Friday, May 9, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Friday, May 9, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five images To The Daily: IF THE RESULTS of the re- cent elections are an indication of HRP's campaign skills, some- thing must be done o impr ye them. The defeat of rent con- trol may be blamed by s o m e people on several factors: 1) alleged imperfections in the con- struction of workability of the proposed act; 2) the ability of the landlords to hire an adver- tising firm to handle their pub- lic relations and advertising campaign, and their superior manipulation of campaiga stra- tegy; 3) the inability of the Left in general, and HRP in parti- cular, to create an effective counter-campaign. The proposed act was not per- fect, but neither is any law. The rent control act was at least at tightly drafted as the Michigan "Tenants R'ghts Acts" of 1968, which allows people to rent strike if repairs are teed- ed, and the "Security Deposit Act" of 1972. The committees that write laws can be influenc- ed by members pvrsuing their own prejudices. The ultimae question is not whether the act would be better. 6-cause each drafter has a different idea re- garding what constitutes "bet- ter". The question in the voting booth is whether its passage would have been better than non-passage. THE SUCCESSFU. carnpaian of the landlords was created by skillful and coordinated use of the media. They raised $31,630, in campaign funds through a front group called "Citizens for Good Housing." Over twenty thousand dollars went to a De- troit-based advertising I i r n. Thev placed well-timed ads and articles in all the area news- papers, conducted jomeowner oninion polls to hell determine the content and quality of the ads, and mailed thousands of pamphlets to vote's. The tam- ing of Democrat Attorne; Gen- eral Kelly's announce: opposi- tion to the proposal lea's one to suspect that landlords may have approached him with a view to publicize his opinion. Op-Ed Pcige The "octopus" ads, telling voters exactly how to "; a v e themselves" from the rent con- trol octopus were ingenious. An ad campaign in all area news- papers was developed in con- junction with this, tnereby cori- municating with a large number of potential voters. Their sim- plicity, humor and timing mark- ed the campaign as professional. THE HRP, on the other hand, has developed no appreciation for the skills involved in com- municating with Chos, whonae not already convinced of their position. This is partly due to their poverty and t the fact that they don't want to use ad- vertising half-truths. We do not suggest that BRP abandon its moral ,istas'e for fraud in oolitics; hovever, not all skillful advertiasng is dis- honest or "hype" IRP would do will to enlist the skills of either paid professi1ntl3 or svm- pathetic unnaid orots-sionais in the endeavor of iraijng a typi- cal HRP statement (such as ad- vocacy of rent casirol) i n t o messages designed to catc the eve and attention of the peole who are not yet decided. PEOPLE are g-nerIlly sin- aware, for examnle, of the Left's position that landiords gain profit in for ways- cash flow, "principal" payments (whereby the tenant buys t h e building for the landlord), "pre- tend" tax depreciamon, and real appreciation in value of t h e unaware of the radical and build ng. Peonle are generally unaware of the radical and supportable belief that hous- ing costs can be cut in half by legislation to stop the in- flation in value caused by ine- sale o buildings at continually Bottle baffle bubbles over (Continued from Page 4 cause their cost is spread over 10or 20 users. A recent PIRGIM survey found average savings on Coca-Cola of 36c per eight pack of 16-ounce bottles. Not much to bother about? Well, one estimate is that consumer savings on returnables would amounts to $66 million a year, in your pocket and mine, just in Michigan. -EMPLOYMENT. The only serious study done so far, by an economics pro- fessor at Western Michigan University, estimates conservatively that, while nearly 2800 people would lose jobs, near- ly 8400 new jobs would be created - a net gain for Michigan of 5600 new jobs. --Litter. Oregon had a 35 per cent re- duction in roadside litter after it passed such a law. Between 90 per cent and 95 per cent of bottles were being returned for deposits instead of thrown aside. -Tax savings. Oregon's bottle bill sav- ed taxpayers over $656,000 a year in solid waste disposal alone. And more. But despite the good reasons and the documented facts in support of this leg- islation, the opponents are fighting hard. Most newspapers have editorialized in favor of the bottles bill, and many local organizations and local governments have adopted resolutions. But it's not enough. Legislators need to know they can't vote for special interests without the peo- ple noticing. They need letters. Not only from students, but from their parents, neighbors, friends. FOR MOST effectiveness right now, w r i t e to uncommitted and opposed members of theHouse Consumers Com- mittee and urge them to report the bill out of committee so the whole House can vote on it. They are: Dan Angel (R-Marshall) George Cushingberry Jr. (D-Detroit) Richard D. Fessles (R-Union Lake) Joseph Forbes (D-Oak Park) Gerritt C. Hasper (D-Muskegon) Josephine C. Hunsinger (D-Detroit) Ruth B. McNamee (R-Birmingham) George A. Prescott (R-Tawas City) Sal Rocca (D-Sterling Heights) The address for all of them is The Capitol, Lansing, Michigan 48901. The committee will be mak- ing a decision in a week or two. This is the moment when your letter can count. higher prices. C)t plus rent control is but one example of s'tch legislation. If IREP had bean able to communicate some of these facts to the unconviaiced public, the importance of rant control may have been understood. Of course, HRP is not on a par financially with the landlords. The Left may never generate the same quantity of printed ma- terials to educate the public about is positioin. Tha :s pre- cisely the reason that the Left should have greater respect for the skills and toil ne tescary to improve the quality of t h a s e materials. -Kathy Kay and Jonathan Rose May 8 W# SUMMER OFFICE HOURS MVon.-Fri.-1-5 ANY ACTIVITY IDEAS? COM E SE E US AT TH E SUAC OFFICES-2nd Floor MICHIGAN UNION M 1 h I 1 1 Oyster Bar & The Spaghetti Maclinei Tuesday thru Sunday-5 to 10 p.m. 301 WEST HURON 663-2403 ANN ARBOR t i I 1 I t I I 1 J 1 HUMPHREY BOGART in 1941 THE MALTESE FALCON John Huston directed this Dashiell Hammeit thriller starring Bogart as Sam Spade. It began a director-actor combination that resulted in most of Bogart's best films (The Tresure of Sierra Maude, The African Queen, and Key Largo). And what a beginning too-with Mary Astor, Sidney Green- street and Peter Lorre, this film is one of the best of its kind. SAT.: Marx Bros.' A NIGHT AT THE OPERA MON.: Hitchcock's THE LODGER (Free-At 8) CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD 7:30, 8, 9:30 Admission only $1 MENU Fresh Blue Point oysters on half shell . 1.95 Dinners below include salad bar, bread, butter. coffee Spagheu: 1. Tomato .. . 2.70 7. Meat Balls ...... 2.95 2. Mushrooms 2.75 8. Sicilian ..........3.25 3. Meat 2.95 9. Marinar....... 3.25 4. Meat & Mushrooms 2.95 10. Carabonara. 3.75 5. White Clam . 2.95 11. Butter, Garlic, Basil 2.75 6. Red Clam . 3.25 12. Chicken Livers .. 3.75 13. Potpuri (Meat, Tomato, Clam Sicilian) .... 3.25 Veal: Marsala . ......... 3.25 Francaise ...........3.25 Noodles: Green ......... 3.50 Whole Wheat . . 3.50 Doily Specials of Shrimp, Lobster, Veal, Crabmeat All spaghetti for children under 10 .... 1.25 less Dessert: Cannolli .... 75 cents All noodles are made right in front of your eyes by our unique "spaghetti machine" Cocktails-Wine-Beer FRANCIS FORD COPPOLA'S 1974 THE CONVERSA THON Gene Hackman as the professional wire-tapper whose conflict- ing dedication and sense of guilt is the backdrop for murder and suspense. A Whispery, haunting soundtrack threads through this fascinating film .CANNES FILM FESTIVAL GRAND PRIX WIN- NER. Gene Hackman, Allen Garfield, Cindy Williams, John Cazale. FRIDAY and SATURDAY ANGELL HALL CINEMA 11 7:30 & 9:45 AMD. A ADM. $1.25