Student housing crisis confronts city, University Dorm shortage forces crowding City struck by housing crush By ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ Morris Holt/. "3. sat hunched on his bed in a West Quad cafe- teria. "It's hot, but livable," he said, describing his first 24 hours as a resident of Dining Room No. 4. Holtz, along with some 300 other teshni en and 36 foreign studen; is absorbing his first imp-siw s of tl University in such unusual living quarters as a linen room, a library, and a janitor's workroom. Ninety of the freslhmen ar o'ccupying two cafeteria on the second floor of Wet Quad, and the 36 foreign tudents are being housed in a dining room at Markley Hall. The students are the victims of circumstances which left the Office of Uniersity Housing with a large number of dormi- tory applicants whom they could not accommodate in regular mom11s. According to housing officials the number of students, partic- ularly men, who applied for dor- mitory spaces greatly exceeded the estimates made last year by th? Committee on Residence Hall Planning. When this became apparent in early June, the housing of- fice immediately made plans to use two women's houses in Marklcy Hall for men. In addi- tion, housing officials began re- jecting some 150 dormitory ap- plications from transfer and graduate students entering this term. According to Inter House As- sembly President Jack Myers, a member of the committee, six different women's houses had been considered for conversion to men's houses as long ago as March. "The personal housing pref- erunces of the individual com- mnittee members helped prevent the conversions, which were later found to be necessary," says Myers. However, the measures taken in June still did not insure spaces for 300 incoming fresh- men. The Housing Office was then forced to assign them to emergency spaces in the Mich- igan Union, the Michigan League, faculty suites, storage and workrooms, the two West Quad cafeterias, and even sev- eral motel rooms. The foreign students, who arrived Tuesday expecting to be provided with rooms, were housed in Dining Room No. 3 in Markley Hall. Housing officials insist the emergency quarters are only temporary. About 200 dormi- tory spaces are-expected to be- come available this afternoon, because the assigned occupants never arrived. However, the stu- dents have been warned they may have to secure housing in fraternities and off - campus apartments. Until they find permanent residences, the 300 freshmen will reside in their hastily furn- ished quarters and many are See DORM, Page 9 By ALEXA CANADY and STEVE KOPPMAN Close to 100 people crowd the off - campus housing bureau every day to find listings for available apartments. At 1:30 in the aftrenoon the lobby of the Ann Arbor News looks like Waterman Gym dur- ing registration as students await early copies of the paper so they can get the first crack at the rental advertisements. The student co-ops, already filled to capacity, have been re- ceiving applications at three times the usual rate for this time of year. The students invading the off- campus housing office, the Ann Arbor News and the co-ops are all victims of a serious housing shortage this fall that has left hundreds of students with no place to live. A combination of too many students, many forced out of the dorms because of a shortage there, and almost no new major residential construction h a s ' created the housing crush. Charter Realty's Plaza Tow- ers, a 26-story high-rise a block and a half from campus, is the only major new building to go up this year. At least one cause is out of the control of anyone on campus - inflation and the rising interest rate on mort- gages. Both Kenneth Barnhill of Apartments Ltd. and D. A. Ren- ken of D. A. Renken and Co. cite the quickly rising cost of mortgages as a discouraging factor in apartment develop- ment. And they both cite the Ann Arbor rent strike being conduct- ed by the Tenants Union as the other major factor. Renken n o t e s that some apartments have been converted to business offices and others have been demolished. One col- lection of small houses was torn down for a parking lot for the telephone company, he noted. "It may be as much as five years before more private hous- ing for students is built," he added. Barnhill notes that the two factors combined to make the student housing market ex- tremely insecure, discouraging new construction. Dale Berry, legal spokesman for the Tenants Union, admits that the rent strike "may have had some impact, but I doubt it is a major consideration." he added. "It is more likely an attempt to discredit us," he said. "Our position is that private housing is not the only answer." The housing situation would not be so bad if it were not for the unusually large number of students seeking non-University housing. With the elimination of re- quired freshman residence in the dormitory system last year, the housing office had predicted See CRISIS, Page 9 Daily- Jal.Cassidv TEll PRESIDENT'S SUMMER see Editorial Page Y L gilt4b ~Iaii4 MUGGY Hligh--84 Low-68 Possible thundershowers Vol. LXXX, No. 2 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, September 5, 1969 Ten Cents Eighteen Pages 1INOR H1: I.C. SGC call for to or nize cease-fire By Ihe Associated Press T'h Vi'u Cong will suspend military operations for three dty n to m_'rk th funeral of President Ho Chi Minh, a broad- cast report said last night. The 'rport wa broadca't 'tby Liberation Radio, mouth- piece of the South Vietnam revolutionary government, and monitored in London by the British Broadcasting Corp. The announ 'emnt >aid the decision was made by the - intr0l Connittee of the National Liberation Front, It did iot p 'ify wh. n the cease-fire would begin and end but said the councilt had decided "to suspend military; attacks for three days during the period of the funeral." march on Regents bookstore for ' , 4- RIO DE JANEIRO T" . Four gunmen kidnapped U.S. Ambas- sador Charles Burke Elbrick yes- terday and, police said, demand- ed that Brazil release 15 political prisoners in retlurn o his fre - dom.. Th'ie kidnappers anibushed El- brick's black Cadila limousine on a Rio street, ehlorofonned the ambassador and drove him off in T l t tone de- mma nding-, poliical aylmor the 15 prisoners and the other con- ttaining-Onantigvamnthar'- Bra/ilian radio and television. Informants said tlh e kidnapers demanded that the prisoners be delivered to tie embassies of Chile. Mxico and Algeria witihin 24 hours .by (11lay afternoon. Eibrick, 61, a ve ran of key as- signmemts in portant p)s1s, speaks Portuguese fluently, a 1Oct01 in his recent appoint nen to the Rio Embassy. He ser'ved as a mbassado r to Portumiii . 1 958-t amid was prexioxisly assigned to Lisbom wlh'n tih' Portuguese cap~ ii al was an intrigue- filled cross- roads during World War II. Port - tlud'se is the language of Brazil. Latin Amnmica's larst ('ottitry. In San Clenmnti' Cal i.. t h e Western White house said Presi- dent Nixon was '''onc'nd"' over the kidnapping and was following deselopmnents closely- The State Department in aWsh- ing ton said the Brazilian eovern- ment had promised every effort to obtain Eibrick's release. Eibrirk presened his creden - biva Jly'14Tel'esidrit now is recovering fom a strmok? and a niilitarv iriumivirame is m'tilii g Brazil. Thie State Departmeit said the searcli form t he am bassador would be left lareely to Bramzilia n ant ho'- it ies but that some Amneric'ani Em- bassy secutrity pjersommel pi'obably would assist. In Washington U.S. officials in- dicated it wou 1d be up to the, South Vietnam government to say howlong it would respond to any cease-fire. The U.S. command' would go along with the Saigon government's decision. officialss predicted. Leaders of the Communist world meanwhile headed for Hanoi to attend the state funeral of the president. The mourning North Vie tnamese capital was shrouded in rain as the people listened to radios playing somber music. First to arrive was Premier Chou En-lay of Red China and two members of the Communist party's Central Committee, Yeh Chien- ying and Wei Kuo-ching. The Soviet Union, Red China's ant agonist, was expected to send Premier Alexei N. Kosygin. Hanoi has yet to announce the date for the funeral of the 97- year-old North Vietnamese leader. who died Wednesday of a heart attack. But Ambassador Xuan Thty, chief of Hanoi's delegation to the ietnam peace talks, said in Paris the funeral would be next Wednesday. Thuy requested and got a can- cellation of Thursday's session of the peace talks. He said Ho's death .ould bring no change in North Vietnani 's staid, which among other things call: for' withdrawal of all U.S. troops from South Viet- mnami Japtanes dispatches from thet North Vietnamese capital said res- icients stood in a light driule to! hear the first word over loud-! speakers that Ho had died. Seiichiro Ujiie, Hanoi corres ion- dent of the Tokyo newspaperw Yomiuri Shimbun, said they re- ceived the news calmly. Man in t' crowds wore black arm iV;'dsI and some were ed-eyed from cad-; "The people seem to lha,,, jIni trust in the solid 'nity ofI their leadership even without 'Uncle Ho'," Ujiie wrote. "People in Hanoi -Dail} 1ay _'. i 't iversity President Robben W. Fleming welcomes inconiing freshmnien Fleminge M aghlin1 clash before freshmen By RICK PERLOFF Student Government Council voted 5-2 last night to sponsor a rally and a subsequent march into the Regents meeting Sept. 19 to protest the Regents decision this 'umnmer not to establish a student bookst'ore. The rally is scheduled to begin at 1:00 p.m., an hour before the Regents meeting begins. "We are going to disrupt the Re- gents meeting," said Executive Vice President M''c Van Der However, SGC President Marty McLaughlin said the rally would, in effect, decide whether or not the meeting was to be disrupted. The motion, introduced by Van ' Der Hout, states that the studentsYg "plan to go to the Regents' meet- ing from the rally sohthat the - student voice may be heard in a z way that the Regents cannot ig- nom'e." If, as Van Der Hout says, the motion is intended to disrupt the meeting it could, technically, be a violation of an SGC rule banning interference with the "quiet" of University functions. -Dauily-Jay Cassidy Council also amended a resolu- gu .E to Ket ele tion fom Van De Houts motion A gus Editor Ken Kelley which stated that SGC's intent was "to continue to disrupt every Regents meeting until actiistro s ' 0 1 )a1 duced by Mary Livingston, stated that Council would pursue the. establishment of the bookstore un- Oct1 harngset til action is taken, presumably, by the Regents. The Regents oi July 18 rejected By STEVE NISSEN two proposals to create a student City Editor discount bookstore. An SGC plan to finance the bookstore through Ken Kelley, editor and publisher of the Ann Arbor Argus, has a $1.75 student fee assessment been freed on $1000 bail following his arraignment Wednesday with additional funds coming from in District Court on an obscenity charge. the Office of Student Affairs was Kelley was arrested Tuesday two weeks after the Argus printed unanimously defeated. This pro- a picture of Republican City Councilman James Stephenson which posal had been supported over- had a drawing of a penis superimposed on it. helmingly by students in a ref- A preliminary hearing has been set for Oct. 1. erendum last spring. Kelley's attorney, Detroit lawyer Marc Stickgold, predicted his The Regents also turned down client "will never be convicted." an administration plan which Stickgold and Kelley appeared at a press conference Wednesday would have financed the bookstore through outside gifts and volun- following the arraignment. In a prepared statement Kelley called his tary student contributions. Mc- arrest a "strictly political bust". Laughlin indicated that the Re- He said the prosecution is "designed to eliminate a highly politi- See SGC, Page 8 cal enterprise that politically attacks this city's, state's and coun- By RICK PERLOFF The President's Welcome to 'freshmen has in the past been a' rather sleepy affair typified by faded jokes by the president of Student. Government Council and familiar praise from the Univer- sity President. But at this year's welcome Wed- nesday a standing - room only crowd ini Hill .Aud. heard talks on the issues as SGC President Mar- ty McLaughlin lashed out at an "undemocratically" run university' and President Robben Fleming spoke of the difficulties in satis- fying the various constituencies in the community. Both McLaughlin and Fleming exceeded the usual 15 minutes al- loted speakers in the past -- Mc-, Laughlin spoke for 45 and Flem- ing for 25 minutes. "The University," said Mc- Laughlin in an impromptu "tell it like it is" speech, "is run in the interest of students only when its interests and the students' coin- cide. "The University listens to the people who have power and it is going to continue to do that un- less the student body - which has an interest in getting a share of this institution - starts mnaking the changes that are necessary." Fleming stressed that he did' not come to debate the SGC Pres- ident and said their differences on c4,1r1l i" 7n17P 1P .f i T ni .r- , i the taxpayers ("who have been extremely generous" with giving money to universities.) McLaughlin attacked the idea that the University is a sanctuary where free and open debates take place. "In fact," he said "what the University is-which you can see very clearly simply from reading a1 catalogue from a school let alone from the bylaws of the University -is a structure which is in es- sence authoritarian, where tih e kinds of authority- -legal and otherwise-is vested in the Re- gents and where defacto authority is in the hands of administ'ators and faculty. "It should be quite clear."' he, continued, "that rational dialogue is only possible between equals and the first time students start toz consider themselves equals with the faculty or the administration is the time they find this really not is the case in terms of powem'r" McLaughlin added that "the University does not serve a train- ing function for producing criti- cal thinkers. Crit ical thinke's are produced at the Umiversity by ccr- tamn accidents as a result of brimg- ing together a certain number' of; sufficiently bmight peopl._ "The role of the university In this society is to produce a com- modity for a price." McLaghlin saved most om his tongue lashinr fo' tie Regents. He described regeital decisions, here as "made after' 350 pages have been sent to them in the mail and duni'ig heii' two dlays a momth in Ann Arbor." He cited the Regemts' decision not to set upt a Univeirsity book-1 I store, dt 'pi i studen referen- See FL EMING, Page 8 I are going about their watine emergency work as usual and thereE appears to be little tension in the1 air." As Hanmoi began a (.)~k f moiurning, Hanoi madio told nevs- papers to run Ho's picture and a biography within a black border for the next seven days. AUl miaoio stations b'roadcast subdued mu c. "tig the mourning das. allj celebratiomis, all entertain :mns,. See VIET, Page 8 sj .I . E ; l COMMLINICATION GAP .- - try's politicians." The obscenity case is expected to raise significant legal ques- tions regarding individual civil lihpartiprad fpernm refthe ~nif Course closin I Y, JJ.Jk 4 VU'ull I rueuv....i.Alla 'sv 411C p. '..a. By JIM BEATTIE On paper, the diversity of the courses offered at a large univer- sity seem a great advantage. In fact, however, many freshmen and sophomores at the University have found themselves on long waiting Speech and sociology hadi the next worst problem with 19 couirses closed in the tvo depatmnets be- fore last Tuesdav, The causes of time piroblemi geI- erally vary with the size of the department in quest ion. However, sThetiariant for Kelley's arrest was authorized by County Pro- secutor William Delhey after City Attorney Jerold Lax refused to the office of the registrar, not the :caused not so much by bureau- authorize a criminal warrant. various departments. determine cratic failure as by shortages of Lax described the Argus photo- what the expected return of stu- funds for faculty and equipment. graph as a "political statement" dents and the admissions quotas "In the larger departments, we and concluded that it was there- shall be for each year. can make fairly accurate predic- fore protected in light of recent Because of fluctuations in the tions about how many students we Supreme Court decisions, number of graduates and dropouts swill have, says Psycholog de- At the Wednesday press con- I .-k _ ~1