tc t ttd ganBailt Seventy-eight years of editorial freedom Edited arid managed by students of the University of Michigan under the rug Richard Balzhiser: A tale of two faces by tee ni~u 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 al reprints. _.L__ DNESDAY, MARCH 12, 1969 NIGHT EDITOR: NADINE COHODAS Balzhiser' ordinance: A political -mnue RICHARD E. BALZHISER is a mayoral candidate with as many faces as there are potential voters. Labelled as a "Romney Republican," the former Michigan grid star fancies himself in the image of the former governor, only younger, more moderate, more progressive and successful. Indeed, as a White House 'fellow, Bal- zhiser apparently viewed himself as Ann Arbor's gift to Washington. And when he returned home, he settled in a neighbor- hood which he says even includes a "mixed couple," living up the street. But you can't tell Balzhiser's politics from his address: A "liberal Republican," he hasddoubled alternately as a hawk, cen- sor and reactionary. DURING iIS TWO-YEAR STINT (1965- 67) on city council, he fought a campaign of obstruction and reaction against a num- ber of progressive measures introduced to the council. Balzhiser served as an effective mouth piece for a small but wealthy minor- ity of Ann Arbor citizens. In 1965, he joined forces with Ann Arbor realty interests to battle a proposal for a strong fair housing ordinance. After repeated efforts to cripple the vHE ANN ARBOR City Council's initial approval of Richard Balzhiser's ordin- ance supposedly protecting tent'ntsF from illegitimate damage deposit losses once again demonstrates city Republicans' lack of concern for the state of housing in Ann Arbor. The ordinance, which would prevent landlords from "willfully, fraudulently and maliciously withholding or refusing to return ia damage deposit" indeed sounds impressive. Despite its impressive wording, how- ever, the ordinance is essentially worth- less. Prosecution would be almost impossi- ble first because it is often very hard to establish what behavior is malicious and second because fraud is virtually impossible to prove. Even the ciiy attorney admitted at the March 3 council meeting that fraud in the withhplding of damage deposits would be "exfremely difficult" to estab- lish. 'In addition, the nature of the ordin- ance forces the tenant, rather than the landlord, to seek court action to secure money that' is rightfully his in the first place. FURTHERMORE, the proposed ordin- ance is weakened by the fact it car- ries no minimum penalties,. Even after repeated court warnings following convictions of landlords f o r housing code violations, either no penal- ties or very minimal fines have been assessed. As a result, the landlords have tound it more profitable to ignore the warnings than to repair their apartments. The courts will probably more forceful in the casest damage deposits than they in those concerning housing tions. not be any of withheld have been code viola- Thus, there is no reason to suppose the landlords will be any more respon- sive to court decisions than they have been in the past. BOTH LAW PROFESSOR Terrance Sandalow and law professor Robert Harris - who is Balzhiser's opponent - have commented that it will require state legislation to give a city ordinance the teeth necessary to compel landlords to return tenants' deposits. And it was the general weakness of the, propdsed ordinance that caused the Democrats on council to vote against the measure last weekend. After the vote, the Republicans charged the Democrats had no concern for the housing situation in Ann Arbor. But the Republicans' haste to pass the farcical proposal and their criticism of the Democrats efforts to improve it indicates they actually favor no effec- tive legislation at all. THE IMPLICATIONS are clearly that the Republican council is trying to present Balzhiser as a concerned candi- date before the mayoral election while effectively preserving an unpalatable status quo. Hopefully, the electorate will not be fooled by such a flagrant political decep- tion. -JIM BEATTIE statute, Balzhiser finally voted against it along with fellow arch-conservative Paul Johnson and William Habel. As a candidate for mayor, he now claims he voted against the bill because he thought it would "polarize" the community. Meanwhile, candidate Balzhiser intro- duced a resolution in 1965 on the Vietnam War. Whereas Ann Arbor and other cities across the nation have recently experienced public demonstrations designed to un- dermine the efforts of our country in preserving the rights and freedoms of the people of South Vietnam; and whereas Aggressive planned acts of civil dis- obedience designed to impair the democratic process within this country have recently been experienced within our community; History has clearly demonstrated that civilized society must suffer if it ignores the totalitarian aggressive acts of warfare of one nation against an- other smaller victim nation of peo- ple; .... and whereas This nation owes an incalculable debt to the young men, killed . . (trying) to prevent the deadly spread of communism and totalitarianism among the emerging nations of the world; and whereas' Unlawful and imprudent acts such as those practiced by an irresponsible element can easily be misconstrued by the enemies of this country ... Therefore be it resolved that the City Council of Ann Arbor go on record as supporting the actions of the United States government in its efforts to bring about a rapid but uncompromis- ing peace in Vietnam, and be it further resolved that this council will oppose, by all lawful means available to it acts of civil disobedience or organizations promoting civil disobedience while at the same time preserving the constitu- tionat guarantees of all citizens to ex- press publically a dissenting point of view. Following his White House experience, Balzhiser says he modified his views qn Vietnam. Now, he says he is "neither hawkish nor dovish" on the war. This is hard to believe, since Balzhiser's conservative views on local issues are con- sistent with the hawkish 1965, statement on Vietnam. While the war is not an im- portant issue in the Ann -Arbor campaign, Balzhiser's position on issues of vital im- portance to the city are most disconcerting. FOR EXAMPLE, he recently suggested a proposal which he' thinks would provide a solutio. to the problem of police inter- vention in artistic productions in the Uni- versity community. On the heels of police raids of 'Dionysus in 69,' Balzhiser proposes the formation of a community review board to preview "potentially controversial" films and plays. The board would forward censorship rec- ommendatlions to the police and city of- ficials. Fortunately, the courts and the Con- stitution have rendered such pre-censor- ship illegal. But such a recommendation from Balzhiser's platform is bound to please many city fathers and mothers. That Balzhiser must know better is no consolation to members of the University community.' But Balzhiser clearly sees himself more as a partisan of city-particuarly business- interests-than an advocate of University rights. In 1965, Balzhiser railroaded through council, a proposal for construction of the 26-story skyscraper on Maynard St. even though the building did not provide enough off-street parking. While opponents of the construction were vacationing, Balzhiser helped have the building proposal slipped on to the agenda. It passed, much to the chagrin and anger of City Administrator Guy Larcom who wasn't even told it was being considered. Later in his council term, Balzhiser pushed to reduce the city's meager pro- gram for low-income housing, as another favor to his realty supporters. He joined in the Republican stall which has slowed the implementation of federal grants for low income housing. ' NOW CANDIDATE BALZHISER is try- 4 0 N ing hard to reform the image his record has created. Recently, he proposed a city ordinance (the Balzhiser Ordinance) which would make it illegal for landlords to "willfully, fraudulently and maliciously withhold, convert or refuse to return a damage, rent security or other equivalent deposit.. Balzhiser must realize that the law as he proposed it would make prosecution practically impossible. A complainant must show the impossible: that the landlord has "willfully, fraudulently, and maliciously" withheld the deposit. But the toothless proposal has apparent- ly overcome initial opposition. It passed a first reading at Monday's City Council meeting. And Balzhiser continues to ride the crest of success in traditionally Republican Ann Arbor. He exudes the casual confidence of an, already elected official. But with more students registered than ever before, with the cit growing out of its status quo tendencies, Balzhiser's vic- tory is far from certain. To an increasing number of voters Balzhiser's saccharine politics are turning sour. 4 I . A, LETTERS TO THE EDITOR The Beaufort County scandal Harris replies to, Tenants Union DR. H. PARKER JONES M.D. wins the Lestor Maddox Chickenfeather Award for the week. Dr. Jones M.D. Is the health officer of Beaufort County, S.C., which recently earned raves in a Senate hearing as the, 'home of worm-infested stomachs and disease-deformed arms and legs. All but one of the 15 Beaufort County doctors immediately signed a statement denying charges that hundreds of black people were dying from malnutrition and vitamin deficiency diseases. And they cleared up a misunderstand- ing about whether they would treat poor blacks who couldn't pay the, waiting room fees. "Certainly we have the responsibility to treat poor people," they said. "But we doh't have the responsibility to go out and beat the bushes for, them, or give them extended treatment at our ex- pense." THIS PUT THE, responsibility directly on Dr. Jones M.D. who responded cheerfully that there wasn't enough star- vation in the county to merit "special attention." Last week a disbelieving reporter teamed up with Dr. Donald Gatch, the outspoken country doctor who hadn't signed the statement and who had testi-, fied at the hearing, to challenge Dr. Jones M.D. Gatch showed the reporter victims of pellagra and rickets, diseases which didn't exist in the United States today according to the textbooks. They saw pre-teen girls whose hair- lines receded an inch or two from normal and boys whose skin was rough and crus- ty. "Protein and vitamin deficiency," ex- plained Gatch. Gatch noted that many people who die from starvation in Beaufort County are recorded as deaths from natural causes. Beaufort County's infant mortality rate of 63 per 100 is one of the highest in the nation. NEVERTHELESS Dr. Jones M.D. in- sisted that no special medical services were necessary and refused to allot extra funds. Gatch and the reporter then asked Dr. Jones M.D. and the other doctors to accompany them on a visit to several homes riddled py disease and hunger. "No doctor is going to do that," re- plied Dr. Jones M.D. "Personally Iknow I wouldn't. To me it would just be. too distasteful." To the Editor: T HE RENT STRIKE Steering Committee now asks all citi- zens concerned with changing the balance of power in the Ann Arbor housing market to withhold sup- port from me until I give "un- qualified support to the Rent Strike and the Tenants Union." Responding to my prior remark that the public interest i not identical with the present or fu- ture interests of members of the Tenants Union,the Steering Com- mittee compares me to the shep- herd who must see how hungry the wolves are before feeding them the sheep. I think it is unfair to me and unfair to the members of the Ten- ants Union to ask them to boycott my campaign. I have explained that I am not opposed to rent strike's which aim for tenant union recognition or for elimination of unconscionable p r o v i s i o n s in leases.However, I cannot go along with the goal of "substantial rent reductions" if it means that these reductions are to be achieved re- gardless of the fairness or unfair- ness of the rent level at a partic- ular apartment. I THINK IT is irresponsible for a candidate for mayor to get into the endorsement business. I do not know .what goals or' what tactics the Steering Committee may adopt at some future date. I do not know to what extent it may find the in- terest of its members at war with the interest of third persons who are neither landlords nor members of -the union. I do not know if we shall see violence before the strike is over. I and my fellow Democrats have fought to expand the supply of federally subsidized low-income (public) housing and moderate- income (Colonial'Square-type 221 (d) (3)) housing. We have fought, to get a decent transport system so that fewer tenants need live in walking distance from campus.-We are fighting toreplace the frivol- ous Balzhiser Ordinance proposal with a series of measures that would actually rectify the damage deposit situation. We are drafting, and will soon introduce, legislation that would outlaw certain uncon- scionable lease clauses. We will soon introduce state legislation doing for tenant collective bargain- ing what the Wagner Act did for labor collective bargaining. We are trying to get public hearings to air current rental market abuses and the full range of legal meas- ures that might correct them. I AM PUZZLED why the Steer- ing Committee finds it so essential to get my "endorsement"-even at the price of defeating me and the Democratic Council candidates so that Prof. Balzhiser and the Republicans can rule two more years. I hope those Tenants Union members who do not take their political opinions from the Steer- ing Committee will make an in- dependent judgment as to which of the candidates will do more to bring justice to Ann Arbor's rental market. -Robert J. Harris Prof. of Law Democratic Candidate March 11 ° Strikers for Harris To the Editor:. TN YESTERDAY'S Daily a letter frof three members of the Rent Strike Steering Committee criticized the positions on the rent strike taken by, both the Repub- lican and Democratic candidates' for mayor. They suggested that no citizen , who supported the rent strike should vote for either of the candidates unless that can- didate gives "unqualified support to the Rent Strike and the Ten- ants Union." Although' we recognize that there are flaws in each candidate's position, several ,of us intimately involved in the Rent Strike do not believe that these flaws should deter students from voting. In our opinion the position taken by can- didate Harris offers a realistic pos- sibility of fairly and eduitably solving many of the problems that. confront tenants in Ann Arbor to- day. While both candidates have of- fered plans for dealing with the illegal withholding of tenant's damage deposits, most independ- ent authorities agree that of the two, only Prof. Harris' escrow fund proposal offers a realistic solution to the problem of damage deposits. Prof. Balzhiser proposes that the "willingly,' maliciously and fraud- ulently", withholding of damage deposits be made a misdemeanor. However, past experience with landlord misdemeanor laws (such as housing code violations) in- dicates that enforcement problems in this area are almost insur- mountable. Even assuming that enforcement mechanics could be improved, it would be very difficult to prove that withholding of a tenant's damage deposit was "willfullly, maliciously, and fraud- ulently" done even in the most blatant cases. Finally, under the Balzhiser proposal, a tenant must pay the legal costs of recovering his deposit from a recalcitrant landlord. IN CONTRAST, the Harris plan would establish an independent escrow agency 'to hold damage) deposits for the. term of the lease. This money would' automatically, be returned to1 the tenant thirty' days after the termination of the lease. This shifts the burden of proving damages to the landlord. Prof. Harris has said that he would use his proven lobbying abilities, (as demonstrated by his successful efforts in behalf of the Michigan Fair Housing Law and Tenants Rights Laws), to gain for tenants the right to collectively bargain with their landlords. This is the foremost stated goal of the Rent Strike. In their letter Messrs. Cohen and Berry and Miss ,Holmstrom ask to whose public interest Harris owes his- all9giance. Admittedly, It is difficult for those involved in an economic struggle to view other people as neutral, but in fact a great majority of the citizens of Ann Arbor have not taken a de- finite position on the Rent Strike. The mayor must be in a position to considerrtheir interests as well as the interests of the disputants. The mayor sacrifices this ability if he gives "unqualified support" to either side. Prof. Harris has shown in the past that he is sincerely interested in tenant's right and his realistic proposals' concerning the current problems in Ann Arbor indicate that he is working and will con- tinue to work to solve these prob- lems. In light of this we feel that the interests of Rent Strike sup- porters will be best be served by a vote for Bob Harris. -Craig Moody, Jim Barnes, John Powell, Frank Eamon, Tom Jennings, Bob Olson, Dave Schraver, Greg Curtner, Perry Bullard, Judy Kahn, Brett Dick and Eric Schneidewind Rent Strike Legal Defense Committee .March 11 Coed-;fraternities To the Editor: CONTRARY TO a report in a recent-.issue of The Daily, Phi Epsilon Pi will not be the first co-ed fraternity on the Michigan campus. Alpha Rho Chi, profes- sional undergraduate fraternity # for architecture and the allied arts, initiated its1first woman member Sept. 2, 1967. --11) Wahlberg Feb. 21 / -HOWARD KOHN On department coffee and other tenure decisions By RICK PERLOFF THE FACT THAT departmental de- cisions on such issues as tenure, hiring and curriculum are m a d e at "coffee 'available" faculty meetings says a lot about t h e informality of many department structures in t h e University. Decisions in departments are gen- erally friendly, informal and very rou- tine. E v e n tenure decisions are not confined to the departmental elite. In fact, professors pride themselves on the openness of their departments. And when the executive committees do take action, members rarely vote formally. Instead they seek consensus. If one or two members of a five-man executive committee h a v e vehement objections to promoting a professor, the action may be delayed until more research can be done. Or the professors in disagreement may file a minority report to the lit- erary college executive committee which makes the final decisions. WHAT USUALLY HAPPENS, how- specialize in the same area as the pro- fessor under consideration. The opinions of the professor's col- leagues - gathered over a period of time - -are instrume tal in making the decision. Members of the execu- tive committee, having mulled over the professional opinions and looked at the professor's academic file, generally come into the meeting with a fairly good idea of where the man stands in the view of his colleagues, IF THE PROFESSOR has published sufficiently to enhance t h e depart- ual members of the committee may stop their colleagues in the hall and ask their opinions of the man under consideration, but rarely is any spec- ial meeting set aside between one pro- fessor and another exclusively devoted to the discussion of a specific tenure decision. Departments just don't w o r k that way. A professor knows he's coming up for tenure five years in advance of the actual decision. He knows something' about who will be involved in the mak- ing of the decision and he likely knows how it will be made. He may e v e n are subjective a n d highly personal. That is one reason why faculty mem- bers are so hesitant to allow students to serve on an executive committee. Student membership on these com- mittees would, in the faculty's view, remove the freedom to toss a profes- sor's academic credentials around the tenure table. It would take away the informality of the weekly meetings in Haven where professor can rap pro- fessor and reach agreements by con- sensus. OR WOULD IT? Students might be seated on an all- student tenure committee and faculty on a "separate but equal" body. The students would not be evaluating the professor from the standpoint of how well he researches or how much rap- port he has with his colleagues. This would reside with the faculty. Rather, students would be evaluating the man solely on his worth as an ed- ucator, mainly on his ability to teach. Consequently the students would not be probing issues of personality or is- spend most of the time in the dingy stacks of a university library. IT IS AN educational tragedy that departments are so concerned about their professional reputations that they ignore a man's ability to com- municate his profession. Under the r ew set-up both teaching and research would be equally con- sidered in making tenure decisions. And both the faculty and the student committees would agree m o r e often than they probably believe they would. If the two groups did disagree at this juncture it might indeed be nec- essary for students and faculty to dis- cuss the matter at a joint meeting. One would hope the nature of the discussion would not be of such a per- sonal nature to faculty members that they wouldrefuse to bring the matter up before students. Both groups could present their opintons of the profes- sor: - the students on his teaching ability, the professors on his profes- sional expertise - and hash out their differences. Le Nouveau Nixon "too often faculty members ship over a man s teaching skills in favor of his ability to do research for journals that spend most of the time in the dingy stacks of a university library. "It is an educational tragedy that departments are so concerned about their professional reputations that they ignore a man's ability to communicate his pro- fession." p' i