-Friday, October 21, 1977-The Michigan ily TENANTS CORNER Eighty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 CXVIII, No. 37 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan More dorm space needed Vol. LX) M1ack rule in South Africa von't come without force 1 OUTH AFRICA'S white rulers have ) made clear their plans for the fu- re of that country - and those plans )n't include relinquishing any power the black majority. In a massive surprise attack Wed- esday morning, Prime Minister John orster banned every major black or- anization, closed two influencial ack newspapers, and arrested more an 40 blacks and white liberals. In recent months, U.S., British and ven South African officials have )ped for an easing of white paranois i South Africa. While carefully warn- ig that change will be slow, they have >netheless assured us that it will )me, and without violence. And many liberals both in South frica and around the world were re- eved. Finally, they thought, there as a solution to the racial problem iat didn't involve armed struggle. But they were all duped.. The Vorster regime has no intention paving the way for black majority ile. Wednesday's action makes it ainfully clear that the only way lacks are going to gain control is to eke it. We sent Andrew Young there, nd Britain sent Foreign Minister 'avid Owen to convince Vorster that is time is running short, and that lack rule is inevitable. But while nod- ing his head in public, Vorster has een plotting behind everyone's backs, nd the result was Wednesday's crack- own. Vorster and his cohorts are running cared, but they aren't afraid of the .S. or Britain. Vorster knows he can ppease the two powers with some fast ilking and empty promises. No, they re afraid of the blacks within their ountry. And not just the revolutionary lacks - they fear the moderate and rhite liberals as well. This is evi- enced by the fact that the 18 black and itegrated organizations banned were enerally regarded as moderate and onviolent. Justice Minister James Kruger ex- ibited his government's fear when he aid: "The government is determined ) ensure that the peaceful coexistence f peoples in South Africa is, not dis- turbed by a small group of anarch- ists." Kruger also indicated that Wed- nesday's crackdown was a forewarn-' ing of even stricter government policy. T IS EVIDENT that the Vorster I government will not give in to black rule unless forced. Summit confer- ences and threats from foreign powers like the U.S. and Britain have had no effect on the South African gover- nment. Vorster has told the world to keep its nose out of his country's busi- ness, and this latest incident of vulgar racism has shown he means business. If there is to be any change in South Africa, the U.S., Britain and other Editor's note There has been a great deal of confusion over an article which ran on this page Wednesday, written by Rod Kosann, which I would like to clear up. It seems that many readers thought that the story (headlined "Hypocrisies on human rights) represented the opinion of the Daily staff, since it was noted at the end of the article that Rod Kosann is the sales manager of the Daily business staff. In fact, this story was solely the opinion of Rod Kosann. The orily editorials that represent the opinion of the Daily are those that are unsigned, and appear on the left side of the Editorial Page. Any editorial that carries a by- line is the opinion of the person named. I apologize if anyone was misled by the Kosann article, or by any other'article that has appeared on the Editorial Page. Ken Parsigian, Editorial Director countries must sever all economic and diplomatic ties with South Africa. In- dependent corporations must pull out their funds - the lifeblood of the white regime. And private and public in- vestors - the University, for example. - must disinvest in those corpora- tions that remain a party to the racist apartheid government of South Africa. But even this may not be enough. Vorster's attack shows he is deter- mined to subjugate black South Afri- cans at any cost. And although we can never condone violence, it may well be that only armed struggle will win for the blacks the freedom that is right- fully theirs. By STEPHEN HERSH Well the University build some more student housing? It's up to the Regents to decide. Hardly any one in town dis- putes the fact that there is a shortage of University housing'. At the beginning of the current semester, the dormitories were so crowded they had all the hectic quality of a television situation comedy. Dorm residents were jammed into whatever tempor- ary 'living space was .available, storing their belongings in boxes and suitcases, waiting day to day for the order to move into new makeshift accommodations. By the endsof September, all dorm residents had either been placed in regular dorm rooms, or been told that their temporary accom- modations were reclassified as permanent. But despite the fact that each dorm resident now has a room to call home, the student housing shortage is still simmer- ing, ready to cause new problems in years to come. THE SHORTAGE of dorm space does more than inconveni- ence students who are kept wait- ing for their dorm accommoda- tions - it also forces the Uni- versity to turn away thousands of students who would like to live in University housing. Those students must enter the city's over-crowded and over-priced private rental market. It's rare that University admin- istrators and students agree on so controversial a topic as housing, but the general sentiment among both now seems to be that more student housing should be built. A typical student view .was ex- pressed a couple of weeks ago by freshperson Tracy Moir, a resident of a Markley Hall lounge converted into a bedroom. Said Moir; "I would say they should either build more dorms or ac- cept fewer people in University housing. But housing is horrible all over the city, and if they ac- cept fewer people in dorms, it's just throwing them into the Ann Arbor housing market." And the University's Housing Information Director, John Finn; had this to say about student housing: "We would (ike to see more of it built, and I agree that there's a need for more housing in Ann Arbor." ONE MIGHT ask why the Uni- versity doesn't just go ahead and start construction. The procedure for getting construction under- Ho'Jslt OPuR pRJA 1 yCN 15ON'E OF 'ST Y'E VtN A I .,.,, ... C y , r _ 5 ' . o ' -- . _ . KFi1 } Rlct 4 t s \\ e ntc c nr. D w way is relatively simple. It starts with the University's housing of- fice, which is the administrative unit charged with designing plans for new University housing. Act- ing Director of Housing Robert Hughes said earlier this week that his office is "intensifying ef- forts to put together a package." He speculated that the plan may be completed "within the next month." Once the plan is drawn up, it's sent off to the federal department of Housing and Urban Develop- ment (HUD), where it is decided whether the government will loan the money to finance the project. "There is money available from HUD," Hughes said. "The College Housing Program has been extended for a year. I would guess we would stand a pretty good chance of getting a HUD loan." But before a plan for new stu- dent housing can be submitted to HUD, it must be approved by the Regents. And it's questionable whether the Regents will back such a plan. They simply have not considered good student hous- ing to be a high priority in recent years. THE REGENTS may now be swayed by the currently popular argument that the size of the stu- dent body will drop over the next few years, and so any new hous- ing will cause a surplus. Pro- ponents of that argument point to recent population studies which show that the number of college- age Michigan citizens will de- cline in coming years. But those population studies do not prove that the University's enrollment will shrink. Hughes said that the number of students will "not necessarily" drop. "There are differing views on what the figures mean," he said. "It's a very iffy situation. I don't think anybody really knows what's going to happen." Associate Director of Housing Peter Ostafin notes, "There's a difference between gross demo- graphic figures and institutional enrollments. The demand for quality institutions is going to in- crease." AND IN HIS recent State df the University address University President Robben Fleming point- ed out, "Despite the availability of so many facts and statistics (on population trends), actual college enrollments remain speculative." He added that cut- ting the size of the student body would be "painful" for the Uni- versity - there is incentive, he said, to take strong measures to keep enrollment from declining. Fleming said, "reduced enroll- ments would pose extremely dif- ficult staff and faculty problems. Not only would reductions in per- sonnel be unavoidable, but the problem which troubles us now of how to bring in new young faculty would be exacerbated." One way Fleming .suggested the Univer- sity could maintain enrollment at its cutrent level by accepting more women, minorities, and people "beyond the normal college age." Thus, it's likely that the student body will not shrink in coming decades. And the current supply of housing is too small to accom- modate the current local popula- tion. Students who choose not to live in dorms, or who are turned away from dorms, face a private housing market in the city whose rate of vacant rental units is only 0.7 per cent. According to HUD, seven per cent - ten times the Ann Arbor rate - is the mini- mum vacancy figure necessary for a healthy housing market. The housing shortage is what makes the cost of local housing so high, and its quality so low. The need for more University housing is'urgent. If University officials want to insure that any new housing they approve doesn't go unused in coming years, they should follow the example of the colleges which have taken to building student apartments in- stead of new dorms. When those colleges can't find enough students to fill the apartments, they rent them out to community residents, at a profit. HUD can offer the University money for new housing. And the University can work its way around the risk that the housing will go unused. It's up to the Regents to make the next move. Stephen Hersh is a former Daily editor who now works for the MSA Housing Law Re- form Project. Letters to The Daily FIRST CAt E S4ta -- OF SA 't, Zt'1 E 'C ti-ACKO UT, ... I~tpW R TtSN A1R1 t +YS & AIR FR ? CE .e rr '... - 1 a ,. " 1 .: .{ _ - . . - _ _ ' _"- --. - - - ,. TNT Tj A DISASTER a Y _ ' . Ott44 44oaq oaao ee as Ors. N w " - 111 j .. -^ . , ,, "' ,.,,, - +C '}M G SO4H TO A 1 A1RF'oRT NEAR 1(oV t maaS c ' > Mac w' y ' flening To The Daily: I read the State of the Uni- versity address delivered by President Robben Fleming in the University Record and would like to respond to a particular phrase that President Fleming chose to convey his displeasure with the present chornic underfunding of institutions of higher education. Quoting from the text of the ar- ticle which summarized the President's presentation: "He blamed that underfunding on a variety of factors, including the campus turbulence of the 1960's and early 1970's (many of the mindless activities of that period have not only hurt higher education badly in terms of public support, but have also tarred education's image"), rising unemployment and a sag- ging automobile industry." One might well wonder which of the many activities which oc- curred on campus in the mid-and late-sixties and early seventies President Fleming referred to in his assertion. Was he particularly vexed because those mindless ac- tivities brought public attention and ethical considerations to the allocation of University funds for research into new and better ways to make war? Does he be- moan the loss of the Willow Run facility, where many of the high- technology devices that unerring- ly guided the bullets & bombs to their strategic (read innocent men, women, and children) targets were developed and test- ed? Is he saddened that the Black Action Movement Strike in the Winter of 1970 forced upon his administration the first meaningful affirmative action obliged to avoid the use of inflam- matory rhetoric in his public ad- dresses. His presentation should have been one based upon fact, not veiled inuendo. They fact is that the only carryover of mind- lessness extant on campus today resides within the cranial con- fines of Fleming himself. Had it not been for those tumultuous 60's the paper you read today would be controlled by the admini- stration, there would be few minority students on campus, there would be few women in positions of meaningful em- ployment in the University as faculty and administrators, and there would be only sanctioned student input into the policy promulgation process in the various schools and departments of which the campus is com- prised. That the University is in a sorry state few can deny.. To what extent Fleming's tepid and over- cautious "leadership" (I use the term loosely) has led to a decline in the respect for the higher edu- cation process here at Michigan and a concomitant loss in State funding should be the topic of in- creasingly penetrating analyses in the next year or so. I look for- ward to hearing Fleming's defen- se of his low-profile approach to the University Presidency. Maybe it's time we had a Presi- dent who could go to Lansing and take the arguments for higher education to the legislators di- rectly. In anirera of decreasingly available real dollars to pay for increasingly inflated salaries and research programs only an effec- tive higher education lobby will get the job done. Another President tired to As President of the University of Michigan Robben Fleming is ing. I took you for a bigger man than that. -Larry Fink goblins To The Daily: While walking home from the. library last night, I encountered a most peculiar group of people. I had just started to cross a bridge when all of a sudden, I thought I heard voices coming from under- neath the bridge. I stopped and tracked the ghostly voices to a carefully hidden spot underneath the bridge. I approached very cautiously and what did I find but seven goblins of the Revolution- ary Goblins Brigade. They were closely gathered around and were staring into a single candle of philosophy which illuminated them with the colors of red and yellow. Around them were other candles of different philosophies but they never looked at them except when fail- ing to snuff them out. Every now and then, one or more of the goblins would turn to the river behind them and begin to speak. The goblin(s) spoke a strange dialect filled with words and phases like "the revolution," Victory for the exploited-oppress- ed masses!! !," "capital imper- ialist," "We demand an end to the housing crisis caused by the money-hungry evil business- persons or else!! !" and "Save Kent State!" to name a few. Yet, no matter how many goblins spoke, the river flowed on. It made little changes, ignoring the noise that came from the east Chorus: Fight this!? Fight that! Fight everything we can't hack! Fight imperialism!!! (Hey, let's go fight for South Africa or Kent State and convert them to our revolutionary relig- ion. Even if they don't want to be converted or fought for!) Chorus Fight capitalism!!! (Hey man, would you care to buy some books on revolutionary thought? Only 50 each or 3/$1.00.) Chorus Fight facism and oppression!!! ("Hey Lenny, after we take over are we going to allow our enemies the capitalist-imperialists to speak freely." "Holy Marx, are you kidding? We'll kill all the men, rape all the women and brainwash all they kids in the name of our holy revo- lution." "Well, Lenny, can't we reform any of them?" "Some of them, but not many. The only .good capitalist-imperi- alist is a dead capitalist-imperial- ist!') Chorus: Fight this! Fight that! Fight everything we can't hack! Except non-violence. That is something we can honestly and sincerely believe in. Fight At this point, my tape ran out. However, for those of you who are interested, the rest of the Revolutionary Goblins Brigade chant pretty much goes the same way; a statement of an illusion followed by a statement of reali-