Seventy-nine years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. 'Happiness is University Hovels' THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1970 NIGHT EDITOR: NADINE COHODAS Flemings double jeopardy "UP AGAINST the wall," a favorite SDS slogan in past years, has suddenly become something very real for the local chapter of the group. It happened Tues- day when President Robben Fleming calmly instituted his triple punch, aim- ed at the repression of the Ann Arbor SDS. Fleming apparently feels that he is un- der no pressure to exercise restraint and, in fact, he has the support of much of the University community. However, in seeking action through the civil courts, CSJ and the literary college, he is raising two issues with broader implications than the immediate disturbances. First, there is the question of double jeopardy. Yesterday in a press confer- ence, Fleming cited legal support for his position, saying the present situation pos- ed no problems. Such a statement hardly sounds like the same Robben Fleming who last sum- mer criticized a Senate bill to cut off aid to demonstrators. "Ordinary citizens who are convicted suffer one penalty," Fleming said. "Students suffer a double penalty - one imposed by the law upon conviction and the other by withdrawal of financial aid. However great our dif- ficulties, I do not believe we want to widen the generation gap in this fashion." Now, by prosecuting students b o t h through the courts and LSA, Fleming is posing the same problem which last sum- mer he said he wanted to avoid. THE SECOND issue which Fleming's action, raises is an even more basic one, that of student control of non-aca- demic affairs. Fleming claims that the in- cidents were academic violations 'as well as civil ones. It is hard to see, though, how dumping a can of paint on a Navy recruiter or smashing glass at N o r t h Hall relates to the academic integrity of those involved. Since the action basically falls out- side the academic realm, University ac- tion, if any, should be left to the stu- dents. This is precisely how the whole bylaws debate got started. If, as seems likely, the case in the lit- erary college goes to the Administrative Board of the college, all the previous theoretical discussion about student con- trol of non-academic affairs will sud- denly take on a very real and immediate importance. FLEMING CLAIMS to be seeking peace on the campus. But through his ac- tions Tuesday and by ignoring the causes for those actions, Fleming is only further undermining the tranquility he claims tox seek. In his press conference yesterday, Fleming also said that SDS has never en- joyed substantial support from faculty. and students; he is right. However, mak- ing martyrs out of the group by prosecut- ing them with every means at his dis- posal runs the risk of confusing the issues and raising SDS to an unearned position of importance. In one sence, this, in fact, may be his intention. By using a popular action, Fleming may be hoping to win a prece- dent in the battle over the bylaws. Such a roundabout victory must not be allowed to happen. THE STUDENTS have already indicated that they are . ready to resist. SGC postponed a confrontation with the Re- gents on the bylaws issue in favor of the black students. But if Tuesday's repres- sive tactics are continued or increased, it is all but certain that some kind of blow-up will result. As with his statement on double jeo- pardy, Fleming is contradicting himself.. His statements ask for peace, but his ac- tions are a clear invitation for increas- ing conflict. -ROB BIER (EDlITOR'S NOTE: The following is a guest feature by Chiet Kuis who is the President of the Baits Local of the Ann Arbor Tenants Union.) IN THE EARLY days of the rent strike against private landlords in Ann Arbor, a popular button had as its slogan, "Happiness Is University Housing," Times have changed, and so have buttons and attitudes. The red and white Baits Tenant Union button represents the focusing of the struggle for student power on- to the domain of University hous- ing. What began last semester as a residents' demand for rent re- duction has mushroomed into the formation of a Baits local for thie Ann Arbor Tenants Unionr the first AATU local to be established in University housing. A week before the Jan. 30 pay- ment for housing, the BTU voted to endorse a rent strike against Baits. So far, $2,000 has flowed from Baits into the AATU escrow fund. The Baits precedent has motivated other dorms to begin organizing into tenant union lo- cals to demand their rights as student tenants. MOST BAITS residents, as well as residents in other University housing, sought refuge from the high cost of living in Ann Arbor by retreating to University hous- ing. Since the University is the number-one employer, landowner, and landlord in Ann Arbor, isn't the high cost of living here more the fault of the University than any other party? In the bookstore controversy, the University assumed the stance of not wishing to compete with private bookstores. Is the failure of the University to provide low cost, adequate housing for stu- dents another example of the un- holy alliance between the Univer- sity and private interests in Ann Arbor? Since the University housing pays no taxes, is financed through 3 per cent loans and other aid under the federal College Housing Act, and supposedly operates on a non-profit basis, would it not be reasonable to assume that stu- dents generally get a better buy in University housing than from the robber-baron landlords in Ann Arbor? However, such is not the case. CONSIDER BAITS. The litera- ture received from the Office of University Housing described the complex as a "new concept in graduate housing." Approximately 1'200 students live in the ten- building complex on North Cam- pus. Since Baits only includes 'room,' graduate students wishing to sat- isfy a mundane appetite have three choices: high-priced and cold Servomation sandwiches; food from the snackbar which serves the ten-building complex; op- tional meal contracts at Bursley, three blocks away. Baits lacks the dining facilities found in undergraduate dorms and the kitchen facilities found in apartments. Since nearly half of Baits residents live in "doubles," the focus will turn to this gem of University planning. BASICALLY a 12 by 12 foot room shared by two residents, the double has no cooking facilities; and washroom facilities are shared with another double. Students in doubles lack privacy and living space. The ten-building complex has only four lounges, which are not decorated, lack curtains, and are totally depressing. Each man in the double pays $61.25 a month -a total of over $122 a month for one skimpy room. Since the Baits double shares washroom facilities with another double, an enlightening compari- son can be made by considering two doubles together.Four men thus share two. 12 by 12 foot rooms, with one washroom. Still they have no cooking facilities, no privacy, no living space. Total rent: $240 per month! Even the robber-baron landlords of Ann Arbor are more generous than that. For that rent, it would not be uncommon to have a four room apartment, with kitchen fa- cilities and air-conditioning,all of which Baits does not offer. THE OFFICE of University Housing claims that "the high cost of living in Ann Arbor," plus unionization of workers, skyrockets the rent. Private landlords are subject to the same high cost of living and labor costs, in addition to paying taxes and higher interest on their buildings; yet they make a profit, while University housing sup- posedly operates at cost. Whereas in the private sector studentspay for landlord profiteering, in Uni- versity housing they pay for Uni- versity management. In both sectors students tradi- tionally have been forced to accept prefabricated policy decisions in which they had no say and which are against their interests. Mr. Feldkamp claims that Baits rents reflect the high quality con- struction which private. apart- ments admittedly often lack. Four examples can readily be cited to illustrate incompetent planning and mismanagement which event- ually costs students dearly: leaky basements, malfunctioning show- ers, stairwell enclosures, and land- scaping. WHEN BAITS opened, base- ment rooms were flooded every- time it rained. No small construc- tion blunder was involved, since Baits is located on the highest hill in town! Several students in Lee House were again mopping up last week during the weather thaw. Scalding showers which fluctuate in water pressure resulted from the contractor not putting in a third pipe to compensate for toilet use. In order to correct this over- sight (more appropriately, under- sight), the University will install a water reserve tank and shower regulators on each shower, at a cost of $80 per shower! Stairwells at Baits were for some reason constructed as open. The resulting safety hazard, due to ice and snow, plus the corrosion of electrical wiring under the stairwells, made the University enclose them at a cost of several thousand dollars. LAST SUMMER the University hired a landscape firm which did not water the lawn or do any suf- ficient weeding all summer. In- stead of compelling the contrac- tor to live up to his contract, the University did nothing. Although the showers, the stairwells, and the basements are "fixed" with general reserve funds in the hous- ing budget (not Baits funds only). Baitsresidents and other student- tenants must eventually pay for poor University planning and mis- management. Students also pay for policy decisions in which they have nc or little say. North Campus Csm- mons was built with University funds, and whatever loss the pri- vate concessionaire experienced are to be reimbursed by Univer- sity housing. To insure against that eventuality, the concession- aire charges prices which few N o r t h Campus residents can afford. Thus residents built, under the guiding hand of John Feldkamp's Office of University Housing, a white elephant which does not cater its service at all to student- tenants. NORTHWOOD Apartments of- fer married students low-cost, adequate University housing. How- ever, applications are not accepted from single students. While sym- pathetic to the plight of married students, especially those with families, I would question the right of University housing to make such an arbitrary decision. Single students often may be in worse financial straits than mar- ried students, since one spouse may have a fellowship while the other spouse has a full-time job. More importantly, if University housing can provide low-cost housing for married students, why can't it do the same for all stu- dents? IN OUR DISCUSSION with the Office of University Housing, Mr. Feldkamp attempts to channel our attention to the budget. Being de- pendent on figures supplied by the University, we cannot undertake the thorough criticism warranted. As tenants, we only can compare the end product: what we get in University housing compared to what private landlords offer. The Office of University Hous- ing will exhibit the phenomenon of bureaurcratic spiral-spending: their demands for more revenue will be matched only by their mis- appropriation of whatever revenue they receive. MAINTENANCE at Baits poses a peculiar puzzle. Since Bursley has hall washrooms, more recre- ational facilities, and more hall- ways (plus undergraduates who. tend to be a little tougher on fa- cilities than graduate students , one would expect biulding main- tenance at Bursley to be higher. Yet maintenance per resident in Baits I is $63: in Baits II, $61; and in Bursley, $30! While Baits I residents pay $9 for laundry, Baits II pays $16. evident, especially if the Univer- sity should attempt to invoke academic reprisals against rent strikers. A c a d e m i c discipline should not be invoked in none academic matters. If such an attempt is made, the BTU would appeal to other stu- dent groups to support us in re- sisting this abuse of academic power. AS A LAST resort, the AATU is prepared to assist us in taking our case to the courts. Hopefully that type of confron- tation need not arise. While in- sistent that the Office of Univer- sity Housing recognizes the Ann Arbor Tenants Union as the bar- gaining agent for student-tenants at Baits, we will not be inflexible in s our demands. Basically residents at Baits (as wow:. . ..%%t'f v;.}":.;.,;.; v . . . . . . . . ... .., t ": W f The Baits Tenant Union has broken down the door for tenant unions in University housing. University housing could be a really great place to live, provided that it becomes more people- oriented. .. . r .. . .... ... : l: P. 1 ... .. ''. Special services (garbage removal, snow removal, etc.) also fluctuate greatly. Baits I residents pay $39, Baits II residents pay $57, and Bursley 'pay's $13 ! Such discrep- ancies illustrate the nonsense of talking about the budget while ignoring the end product. TRADITIONALLY, University administrators were assumed to be on the side of the students. The bookstore confrontation has shattered that myth. When the BTU complained to Mr. Feldkamp of the deteriorating Servomation service in the complex, he lectured us on how Servomation was los- ing mroney at Baits. . Seemingly University housing exhibits the Midas touch in re- verse-everything it touches loses money ! The Office of University Hous- ing needs a thorough house clean- ing to rid itself of inefficiency and incompetence. For this task John Feldkamp gets paid. How- ever, students must look after their own self-interest. To further their rights as student-tenants many students are forming tenant union locals. Hopefully the trend will continue this year and expand even more next year. THE BAITS rent strike was un- dertaken only after other avenues had come to an impasse. Concern- ing rent schedules, cooking facili- ties, lounge improvements and a host 'of other matters, Mr. Feld- kamp expressed concern but no commitment. The possibility of ,a major con- frontation with the University is elsewhere) demand a better deal for the rent we pay. The proposal to increase Baits rents by $29, without providing cooking facili- ties. or improving facilities and. services, is totally unacceptable. THURSDAY NIGHT at 7:30 Student Government Council will meet in Baits Stanley lounge to discuss University housing in gen- eral and the Baits situation in particular. In addition to taking a firm stand against the Univer- sity invoking academic reprisals against strikers, I would urge SCGO to discuss the three demands given to John Feldkamp in a BTU po- sition paper last semester: That the University recog- nize the right of student ten- ants to collectiYely bargain with the University concerning rent and living conditions in Uni- versity housing. That the Office of Univer- sity Housing negotiate with the Baits Tenant Union equitable rent -reductions. That the University negotiate with student tenant unions broad questions of policy. THE BAITS Tenant Union has broken the door down for tenant unions in University housing. University housing could be really a great place to live, provided that it becomes more people- oriented. People - oriented means power to the 'people, which in University housing means tenant power. The struggle had just begun. The. quota, the state, and the 'U' INTEGRALLY INVOLVED in the con- troversy over boosting minority ad- missions is the problem of instituting a quota system. Although the need is clear for admitting minority group students who would not qualify under current standards, t h e question of a quota system is sensitive- even if it is only introduced temporarily. The quota, while it insures the admission of a certain percentage of students from target-groups, also excludes other "qual- ified" students for reasons over wlhich they have, no control. According to administrators, the Uni- versity has .reached the saturation point in terms of student body size. The ad- mission standards, steadily rising, are also reaching a limit, some say. In this context, the quota offers the only effec- tive method of increasing minority ad- missions. BUT THE PROBLEM isn't solved with the quota alone. Once admitted, minority-group students must be assisted in their adjustment. It is absurd to con- template the admission of additional stu- dents who will then be forced to drop out when caught in a scholastic squeeze for' which they have not been adequately pre- pared. Special financial and counseling aids, study programs oriented to minority cultures, and accelerated recruitment of minority faculty, must also be adopted. On paper, at least, the University h a s already committed itself to these goals. On the other hand, the University must guard against converting its minority programs into educationally-inferior courses of study. The goal is to increase minority admissions into this University, not into a hastily-constructed. Ann Ar- bor based junior college. Beyond this, we are faced with t h e broader question of where the buck is to stop. Is it really the responsibility of one University to rectify the inequalities of the whole state's educational system? The onus, it seems, ought to be on the legislature - where the funds are. And the problem is complicated by the ab- sence in Michigan of the kind of central higher educational system such as exists presently in New York, Florida and Cali- fornia. NEVERTHELESS, IT is too easy to allow these complications to obscure the immediate question. While it is true that thorough-going reform can only take place state-wide, there are still import- ant measures short of such a complete overhaul which the University can and must take. The affluence-education-af- fluence chain must be broken now. --SHARON WEINER LETTERS TO THE EDITOR To the Editor: attemptir THE EDITORIAL in Tuesday's guy" ima a whole. Daily by Henry Grix (A Clarifica- This is tion, an Apology") regarding LSA sit-i Philip Block's article in Saturday's to invok Daily ("Fleming: Witness for the against t Persecution") was a blatant ex- in, in a am..le of manipulation and misuse Fleming of power. Block's article systems- a nonste tically and accurately exposed (In realil Robben Fleming for the liar that such proc he is but Grix, having attended the sit-ir not a single LSA sit-in trial, re- operate a fused to believe that the great have ano liberal Robben Fleming, would hinm.) H resort to such base tactics in an who ward attempt to repress future dissent others wJ on this campus. the trials Many people believe we are very Fleming- fortunate to have a man of Flem- under oa ing's integrity and 'cool-headed- "troublem ness as our President instead of an overt fascist like S. I. Haya- BUT I' kawa, for example. Cool-headed- ing's stra ness, I must admit, Fleming usual- 200-300 p ly has; integrity, he has not. In- Fleming stead of resorting to overt repres- pressive, sion as Hayakawa does, Fleming, scrupulou in a cool and calculating manner, I have y reveals his true, repressive nature lying und to as few people as possible while rid of his Hout on Flemings integrity ng to maintain his "good- age with the campus as n blatantly obvious in the .n cases. By choosing not ke University discipline hose involved in the sit- ddition to civil actions, does not come across as r to most of the campus. iy, he attempted to begin .eedings but gave up when n people refused to co- and he realized he might ther confrontation facing However, the 107 people e busted, along with any xo have attended any of , are exposed to the real -a man who will lie .th in order to put his nakers" in jail. T APPEARS that Flem- tegy is working. For while people know that Robben is perhaps even more re- and certainly more un- s, than Hayakawa (for et to hear of Hayakawa der oath in order to get rebellious students), the majority of campus, still seeing the Fleming of 1968, continue to regard him as a true liberal, And it is people like Grix who perpetuate this myth. I doo not know whether Grix actuallydknows what is going on down at court and wants to keep this from the- campus so the students will not lose complete faith in Fleming, or whether, in his editorial, he spoke from utter ignorance. Grix says that Block's article was "only the interpretation of evidence of the writer" but if he had bothered to come down to court before writing his little piece, he would have realized that it was the out and out truth. Grix states that the article "was not intended to impugn the in- tegraity of the President." I again suggest that if Grix had bothered to observe a trial beforehand, he would havesrealized that Robben Fleming has very little integrity left to impugn. FINALLY, GRIX STATES "The Daily regrets any embarrassment caused to the President by pub- lication of the editorial." In pretending to speak for The Daily, Grix deliberately mis-used his position as Editor of The Daily for his own personal benefit for he did not want to see President Fleming discredited in the eyes of the student body. I sincerely hope that neither, Grix, nor any other Daily Editor attempts to misuse his power in this manner again. As for his doubt as to the truth of Blocks' accusation, I invite Grix to attend my trial on Tuesday, Feb. 17 and see for himself that Robben Flem- ing really does lies under oath. However, the courtroom is not the only place where Fleming's dishonesty and hyprocrisy is ex- posed. Students busted for the sit- in that are receiving State or fed- eral scholarships are in serious danger of losing these scholarships unless Fleming does something about it. Fleming spoke out against the passage of both of these bills last year but when it I W1.R ItOA'5AK l2- I U TJ o DREAM O SAS A 6WkL)P I A 'hST PEOT'- I A COLO6V-t A A-L f-A6 ! M f t I /^ , a ....-. *, * 4 '7 C' These new uniforms a occasions... like spe more than the rich, he should re- fuse to turn in any names and take a stand on this issue-rather than hide behind meaningless words. To say one thing and do another is the act of a hypocrite and so far Fleming has revealed himself to be just that. He has the power personally to continue .or discon- tinue the education of 20' people arrested for protesting over the establishment oF a bookstore. The responsibility for their fu- ture lies directly upon his should- ers. Students will be picketing Fleming's home from noon to 2:00 p.m. on Friday and all those who wish to preserve the right to dis- sent on this campus should be there. People will meet at the SAB before 12:00. Robben Fleming must be made to answer for his ',.. . are only for ceremonial eches against the media titles written by Bill Cusumano. My first complaint has to! dc with a column of his appearing last week dealing with a pick up basketball game .Mr. Cusu- mano participated in. I have ye to discover of dvhat possible inter est to the Daily audience a datail- ed description of such a para- mount athletic contest might be. Second, I take exception to your coverage of the Purdue-Michigan basketball game. I'm as devout a Blue fan as the next guy, but I at- tributed Michigan's loss to- ths facts that Purdue is a better re- bounding team and that they have one of the game's great shooters in Rick Mount. IDO NOT attribute the loss to poor or one-sided officiating, Mr. NOLOt IMA FORTYI. 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