A small Wisconsin newspaper spent more than $7,000 to defend itself against a complaint from a man rebuffed by a woman who had advertised for a female roommate. Actually, the woman's ad was legal under HUD regulations (one of the few discriminatory words it allows), and the man in question started harassing the woman for a date after she turned him down as a live-in. Nonetheless, a HUD investigator questioned more than 20 newspaper employees before filing a compulsory eight-page report on the matter.
An Inclusive Litany
1/30/95
Agents from the Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity Office of the
Department of Housing and Urban Development
investigated the Salem, Oregon Statesman-Journal
for publishing a drawing of an Easter bunny in its real-estate section
during the Easter holiday season. The bunny had offended an atheist
who thought it promoted Christianity and was thus
discriminatory. Other word crimes HUD
has ferreted out include the use of "bachelor pad," "mature,"
"singles' paradise" or "exclusive," as well as terms that might
"ghettoize" certain groups: "near synagogue," "near country
club," or "desirable neighborhood."