (of Regents) attention concerns the University is paying others to address." Dallas recalls THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Speakers Technology and Third World - John Vandermeer (Biology), Vern Terpstra (Bus. Admin.), 1005 Dow, 3:30-5 pm. "Geochemistry of the Lower Crust of Mexico" - Joaquin Ruiz, University of Arizona, 4001 C.C. Little, 4 pm. Coffee and cook- ies, 3:30 pm. 'Man and Earth in the Distant Past I" - Prof. Ernst Katz, 1923 :Geddes Ave., 8-9:45 pm. "Properties, Applications and Short Stories on Median Type Filters" - Prof. Neal C. Gallagher, 1200 EECS, 4:30-6 pm. "Report from Zouping County, Shandong Provine" - Poli Sci Prof. Michel Oksenber, Lane Hall Commons, 12 noon. United Asian Organizations - Trotter House, 4 pm. Shotokan Karate Club of Michigan - CCRB Martial Arts Rm., 7-8:30 pm. U of M Fencing - Practice, Hill Coliseum, 7 pm. Women's Action for Nuclear Disarmament - 2209 Michigan Union, 7-8:30 pm. Lesbian and Gay Rights Orga- nizing Committee - 3100 Michigan Union, 8 pm. Public Relations Club - Welker Rm., Michigan Union, 4:30 pm. Tagar: Pro Israel Student Activist - Dominick's, 5 pm. U of M Archery Club - Coli- seum, 7-10 pm. Call 764-4084 for more info. Kennedl Dallas (AP) - Hundreds of people came to the John F. Kennedy Memorial in downtown Dallas yes- terday as the city where he was killed 25 years ago prepared to mark the anniversary. On Sunday, 30 former Green Berets and 150 onlookers gathered at the memorial to re-member Kennedy. The members of the U.S. Army1 Special Forces wore their berets-the; ones Kennedy had authorized in 1961 - as they saluted four wreaths laid at the memorial. At Parkland Memorial Hospital, where Kennedy was taken after being shot, a roundtable discussion was planned for today with five doctors and nurses who were at the hospital when the president arrived. Also today, Dallas-area painters, poets, performance artists and musicians planned a series of ex- hibits and live performances at the Texas Theater, where assasin Lee Harvey Oswald was apprehended only hours after the assasination. At Dealey Plaza, where Kennedy was shot, a small American flag with a bouquet of flowers lay in front of a plaque, about 200 yards from the memorial and across the street from the Texas Book Depository Building, where authorities say Oswald fired from a sixth-floor window into Kennedy's motorcade. The attention given to the 25th anniversary has aroused more interest than usual in the site, said Gary Mead, who drove one of several tour buses that stopped at the memorial yesterday. Police Continued from Page 1 approached by Rabahi, police said. Sgt. John King said the woman told police Rabahi introduced himself and she voluntarily got into his car where the assault occurred. Heath said the woman reported the alleged assault to the police, and Rabahi was arrested shortly there- after. The woman told police she did not know Rabahi, Heath said. The man is not believed to have committed any of the recent string of Ann Arbor or campus-area rapes, Heath said. death BY SCOTT CHAPLIN Child abuse. While some cases are very obvious to educators, others are very difficult to detect, says William Mays, executive director of the Michigan Elementary and Mid- dle School Principals Association. A new booklet will help school officials identify potentially abused children and report their suspicions to the proper authorities. Statistics fail to tell the human stories and tragedies of these chil- dren and substantially understate the actual number, because not all cases are detected, Mays said. Child abuse can lead to life-long physical and emotional injuries for the victims, and may lead to abusive behavior by the victim towards future generations of chil- dren, said Philip Kearney, associate School of Education dean. In -1986, said University Associate Education Prof. Charles Vergon, author of the booklet, there were 28,000 substantiated cases of child abuse or neglect. Educators, he said, have a unique opportunity to help protect children from ne- glect and abuse because of their daily contact. Since 1975, Michigan law has required all teachers and school administrators to report to the local division of Protective Services if they have reasonable cause to be- lieve a child is being abused or neglected at home. Non-Stop Copy Shop Whenever you need copies, depend on Kinko's, the 24 hour copy center. kinko'rs the copy center 540 E. Liberty 7614539 1220 S. University 747-9070 Michigan Union 662-1222 Call 764-0557 The law has ambiguities which this guide is designed to clarify, said Don Elliot, the executive dir- ector of the Michigan Association of School Ad-ministrators. Elliot's group, along with MEMSPA, the School of Education and another Michigan school administrator group published the pamphlet. The guide, called "The Educator's Guide to Child Abuse and Neglect Reporting," identifies the common warning signs of abuse or neglect and outlines the investigative and legal procedures for reporting. In addition, it details the penalties for failing to report. CLASSIFIED ADS! Furthermore Meetings Islamic Coffee Hour - 1003 ;American Institute of EECS, 12:30-1:30 pm. Aeronautics and Astronautics Revolutionary History Series I II I If it