MONEY AND REVENGE EleMtd iaft aily Eighty-Five Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Renters sue management Wednesday, March 26, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 By DAN BLUGERMAN NTEIL GOSOSH, Jeff Baill, and Al Kelman last semester moved into a fairly typical Ann Arbor student apartment: filthy hallway entrance, uneven floors, thin walls, no storm windows, improperly hung doors, and a truly interesting pattern of cracks in the ceilings. Feeling they deserved better for the $270 a month rent they were shelling out, they drew up a list of complaints about the place and then notified McKin- ley Associates that they were not paying any more rent until the premises were livable. Starting last December, Neil, Jeff, and Al began depositing their monthly rent check in an escrow account beyond McKin- ley's grasp. The miffed McKin- ley people promptly brought suit Weyand gambit no bargain TWO AND A HALF years after for- mer President Richard Nixon belatedly blew the whistle on Ameri- can involvement in Vietnam, our new commander-in-chief came dan- gerously close yesterday to sending in the U.S. team again. President Ford's announcement that General Fred Weyand, U.S. Army Chief of Staff, will fly to Saigon today to study the worsening military situa- tion in South Vietnam and recom- mend possible new American assist- ance, cast a chill over a country tired of sinking lives and money into the Indochina quicksand. The long, collective sigh of relief we breathed when U. S. troops were finally pulled out of Vietnam after ten frustrating years of battle that claimed 60,000 American lives must now be tempered with a gnawing fear of renewed involvement. Ford's personal instruction to Weyand re- calls nightmares of Nixon's closed door policies. Ford is walking a dan- gerous tightrope over Vietnam with no net of American support to catch him. FORD'S ACTION SLAMS against a solid Congressional wall of op- position. Congress has so far refused to comply with Ford's recent request for $300 million in additional mili- tary aid for South Vietnam as well as $222 million in more military as- sistance for Cambodia. Ford is giv- ing it the old team try, however, and yesterday told a South Vietnamese delegation that he was making an all-out effort to persuade Congress to provide the requested funds. Press secretary Ron Nessen said the President had asked General Weyand to assure South Vietnamese Presi- dent Nguyen Van Thieu of his strong support in Saigon's fight against the insurgents. Ford had better clamp his helmet down tight during this playdown with Congress and listen to his teammates who want us out of the Vietnam playing field. Who can assure us that we are not heading toward a rerun of 1965, when the Tonkin resolution first sent U. S. troops charging into the Vietnam turmoil? TRAN KIM PHUONG, who led yes- terday's delegation to the White House, tried lamely yesterday to ex- plain Congress's reluctance to pro- vide more aid, declaring that views would change if more American legis- lators went to South Vietnam and became aware of how determined the country and the people were. However, while Ford sounds off on the domino theory, claiming our re- sponsibility to guard vulnerable coun- tries from toppling to the Commu- nists, the American public, backed by Congress, gains determination to avoid a repeat of the Vietnam trag- edy which so recently lost its Ameri- can victims. President Ford assumed his office with proclamations of candor, and humbleness. However, yesterday's move bears frightening resemblance to the closet tactics of his predeces- sor who ultimately walked the bat- tlefields in isolation. mTheLighter Side:...... ;:iy Half million spent . find secret love :::....... ..........:.:.:.:....:..: { :: .D ic k W est - J - By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) - In a recent press release, Sen. Wil- liam Proxmire accused the National Science Foundation of squand- ering $465,600 on three "futile and wasteful" studies of love. Here is a classic case of leaping before looking, which often happens in senatorial press releases. Had Proxmire thought the matter over carefully I'm sure he would have concluded the money was well spent. For some people, $465,600 wouldn't even pay a month's ali- mony. Yet in this instance it could solve the age-old mystery of why people fall in love. The point Proxmire overlooked is that you have to know why something happens before you can prevent it. And certainly it would be in the public interest for people to be able to avoid falling in love. STATISTICS SHOW that 66.34 per cent of the people who fall in love fall with the wrong people. Which can be a soul-search- ing experience. As well as frightfully expensive. If people knew why they fell in love they would then have at least a fighting chance of tumbling in the right direction. As it is, the process is based entirely on chance. Those who fall in love simply stumble into it. 'Tis done without rhyme or reason. Well, maybe a few rhymes are involved. Moon, June, spoon. But of reason there is none. The result is a high rate of shattered romances, heartache, broken homes, heavy drinking, lonely teardrops and evenings spent making fudge, most of which could be avoided if people knew what they were doing when they fell in love. WE WON'T HAVE the answer until the studies are com- pleted, but let's assume, for illustration purposes, that falling in love is caused by tight shoes. Here's the scene: A table for two in some secluded rendez- vous. Candlelight and wine. Soft music and roses. Cramped feet. The girl, as girls are wont to do, slips off her shoes under the table. The boy, who has a hole in one sock, remains shod. Result: He falls in love, she doesn't. The only thing worse would be for both to keep their shoes on and wind up unhappily married. The point I'm making is that if people knew why they fell in love they would stick to barefoot dates until compatibility was established. And that, Proxmire to the contrary notwithstanding, would be the first faint gleam of rationale in male-female relations. Dick West is a syndicated UPI columnist. against their recalcitrant ten- ants. But the prospect of fight- ing it out in court must have given the rental agency cold feet. On Thursday of last week, an agent for McKinley appr.ach- ed the three rent strikers and, after a short talk, reached an amiable, out-of-court settlement. BECAUSE NEIL, Jeff, a n d Al were willing to back up their complaints with action, their lease has been amended so they are not liable for May and they get a half a month's rent re- duction. "This is more than a victory for us," Baill commented on the settlement. "It is an inc-,ntive for other people in the battle of the rental market. If people do as we did, we can bring the landlords down to their knees." "We won something substan- tial," he added, "money and an early out of our lease." Neill, Jeff, and Al's disen- chantment with their housing plight was not an isolated in- stance in Ann Arbor. When six students moved into 942 Woodlawn last September they were so appalled at the conditions of the house they vowed to themselves not to pay another month's rent until it was repaired. There was no stove, refriger- ator or hot water for the f i r s t week. The missing windows and screens were never reolaced son, "we had offered teem a better settlement than the c :urt finally awarded us." But the conditions of the house were so intolerable that bv late October the six were looking for another place to live before the trial. They found one that was open to January 1, ,ut it had been gutted by fire and they were forced to endure their ori- ginal house until the first week of February, when repairs on the new place could be com- pleted. "This is an incentive for other people in the battle of the rental market. If others do as we did, we can bring the landlords down to their knees." x":. ...x.es a pared for the following legal procedures and landlord reac- tions. First, the city suggests tnat tenants with complaints about their housing should call the city Housing Division and wait for an in.';pector to show up and issue a violation. After the issuance, the landlord has 30 days to fLx it with grace periads allowed for good effort. HOWEVER, such a strategy would still leave you paying the overpriced rent for some- place in disrepair. Landlords are required to pro- vide a clean, safe place to live. If you think yours isn't con- tact the Tenants Union or Stu- dent Legal Aid, both located in the Michigan Union. They can give you informed opinion of whether your complaint is mer- ited. If it is, stop paying rent immediately. Call the landlord and tell him you are withholding rent ai iti the listed repairs are made. Usually a landlord will aik for a time schedule for the repa rs. Here you have to mare a choice. Inform yourself about the person or firm and nrizeed according to your best judg- ment. If you find that your land- lord has a bad track record with repairs, withhold rent right away. As soon as you have, mail him a list of the repairs you de- mand. You might also kcep a carbon copy of this letter in a manila envelope marked: "Vic- tor- for Oppressed Tenants!" "You needn't establish an es- crow account for the money, just make sure you have it readily available. Dan Blugerman is a Daily staff writer. and the water pipes threatened to burst everywhere. THEY CONTACTED L e g a l Aid when the landlord sent tnem a notice to pay the rent die or vacate the premises within the week. After determining that the claims against Westerman, their landlord, would hold up in court, Legal Aid advised the six sim- ply to sit tight. "It was a fairly easy proced- ure," commented Tim W'lson, whose name appeared on the suit. "The only difficult part was the uncertainty. We were constantly trying to decide among ourselves whether tn set- tle it or take it to court." "As it turned out," continued Wil- TWO WEEKS ago the case came to trial in Judge Pieter Thomasson's -15th District Court. On the basis of a fiery eight hour session led by Stu- dent Legal Aid Lawyer .Johna- than Rose, Judge Thomasson ruled the six not only 3houldr.'t pay any rent for the six months before the trial, but that they receive a rebate on tie single month's rent they had paid in advance in September. Both of these cases -oint to the rent strike as the best stra- tegy for getting through to de- linquent landlords when you feel they've been negligent in their duties. If you're thinking of register- ing a housing complaint, be pre- Letters to The Daily Simon's right. If upper income folks get most of the rebates, they'll buy cars and refrigerators, where we'd just fritter it away on food, clothing and health care.' undergraduates To The Daily: THE ATTITUDE of Wayne Johnson toward the undergrad- uate role at the University is summarized in his statement: "Undergraduates are mere tran- sients, bodies that fill seats and take notes." As an undergraduate and Daily reporter at the U dur- ing the years 1964 - 1968, I would like to point out that if we had felt that way when we were undergraduates, some or all of the following conditions would still exist: 0 Women would still have cur- few hours in the dorms, and would not be allowed to live off campus until their junior year. 0 There would be no BGS program. All undergraduates would still be required to meet the more rigid distribution re- quirements of B.A. and B.S. de- gree programs. " ROTC courses would still carry full undergraduate crelit. * The Wilow Run Laborator- ies would still be a branch of the university, sending U pro- fessors to Southeast Asia to teach government armies how to use the infrared sensing de- vices developed at the Univer- sity. * The Daily would still be controlled by the Board in Con- trol of Student Publications, and the Board would still have the power to delete articles and con- firm (or refuse to confirm) ap- pointments for Senior Editor- ships. 0 Students who dropped out of school or graduated would still be subject to a military draft. THE PRINCIPLE that J,:hn- son proposes, that undergrad- uates should worry about their awn education and view them- selves as transients takes a nar- row view of education and of citizenship in general. Undergraduates who sympa- thize with the situation of teach- uate employees in the past. To those undergraduates who are standing on the lines with us - thanks. If you ever go to grad- uate school, you'll be glad you did. -Carole Hafner GEO Member misleading To The Daily: I WOULD like to respond to a number of issues raised in the Second Ward council race, and especially to some intentionally misleading propaganda being distributed by Democrat Carol Jones. In her campaign Intflet Jones lists a number of items that supposedly indicate her superior performance. When all the facts are known +hey indi- cate just the opposite. Jones says that the H u m a n Rights Party did not introdu -e a Community Development Rev- enue Sharing proposal > coun- cil. She fails to mention that H.R.P. played a leading role in organizing groups to present their own proposals. More in- terestingly, she does not men- tion that H.R.P. did have a proposal to submit to city Goun- cil, but at a joint Democrat- H.R.P. meeting to discuss C.D.R.S. Jones and Kenworthy made it clear the Democrats would not second H.R.P.'s pro- posal, thus preventing any dis- cussion of it at concil. One last point on C.D.R.S. ; Jones voted in favor of the Mayor's appointments to C.D.R.S. citi- zens committees (one of which was chaired by C. William Ced- burn) while acknowledging that the committees were not tepre- sentative of the community. JONES SAYS she has worked for voter registration. Yet sin- glehandedly she was respon- sible for giving the Republican controlled council an ecuse for a severe cutback in voter regis- tration services. In January of to register, in spite of poli-ical opposition. After the council vote in 1974, H.R.P. filed suit against the City for violating -he civil liberties of student voters. In another matter, when Dr. William Brown from the Envir- onmental Research Institute of Michigan first appeared before council neither Jones or any other Democrat raised oniec- tions to E.R.I.M. war reseal ch. H.R.P.'s second ward couincil- person Kozachenko was the only voice of opposition. Later t h e H.R.P. members provided much of the energy on the Ad-Hoc Committee to oppose E.R.I.M. war research. CAROL JONES supports t h e rent control charter amendment I guess. I can't tell from h .r literature because she never mentions rent control. A any rate, rent control has been put on the ballot (like the $5 fine, preferential voting for Mayor and daycare) through the pri- mary effort of H.R.P.'s organi- ation. During her entire term on council Jones has taken no ,.c- tion that would bring rent con- trol closer to reality. I will support Frank Shaic'iet for City Council in April. -William D. Wilcox' March 14 day care To The Daily: THE PROPOSED charter amendment on day-care funding responds to two important needs. Day-care is of course a nie- cessity to conscientious working parents, particularily working mothers. Low cost quality day- care will allow women to join the work force when necessary for their economic survival. A second need the day-care amendment speaks to it that of our children. Young people from every socio-economic background will have the chance day-care slots in Ann Arbor. This compared to the 9,400 child- ren in the city of Ann A r b o r who could make use of day- care facilities if they were available. For those reasons the Ann Arbor chapter of NOW i3 en- dorsing the day-care funcng amendment. We believe the fu- ture of our children and our society can only be improved by proper quality day-care. We urge all women and men in Ann Arbor to vote "yes" on the day-care proposal whih will appear on the April 7 ballot. -Kathleen M. Fojtik President of Ann Arbor Chapter, National Organization for Women March 19, Sullivan To The Daily: MARK SULLIVAN'S com- mand of the intricacies of con- sumerism and the American economy isastartling. Perhaps he espouses as our new rallying cry "Divided we stand; united we fall." -David Hiller March 21 politics To The Daily: I FIND IT interesting, and a bit saddening, to read, the re- cent pre-election literature dis- tributed by the Human R*,ghts Party and the Democratic Par- ty. The character assassination and ideological rhetoric t h a t these parties so blatantly spatter their positionstatements with are nothing but detrimental, if not destructive to the eUs that the parties are trying *o achieve. The Democrats' character as- sassination attempt upon the person of Frank Shoichet does nothing but lower both Mr. Sho- ichet, for his activities, and Ms. platform for a very vocal, very minor section of the community. The ideal concept of an effcc- tive third-party movemeit is one that 1) open-minded forum for populist ideas, and 2 ) re- cognies that the root carse and root solution for the uniquely American problem must be dealt with through the political system, rather than the Euro- pean-style method of changing the economic system. The most saddening part of the whole thing, however, 16 that these parties are wasting an op- portunity that cannot be re- peated. Here in Ann Arbor exists the makings of a micro- cosm of America. Here in Ann Arbor, also, exists the chance for the political parties to try and onerate the system the way that it was supnosed to be op- erated in the first place: get- ting the people representd and providing for all of them. "'7th- out the suport of the people, no governmental system can sur- vive." With the Watergate-like antics that the political patties are playing it today, how long are the real people going to stand for it. Think about it. -.Teff Smith March 20 tenants To The Daily: THE ANN Arbor Tenants TUn- ion plans to evaluate the politi- cal narties and candidates in the Ann Arbor city elections on the basis of their records and priorities on tenant related is- sues. General questions of most con- cern to us are: 1) What have you done in the past to further the struggle of tenants for recent housing at a reasonable cost. 2) Do you sunport the rent control ballot question on the sprine ballot? 3) If elected, how would you It's that time again: TAXES TAXES, ONE HALF of life's un- avoidable duo, are due April 15, gust three weeks away, which is sooner than it sounds. And the mes- sage from the Internal Revenue Service is clear as a bell: file early if you want your refund soon. Returns filed today will probably yield refunds in about ten weeks ac- cording to local IRS officials. And, the official warned, the closer to the 15th that an individual files, the longer the delay in receiving the return will be. So if you're counting on money from the feds to get you through t~he smmeor nr finance a nremonfira vacation the chances are slim you'll have your hands on the money in time unless you gather your W-2 forms, borrow a calculator, and get busy. J)ON'T BE DISMAYED by the hope- less bureaucratic doubletalk that fills the form 1040 instruction manu- al. Despite their reputation as sadists who find nothing more enjoyable than watching citizens sweat trying to decipher the obscure language of the tax code. IRS staffers are only too happy to assist you in any way possible, including telling you which fnrm rrni nrc hnw +t feim fhr