"Outside agitator glje At tiianBaffg Seventy-eight 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 ol: reprints. SATURDAY, MARCH 29, 1969 NIGHT EDITOR: BILL LAVELY The rent strike: Growing significance an - .00 * E a. .1f n , 1h f -eve " a~ r rTHE ANN ARBOR Rent Strike goes on, gaining momentum, attracting na- tional attention, and in general surpris- ing its early detractors who thought it an impotent flail at the all-powerful landlords. The rent strikers certainly haven't won yet, but they have had some significant victories and will no doubt give the land- lords a hard fight before the end comes. The last case handled so far, which was decided yesterday, is the most significant. Not ofily was the rent reduced, but the tenants were given possession of the apartment for the remainder of the lease. Implicit in such a verdict is the very clear declaration that there is something very wrong in the housing situation in Ann Arbor. The landlords have been found greatly at fault, in this the first serious attempt at challenging their power and authority in the housing market. THE STRENGTH of the rent strike can be measured by the non-student sup- port it is gaining. There are many people close to the housing situation, who do not have a vested interest in it, who have tacitly or openly declared their support for the strike. The strength grained there -from the powerful United Auto Workers Union among others-adds greatly to the credence the strike is developing. Buit these early successes are not the whole ball game. The pleasure of these victories must not obscure the goal of the rent strike, the reason for the whole effort. No number of minor or psycholog- ical victories should overshadow the pri- mary goal-the permanent establishment of a public or private agency which will equalize bargaining power between the tenants and the landlords. The rent strike is not the first attempt at improving the tenants' situation in Ann Arbor, although it is the most suc- cessful. The most important factor is the permanance of this attempt. Landlords last longer in Ann Arbor than students and individually have a greater stake in the housing market. IT IS UP TO the students to consider the future housing situation as well as the present one. Such considerations would indicate only one course of action for students; now considering entering the housing market: they must not, under any circumstances, rent from any of the landlords being struck, or if they do, they should join the rent strike immediately. Current rent strikers must also be aware. Some landlords now are trying to buy them off by catching up on improve- ments and satisfying their immediate de- mands for service and maintenance. But, while that is what the rent strikers seek in the long run, the piecemeal successes they win this way must not be confused with the real thing. And the success is neither real nor assured until every stu- dent can be assured of protection by a tenants' union. There is a very positive virtue in the fight being waged now. The landlords have overstepped the bounds of propriety in their handling of housing and tenants' problems up to now. It is now that they are being brought to task, and they should be made to pay the price. Clearly, the question here is not one of property rights or even the personal nights of tenants in any ethereal sense. The long-suffering tenants are challeng- ing the strength of the landlords, and it is just that, a test of strength. The basis of that strength lies in more than just economic clout. The students have a sharp, competent agency leading their fight, and it is in that leadership that their victory will lie. THE LANDLORDS are only now becom- ing aware of the competence of the rent strike steering committee. The com- mittee has established its ability to ob- tain and use factual and legal informa- tion, and it is a strength the landlords did not expect, but which they will have to deal with, The landlords' awareness of the ten- ants' leaders' abilities was not the crucial question-the ability itself was. That has been established, and it now seems to be only a matter of time before the play will see its last act-most likely in favor of the tenants. -RON LANDSMAN Managing Editor -JUDY SARASOHN m-MURRAY KEMPTON- Norman Mailer The man who laughs "He had lived well enough to have six children, a house on the water, a good apartment, good meals, he had even come to enjoy wine. A revolutionary with taste in wine has come already half the distance from Marx to Burke."-Norman Mailer in Chicago. NORMAN MAILER'S National Book Award is a great pleasure; you meet only a few persons in life who enforce on you a respect that is quite past envy, they become a private possession, a better self, so to speak, and their awards, in some curious way, are partly your own. This award had to be unanimous; in cases like Mailer's there is until the final judgment always some passionate dissenter in the jury who hangs the others and forces them to choose someone less trouble- some. He has arrived then at becoming a closed question, a grand maitre. "The Armies of the Night" passed beyond any need for distinc- tions by ceremony quite a while ago, having already broken open the journalism we had accepted before it. I will take these awards, Mailer told his audience in effect, and you will give because none of us any longer knows what we are doing. And Mailer came at a time when we understood that wecno longer knew what we were doing, when the canons of objectivity and the commitments of partisanship were alike unable to serve us, when we needed narrators so engaged that they were unafraid to contradict themselves. HIS WORK, of course, is held k." together by the presence of a great comic character and a great serious character, both himself. Everything works, not only the eye but the memory of other times, all of him even to the nerves in the shoulder when a policeman lays his hand upon it. He throws on any table every bit of property he has. His sense -, of risk is the only ridiculous thing about him. I remember sitting the Sunday before the Goldwater con- vention and hearing him say how much he wished he could be for :...<': . . Goldwater. Look at these girls. he said. My God, I answered, look at their mothers, having learned long ago not to imperil my immortal soul at inconsequential public events by allowing myself to be susceptible to their participants. I did not understand the Immense ' advantage, held by the man who ' dares that peril until I read Mailer later: he had left that convention at the same time picketing and being picketed, AFTER HIM, we cannot be satisfied again with any other version of the events except the one which has the beholder's every, intimacy and embarassment in it. Already, 'after Mailer, the magazines are coming out with great, sprawling pieces founded on the principle that size itself is a virtue and more 'often than not convincing us that it is. It is hard to say how well all this will work; most men, given a real effort, may develop sevenreasonably new ideas of their own and these can be exhausted by just one large exercise in the Mailer pattern. The danger of imitating a truly strong talent is that we do not have its capital; he may leave the rest of us very soon bankrupt. No matter; strongers unconceived will pick up "The Armies of the Night" as some of us do Carlyle's "French Revolution" and say "This was the way; why didn't these fools know to follow it?" Our answer will be that we did know; we just didn't know how. In the interim, Mailer lifts _us all; he reminds us that, after so many sins of ours, one of us has gone past Walt Whitman who was ne'ver so untrustworthy as when he wrote: "I am the man, I suffered. I was there." Now we have an American who knows enough to say: "I am the man, I suffered a little. I laughed a lot. I was there." Care- ful, you lords of creation: something new approaches, led by a man who laughs.(Y (c) The 'New York Post 4 ,4 More notes from Howard By HOWARD KOHN IN KANSAS CITY six-year-old Timothy Adams took the long way home from school. His mother called the police who sent out a helicopter to look for 'rim. Flying overhead the police spot- ted Tim and boomed out on a megaphone "Timothy, go home!" He ran all the way home and told his mother of "the big voice in the sky." His mother explained nothing. AND T H E ABSURDITY of hunting took on new ramifications this week when Gerard Matte shot down a low-flying helicopter be- cause it was scaring his game. The helicopter was spraying marshes for mosquitoes in France. The pilot made a forced landing with buckshot holes in his g a s tank and his leg. In Africa's Kenya veld profes- sional guide Bali Iqbal earned his fee from U.S. sportsman Bill Des- manders this' week. A supposedly dead buffalo gored Iqbal in the leg when he a."proached it after Desmanders shot it. But Iqbal calmly held the wounded animal down with h i s foot while Desmanders shot it again. And in Florida poachers contin- ue to make from $500 to $1000 a night killing alligators in the Ev- erglades, PEOPLE WHO BUY savings bonds are actually losing money because of the eroding purchasing power of the dollar. Someone should tell Uncle Sam about truth in advertising. GENERALISSIMO F R A N C O wants $700 million from the Unit- ed States to renew a contract for two air fields and a Polaris sub- marine base in Spain. Not only is the price outrageous but the bases have little worth, either militarily or politically. If we don't renew the contract, we will have to evacuate within a year - which is exactly what we should do. * * * LONG-REGARDED as a haven for the experimental and icono- clastic in theatre, no matterf how raw, New York City has finally be- gun to define some limits. After several preview perform- ances which featured simulated love-making on stage, 'Che" was raided this week by the police. "Che" is billed as a symbolic tale of Che Guevara's last hours. Police arrested 10 actors including two women and a 16-year-old boy, all of whom appeared n u d e on stage. The charge was lewdness, sod- omy and obscenity. DR. DONALD GATCH, who ex- posed ricketts and starvation in Beaufort Count, S.C., has b e e n hospitalized because of malnutri- tion. Doctors said he had b e e n working too hard and observing poor eating habits. Some 50 years after he d a t e d Ethel Boeke, Frank Warren has taken out a marriage license. Warren, 90, has never been mar- ried. Ethel, 73, is a widow. But, good bachelor that he is, Warren has not yet set the wed- ding date. AND IOWAN HOUSEWIVES continue to argue with state chemists over whether there are rat claws in the bologna thereIaf- ter all. A\ spokesman for the Iowa ag- riculture department originally announced the hard, white slivers in the bologna, which is processed in Des Moines, were rodent's claws. A subsequent chemical analysis disputed this finding and claimed they were "lip pacillae," from the room of a cow's mouth and legal ingredients for bologna. But now some chemists say the analysis was inconclusive and the clippings may indeed be rat's claws. 4 * Letters: Truth, clar To the Editor: WMHO "WON" the eviction trial of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Rosen on March 20? Decide for yourself on the basis of the- Ann Arbor News story reprinted in the Daily, an- onymously by t h e landlords, to scare rent strikers. Edward Kloian sued to collect $300 back rent and the jury awarded him $280. T h e tenants were not thrown out on the street and were not hurt financially. Ac- tually they gained $5 by joining the rent strike: $20 cut in back rent balanced off against $15 (10% of first month's rent) they put into the strike fund. Any court costs (set by law at $25) will be paid by the Tenants Union if they are charged to the Rosens. What of Kloian? Paying his lawyer $30 an hour a n d paying other bills associated with the case, it cost him more than he got out of it. And the case has little scare value since the Rosens are no worse off than if they had never joined the rent strike. Klo- ian still has a lot of rent strikers on his hands, including the Ros- ens starting again next month. Tf landlords canscore big vic- tories in, court why have t h e y brought so few eviction cases against strikers? O n I y 25 sum- monses have been brought on the 1200 strikers. The big management companies (Charter, Apts. Ltd.) have not brought a single sum- mons. THE POINT IS not t h a t the Tenants Union achieved any of its goals in court, but that the land- lords will not be able to break the strike in court. The Tenants Union will be es- tablished as an effective bargain- ing agent for Ann Arbor tenants only by winning an economic war with the landlords. Only then will the monopoly power of the land- Balzhiser To the Editor: DURING THE CAMPAIGN for mayor, there h a s been some discusion of the record of Richard Balzhiser as a councilman. Although it took place nearly four years ago, there is one entry in that record I will never forget. It is dated Dec. 20, 1965. The Council was about to vote into law our Fair Housing Law. The moderate Republicans - Hul- cher, Hathway, and Crary - had made it known they would vote for it. We Democrats - Eunice Burns, LeRoy Cappaert, Ed Pierce, Bob Weeks, and I-all had fought hard for it and obviously would vote for it. Then there were the Council's two best known conservatives - Johnson and Habel. No one was surprised when they announced they would vote against it. The lines were drawn: the lib- eral majority - a coalition of Democrats and moderate Repub- licans - on one side. On the other side were the right wingers. WHICH SIDE did Councilman Balzhiser choose? He joined, the other conservatives a n d voted against the ordinance. (That is after he first tried to cripple it by limiting it to just a token num- ber of dwellings in this city. And why? He has since claimed he voted "no" because he felt it was more appropriate for the state to pass laws regulating discrimina- tion. Did he say anything about this on the night of Dec. 20, 1965, when he tried to vote down Fair Housing in Ann Arbor? Let the next day's Ann Arbor News tell the story: "Both Balzhiser a n d Mayor pro tem 0. William Habel said the ordinance encroaches on the rights of citizens to privacy and association." That is a night for all citizens of Ann Arbor to remember. news reporting) policy of y o u r publication in such an untenable position as to make a Joke of what you must consider to be serious comment. In one editorial yesterday (on the engineering school's sit-in re-' cruitment protest), you managed to (1) headline President Fleming as a "meddler," (2) make it ap- pear that the President was acting against the wishes of all the en- gineering students by "pre-empt- ing enraged engineering students," (3) take the unbelievable position that Mr. Fleming as president of this university has no d u t y or right to act where university stu- dents are denied the right to speak with a recruiter who was present in a university building at the re- quest of a university official, (4) accuse President Fleming of at- tempting to influence student af- fairs by referring a matter to a student judicial body which the students themselves have ordain- ed and established for the situa- tion at hand. ANY "EMBARASSING and per- ity, and plexing dilemma for the juriciary" was not created by President Fleming as you say, but by t h e students themselves which you, every day, attempt to lead down the correct paths. I believe that the facts of this case are clear. Your attempt to distort or re-characterize them can only lead to your own demise as an influential editorial writer. Need we guess what your edi- torial would have sounded like had President FleI..ing done otherwise and permitted the Ann Arbor po- lice to make arrests in this case? Your directive as to what the Cen- tral Student Judiciary "must" and "should" do seem equally out of place since you are clearly trying to tell a judicial body what to de- cide. -George Frye' Law '69 March 28 SDS position To the Editor: ON TUESDAY, March 25, a group of students affiliated unbiased reporting with SDS took the first of a series of militant actions orientated against the University in its capa- city as the servant of the military. A recruiter for Naval Weapons Research was effectively block- aded in his office and prevented from recruiting for the greater part of the day. 'We in SDS feel that this action was justified for the following reasons. Military recruiting in all its forms must be seen as an integral part of the role the University plays in maintaining and increas- ing the militarization of American society. Together with the in- stitution of ROTC and University involvement in Defense Depart- ment contracting (war research), recruiting is a necessary phenom- enon: necessary, that is, to the present functioning and growth of the military establishment as the oppressor of countless num- bers of people both at home and abroad. The fact is that the military as it functions today could not exist without the support so willingly AM offered by our supposedly "neu- tral" universities. Today's large university forms the very foundation of American society; it is an institution that legitimates and provides the cru- cial support necessary to main- tain the present social order. Michigan is no exception. Day in and day out, this University provides facilities for recruiters; officers for the Army, Navy, and Air Force; and technology for the present policies of domination. BUT WHAT, specifically, is the function of the military? Very briefly, we believe that the mili- tary and the militarization of the economy are the inevitable out- growth of a system that serves to oppress and exploit people in both this country and the Third World, in both the black ghettos and the villages of Vietnam. The military functions to carry out American domestic and foreign policy, which we believe not to be formulated for 'national defense," but rather for the maintenance of a veritable economic empire. But on the other hand, don't students have the right to be recruited, to be granted an inter- view with anyone, no matter who he be? Does SDS have the right to disrupt the lawful activity of a military recruiter? We believe, first of all, that the 'word "right" must always be un- 'derstood in the wider context of what it is used to justify. In this 'case, when students say they have 'the right to be recruited, in effect .re saying they have the right 'to participate in the American war ,hachine, the right to do research 'to build more weapons, the right ultimately - to kill people. They are saying they have the 'right to carry on the inhuman op- 'pression and wastage which by 'human standards cannot be justi- fied by any right at all. *The recruiter and the prospec- tive employe or officerhshould not be considered in isolation from the total system which they represent: and serve to perpetuate.What 'goes on in that small office is essential to the continuation of the oppression and wastage that is the very essence of the military. SECONDLY, it seems clear that rights are defined by the rulers of this society not primarily with reference to some standard of justice, but rather merely in terms of what is right for the preserva- tion of the status-quo. Rights are easily abrogated, if those rights are used to challenge the workings of the existing sys- tem. Thus, while I have the right to be recruited, I do not have the right to refuse the draft for polit- ical reasons. Safeway Supermarkets has the right to raise their prices in the black ghetto market when welfare checks are issued each month for not issued). But the black people do not have the right to rise up in rebellion against this plain fact of exploitation. The ruling class I I An open letter to President Fleming Dear Mr. Fleming: I WAS SORRY to see you, the President of the Administration, expose your ignorance of student government on the editorial page of The Daily (March 28). You note the low turnout at SGC elec- tions. In the mildly-contested run-off be- tween two candidates of similar views, with bad weather and one day to vote, and with a shortage of pollworkers caused by an abortive boycott of the election, only 10 per cent of the student body voted. Under the best of conditions, the turn- out has never been much above 35 per cent of the electorate. While such turnouts lem"? Low turnout at University Senate meetings, the faculty equivalent of SGC elections. What was the resolution? Fewer University Senate meetings and setting up Senate Assembly, a representative body getting much higher attendance. COME, COME, Mr. Fleming. Are you caying that SGC should hold fewer elec- tions? I don't suppose so. Are you saying that the student body shouldn't try to conduct too much business through refer- enda and should instead do most of its business through a representative central government? If so, you are certainly right (though student body by colleges. You have been saying that for over a year now. Which is what shows how little you know about student government.- THE CONSTITUTIONAL Convention was, in fact, organized as you want SGC to be organized and was approximately the size of Senate Assembly (55 seats). Election by schools and colleges left many seats vacant and gave few members of the body any defined constituency they could" go back to for guidance. The Convention failed in part because it could not find an alternative to the present structure of SGC, but more, I 01