fl ASr4iepnIit 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, FEBRUARY 14, 1974 Supporting rent control CITIZENS OPPOSED to Rent Control, a landlord pressure group, has sug-. gested that Ann Arbor landlords kick in $5 for every rental unit they manage in order to defeat the proposed rent control ordinance. More than the rent control ordinance is at stake. By itself the suggestion is a. frightening example of the way in which private power and private money, in. the service of selfish interest, are used to de- feat the popular will. Even more frightening, however, is a calcul&tion of the real financial power which the landlords have at their dis- posal, and which they are undoubtedly marshalling against the rent control or- dinance. Multiply the $5 cut by the number, of rental units in the city and the sum raised would amount to about $85,000, an awesome campaign chest in the local. political arena. This, in fact, is nothing compared to the amount of money which the land- lords are potentially able to raise, espe- cially if the proposed ordinance passes April 5 and goes into the courts. IN WHATEVER WAY the landlords raise their campaign treasury; it will be the renters who bear the cost. Considering the ingenious proposal emanating from the landlord pressure group, tenants would do well to follow another suggestion, this one from the prime mover behind the rent control or- dinance the Human Rights Party (HRP). HRP has suggested that renters bal- ance their landlords' contributions with those of their own, deducting five dol- lars from their next remittance to their landlord. The money should be sent to HRP rent control fund, 516 E. William, Ann Arbor 48104. Tenants have been burned by their landlords-especially the big manage- ment companies who will lead the anti- rent control campaign-for long enough. When laws are passed to protect tenant's rights, the management companies will think up clever ways to evade them. Rents and profits are high enough, as the plumbing is bad enough and the deposit hassle enough. TN A LETTER MADE public by the Hu- man Rights Party, local realtor Neil Snook stated that rental control is "in- tended to bring people who own, oper- ate or manage income property to their knees." He's right. Thompsc fiture worlds goofs By STEPHEN SELBST HUNTER THOMPSON'S appearance at Hill Auditorium Tuesday has to rank as the most visible and blatant mistake of the Future Worlds lecture series. Thompson was neither educational nor entertaining. This is nothing new at the U. There are many professors who aren't educational, many mre who fail to enter- tain. The combination, as Hunter proved on Tuesday, is deadly boring. But Hunter Thompson doesn't deserve total blame. The real cause of a horrible lecture was that Thompson is not a lectur- er by profession, he is a journalist. His style is highly unorthodox, and to expect " him to deliver a straight talk followed by an unemotional question period was fool- ish. WHAT MORE does he have to say? He tore all his favorite targets to shreds in Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail '72. Did the crowd expect him to get uip there and tell the untold chapters? Or, like Ralph Nader, to expose the real truths in American political life? He didn't have anything to say, and he didn't. He seemed to enjoy the adulation, and there was plenty of that. A lot of the crowd seemed attracted to him because he seems to be such an obvious escapee from the funny farm. People who had come to see the man who wrote Fear and Loathing in Ls Vegas;, the best book ever written on dangerous drugs, wanted Thompson to tell them they were right in filling their bodies with weird substances. That crowd was right at home from the start, passing joints, drinking booze, and engaging in a perverse form of adolescent hero worship. THEY YELLED and hooted whenever Thompson said anything at all. "Pretty ear- ly in the day to be so fucked up," drew a big wave of appreciative laughter. Right from the start, any hope of a serious lec- ture was doomed when the crowd refused to settle down. Instead, a mood of nervous expectancy prevailed, with people waiting for him to say something utterly outrageous, stumb- ling along, hoping for laughs and cheap thrills. For his part, Thompson didn't add to the decorum much. When Ann Arbor's own Shakin Jake took the stage, Thomns)n just moved aside and let the crowd have it's way. He got paid no matter who was on stage. He flaunted that arrogance when he told them, "to satisfy contractural obliga- tions I could read from the cocaine papers of Sigmund Freud." C'MON NOW. What kind of crap? This guy is supposed to be for academic credit. Can you imagine a future worlds final ques- tion? Get stoned and describe in ramb- ling terms Thompson's sum knowledge of the American political process. 25 points.- Thespeople who came to see him smply because he is a big youth type name got taken for a dollar, but the students of the course got ultimately defrauded. The blame for this fraud lies with Future Worlds. They obviously wanted a big name to draw people, to go along with Ralph Nader, William Douglas, Buckminster Ful- ler, and some of the other big names. bombs: Who's to blame? That's fine, and pulling in a big name to go with a bunch of fairly obscure scientist types is a necessary concession to the lure of the almighty dollar. FUTURE WORLDS is in financial trouble and they hope to draw a few big crowds. But Hunter Thompson was the wrong man to fill the role. Not touching on anything about the future, or anything else for that matter, he wasted the time of several thousand people and disgraced the name of Future Worlds with one of the worst performances ever on this campus. credible bits of wisdom, you've gotta be prepared for his almost complete and oft- en boring self-indulgence. IT HAPPENS THAT we didn't get the bits of wisdom Tuesday. But neither has anyone else lately. He doesn't write much and his last two pieces in Rolling Stone have been pure mush. Thompson has given up plans to run for the Senate, and he says his major pastime and means of sup- port - an offshoot of his success in han- dicapping presidential candidates during the primaries - is betting on pro football. What this may represent is the begin- ning of the end of a really fine hustle. Thompson had a limited appeal. He could only fulfill fantasies so long. He said as much in his "speech". At first I felt sorry for Thompson Tues- day. They wouldn't take him seriously. Instead a bunch of lost fools guzzled Wild Turkey and tried archly to imitate a style which I suspect even Thompson only takes vaguely seriously. BUT THEN PEOPLE started asking ri- diculous, pretensious questions like "What do you think of Bill Proxmire?", "of Scoop Jackson?" and "Do you think Mrs. Howard Hunt's plane was sabotaged?" Questions Thompson knew nothing more about, and perhaps less, than the rest of us. After that, I started hating the audi- ence, and myself, for having gotten sucked into the hype. Yea, we got what we deserve. As a good con man once put it: "If you've got lar- ceny in your own heart, no matter how' slick you are, you'll be easy to hustle." Well my larceny was that I expected a hero, a God, and the seventies offer noth- ing but scarred, fallible people. HUNTER THOMPSON'S an ass, but he makes no bones about it. He walked away with $1200 Tuesday for doing nothing less than all precedent said he would have. The joke's on me. Solzhenitsyn's tragic plight THE SOVIET GOVERNMENT arrested Alexander Solzhenitsyn last Tuesday night. Its violent action was hardly un- predictable. Ever since the seizure of his latest work, Gulag Archipelago, an ex- pose of Soviet labor camps the Soviet Un- ion has stepped up its harassment of. the Nobel-Prize winner. In spite of the government's attempts to coerce Solzhenitsyn into retracting his scathing Indictments, the author firm- ly refused to deny the charges or to leave the country, an alternative emi- nently desirable to a government deter- mined to silence one of its most vocal critics.' Solzhenitsyn refused to leave Russia because he is a confirmed Communist and a sincere patriot whose dedication to his country has led him to denounce the wrongs he finds in it. He did not want to leave the nation he loves, but the issue is not patriotism alone.. SOLZHENITSYN IS ONE of the few leaders of the Soviet intelligentsia still alive and able to voice his opinions. His presence in the country was a strong influence, a fact of which the govern- ment was painfully aware. TODAY'S STAFF: NEWS: Prokosh Aswani, Dan Biddle, Tim Evanoff, Cindy Hill, Cheryl Pilate, Jim Schuster, Becky Warner EDITORIAL PAGE: Clifford Brown, Morn- ie Heyn, Patricia Tepper, Joan Weiss ARTS PAGE: Ken Fink, Jeff Sorensen PHOTO TECHNICIAN: Thomas Gottlieb Now, what Solzhenitsyn most feared and the government most wanted has come to pass. He has been exiled from the Soviet Union for the rest of his life. His wife and children will be permitted to join him whenever they wish. At one time, he simply would have been liquidated; but in this age of in- creased Soviet sensitivity to world opin- ion, the solution was not that simple. A massive campaign to discredit Solz- henitsyn and his book completely failed to shake public belief in him. The gov- ernment was forced to take stronger measures to silence him, but actual mur- der would have made him a popular martyr and therefore been counterpro- ductive. Spiritual murder, however, is far more difficult for the world to see and thus more effective. TRUE, THE SOVIET government cannot silence the writer now that he is in West Germany, but it can efficiently pre- vent him from acting as mentor to dissi- dents within the Soviet Union. From the standpoint of personal safe- ty, perhaps exile is preferable to remain- ing in the country, but in light of Solz- henitsyn's steadfast refusal to surren- der his position and his citizenship, the action is totally deplorable. Although Soviet oppression is not as readily apparent as it once was under previous regimes, it still crushes attempts at free expression. This may be an "age of detente", but the world cannot ig- nore such flagrant violations of the right to criticize injustice. audience applauds By TONY SCHWARTZ I GOT WHAT I deserved, and so did most of the people I talked to. I wanted a hero, or at least an anti-hero, and there aren't many people around to fit the bill. I chose Hunter Thompson for a few reasons: -He was twisted enough to run around like a completely self-indulgent, maniac 17-year-old juvenile deliquent, and get away with it; even, incredibly, to get payed for it. He filled, vicariously, all my wildest fantasies. -He was ruthless to his body, filled it up with more drugs than I knew existed, or at least said he did. And then he was funny and lucid writing about it, in a way I always wanted to be. -HE WAS ALSO ruthless and funny in writing about the biggest villains in the last few years: politicians. Drugged up, he parodied their incredible deceit by ob- scuring his own line between fact and fan- tasy. And these are the reasons I had no right to expect any more than Thompson gave us. Make no mistake about it: he was a rin-off. He came here to speak about "Politics and the Seventies" and instead he offered to read from "The Cocaine Papers of SigmundeFreud" and finally gave slur- red responses to questions through a dys- functioning microphone. But why not? We read, in his own words, how he ripped off Sports Illustrated and just about everyone in sight while he ran around in Las Vegas. And so too Rolling Stone, during the last presidential cam- paign. What makes a university so sacred? Thompson is Thompson, and for his in- point where it will buy two hours of alternate chaos and boredom. Perhaps it was too much to expect Hunt- er Thompson to speak coherently, aud- ibly or in complete sentences when he spoke on Tuesday at Hill Auditorium, let alone to expect a recognizable or organized topic. Many in the audience were expecting a torrential and biting lecture similar to Thompson's famed written ravings. Those who were not familiar with Thompson's gonzo journalism were expecting at least an adequate lecture for their dollar and two hours. LOGICALLY, THOMPSON - who doesn't write like most writers - should not have been expected to lecture like most lectur- ers. Thompson's Future World lecture col- leagues have been distinguished and erudite speakers. The audience may have been ex- pecting a Ralph-Nader-type lecture on con- sumingdrugs or a Carl-Sagan-like lecture il- lustrating the outer space of the inner' nihd. What the audience's tickets bought them was a view of a red-shirted, besneakered and dying hero, a man whose life was a bottle of pills and a bottle of booze and a ball point pen - with the bottles winning out. The cripple-tongued, foggy speaker claimed to be the same man known for intestinal and fearless outer limits writing. That claim and Thompson's assumption that he was qualified to set one sneaker sole on the Hill Auditorium stage was frauda ulent. WHAT WAS perhaps most disillusioning to those who had come to hear a brash but potent journalistic leader speak was the realization, after an hour of schwafling and Romper Room madness, that Tho mp- son had nothing to say. Half the people in the audience could have expounded on politics with ten times the comprehen- sion and clarity of Thompson, although only a few could have elucidated on drugs with more knowledge or personal expertise than Thompson. Thompson's speaking ability may well be more suited to the American Pharmaceutical Association. Only a handful of gonzo devotees enthus- -Astically hooted in obeisance to te g nzo master. The large majority of faces held rooked looks or were turning in disust toward the exits. Thompson's popularity dwindled during the lecture, reviving brief- ly whenever he decided to call a questioner a speed freak or swear. A foul-mouthed boy scout could have done. as good a job and probably only charged a dime. PERHAPS THE nerve connectin. b- tween Thompson's drug-burned mind and his mouth have been mescalined out of existence, or one too many Hell's Angel's fists crashed into his skull. For whatever reason, Thompson is bound into a nietal straight-jacket, unable to verbally cotylete a thought. The dream of a bright revolutionary to lead us through days of unenlightened 84me- ness has been swallowed in a capsule ond hypodermically punctured. Hunter huffs By BETH NISSEN A DOLLAR WON'T buy much of a lunch these days. It has devalued to the Letters Tohe Dail .Notes of co ncern U U - mm. mu 0 '4 g I r -I l, '/1I I LLD " " t6 To The Daily: THIS APPEAL BY Miguel En- riquez, Secretary General of the Chilean MIR (Movement of the Revolutionary Left) was recently smuggled out of Chile. Enriquez, on whose head there is a price of 50,000 Escudos, along with Socialist Party leader secre- tary, Carlos Altamorano, has ask- ed for the widest possible distribu- tion. I take the responsibility for its accurateness; please allow MIR and the working people of Chile to express themselves in your newspaper. -Maris Bertoletti Comrades, FASCISM HAS imposed itself in Chile, with the suport of U.S. im- perialism and it's sub-imperialism in Brazil. All democratic freedoms have been abolished. The army has intervened mili- tarily in the universities. Parlia- ment has been closed down. The worker's organizations have been dissolved. Thousands of work- ers have been sacked. A real sys- tem of forced labor exists today. Wages have been frozen. Prices shoot upwards. The administrators named by the government to run the factories are the former own- ers, the former directors. A state of seige exists through- out the country. The whole popula- tion is subject to curfew and can be hauled before a military tribunal as in time of war. The number of summary execu- tions is increasing, and a virtual program is being carried o u t against foreigners. A regime which draws it inspiration from the Nazi Germany rules Chile today. IT WAS NEITHER socialism, nor the proletariat revolution, nor the workers which failed in Chile. In Chile what collapsed so trag- tionaries are still powerful. The struggle wil be long and hard. But we are sure of winning. From the struggle for the re- storation of democratic freedoms, from the defense of the standard of living of the masses, the maws movement will reorganize itself, the popular resistance to the dicta- torship will grow in the country and in the towns will develop and grow. This will lead to the overthrow of the dictatorship, the restoration of the freedoms, and will open the way for a powerful revolutionary process involving the workers and the peasants, which will culminate in the prolertarian and socialist revolution. THE STRUGGLE of the Chile!4n working class and people agaist the fascist military dictatorship is an integral part of the struggle of the peoples of the world against imperialism. The international sol- idarity of the socialist countries, of the democratic and the revolu- tionary countries and sectors has been and will continue to be funda- mental. I do not want to end without pay- ing tribute to Salvator Allende, who gave his life in defense of his be- liefs, the workers, and to the mili- tants of all the organizations of the left, and in particular to our own militants who are dead, dying, or imprisoned in the fight against ie facist military dictatorship. -Miguel Enriquez October, 1973 Chile To The Daily: BAUTISTA VON SCHOWEN, un- dersecretary-general of the Move- ment of the Revolutionary L e f t (MIR) was arrested and condemn- ed to death in Chile December -14. According to the reports, he was accused of "acts of resistance " Nothing else was known by Jan. Guarnicion de Santiago, Grl. Ai el- lano, Santiago, Chile; and to En- rique Urrutia, Presidente de la Corte Suprema, Plaza Montt-Virus Santiago, Chile. -The Chile Solidarity Committee New York, Jan. 31, 1974 the herd of students pasing in and out of the multiversity every four years, and gather perceptions about the education we receive here. We are surveyed, counted, and computed. The tabulated re- sults can be found in office files and wastebaskets or the "Mo- dern Living" section of Time. But how many of us can say that we have been approached as human beings and asked how we feel about the courses offered us or the way we are taught? It would have to be a sca:'e handful. Yet somehow it ha. oc- curred to the history department that our perceptions, as individ- uals, and as a group should count when making decisions concerning teaching and curriculum. Hopefully, a lot of people, espic- ially those interested in history. will recover from the sho sk in time to be present at the fortrzm, billed as "the Greatest Forum on Earth", or, for the less pre enti-)ts, 'Teach- ing History: What to Save? What to Change?" being held in 182' Physics and Astronomy Building, Friday afternoon at 4:00 p.m. The people in a position to act -- to change, to eradicate problems and build exciting programs, will be there to listen and to respond. FRESHPEOPLE and soromores are particularly encouraged tt, come and express th:r views, since one of the major topics of discussion will be lower level courses. What are people who take them looking for? What do they feel they are getting? What areas and approaches might be most interesting and effective? 0); h e r questions which should ba raised concern the role of the teaching fel- low and the grader and the differ- ence between graduate and under- graduate education., If we want to help detrniine our education, instead of bitz i og use- To Tht DAilY: To The Daily: THE IRRESPONSIBLE behavior of SGC members: Hoffman, Hud- ler and Taylor "Fight nearly erupts"; 218/74) cannot go un- criticized. In full awareness, that the movement to organize farm workers is a struggle against the racial and social oppression of the entire Chicano community, these representatives chose to childishly eat non-union lettuce during a re- quest by the UFW suport commit- tee for financial assistance. Whenever the rights of a parti- cular minority are threatened, everyone in the society suffers. Mr. Hoffman should be especially aware of this. There is no place for racism in the academic com- munity, let alone in the student government. If Messrs. Hoffman, Hudler and Taylor are allowed to remain in office this can only imply consent for their actions and beliefs, on the WHAT DOES BOB Dylao's con- cert tOur mean? Everything has its symbolic as well as literAl meaning. The concart Was a bit- ter-sweet experience. But what is Dylan sayin'A? I'a. has enough money to live, I tink, from his previous work, and to play to peuple to his heatt's con- tent. Instead of doing that, he hooks up with a monster commercial tour which will pull in millions. For what? So lots of people will get to see him? He says himself that money doesn't talk, it screams. Where does he go fromn here with his million dollars? What does he have to say to us now? He's a rich man telling us to stay "forever young." TO ME IT was like he was say- ing good-bye. He could have con- tinued to be a part of ur ives,. like he was to mine for sd iany years in the sixties, when he Sang of everything I Was feeling and experiencing, and made mi feel in touch with the world when ever*'- thing was crazy, dbumaized, and brutal. He gave us a nignt of high exite- ment, I loved it, and r pid $30 for my chance to see him. I'd ned'- er actually seen him perform be- fore and really wanted to. But now he's gone, I wonder what there is to follow. If he wax a synbol &, self-exploration, his expoloitatio of his name and his fame, or his failure to prevent chers, like Gra- ham and the businessmen from x. ploiting his talent for profit, make me wonder where he is going or gone. I CAN'T follo~q' him If there-s music to play and things to say, you've got to just be contesit wit; saying it. The it ,ge of Dylan, now the rich mtn, gain3 his way Dylan I ~1r bi ' Rt MILK