rte. Page 4-Saturday, October 29, 1977-The Michigan Daily Eighty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan housing I LIOUSING LEASES in Ann Arbor x 1are fraught with illegal, unen- forceable, and objectionable clauses. So reveals a study released Thurs- day by the Public Interest Group in Michigan (PIRGIM)1 which shows all of the 46 leases examined in Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti .contain "objectionable clauses.," The study further reveals that vio- lations in Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti averaged 6.6 per lease - the highest among the 19 Michigan cities examined in the 18-month study. Taken at face value by uninformed tenants, these leases seriously jeopar- dize their ability to protect their legal rights. And since laws and past cases relating to these clauses are scattered throughout legal books, lawyers them- selves would have trouble defending ases: Illegal their clients against such unfair and illegal clauses. Ina cit ywhere tenants are faced with a tight and expensive housing market, this PIRGIM revelation only adds to the public's knowledge of lan- dlord's excessive power. It's time for a single law to protect tenants from such unfair deception by their landlords. And that's what Rep. Mark Clod- felter (D-Flint) is proposing. Now pen- ding in the House Civil Rights Commit- tee, Clodfelter's bill would prohibit leases containing any of the offensive clauses which are so widespread in the 'city. Tenants in Ann Arbor - and throughout the state - are taken ad- vantage of enough. Clodfelter's bill would give them back some of the right landlords have taken from them. Ads and movies don't mix Carter two- gas, dereg, By ROD KOSANN remained the same - higher p: production. Last year, Governor Dolph Briscoe of Tex- In light of the ERDA report, as received a personal letter dated October should be called on to explain a p 19, 1976. It read in part, "I will work with the this week by the Federal Energy Congress to deregulate new natural gas. The Commission. The plan provides fo decontrol of producers' prices for new natural year delivery of 926 million cu. ft. gas would provide an incentive for new ex- gas per day at an-expected price ploration, and would help oil and gas produ- The administration appears willi cers attract needed capital." The letter was the consumer with expensive for written by the democratic candidate for the stagnant production levels when presidency, James Earl Carter. offered the alternative of greate Almost one year later, Jimmy Carter supplies at prices cheaper than called a White House news conference focus- provide. Even more alarming is ing on energy. In his opening statement he twenty year time element since it i equated industry's quest for natural gas de- Washington will permit this stat regulation to the "biggest ripoff in history" for some time. and "potential war profiteering." IN THE WORLD of present day politics it THE RISE IN production that r is impossible to expect that campaign prom- deregulation will be prompted ises will not be modified or broken. However, creased profits it ensures. The ca it is embarrassing to find that President Car- feet relationship can be couched i ter has come full circle on deregulation, the terms. Considering the enormous principle concern of what he has called "the ding new gas, this profit incentive most important domestic. issue that we will if further exploration-is going to face while I am in office." Yet the President's Attempts to find gas so far have pr reversal on the deregulation of new natural quate. Since 1973 the number of w gas might well make energy a far more in the U.S. increased 63.4 per serious issue for the man who succeeds him in production declined steadily. 1980. Aside from boosting production President Carter has presented an energy ulation of natural gas will make program that underplays the enormous pro- market more competitive. The duction potentials that exist beneath our feet. regulation of prices and the discou The President has placed greater emphasis duction outlook has excluded too on conservation, a concept embodied in the -- symbols of a cardigan sweater and a flaming hearth, but induced through a series of tax measures. This past summer, Dr. Vincent McKelvey, S 1 1t Director of the U.S. Geological Survey esti- mated that 60,000 to 80,000 trillion cubic feet of gas exist in the Gulf Coast region, and added By GERRY WOLKE that "even the bottom range represents about Verily, it had come to pass that ten times the energy value of all oil, gas and heard of great suffering and ang coal reserves of the United States." his people. They needed jobs and While presenting these figur, McKelvey was availabl. So with a herald of noted they did not include the considerable and a flourish of cameras he appe note thy nt ic econi e the faithful in the wilderness callec reserves that might still be tapped within the Yea, the wretched of the eart country. Such numbers did not sit well with an about him, amazed and dazzled a administration that forecasts energy doom, deur, and did petition him with th and McKelvey was summarily relieved of his "Grand ds ptjon hm with duties. The excuse given was that the ad- "Grant us a job or more dole", ministration "wanted its own team," an pred, "that we may suffer no more unusual statement since nominees for his post St. Jimmy heard them and knew come from the National Academy of Scien- faithful and sincere. At lasy he ces. "Oh faithful of Detroit, your THE ONLY METHOD by which the reser- Washington knows that you beli ves will be brought to the surface is by total and have served him well, so rej deregulation of all new natural gas. (New gas understands." is that leased offshore or drilled onshore after April 20, 1977).RAPTURE CAME over the fa At present, the price is unrestrained when faithful. "He understands! ", the: sold intrastate (the going rate is approxi- and left to carry forth his word. mately $2.00-$2.25 per 1,000 cu. ft. (mcf)), but comforted, though they still had no it is still controlled at $1.47 mcf when offered It came to pass in those days a appeared -among the people. " across state lines. The latter is not r aeppeaed. "Yong thlople p1 that will draw -rproducers into the market-shouted"YoU'follow'a false p that w rket- Jimmy has- no power you do not. place, nor will it encourage further explora- you have given to him for he tory attempts. The potential for profit is nothing. His only services are regu inadequate at $1.47 mcf. trol, violence and destruction. H The best evidence of this comes not from then provide jobs except by tak the oil industry, but from the administration s away through taxation? He ha own Energy Research and Development Ad- caused your misery so that you ministration (ERDA). him for relief." An ERDA report released last June states. "Jobs can only come through that if the price of gas were allowed to rise to and ultimately investment, bt wi its market level, from $2.25 to a maximum of $3.25 mcf, the supply of gas would increase d people of investment capital substantially over the amount expected from ad xn t p ia President Carter's proposed ceiling of $1.75 business cannot expand or innovat mcf. Because the ERDA people arrived at stifled competition, fostered mon such conclusions, their study was reworked intervened on behalf of existing b three times, but in each instance the result to prevent new firms from ente acedon ulation rices, more pendent producers, and helped foster the con- centration of energy power into fewer hands. Mr. Carter The increased opportunities for profit that an approved result from deregulation will attract new. Regulatory competitors, each vying for their share of the r the twenty energy market. of Algerian Ultimately, it will be the consumer who of $3.26 mcf. benefits from deregulation. An increased ng to saddle domestic stock of gas will be offered below eign oil and the price levels of foreign supplies. The price ERDA has rise that does result from deregulation will er domestic promote the same conservation efforts to- Algeria can wards which President Carter is aiming. the plan's Thus, it seems to be far wiser policy that con- implies that servation accompany higher production, as e of affairs opposed to the higher taxes which the energy package presents. esults from OVERALL, PRESIDENT CARTER'S at- by the in- tempts to promote conservation may be term- ause and ef- ed nothing but admirable. However, if en- n no clearer couraging further production is not coupled costs of fin- with such attempts then admirable is too is essential strong a word. Mr. Carter has labelled the take place. energy issue "the moral equivalent of war." oved inade- As a graduate of Annapolis he should exercise ells drilled the judgment of an experienced commander, cent, but and recognize that victory will come only by boosting the supply of his most potent , the dereg- weapon. the energy " prolonged Rod Kosann is Sales Manager of the raging pro- Daily Business Staff. many inde- nmy i Det VOU'VE JUST muddled through an- .1 other trying week of school. The only thing on our mind is escape. Get away from the real world for a few hours and relax. But where can you find this comfortable little pseudo- reality? Why, at the movies, of course. There you can sit back in a comfy chair with a ox of popcorn and lose yourself in the film. Two glorious hours of unin- terrupted escape, right? Well, no 4longer. Wednesday, 1,800 theaters in major U.S. cities began showing commer- cials on the silver screen. This is an outrage. With movie prices soaring to unbelievable heights in recent years, it is a brazen affront to every moviegoer to profane one of the last means of escape from the com- mercial-laden world. Since we are re- quired to pay $3.50 to see a film that will undoubtedly be on television for free in ayear or soythe movie theater has to offer something better than TV. In the past, theaters have offered something better than TV. In the past, theaters have offered something ex- tra: a large screen, which almost always enhances the film and most important, NO INANE AI)VERTISE- MENTS !With this new policy, the only advantage a theater will have over TV is the large screen, and that just isn't worth $3.50. { C . r tc. t t1 EDITORIAL STAFF, ANN MARIE LIPINSKI JIM TOBIN Editors-in-Chief LOIS JOSIMOVICH...............Managing Editor GEORGE LOBSENZ ..................Managing Editor STU McCONNELL.. . .....Managing Editor JENNIFER MILLER. Managing Editor PATRICIA MONTEMURRI Magaging Editor KEN PARSIGIAN...............:..:...Managing Editor BOB ROSENBAUM...... ...... Managing Editor MARGARET YAO....................Managing Editor SUSAN ADES JAY LEVIN SundayMagazine Editors ELAINE FLECTCHER TOM O'CONNELL Associate Magazine Editors JEFFREY SELBST Arts Editor STAFF WRITERS: Susan Barry, Richard Berke, Brian Blan- chard, Michael Beckman, Lori Carruthers, Ken Chotiner, Eileen Daley, Lisa Fisher, Denise Fox, Steve Gold, David Goodman, Elisa Isaacson, Michael Jones; Lani Jordan, Janet Klein, Garth Kriewall, Gregg Krupa, Paula Lashinsky, Marty Levine, Dobilas Matunonis, Carolyn Morgan, Dan Oberdorfer, Mark Parrent, Karen Paul, Stephen Pickover, Christopher Potter, Martha Retallick, Keith Richburg, Diane Robinson, Julie Rovner, Dennis Sabo, Annmarie Schiavi, Paul Shapiro, R. J. Smith, Elizabeth Slowik, Mike Taylor, Pauline Toole, Sue Warner, Jim Warren, Linda Willcox, Shelley Wolson, Tim Yagle, Mike Yellin, Barbara Zahs Mark Andrews, Mike Gilford, Richard Foltman Weather Forecasters BUSINESS STAFF DEBORAH DREYFUSS ................. Business Manager COLLEEN HOGAN.................Operations Manager ROD KOSANN.........................Sales Manager NANCY GRAU...... ................Display Manager ROBERT CARPENTER.................. Finance Manager SHEyLLEYSEEGER,.t..', .......Classifie Manager SUSAN BARRY.............:National AdManager PETEPE 1i1Sl;N,.,....,,....Advertising Coordinator.. STAFF MEMBERS:'Steve Barany, Bob Bernstein,Richard Campbell, Joan Chartier, Fred Coale, Caren Collins, Pam Counen, Lisa Culberson, Kim Ford, Bob Friedman, Kathy Friedman, Denise Gilardone, Nancy Granadier, Cindy Greer, Amy Hart- man, Susan Heiser, Larry Juran, Carol Keller, Randy Kelley, Dough Kendall, Katie Klinkner, Jon Kottler, Lisa Krieger, Debbie Litwak, Deb Meadows, Art Meyers, John Niemisto, John O'Connor, Seth Petok, Dennis Ritter, Arlene Saryan, Carole Schults, Claudia Sills, Jim Tucker, Karen Urbani, Beth Warren SPORTS STAFF KATHY HENNEGHAN... ......................Sports Editor TOM CAMERON...................Executive Sports Editor SCOTT LEWIS........................Managing Sports Editor DON MacLACHLAN...,............Associate Sports Editor JOHN NIEMEYER.................Contributing Sports Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Paul Campbell, Ernie Dunbar, Henry Engel- hardt, Jeff Frank, Gary Kicinski, Rick Maddock, Brian Mar- tin, Bob Miller, Brian Miller, Dave Renbarger, Cub Schwartz, Errol Shifman and Jamie Turner. St. Jimmy wish among not enough newspapers ared among d Detroit. h gathered at his gran- eir prayers. they .whim- re." . w they were answered, father in eve in him oice for he aces of the y swooned, They were jobs. wise man Fools!" he rophet. St. All he has produces lation, con- ow can he king others as cleverly will turn to production ho has rob- by inflation income so e? Who has opoly, and ig business ring an in- dustry? Who has created sky-high interest rates and mounds of regulations and red tape that make it almost impossible to go into business today? Who has -made investors reluctant to place their money into business when no one can predict which business will be the recipient of regulation or subsidy? "WHO HAS intervened on behalf of labor allowing them to drive wages up past their market value while compelling business to use less labor? Who has passed minimum wage laws that throw thousands out of job training situations to walk the streets in anger? Who has created licensing bureaus that allow a trade or profession to limit their numbers and drive up their fees so people who want to do their kind of work cannot? Who has created an educational system that divorces education from the workplace so most studen- ts do not understand production. Meanwhile, many will be trained for jobs that don't exist and other jobs will go begging for lack of trained people to fill them? "Who is so blind as he who will not see that Jimmy and'his cronies are the enemy?" "Liar! Heretic!" someone shouted. "Blasphemer!" shouted another. The righteous people rose in anger and cast lhe wise man into the outer drive with a great wailing of tires and gnashing of bumpers until he was heard no more. St. Jimmy looked down upon the scene from the great white palace on the hill and once again, smiled. Gerry Wolke is President of the Ann Ar- bor Libertarian League, and was q Liber- tarian candidate for State Representatie in the election of fall, 1976. C't. I Letters to The Daily - #. z T- ( ' POW Euv- t V&LL7 carilloneurs To The Daily: As an inhabitant of the Modern Languages Building, I wish to express my displeasure with the schedule and the musical arrangements of the Burton Tower carilloneurs. I have. nothing against music; however, the noon concerts are distracting and I find professors and teaching assistants having to shout to be heard. As for the selections, in my two and a half years in Ann Arbor, I must have heard the same ten or fifteen pieces played thirty times each. It gets tedious. Mu suggestion is to limit the noon practice to ten minutes, from 12 to 12:10. A few new arrangements would also be greatly appreciated. -Jeremy Katz Teaching Assistant clericals To The Daily: as reported in the October 18 Daily, University management interfered with clericals attem- disregarded the rights of UM workers, employing a wide range of techniques to attempt to bust campus unions. Management's action 'against clericals in the OCC is the latest in a series of blatantly anti-labor moves. In the past, management denied AFSCME members union representation in disciplinary ac- tions taken against them; it refused to allow clericals in UAW Local 2001 to distribute union literature on non-work time in non-work areas; and it refused to. sign a contract with GEO. In all three cases, the University brazenly violated the Michigan Public Employment Relations Act. The Unions filed ULP charges and WON. In each case, management is stalling by ap- pealing through the courts, although they have almost no chance of winning. Now University managment is frantically trying to stop the ex- panding clerical organizing drive. Managementhas good reason to fear a new clerical union. Once organized, our new union will represent the largest number of workers at UM. It will express in one collective voice what many clericals are now ca inr ndvii li- T m irr contract negotiations. W settle for 5.75 per cent w creases, we won't settle same inadequate benefi we won't settle for th abuse we get at work. O new union acts in unisn v other campus unions,v begin to win the contract ds we so urgently need. In filing the ULP, the O shown that we do not and tolerate management's cancellation of our meeti any other tactic which den rights. Manage r harrassment won'T Clericals are fighting m, are organizing and we w ceed. All clericals shoulds the OCC and sign an OC The union makes us strong -Organizing Comm for Clericals October 24, 1977 To The Daily: While the people of Dad ty weren't looking - it apF their elected represen were conspiring to fois them an ordinance which (1) deprive parents of the to make certain that those e won't sion into the neighborhoods in age in- which they own property. for the Anita Bryant had the courage ts, and to stand up and say no, loudly and e daily forcefully enough that her neigh- nce our bors took notice, despite all the with the vitriolic ad hominem and ob- we will fuscation of issues with which the deman: media greeted her efforts. She is not fashionable, you see. )CC has She has the gall to believe i will not chastity in an age in which (as w illegal are told by the chic professors a ngs nor all the best universities) th nies our "new morality" is stamping ou n en t 's the dead hand of ugly traditiona WORK. beliefs. She has the gall to believ ad-we that the Apostle Paul just migh vill suc- have enjoyed as thorough an un support derstanding of Christian prin C card. ciples as the latest chi ! theologian whose creed boil ittee down to "if you can't lick 'em join 'em." She has the gall to tak the Bible seriously - to rea from it in public! Bigotry! Shee bigotry! Rita Three cheers for Anita Bryant the good folk of Dade County Mark Siljander, and his fift le Coun- colleagues in the Michigan Hous peaCrs- of Representatives! If Mar pears - didn't intend to make this a st upon issue, he should have. May h s would some day soon run for statewid air right office. I am dying for a chance t e teah- vote for him! .iw Contact your reps Sen. Donald Riegle (Dem.), 1205 Dirksen Bldg., Washington, D.C. 20510