Corporations roll into land development t e ti an Bail Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 News Phone: 764-0552 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1973 Thwarting the boycott WE DEPLORE the move Tuesday by the University Housing Council (UHC) to re-introduce non-United Farmworkers Union lettuce onto the tables of Uni- versity's dormitory cafeteria. Fortunate- ly, the Housing Policy Committee must now consider the move. We hope the com- mittee will reverse the UHC decision and continue the boycott. The argument that the University; should no longer participate because a minority of students oppose it is absurd on the face of it. In the all-campus elec- tion last October support for the boycott was registered. Despite the fact that rel- atively few students voted, the election is the only concrete evidence on which any action should be based. Advocates or throwing out support of the boycott say the rights of a student minority are being trampled upon. But what is at issue is the living and work- ing conditions who have been struggling for years to carve out decent lives for themselves through the United Farm- Workers Union. BDY FORCING non-union lettuce into dormitory cafeterias, the rather in- significant right of a minority of stu- dents to eat lettuce is being used to tram- ple on the rights of Chicano farmwork- ers fighting for meaningful standard of living. The additional argument that the de- cision is an individual one and not insti- tutional is bogus as well. Lettuce would be bought and prepared by University Housing, not individual students, and thus it is indeed an institutional decision. Even had the October vote been closer than the 258 to 192 in support of the boy- cott, we must look towards our govern- ments for moral leadership rather than to simply carry out the biases and pre- judices of a minority of their constitu- ency. UHC has failed in this role. And UHC's decision also ignores other, varieties of lettuce available, including romaine lettuce and union lettuce. MORE DISTURBING than the UHC de-, cision, however, is the greed of the vociferous minority who feel their appe- tites should supercede the rights of un- derfed and underclothed Chicano farm workers. A final ironic note is that nearly at the same time the UHC decision was being made, Richard Chavez, brother of Cesar Chavez, was speaking on the diag. The UHC decision stands out as a symbol of the callous attitudes of many comfort- able middle class Americans toward the plight of farmworkers and Chicanos who supply them with much of their food every day. By MARTHA DEAN (Editor's note: The following is the first of two articles on the increasing involvement of large corporations in land development in this country. Today's artacle outlines some of the economic f'orces w~hich have prompted their involvement. Tomorrow's article will look at the philosophies such companies are following and the results.) AS URBAN AREAS in this country grow, consuming more surrounding land (For- tune magazine has estimated 3,000 acres per day), it becomes more important that land be used wisely, and thus it is increasingly valuable to know who is planning and fin- ancing the development boom across the country. In the last few years, it has become ap- parent that huge American corporations not previously involved in real estate and de- velopment are beginning to acquire land, and local builders are financing residential and commercial developments, "planned" communities, shopping center complexes and large office buildings. However, corporate involvement in real estate development is a striking change from the situation that existed as recently as ten years ago. Until that time, scholarly works noted, in- vestors such as insurance companies made their decisions largely on the basis of esti- mated costs, risks and monetary returns. COSTS AND RISKS in real estate were regarded as high, largely because such companies felt they had little control over land values, and felt themselves at the mercy of local governments. Not only could the values of specific pro- perties depreciate quickly, resulting in large amounts of money locked into profitable ventures, but privately owned lands are subject to the whims of authorities who might wish to use the land for such things as public housing projects. Insurance companies, after all, are ob- ligated to policy holder and stockholders, and the risky nature of real estate was not considered acceptable. Most states also limit the amount of real estate insurance companies can hold to between five and ten per cent of their assets. In addition, such companies seem to have held the opinion that real estate investment was not en- tirely proper for "respectable" companies. Thus what involvement there was came usually in the form of large downtown of- fice buildings for "name" tenants. However, this was hardly a commitment to maintain- ing or revitalizing a central business dis- IN GENERAL, corporate investors.in the late 1950s and 1960s considered themselves followers, not leaders, of current land use trends, namely the flight to the suburbs and urban sprawl. This picture is confirmed by the 1968 re- port of the federal Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations, which not- es that 62 per cent of new industrial build- nig and 52 per cent of new stores and other such commercial construction between 1960 and 1965 took place outside the central cities of the larger metropolitan areas. And even when investing in "new towns" the site selection process was conducted "purely from the standpoint of its economic sound- ness" rather than any concern for social public welfare, the report says. However, it would appear that rather recently real estate investment has ac- quired an infinitely better image in cor- porate and financial circles. ONE NEED ONLY look at such know- ledgeable publications as the Wall Street Journal, Fortune magazine and House and Home and note articles with titles like "Look Who's Rushing Into Real Estate," "The Future Largest Landlords in Amer- ica" and "Prudential Insurance to Lift In- vestments to $3.9 Billion in '73." Obviously a change has taken place but only among the largest of the potential in- vestors. For the life insurance industry as a whole, for example, only three per cent of admitted assets were tied up in real estate in 1957 and again in 1971. However, for institutions like Prudential the increase has been substanital. Direct investment in real estate and joint ventures grew from $90 million as recently as 1971 to $250 mil- lion last year. Attempting to answer the "why" of ex- panded corporate involvement also pro- vides answers to such questions as "who" and "how." IN THE homebuilding business, recent developments have produced the so-called "merchant builders" who combine in one company the entire range of land purchase, site improvement such as stretes and utili- ties, house construction and sale, and "com- munity builders" who own and develop very large parcels of land for commercial, industrial, residential or combinations of such uses - including amenities not norm- ally found in suburban developments. "In the last few years, it Ias become apparent that huge American corporations not previously involved in real estate and development are beginning to acquire land a striking change.." ...... .... .i :.:',L: ..'; .titit ...:: ... ...:''"3} ."}"r:':. i?}. . .. i.v.{"}1:i7 Both of these types of builders require large sources of capital who can afford to wait the two to ten years necessary for the profits to start rolling in. Corporations are also finding their own situations amenable to real estate develop- ment. One factor has been the need to stimulate product demand. Many industries increased their capacities in expectation of a 1960s boom only to have the Vietnam. War produce a tight credit situation. So such companies as Masonite and Kaiser In- dustries have banded together in financing operations to "encourage" homebuilding. IN ADDITION, many corporations have entered the homebuilding field to engage in product promotion and testing. Accord- ing to Fortune, Boise Cascade purchased the Perma Bilt Corporation and its lands to provide a test market for second homes and resort residences. Gulf Oil originally in- vested in the new town of Reston, Va., to get the right to erect 47 service stations in the community. Another incentive is an abundance of cash with no place to go. Such industries as alumnium and cement are faced with over- capacity and are in an oligopolistic situa- tion, so that craeting new capacity would not be profitable and mergers might result in anti-trust action. Investing in building industries, which use their products, is thus an attractive alternative. Real estate also provides opportunities for diversifica- tion without anti-trust hassles. Some corporations are using previously- owned land which they had planned to use for corporate purposes. Humble Oil Co. is using such land to build Clear Lake City on the outskirts of Houston. Chysler Corporation, in an effort to "up- grade dealer locations," cash in on valua- ble excess holdings, and "widen its real- ty base," has embarked on a planned com- munity, a luxury housing development, a town house development (Geddes Lake here in the city) office buildings, and shopping centers. Its 1968 estimate was that its real- ty subsidiary's assets would reach $1.5 billion by 1975. That estimate points up the basic reason for the change of attitude about corporate investment in real estate: There is lots of money to be made. In a tight money situa- tion, wealthy corporations are exploiting a strong bargaining position to demand what amounts to all the current income for at least the first four to five years of a pro- ject's life. In addition, real estate has come to be regarded as an excellent hedge against inflation, earning more money for as in- surance company than a similar investment in common stocks. Corporations have the money and now the inclination to invest in land and its development. Considering the large-scale nature of the building industry today, it is apparent that corporation involvement will become even greater in the future. The next question is, with what standards and philosophies are these corporations ap- proaching this involvement? Martha Dean is a teaching fellow in the Political science department. Ford confirmation: A An ecological setback 1 HE ALASKAN PIPELINE has finally been pushed through Congress, aft- er years of opposition by environmental- ists and tremendous lobbying in favor of it by the Nixon administration and the oil companies. Although the energy crisis probably gave the pipeline the final push it need- ed, perhaps its construltlon was inevit- able. The basic mood in this country con- tinues to be that when the environment and our inflated energy uses co'nflict, the environment be damned (or in many cases; dammed). Those with such attitudes either have forgotten or choose to ignore the fact that after ruining the environment be- yond a certain point, how much energy we want or need will be irrelevent to more basic issues of plain survival. The problems inherent in the pipeline still exist. The environmental impact Editorial Staff CHRISTOPHER PARKS and EUGENE ROBINSON Co-Editors in Chief DIANE LEVICK ........................ . Arts Editor MARTIN PORTER ..................... Sunday Editor MARILYN RILEY ......... Associate Managing Editor ZACHARY SCHILLER .............. Editorial Director ERIC SCHOCH .................. Editorial Director TONY SCHWARTZ .................... Sunday Editor CHARLES STEIN................ City Editor TED STEIN....................... Executive Editor ROLFT TESSEM.................Managing Editor EDITOIIAL PAGE EDITORS: Marnie Heyn, Chuck Wilbur, David Yalowitz DAILY WEATHER BUREAU: William Marino and Dennis Dlismachek (forecasters) statement originally produced by the In- terior Dept. noted that even under emer- gency shutdown procedures as much as 2.6 million gallons could escape after a pipeline break, and that minor leaks re- leasing as much at 31,500 gallons a day would be undetectable. THE REPORT ALSO stated that a sig- nificant spill into the upper Gulkana River during the peak of the salmon run would likely cause fishery damages of "catastrophic proportions." The Gulkana flows into the Copper River, which sup- ports one of the greatest birdlife concen- trations in the world. But many people are shortsighted, and suggest birds are not worth worrying about. So the Nixon administration has its pipeline victory and the oil compa- nies have the defeat of the environmen- talists for which they have struggled so long. More attempts at destruction of the American ecology effort can be expected, with the energy shortage as an excuse, while overconsumption of energy is the real problem. The battle to save the en- vironment has only just begun. TODAY'S STAFF: News: J. Fraley Jr., Jo Marcotty, Eugene Robinson, Judy Ruskin, Jim Schuster, Charles Stein. Editorial Page: Eric Schoch, David Yalo- witz Arts Page: Sara Rimer Photo Technician: Steve Kogan By JAMES WECHSLER GERALD FORD may be Richard Nixon's last secret weapon or his ultimate revenge against his disaffected countrymen. For as the Senate Rules Com- mittee completed the first - and possibly final - phase of its ex- amination of Ford, large numbers of onlookers must have felt a new unease about the prospective sub- stitution of Ford for Nixon in the highest office of an emotionally battered nation. Yet there appeared little dis- position among the Deimocratic Senate interrogators to offer any spirited challenge to Ford's creden- tials for the Vice Presidency. Even when potentially explosive ques- tions were raised involving, for example, widely-published reports of Ford's early role in blocking a House investigation of Water- gate, the questioners were almost apologetic in tone. Perhaps the atmosphere w i I 1 change if testimony taken in exe- cutive session confounds some of Ford's protestations of fiscal and general virtue. But for the mo- ment both Democrats and progres- sive Republicans act like people en- trapped. FORD HAS been an amiable, rather well-rehearsed witness with no trace of arrogance. Indeed, there were intervals when his de- meanor invited remembrance of Winston Churchill's celebrated re- mark about Clement Attlee - "a modest little man, plenty to be modest about." Ford's larger size is not to be confused with stature. Such reflections could not have eluded Mr. Nixon when he tapped the Pentagon's wisdom in foreign affairs. It may be said that in many re- spects his domestic positions were a carbon copy of Richard Nixon's, and that he dutifully followed Nix- on when the latter reversed him- "Ford was a congenial member of the Congres- sional club with a highly consistent record of reactionary votes on home-front issues and un- swerving allegiance to the Pentagon's wisdom in foreign affairs." }}:4":f}: }"g , ":"b:::4:"i imi:: "}.;?y.;}";y.: .:r:ibi:" n::.;y:::::::: :. ::i :.::.w.::v bloodless until Ford is safely installed. That may well be the case - at least pending new, shattering epi- sodes such as the saga of the mis- sing tapes. Conceivably Ford's elevation will reveal hitherto hidden assers - of leadership - in the man. But the liscernibly growing pressure among right-wing Republicans for M r . Nixon's departure, presumably in the immediateraftermath of Ford's confirmation, raises a more omi- nous possibility. It is that Ford is envisaged by the Republican Right as "our own man" - and one who will be an utterly pliant captive of the GOP's Goldwater-Buckley-Dominick fac- tion. Long before the disclosure of tainted concessions to special in- terests and other scandals t h a t have brought Mr. Nixon to the edge of political ruin he had be- come an ideologically suspicious character to many of his former companions. His Moscow-Peking journeys and his identification - short-lived - with the Moynihan Family Assistance Plan were here- sies not easily forgiven by his old disciples. It is not hard to imagine t h e GOP rightists projecting Ford as the manipulable man who will give them new dominance within the Administration and a firm base.for coup operations in 1976. The coup would be bloodless. That scenario should restrain thoughtless elation among those who believe (as I do) that Mr. Nix- on faces ultimately irresistible pressure for resignation and are prepared (as I am not) to em- brace Ford's confirmation to hast- en that day. THE PRESIDENT'S problems multiply hourly; there is no miracle formula for his survival on the horizon. But I am still convinced that the healthiest solution for the national crisis is to convince Mr. Nixon that his support for a statute mandating a new national election upon his resignation would offer him the most dramatic and honor- able way out. Perhaps too many "practical men" in both parties are reluctant to give the nation a chance to be- gin anew, under fresh command- whether Republican or Democratic. But the idea may gain new ground if the prospect of a Ford Presi- dency is contemplated long enough. It may even finally begin to ac- quire appeal in the increasingly stormy view from the White House and Key Biscayne, fames Wechsler is editorial page editor of the New York Post. Copyright 1973 - The New York Post Corporation. Ford for the Vice Presidency. Even as Ford tried with plaintive earn- estness to describe his grasp of world affairs - some of his best friends, he indicated, are very important international personages - and his gifts for domestic lead- ership, his pedestrian if frequently unexceptionable responses seemed to enlarge Richard Nixon's dimen- sions. The truth is that at no point dur- ing his 25 years of plodding, faith- fully partisan service in the House had Ford been a serious contend- er for his party's Vice Presidential nomination. He was a congenial member of the Congressional club with a highly consistent record of reactionary votes on home-front is- sues and unswerving allegiance to self and began his Moscow-Peking initiatives. Defenders of the Ford appointment argue that Mr. Nixon was wholly justified in honoring so faithful a servant, and t h a t critics of the Ford choice are really trying to upset the 1972 "man- date" by blocking the appoint- ment, impeaching Mr. Nixon (or forcing his resignation) and there- by capturing the Presidency f o r Democratic Speaker Carl Albert. A SENSITIVITY to these charg- es no doubt explains why so many Congressional Democrats h a v e been echoing Republican demands for swift confirmation of Ford. Many may be more heavily influ- enced by the belief that there is no chance of Mr. Nixon resigning '! Letters: HRP I To The Daily: THE LAST Human Rights Party mass meeting (Nov. 1) unanimous- ly passed a resolution calling for the immediate impeachment and conviction of President R i c h a r d Nixon on the following grounds: 1) the illegal bombing of South- east Asia during 1970 and 1971 and during December, 1972; 2) the illegal impounding of funds earmarked for housing, education, health and medical care; 3) the use of illegal wiretaps and other surveilance methods in an attempt to effectively silence Ad- ministration critics; 4 the attempt to invoke execu- tive privilege to justify police state tactics in deliberately keeping the truth from the American people. The resolution was amended to read that "if we can't get him on those grounds, we would accept any others." As more and more information is revealed by the Administration and as the veil covering the lies grows thinner and thinner, it is import- ant that all of us unite in a drive to impeach the President and do not shrug off the tacticsofrthe Nix- on Administration as mere "poli- tics". It is clear, of course, that the political system of this coun- try is festering with corruption and that, more importantly, deceit is used to cover up the most hor- rible of moral crimes. For the President to deliberately lie to the .- - 2 es the crimes al the more stagger- ing. The crux of the matter (from ITT in Hartford to Chile to the war in Vietnam to Daniel Ellsberg to Archibald Cox) is that the Nix- on Administration had laid bare the guts of the American political system. It is not "politics" in some abstract sense but the capitalist system in the concrete which creat- es the conditions for Vietnams and Watergates. The Ann Arbor Human Rights Party, in demanding Nixon's im- peachment conviction, urges the support of the Ann Arbor Impeach- ment Committee in its efforts to build mass-based community op- position to the Nixon Administration including as a first step the attend- ance of the Town Meeting to be held Friday night, 7:30 p.m. in Rackham Auditorium. Also, in the near future we shall introduce a resolution at C i t y Council calling for Nixon's im- peachment/conviction and we urge all community support. Betsy Bunn City Committee Co-chair, Ann Arbor Human Rights Party Nov. 13 '11' mathmatics To The Daily: FOR SEVERAL MONTHS th administrative barons of the Uni- versity have used the argument _rocot rl , a in ti - nQ of a calls for there was some uncertainty con- cerning the exact size of the deficit, which would ultimately be deter- mined by the number of students receiving residency. After all, the University argued, it was better to be on the safe side with a slight surplus than to have to labor un- der a deficit. Having made these explanations, the University's financial wizards hid behind the uncertainty of the residency situation, using it to evade legitimate questions regard- ing their dubious accountings. (It is interesting to note also that, in the skillful hands of Mr. Pier- pont and others, the projected de- ficit grew from $2.5 to $3.9 mil- lion, conveniently cutting any po- tentially embarrassing surplus by $1.4 million.) The long-awaited facts and fig- ures are now known. It appears that the University, soteager to prevent a loss, over-calculated somewhat and "accidentally" end- ed up with a $3.75 million surplus comprised entirely of cash ripped- off from students. The magnitude of this surplus, along with the Uni- versity's apparent unwillingness to refund any of it, is more than a clear indication of bad faith; it is but another manifestation of the arrogant and contemptuous atti- tude that has characterized the administration's dealings with stu- dents. And we as students are pow- erless to do anything about it. Our only recourse it to suggest how impeachment what Dr. Fleming so piously refer- red to as a "goal" of ten per cent black enrollment. -Hire additional staff to recruit qualified students from the Chi- cano, Asian-American, and other third-world communities. -Publish and distribute to every students a comprehensive state- ment explaining fully all financial aspects deriving from the present tuition/residency situation. A Regents' meeting is to be held, this week, including a public com- ments session at 4 p.m. Thursday in the Administration Building. Student Action Committee (SAC) urges all students to attend and voice their feelings regarding the disgraceful, high-handed treat- ment they have received from the Regents and officers of this Uni- versity. As a further protest against this outrage, SAC has cal- led for a demonstration to be held on Peoples Plaza, Friday at 11 a. m. -Joe Frankl Mark Schlack Student Action Committee Nov. 14 Farah boycott YOU ARE probably awat3 that there was a nationwide boycott of Farah products. Well, there still is! None of the conditions : h a t caused the boycott have been re- medida Wns nre 1till below nar Kainrod Apparel, Par Exc=Td-tce, Passport, and S U Par. Farah's registetion numbers are 21:11 and 43914. Check all labels carefully for these names and numbesa. Con- tinue the Farah boycott and don't be fooled by these produc under any other names. -Michael Koen Oct. 25 clari fica tion To The Daily: I JUST WANT to clarify one point in The Daily's article (Nov. 7) on the political rights defense fund suit against Nixon. Claire Jean- nette endorses the suit as an indi- vidual and not as a representative of the Women's Advocate office. Secondly, endorsement of this civil liberties suit does in no way imply political agreement with the plain- tiffs, the Young Socialist Alliance (YSA) and the Socialist Workers Party (SWP) --Marty 'Pettit Political Rights Defense Fund Nov. 7 1 fI t... .. The nail -sul w