The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 27, 1989 - Page 3 Pierce takes the 5th before House panel Ann Arbor homeless plan WASHINGTON (AP) - Citing his constitutional right against self- incrimination, former Department of Dousing and Urban Development secretary Samuel Pierce, Jr. refused to answer questions yesterday from a House panel investigating housing scandals. He contended that he had been "prejudged by this body." Pierce, compelled to appear by a subpoena, accused the subcommittee of trying to rush him into testifying without adequate preparation and said he hoped to tell his story later. His refusal to testify came at a dramatic meeting of a panel that has been investigating allegations of bil- lions of dollars worth of fraud, mis- rtanagement, influence peddling and political favoritism at HUD, which Pierce had headed throughout the 1Meagan administration. Disagreements between the sub- dommittee and Pierce even extended tb news coverage of the hearing. I ierce invoked House rules that forced subcommittee chair Tom Lantos (D-Calif.) to bar television, radio and photographic coverage, de- spite Lantos's complaint that the move was unwarranted. Pierce read a brief statement say- ing he had not had time to prepare, did not have the HUD documents he needed and would invoke his consti- tutional right not to testify. Lantos then posed eight questions to Pierce, some raising new sugges- tions of political influence involving HUD and the Reagan White House. Pierce delivered the same re- sponse to each of the eight ques- tions, a brief sentence citing his rights and his attorney's advice. He sat expressionless, facing the panel. As members criticized his refusal to testify, he occasionally closed his eyes and shook his head slightly. "The subcommittee's desire to rush me through this process, to- gether with various statements made by members ... leads me to the painful conclusion that I have been prejudged by this body," Pierce said. D.C. march Local contingent hopes to make mark in Washington Associated Press Former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Samuel Pierce leaves a hearing investigating HUD scandals on Capitol Hill yesterday. Pierce refused to answer questions during the hearing, citing his Fifth Amend- ment right against'self-incrimination. T he aftermath of hurricanes Local groups still fight effects of 1988's Hurricane Gilbert by Ken Walker I In Charleston, South Carolina, life is returning to normal after the dimage left in Hurricane Hugo's wake. As of August, however, people *n Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula were still dealing with the aftereffects of Hurricane Gilbert's landfall nearly a y4ar ago. Students from the Universities of Michigan and Wisconsin spent six weeks last summer trying to help tie Yucatan village of Dzidzilche re- cover from the disaster. "These people were starving to bgin with, and homeless after the storm hit," said LSA junior Marian Caplan, a Michigan member of the Wisconsin-based Yucatan Relief Fuid. Caplan has traveled to the Yucatan with the student group three times. The poorest citizens of the area were hardest hit by the hurricane, Caplan said. Many citizens of Progresso, a city of roughly 30,000 ople on the Mexican coastline, live in tarpaper shacks erected on garbage dumps or in swamps sur- rounding the city. Univ. of Wisconsin-Green Bay lumanities Prof. David Galaty, said he saw these shanties torn to shreds dtiring his November 1988 visit to the area. He later formed the Yucatan Relief Fund to aid the poverty- stricken families left homeless by the storm. Money was raised for aid through bucket drives, presentations, and other fund-raising projects. Galaty organizes trips to Dzidzilche and Progresso every year; he has traveled to the Yucatan with Wisconsin students since 1977. The original purpose of the group was to expose students to rural Mexican culture. On these trips, Galaty said the money raised by the fund is spent within the Yucatan on relief projects to avoid any loss to corrupt individ- uals in the Mexican government. He noted some examples of misalloca- tion of aid, including a promise by the Mexican government to dis- tribute food aid to people left home- less by the hurricane. The advertised aid turned out to consist of two cans of cooking oil for a town of 10,000 people. Galaty also said eggs donated to the government for victims of the disaster were sold to local supermar- kets, and tarpaper donated for repair of shanty homes in the poverty- stricken area disappeared from a gov- ernment warehouse. This sort of corruption prevented much of the money raised by non- profit organizations in the United States from being distributed to the victims of Hurricane Gilbert. Galaty said the lack of assistance from the Mexican government largely ac- counts for the area's slow recovery. During the past year, the organi- zation has distributed roughly $4,000 in aid, including the distribu- tion of eyeglasses gathered in the U.S., the establishment of an eye clinic in the area, and the improve- ment of area homes. Caplan said her last two trips to the Yucatan - in December, 1988, and August, 1989 - have also involved work to repair homes damaged by Gilbert last year. Clean-up conti; wrath of Hurri CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) - Tap water became safe, some stores reopened yesterday and a ton of cat-+ fish was on its way to ease the plight of this city's hurricane sur- vivors, but 80 percent remained' without power and stricken outlying areas grew desperate. Generators and other necessities poured into this historic port from around the nation. The Mississippi Agricultural Department arranged to send a ton of donated catfish along with cooks to fry it and serve it with hush puppies, the region's beloved cornmeal side dish. While Charleston regained some services, the picture was bleaker in isolated areas. "We have no ice, no lights and we're low on batteries," St. Stephen Mayor Bobby Hoffman said. "Everything is funnelled to Charleston, but we had a hurricane, too. People are desperate. They're going to panic." He said roads were still blocked by downed trees, making it impossi- ble to reach some people in the town of about 2,000 bordering the Francis Marion National Forest north of Charleston. "We can't get to their houses to see even if they're still alive or not," Hoffman said. All travel expenses are paid by the members of the group to assure that every penny they raise goes to the needy in the area. The Fund will continue poverty relief work in the area after the re- covery from Hurricane Gilbert is complete. Caplan admits that the Fund's efforts are limited and local- ized, but she said, "Even if we can only help 60 or 100 families, that's 60 more families that won't get wet when it rains." nues after cane Hugo Some other towns and the barrier islands had similar problems, offi- cials said. Hugo and its remnants killed at least 33 people in the Caribbean and 28 on the U.S. mainland, including 17 in South Carolina. Charleston schools remained closed for at least another week; some colleges in the area plan to open Monday. Charleston Harbor reopened to limited ship traffic Tuesday, and some traffic lights in Charleston and in nearby Mount Pleasant were working. Residents climbed onto roofs to repair shingles under a sunny sky, while others shopped in grocery stores opened for the first time. Rain that was predicted held off. "They're cleaning the trees out of the streets. We're going to get along with the help of the Lord," said John Gale, whose house col- lapsed when hurricane Hugo swept through South Carolina on Thursday night and Friday morning. President Bush yesterday ex- panded his earlier disaster declaration to include five more South Carolina counties, bringing to 12 the number eligible for federal money in the state. Banks began offering low-in- terest loans to those ineligible for federal aid. by Tara Gruzen Daily City Reporter Homelessness is not an isolated problem in Ann Arbor. It is not something to worry about only in large cities such as New York, Los Angeles or Detroit. And it is not something that can be ignored by the federal government, say organizers of the National March for Housing Now, which will be held Oct. 7 in Washington, D.C. "President George Bush and (Secretary of Housing and Urban Development) Jack Kemp have said' they are serious about affordable housing, but haven't put aside any money yet," said Michael Appel, one of the Ann Arbor coordinators of the march. "They are just words without money." The rally, expected to draw be- tween 1/2 million and a million people, will be made up of a large number of homeless people, said Verna Spayth, an organizer of the Ann Arbor constituency. Ann Arbor is planning to send two buses to the march, one of which will be subsidized by contri- butions in order to send homeless people to the march. Working with the Detroit Hous- ing Now Project, Ann Arbor orga- nizers of the march have raised ap- proximately $700-$1,000 from indi- viduals, community groups and church groups, Appel said. The American Friends Service Commit- tee has promised to match every dol- lar raised by the Detroit Housing Now Project, assuring at least POLICE Continued from Page 1 brought through City Council members to enforce the laws, we have no choice." A noise violation occurs when a sound can be recorded after 8:00 p.m. at a level greater than 60 decibels from the edge of a potential viola- tor's property line. According to Ann Arbor's 15th District Court, University students Jason Brindel, an LSA senior; Lance Pacernick, an LSA senior; and Robert Sheppard, an engineering ju- nior, were charged with noise viola- tions. Records indicate that Brindel and Pacernick were arraigned on Monday and entered pleas of not guilty. Their pre-trial examinations are set for Oct. 10. Student Legal Services will be $1,400 to subsidize the bus, he said. Although Spayth said the bene- fits of sending homeless people to the march are not tangible objects like new curtains or sheets for a shelter, she said going to Washing- ton will. provide homeless people, who feel completely out of the mainstream, with a sense of hope and power. According to information dis- tributed by the Ann Arbor organizers of the march, the fair market rent price for a one-bedroom apartment is $479, whereas the maximum aid to a family with dependent children (three people total) is $321. This discrepancy in numbers is what has to be addressed by the fed- eral government because it is oftenr impossible for people with aid to find affordable housing, Appel said. Information about the Local Housing Now march will be dis-, tributed in the Fishbowl today be- tween 9:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m, Buses will be leaving Ann Arbor for Washington at 6:45 p.m. on Oct. 6 and will be returning in the morning on Oct.8. "We're going to drive till we march, march till we drive, and drive till we drop," said Spayth. Full price for the bus is $50, but people who are interested but cannot pay the full price should talk to Ann Arbor organizers about receiving par- tial aid. For anyone who is unable to go to Washington but would like to support the march, there will be a send-off rally at the First Baptist Church Oct. 6 at 6:00 p.m. representing Pacernick, and probably Brindel as well. SLS would not comment on the cases. Sheppard, who was arraigned yes- terday, pleaded guilty and was fined $80. He plans to split the fine with his housemates. Residents of Arbor Street said they don't deserve to be ticketed. "It's bogus," Pacernick said, "We were having a party, but it was not a noisy party." Brindel said there was no music being played at his house and he re- ceived a ticket anyway. Brindel's housemate, LSA senior Susan Carlson, said, "I would like to know who we were bothering. We have Blue Front on one side and neigh- bors on the other. Blue Front was certainly enjoying the business ands our neighbors were having a party, too." THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Meetings student Chapter of the National Association of Environmental Professionals mass meeting at 5 p.m. in room. 1040 Dana Building Women in Communications - imass meeting; 4:10 in 2050 Frieze Building UM Asian Student Coalition - meets at 7 p.m. in 2413 Mason Hall Earth Day Organizational Committee - mass meeting at 7 p.m. in Rm. 1040 of the Dana Building Mill Street Cinema - meeting to pick films at 6 p.m. at Hillel Furthermore ECB writing peer tutors available - 7 to 11 p.m. at Angell-Haven and 611 computing centers; Sunday through Thursday Club Heidelberg - Abraham Nixon with Mr. Largebeat Existence School of Education Support Staff Coffee Hour - 8:30-10 a.m. in 1211 SEB "Immobilized Enzymes"- an analytical seminar by Yingqi Wang, Department of Chemistry: Career Planning & Placement programs - Business Opportunities with a Liberal Arts Degree, 4:10 to 5 p.m. at the CP&P Rm.; Resumes that Work: The Employer's Perspective 5:10 to 6 p.m. in the CP&P Library Safewalk - Night-time walking service, seven days a week, 102 UGLi, 8 p.m. to midnight, 936- 1000 Pre-Interviews - Apple Computer, 6:30-8:30 at 1200 EECS; General Electric, 5:15 to 7:15 at 1500 EECS; Conoco, 6:30-8:30 at 1003 EECS Technology and the Workplace - a seminar with Susan Schurman and Dan Hoffman; 3:30 to 5 p.m. at 1005 Dow Chem. Bldg. Senior Portraits - portraits will be taken from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. on the 2d floor of the Union Impact Dance - first workshop for the dance troupe (geared to beginners/intermediates) will be held from 9 to 10:30 in the Union Ballroom "A Non-Traditional Perspective on the Undergraduate Experience" - an informal brown bag lunch and discussion; noon to 1:30 p.m. at the Center for the Continuing Pduetion of Wnmen at the trner Become a Daily Photographer! L A f. . . . . L( I a