EightySevten Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 .. . Thursday, March 31, 1977 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Ann Arbor Hash Bash: A look back to the 60's THEY SAY THAT when the smoke finally clearedfrom the social un- rest of the sixties, the youth of our country was left in virtually the same shape it was in at the end of the fif- ties. Young people are now largely conservative, they say, intent on get- ting a good job and a fat bankroll more than anything else. Just like in the fifties. Sure, there's some truth in that. But you can take a comparison be- tween today's youth and the youth of the fifties too far. One proof that you can take such a comparison too far is that for one day every year in Ann Arbor, some of the smoke of the sixties comes back - in the form of sweet-smelling clouds rising from hash pipes and reefers, at the annual Hash Bash on the Diag. It's kind of a nice thing to see thousands of people turning out out- doors every year in our fair city to smoke marijuana together, because the attitude of defiance toward the law implicit in a public show of pot- smoking brings to mind the heady days of the sixties when people took to the streets in large numbers to complain. There was plenty to com- plain about it this country then. And there still is, although there's no prominent issue in the public eye to rally around. IN THE SIXTIES, the pot-smoking issue was widely associated with all the other popular protest issues of the period. It is one of the few controversial issues of the sixties that is still discussed a lot. It is no life- or-death question. But the drug sure- ly ought to be legal. The harrassment of pot smokers is more trouble than warranted by any possible dangers of pot smoking, because prosecution of marijuana offenders is exorbitantly costly and totally ineffectual, be- cause . . . but we've all heard the reasons. They're convincing. If people would get out and voice their opinions on issues more vital than marijuana smoking, we'd be bet- ter off. But we shouldn't write off the value of the Hash Bash as a dem- onstration in favor of the worthy cause of legalizing pot. The University and the city police have issued statements warning that violations of the law, such as public drunkenness, will be punished at the Bash. Potential participators in the event would probably do well to re- strict their lawbreaking to marijuana use. But they shouldn't fail to show up. 1OW y0..U ! :FEE VF ( AV * 0000 O& Council shc By RICKY DUTKA ling of its severity HOW IRONIC. The Ann Arbor News carries the head- MOREOVER, 1 line, "City Housing Called Among Worst in U.S.", needed all this dat the $39,000 ISR study documents the housing crisis, as if the entrench and the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) Housing no head. Everyone Law Reform Project releases its analysis which sup- it cannot be denie plements the ISR data by showing that the crisis has be done to impro been growing more severe over the past decade. Yet But, as City Counc within the same few days, City Council rejects a is worth even les $6;100 grant request from the Tenants Union (TU) originally anticipat for tenants' rights counseling in the three poorest cen- education program sus tracts. Somewhere between the common recogni- tion will be rejec tion of the severity of the situation and the will to The TU reque implement solutions, there are overwhelming obsta- on one of CDBG' cles; in this case the obstacle seems to be the Coun- Grant) highest pri cil majority and the landlord interests it represents. to hire attorneys, t This not unexpected rejection is continuing proof ant workshops. Th that it is not studies, but action that is needed for CDBG committee t solutions. The MSA Housing Project protested the ex- cil chamers. The penditure of such vast sums of money for a study which for a mere one-an would only prove what every tenant already knows: was still too much rents are too high, maintenance is low, landlords are We have surel invading privacy, and the banks are milking the mar- back as 1968, theT ket. In fact, the Housing Project was even forced to mediately after th supplement the ISR data with reams of research so representatives of as to place the data in an historical and meaningful union, and state st context. Lacking this supplement, the data would have sive state-wide te shown us only the present conditions, without any ink- mented. However, W\ Th .7, ,I C-ONV:USU, NOW4, T tC Pc Bb UN AR lS ..AND pQor A __ __ ItsL ) C t I qqmmmm p- )rtchanges TU Conimittee saves Upper Peninsula, ecans Seafarer or general trend. EVEN IF IT WERE TRUE that we a, and now that we have it, it seems ed interests in Council will pay it now knows there is a housing crisis, d or wished away; something must we the lot of tenants in this town. zil seems to be telling us, the data ss than the MSA Housing Project ed: Even the most minimal tenant by an established tenant organiza- ted. st was originally for $28,000. Based s (Community Development block orities - housing - the TU planned tenant counselors, and to create ten- he budget was cut, however, ,by a o $6,100 before it even reached Coun- revised budget would have provided d-a-half counseling positions, but this for Council. y taken a step backwards. As far New Detroit Committee, created im- e urban rebellions and composed of the highest echelons of corporate, ructures, recommended that a mas- nant education program be imple- tenants' awareness of their rights has not significantly increased since that time, and the housing situation has only deteriorated. PRELIMINARY STUDIES by the MSA Housing Project show that the more a tenant knows of his/her rights, the less satisfied he/she becomes, and thus the more prone to taking action to improve the hous- ing. For some, this is reason enough not to inform tenants of their rights; for others it means that edu- cation is a prerequisite to altering this rapidly de- generating situation. Any progressive legislation is worthless if the public is not made aware of how to implement it. The Council vote also shows the tenant popula- tion that their conditions will not be improved by sole- ly relying on the city legislature. Popular referendums are necessary in order to take the proposed legisla- tion directly to the public; is are collective tenant actions, including further rent strikes. Funding for these projects will obviously have to come from al- ternative sources. And while there can no longer be any doubt about the existence of this housing crisis, it seems as if it will be continued, at least into the near future. None of this year's CDBG money was directly allocated for housing needs. Hence, tenants, on their own; will have to support such organizations as the MSA Housing Project and the Tenants Union; the landlords won't. SEAFARER has become an endan- refusal to gered species. And all of the tems as rep ecology lovers in Michigan's Upper funding. T Peninsula are preparing happily for ble ecologi the day when it is declared extinct. nents of 1 A subcommittee of the U.S. House cause were Armed Services Committee voted vote. unanimously not to continue funding But the Seafarer, the Navy's underground everyone el submarine communications system gress has planned to be built over 4,700 square much of th miles of the UP. ty. For thi The subcommittee's action doesn't gratulate t automatically signal the end of Sea- for its acti farer - legislative process contains reasons for all sorts of possibilities for wheeling and dealing funding back into exist- ence - but Navy officials admit that restoration of Seafarer will be a diffi- . cult task. Anti-Seafarer factions in i the House are already mobilizing to1 counteract probable Navy lobbying in the Senate. ALAN BILIN COMMITTEE members cited vulner- BRAD ENJA) JOHN KNOX ability to attack and the Navy's CHRISTINA S -; i work on alternative sys- asons for the cessation of hey said that the possi- 1cal problems that oppo- Seafarer believe it would not a consideration in the ey are our concern. And se's that believe that pros destroyed altogether too is country's natural beau- s reason we heartily con- the House Sub-Committee ions, whatever its primary doing so. Photography Staff JSKY ANDY FREEBERG 5-Photographers-fn-Chief IN ..........Staff Photographer ...........Staff Photographer CHNEIDER . Staff Photographer - I 1 I Letters.to The Daily I TO THE RIGHT, MARCH ! AFSCME To The Daily: Within the past week 31 AFSCME workers and at least seven student workers have been fired or suspended for their participation in the strike. The University claims that they had 1 r f" arI-. good cause in taking this ac- tion. The suspended and fired union workers were charged by the ,University with "serious misconduct" and "malicious de- struction of property." One striker was fired for getting a ticket for littering during the strike. Others were fired for verbal abuse while the Univer- sity paid their own personnel' aaid the Ann Arbor police to pro. voke people on the picket lines by beating and shoving them. Does this seem like malicious intent on the part of the work- ers to you? Furthermore, none of these people as of yet have been convicted of breaking the. law! The University does not create laws nor are they em- ployed as official enforcers of the law. Yet it is evident here that they have taken the law into their own hands by charg- ing, trying and convicting the AFSCME workers that they would like to see fired for their active union participation. And still the University has not seen fit to extend its iron hand to its own supervisory personnel who have committed malicious and destructive acts. William Neff, the University's chief negotiator, after pushing and shoving two women picket- ers, threatening another with his life and then running him down with a scab laundry truck escaped without even a repri- mand! Student workers have been "terminated" for "excessive ab- senteeism' according to the University. Although there were many students who had accum- ulated more than the number of absences necessary for dis- missal, only those students who had been active in the strike and the Student AFSCME Sup- port Committee have been fired. This is a violation of the right to free speech and freedom of political belief! The University, by depriving politically active students of their much needed ion and participate in the ef- fort to reinstate all fired and suspended workers. If you would like to help circulate a petition protesting the University's ac- tions or want more informa- tion, call: Rick Rosenthal - 994-0952 Ilene Moskowitz -764-4650 Come to the Student AFSCME Support Committee meeting on Monday, April 4 at 7:30 p.m. in Greene Lounge, East Quad. The Student AFSCME Support Committee registration To The Daily: Early registration at the Uni- versity of Michigan has a new twist this year, random alpha- betical order. I am a senior in the School of Natural Resources, with one more semester of studies here. Due to the unfortunate random chance that my last name be- gins with Hai-, I have been presented with the final day, April 19, as an appointment for early registration. After talking to a lady in the Registrars office, I was inform- ed that no exceptions are made for upperclass level students. This is ironic in the fact that University officials are claiming that eventually everyone will have the chance to be first on the appointment schedule. I. won't be around long enough to gain that benefit. Unless, that is, the University forces me to go another semester or two be- cause I wasn'i. able to get the classes I needed the first time around. If such is the case, let them pay the extra tuition. I also question the fact that the Deans of the various Uni- versity schools have let the LS&A department palm off their problems onto the entire sys- tem. The School of Natural Re- sources apparently had no prob- lems before this semester. Why should LSA policy govern the fi I' . CHUCK ANESI--- Well, Mayor Wheeler has been in office for two years now, and he's done very little worth noting. In fact, in two years, he's introduced only 6 pieces of legislation, four of these in the last 2 months - just in time for the election. Four of these were resolutions: one against capital punishment, one against the B-1 bomber, one urging the state legislature to enact a utility stamp (a la food stamp) program and one urging the county to enact a PBB and PCB testing program, which the state already does. On the surface, it would appear that Mr. Wheeler thinks he's in Congress. But he has been active at the local level, especially in the' area of pointless vetoes. He vetoed the Briarwood senior citizen's project and various street resurfacing projects. In all, he has vetoed 11 measures since April of 1976. Add to this his idle thumb- jtwiddling on mass transit, and you will end up with a very fair picture of Mayor Wheeler: a man deathly afraid of making bad decisions, yet too slothful to inform himself on pressing matters which require decisive action. Fortunately, Ann Arbor has an alternative to Mayor Wheeler in the excellent Republican candidate Lou Belcher, a third year councilman from the 5th ward. Belcher is very well qualified for the mayorship: aged 37, he has a BS in management and is a partner in a management consulting firm. He has the analytical and practical skills a good mayor will need. He also has some very good ideas for Ann Arbor: downtown revitalization, with high-density housing in the downtown area. He led the fight to modify the housing code, allowing the second and third floors of storefronts and office buildings to be used as dwellings. He thinks that double-decker London busses on a regular downtown loop, and a trolley system as well, would ease the congestion and make for a more pleasant downtown district. And he's probably right. Mayor Wheeler, however, disagrees. Contrary to rumor, Belcher most certainly does not favor air- port expansion. He does think that the direction of the currently existing 2800 foot runway should be changed. Currently the landing patterns of this runway come in over Stony Brook and George- town; if changed, they would come in over the adjacent dump. This too, sounds like a good idea; Wheeler doesn't like it, of course. If the campaign were run on the qualifications of the candi- dates, their creativity and their character, Belcher would win in a walk. But Belcher has one stigma that automatically turns many o ,,r.- ~ -- .7 . -- >1 I,4~) - } mw "Il naC s q G I I