I Eighty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Wednesday, April 6, 1977 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Sound and fury of election leaves Cou-ncil2 unchanged Wonmen By JOAN REISMAN ON A WORLDWIDE SCALE, women are now com- ing of age. We're facing unprecedented freedom, and with it unprecedented responsibility for such funda- mentals as grasping our -own identities and answering for our own fates. Certainly every generation has undergone changes, and there have been many waves of social evolution before this. But women may never before have en-- countered the vast spectrum of challenges, of vari- ables without constants, that we're dealing with to- day. And those of us who are now adults are in the thick of it. We are both the remnants and the sloths of one era, and the pioneers of another. We have the enviable opportunity to shape our own and future lives - but to do so we may have to venture deep into unfamiliar territory. We were brought up in the tradition in which. marriage and family provided the center around which we were to accommodate our lives. We were nurtured on a morality that fostered those bonds by exalting lifetime tidelity to our spouse,' and subjugation of our wishes to those of our family's reinforcement - a morality complete with a network of social, psy- chological, and material reinforcement. BUT THEN, SOME TIME after those values were deeply incorporated into our intellectual and emotion- al outlooks, and in many cases after we'd devoted are coming of age significant portions of our lives to them, came a new wave of ideas and circumstances infiltrating the old. Suddenly we were seeking educations apart from seek- ing husbands. The economy was changing in ways that enabled eager women and forced reluctant ones to pursue careers. We were finding that we didn't have to depend on men for support, we could depend on ourselves. We spent our formative years preparing for life in a restricted world, and encountered an unrestrict- ed one as adults. These changes have disturbed our traditional niche, in all its oppressive and protective and enslaving and comforting aspects. Now it's up to us to find a new niche, or a way to live without one, We no longer have many of those solid external excuses for failure to live up to our individual potentials. It's not as easy as it used to be to borrow someone else's values, or to close our eyes and swallow someone else's idea of how to live. We can still do what we might have done if women's lib hadn't come along - only now we really have a choice, whether or not we choose to recognize that fact. These changes have set many women adrift in a sea of conflicting emotions. There's the fear and resentment of having the rules change mid-game. There's the elation of the challenges and possibilities of a new frontier. And there's confusion galore, where so many choices seem to have double edges. How do we coordinate the variety of roles we're adopting? How do we combine career and family? How do we rocon- cile new attitudes of sexual freedom with those deep- rooted ideas about right and wrong? Moreover, how do we develop and balance strength and independence in the face of insecurities, both our own and others? WELL, IT'S NOT EASY. Women as a group are in the throes of adolescence. It's a painful, awkward period of growth, of experimenting with different iden- tities and philosophies, of grappling with what we want to do, and what we can do and what would work best in the long run. We can shrink from the experience, submerge ourselves in whatever is handy, and never emerge as mature individuals who assume responsibili- ty for ourselves or anything else. We can run wild, take risks, make mistakes, perhaps burn ourselves out. Or we can strive to take control of the situation, to be at once realistic, imaginative, and true to ourselves. The point is that however we choose to handle our lives is our choice and our responsibility. From an existential viewpoint, that has always been the case; the difference now is just that it's harder to ig- nore. We may discover that the traditional way was best, and we'll settle back into that. Or perhaps we're in for a long period of genuine change upon change that will evolve into something we can't envision now. In any case, we're in the midst of it, so we may as well acknowledge it and psych up for the growing, and growing pains, ahead. MONDAY'S CITY elections remind -- one of the third act speech in Macbeth - "there has been a great deal of sound and fury, as well as some doubt about the significance of the whole business." The balance of power on City Council remains substantially unchanged, and it may be weeks before anyone knows who really won the mayoral race. But there are still a few lessons for us'all in this year's democratic exercise. We may learn, for instance, that bad weather doesn't necessarily help Republican candidates any more than it helps anybody else, or that it takes more than a mayoral contest to draw Ann Arbor voters to the polls. The Socialist Human Rights Party (SHRP) and Libertarian Party may learn that this community is not a ripe vineyard for third-party politics for the moment. AL WHEELER may learn that he should either take some vigorous actions (to siphon off Belcher votes)' or clarify his ideology (to siphon off Slaughter votes). Either stand would have given him a definitive lead in the election. Lou Belcher may learn that less than a majority of Ann Arbor's vo- ters were willing to accept his new role as liberal standard-bearer for the GOP, and smelled a wolf -- real or imagined-beneath the sheep's cloth- ing. City officials may learn that the very well-heeled voters who complain about the condition of city streets re- jected two ballot proposals which would have filled a few potholes. And we can all learn, once again, that Ann Arbor is a city where the unexpected usually happens. 1 0,V6 I Tffk) I Cc*3E ASPI"o.sA A CIA!Ma H0 al- ACe ,rA P tNP4JAM 9C L( - -S.$ ow",i L ca/R P eTnt W~E$,I iz, 17"~ Carter takes first step toward energy conservation AST WEEK, in an effort to con- serve energy, President Carter an- nounced he is considering putting a stiff tax on gas-guzzling cars-$500. He is also contemplating offering' as much as a $500 tax rebate to per- sons who purchase I gas-conserving automobiles. This is a positive step towards easing one of this nation's, and the world's biggest crises, and we urge Carter and Congress to implement this plan as quickly as possible. But this is only a first step, and Carter must not sit back, and relax, con- tent that he has offered one solu- tion. With gasoline prices hovering near the 70 cent per gallon mark, and the natural gas market still suffering from the algid winter, dras- tic, and immediate action is neces- sary. We suggest the following: *Offer a one time tax rebate to all persons who wish to insulate their: homes, or to add storm windows. Properly installed insulation and storm windows can cut energy con- sumption as much as 25 per cent. * Offer a rebate to all persons willing to switch to solar heating. State Rep. Perry Bullard is sponsor- ing a, similar bill in the state, but federal monies would make it much more effective. Solar heating is fair- ly expensive to install, so families need to be encouraged to make the switch. Once they do switch, however, TODAY'S STAFF: News: Lori Carruthers, Jay Levin, George Lobsenz, Stu McConnell Editorial: KeA Parsigian Arts: Lois Josimovich, Steve Pickover Photo: Christina Schneider Sports: Gary Kicinski, Bob Miller, William Neff, Cub Schwartz, Dan Spatafora it saves all the energy they used for heat before, and draws instead from the bottomless well of energy we have left-the sun. " Continue some of this past win- ter's emergency programs. We're not saying we must all continue to keep our thermostats at 65, but we don't have to revert to setting them at 75 either. All Americans can easily learn to live comfortably at 68 to '70 de- grees, and the President should urge all people to do so. 0 Encourage the public to use mass transit, and make more efficient mass transit a top budget priority. Carter can and should call on the public to conserve energy by using mass tran- sit, and Congress can give the major cities federal funds to build new sys- tems, or rennovate old ones. There are certainly many other plans that could "save energy, and Carter and Congress must examine each of them. This proposed tax and rebate program for cars is a good idea. Let's not stop there. Sports Staff KATHY HENNEGHAN............sports Editor TOM CAMERON ........ Executive Sports Editor SCOTT LEWIS Managing Sports Editor DON MacLACHLAN ..... Associate Sports Editor Contributing Editors JOHN NIEMEYER and ENID GOLDMAN NIGHT EDITORS: Ernie Dunbar. Henry Engel- hardt, Rick Maddock, Bob Miller, Patrick Rode, Cub Schwartz. ASST. NIGHT EDITORS: Jeff Frank, Cindy Gat- ziolis, Mike Halpin, Brian Martin, Brian Miller, Dave Renbarger, Errol Shifman and Jamie Tur- Buiness Staff DEBORAH DREYFUSS.........Business Manager COLLEEN HOGAN...........Operations Manager ROD KOSANN.................Sales Manager ROBERT CARPENTER ....... Finance Manager NANCY GRAU...............Display Manager CASSIE ST. CLAIR........Circulation Manager BE'IH STRATFORD........Circulation Director "WFItMTY P46 Hb RAT~s W FOER EXPIIW HINA AK) A6WP Hol Te K6! THATOU WA OUR (F WE ptJ"T 5VPW~f TH NH OF ECHY P1 to~ t 6TTf OF es. 7PE I ioSNA i-U Letters to the Daily housing To The Daily: Your support for the 25-cent funding proposal in the MSA election today may help lower costs and improve the quality of student housing. Your land- lord hopes you will vote against it. For about a year now, MSA's housing law reform project, cen- tered in a windowless cubicle called "Music Room 1" on the third floor of the Union, has been quietly working to unravel, ex- plain and cure the housing crisis that causes dorm lotteries, crowding, unconscionable lease clauses, and perhaps worst of all, gross rents that at $174 per person per month are 72 per cent higher than the national median. Essentially, the license that, landlords use to raise the rents, write intimidating lease clauses, rules, and 12-month leases, is that there is an excess of de- mand over supply, and no meth- od of community control over the price of rent. (The Cam- bridge University "landladies," by contrast, must negotiate the maximum allowable rents with the University housing office be- fore' they are approved for stu- dent occupancy.) We have seen horrors in Ann Arbor student housing of people living in a closet, two groups of tenants literally fighting over the right to occupy a house, ads offering a "reward" for finding a house for rent, and rent rises of 60 per cent in a year. One Reliable Realty houserwhich rented for $650 last year rents for $1,100 this year. We are familiar with one student who paid her rent but went literally hungry for lack of money to purchase food. The MSA housing law reform project has -powerful opposition, but there are powerful forces on our side too. The primary opposition to effective housing reform in Ann Arbor is the same as the national opposition: land- lords; real estate speculators and financial institutions make a lot of money on the problem. They in turn are better able to influence the press and, frankly, confuse the public. They would like you to believe, for example, that your rent in- crease is caused by "inflation" and by tax increases. Yet Ann Arbor's rents rose 300 per cent between 1950 and 1976, while the consumer price index rose 133 per cent. Your MSA law- yers also believe the property tax argument is a distortion of the truth. Property taxes are based on the assessed value of the property, which is based on recent selling prices of similar properties. The selling price of income property is based on the current and expected rent. So if your landlord tells you that your rent is going up because property taxes are going up, tell your landlord that if he holds rents down, property taxes will be held down. The following is some of the recent work of the MSA housing law reform project and its mem-' bers: *Writing and publishing of Ann Arbor's first tenants' rights primer, "How to Evict your Landlord." " Compilation of State and local housing laws to help ten- ants and tenant lawyers prepare for court trials involving rent and maintenance. * The project developed five out of the eight recent Fair Rental-Practices Committee pro- posals, including: a. a city ordinance affecting illegal lease clauses; b. a policy which would pro- tect tenants from uninvited code enforcers and land- lords; c.. making all Building and Safety records on landlords, public access records; The MSA project, developed the strong stand adopted by the Mayor's committee, that the University's presence increases demand more than supply, and that its inaction works as an unintentional subsidy to land- lords at the expense of students. Some of the above are poten- tially quite significant. Manda- tory clauses in leases advising tenants of their rights and ac- cess to legal and union help is an important step in making that help a reality. The MSA project is hard at work analyzing major economic solutions, including a form of rent control that would not dis- ...." y 2". : }mmmm '!:~ J..Y.] DV.: :: . . t courage new construction, would encourage maintenance, would allow for rent rises as costs rise but not for the whim of the land- lord, and would minimize bu- reaucracy often associated with controls. The project and its workei's have already worked at the request of State legislators, on a State tenant privacy bill and on a landlord- ockout lawi recently passed. The project has established contacts with local news and radio media, and is currently making a film depicting Ann Arbor housing conditions, based on the assumption that public awareness of a social problem is a prerequisite for change. We urge you to take a mo- ment to stop by one of the MSA election booths today and vote for 25 cents for housing law re- form. Booths are at the Union, the fishbowl, the Engin arch, the CC Little bus stop, and at CRISP. Richard Dutka, Jonathan Rose, Paul Teich AFSCME To The Daily: By now, most of us are well aware that the University was successful in breaking the AFSCME strike. But are we aware that extreme physical violence was employed by the University (via the Ann Arbor Police) as a means toward that end? Are we aware that 20 AFSCME workers and seven students have been fired and 11 others suspended from their jobs as a result of their partici- pation in the strike? Can we, with clear con- science, silently, passively ob- serve events such as these? Is there not a point at which we say "no, damn it, that's, wrong"? Is there not a point at which we begin to care? Whether or not one supports AFSCME's position in this par- ticular case, such instances of physical violence and blanket firings can not be ignored. We must consider the nature of our social responsibility and its im- plications. To sit back and vawn at injustice - to accept it as "common" - to sav "that's life" - is to endorse it. By not sneaking out against it, we become complicit in its per- netration: we become accesso- rimq to the crime. The University ann ars to into these firing begun, further injustices can be expected. A number of campus groups have organized the United Front Against Reprisals (UFAR) in response to the firings. A noon demonstration on the Diag is punned for today. If you are at all sensitive to the issues we have raised here - if huwtan rights violations arouse your anger - we en- courage you to make your sen- timents known. As students ourselves, we recognize that time is extremel} valuable at this time of year and that, therefore, a large commitment is near-impossible. Wht we all can do is speak up. Attend the demonstration. Write a letter. Stand up and be cc inted as one individual who dnes not buy violence and intimidation as vi- able solutions to any end. Lee Berry Tom Bray Shari Kolodry Mike Landy Pat Longe Jewet Nemvalts Andy Perellis Jim Sachs Laurie Siegel \ fL \ Li °'° (/ff\ TENANTS RISING by RICHARD DUTKA Dear MSA Housing Law Reform Project. Now that I've lived in this hovel for a year, I'd like to get out. How do I get my security deposit back? Dear Tenant: Many people -have contacted the Housing Law Reform Project concerning problems with their landlords when it comes to re- appropriating one-and-a-half month's rent you put down so Ring ago. To help avoid any hassles, and there usually are some, follow these steps and you ought to get most, if not all of it back: Security deposits are regulated by the Michigan Security Deposit Act (1973). The law applies to all tenants in the state, including sub-tenants. It applies to written and oral leases, re- gardless of the time period of the lease. IN ORDER TO GET YOUR security deposit back, you must notify the landlord in writing of your forwardingaddress within four days of moving out of your apartment. If you don't do this, the landlord does not have to give you notice of damages and can keep the money. That's why landlords are in no rush to find you after you've moved out. Next - within 30 days after you've moved out, your land- lord must mail you an itemized list of all damages which he/she claims you caused, the estimated cost of repair for each item, the amount he/she is charging you for each item, and a check for the difference between the damages claimed and the original security deposit. This notice of damages must include, in boldface type, the warning: "You must respond to this notice within seven days after receipt of same, otherwise you will forfeit the amount claim- ed for damages." WITHIN SEVEN DAYS after receiving the notice of dam- ages claimed you must respond in writing, indicating your dis- agreement with any of the deductions. If you properly notify your landlord of yo'ur disagreement, he/she must return what you demand or sue you for the contested portion of the deposit within t}!,: }Y%.,..ii w 'p yJ:i :.i""!. Y r':..} ": ,iS y [S t:i:..... G{.'::Yl4 i.liK:::":.. J:."': :" :.L .."'.V .."."l".{:::"...}YJK WS . :: .--:-1J :"" A,., A . 1. .. U