4 OPINION Page 4 Wednesday, September 23, 1987 The Michigan Daily Et aeby studentsa nivstMichigan l Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan A neophyte tours CCRB r 1 i Vol. XCVIII, No. 10 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. Support rent stabilization VOTERS IN ANN ARBOR will have an opportunity to enact a rent stabilization ordinance in April. The passage of this ordinance would be an essential first step toward maintaining the economic diversity of Ann Arbor and the University. Ann Arbor is afflicted with a housing shortage, which will worsen in coming years, as the University and the community continue to grow. As this shortage intensifies, rents will continue their upward spiral (currently in the neighborhood of 15 percent a year) until housing becomes unaffordable for all but the very affluent. This will not only chase many poor and moderate income people out of Ann Arbor, but it will also make it more difficult for poor and moderate income students to attend the University, since rent is by far the students' largest single cost after tuition. For this reason, rent stabi- lization is important not only for the students that are here now, but also for any attempt to increase the diversity of students that will be able to come to the University in the future. Local businesses should also support rent stabilization, so renters will have more income to spend in their stores, rather than having it si- phoned out of the community by the landlords. The arguments against rent stabi- lization should be well known to anyone who has taken an intro- ductory microeconomics course. Opponents argue that rent stabi- lization will reduce the supply of housing, by reducing the profits of landlords. There are several reasons why this traditional analysis is practically irrelevant to our current problem. First, the supply of existing rental housing is, for all practical pur- poses, fixed. No one seriously ex- pects anyone to start demolishing buildings simply because profits can no longer rise by more than the rate of inflation. In Ann Arbor, the supply of new housing is governed primarily by a political decision to limit new development, rather than by eco- nomic considerations. So the argu- ment that new housing would be stifled by rent stabilization has little relevance. This is especially true in light of the provision in the pro- posed ordinance that would allow any new housing to rent at the market rate for its initial lease. Finally, opponents of rent control argue that the supply of existing housing will deteriorate until it is unusable. Again, such a claim seems to defy logic, since Ann Arbor has a housing code which requires rental units to meet certain basic standards in order for land- lords to collect rent. Since the proposed rent stabilization ordi- nance also allows landlords to pass on the costs of necessary repairs, it is difficult to see why landlords would have any added incentive to allow their property to deteriorate to substandard levels. The debate over rent stabilization will undoubtedly be heated and attract a number of misleading or irrelevant "economic" arguments such as those addressed above. Another case in point is the state- ment in last Thursday's Daily by assistant professor of economics and public policy Severn Boren- stein. Offering neither empirical evidence nor any analysis based on the actual housing situation in Ann Arbor, Borenstein expresses his disapproval of rent control in general, and repeats the same tired 1ld (and unsubstantiated) story about deterioration of rental hous- ing. Students and citizens of Ann Arbor would do well to ignore such "expert" opinion which substitutes abstract economics dogma for an analysis of the situation at hand. The bottom line with rent stabi- lization is that it will prevent a massive redistribution of income from tenants to landlords that will otherwise continue to take place in Ann Arbor. There is no reason why landlords should be allowed to get a huge windfall because of the city's growth, at the expense of tenants. Rent stabilization guaran- tees them a fair profit: they are entitled to no more. If "experts" such as Borenstein insist on bringing modern economic theory to this debate, they would do better with the doctrine of "revealed preference." The latter notion sim- ply asserts that people must in some way prefer the choices they select over others that were not selected but were available to them. In all the cities that have implemented rent stabilization ordinances since World War II, virtually none of them have repealed the ordinance. In view of the massive economic power of landlords to promote such an appeal, this can only be attributed to one thing: rent stabilization works. By Stacey Farb Remember last spring just before summer vacation-while you were cramming for finals? I don't mean book cramming. I mean pizza, Hostess cupcakes, Twinkies, ice cream, and Mt. Dew (by the gallon) cramming. Do you also remember the excuses you used to console yourself while you were cramming? "I'm under a lot of stress." "My metabolism is inversely proportional to the amount of sleep I get." "It's empty calories, right?" "'Empty' i s, philosophically and poetically speaking, nothingness, and nothingness means the absence of something, which in turn means that the food I'm eating has no calories!" How about the greatest excuse of all-the one used after finals were over? "Now I'll have time to exercise. I'll take off the excess weight and tone up in no time." Right. The human mind is amazing. It construes lies with such ease and can convince its host without any hesitation-no matter how irrational it may be. Well, summer came and then jumped out the window crashing on the cement pavement along with my slim-down/tone-up program. I honestly was going to start, but after working eight hours a day... At any rate, I know I'm not the only one whose exercise program disintegrated as each week passed; I've seen the lines to sign up for those aerobic classes, I've seen you running and playing hoops (which is a lot easier than you makesit look). Still, I shouldn't talk. I'm just as out of shape as the rest of you. Last week I dug out my two-year old Farb is a Sophomore in LSA. running shoes which, surprisingly, looked brand new, and started jogging. I finally worked it up to a point that when I stopped so did the rest of my body. That's when I decided it was time for the big step-the weight room at the CCRB. Nobody had prepared me for the experience-not even my mom who seems to "prepare" me for all of life's little trials and tribulations. No sooner did I step inside the doors than I was accosted by a person, not unlike a customs officer from Cuba, demanding to see my student I.D to verify my validity as an enrolled student. He handed back the yellow plastic and smiled. The smile was closer to that of a policewoman as she revs up in pursuit of a traffic violator than a friendly "have a nice day" smile. It gave me the willies. I lump-bumped downstairs to the weight room still shook up by the customs inspection. At the bottom of the stairs, I took a couple of deep breaths to stop the trembling. After all, I was only, going to lift small tonnages of lead, not going to perform open heart surgery, right? I strolled down the corridor and noticed that there were three weight rooms, two of which are free weight rooms and one which has a Universal machine. The difference between the two types of weight rooms is that in the free weight room, if you drop the weights while in the process of lifting, they fall on you. In the Universal weight room the weights are attached to a big metal structure so that if they're dropped, they will catch on a metal platform. All things considered, I decided on the Universal weight room; better to break the equipment than myself. The first thing that struck me as I entered the room was the odor. It was a distinctive blend of swear and stale deodorant. It took a little getting used to at first, like going into the hog barn at the State Fair, but after a while it wasn't as rank. I walked around the room a few times stretching out (really I was reaching other people lift so I would know what to do when my turn came up). As I walked around, I noticed that there were deformed bodies all over the place! One person was suspended in the air facing the the floor using only a small metal disc on which to place his head and his elbows projected straight out. Then he started raising and lowering his torso; arching his back as much as possible, on purpose. I saw another person who looked like he needed plastic surgery. His chin jutted forward, his mouth stretched across his face, two eyebrows molded into one, eyes bulged out of their sockets, and veins I never thought existed decorated his face and neck, turning his head into a big jigsaw puzzle. A sound escaped his throat that went something like "aaiieeuggg." That's another thing I noticed-the language. I think it is foreign because I've never heard some of those words before. In fact, I'm not even sure the natives use the same alphabet I learned by watching Sesame Street. As I sat down on the little seat to do leg presses, I noticed the guy next to me lying on his back on a cushioned bench. He was about to lift-push on a bar that would raise the weights attached to the Universal. He took several deep pants and then, as he pushed on the bar, he let out a long painful moan. It sounded like hetwas giving birth. That's when I decided to get out of there. Taking the steps eight at a time, I escaped as quickly as possible. I could hear the customs officer's cynical laugh as I ran across the bridge towar Central Campus and into Steve's Ice Cream. r 1 Wasserman IA ME SY TIS ABOUT ?NAT \ Eli~ c-I Z AAA NOT A GROOV ! SJ WIL Nt&R E To You! cNAN You * ANDGNIG&O~H&iT 1 LETTERS: Both Daily and Biden plagiarize To the Daily: I'm writing in response to two articles which recently appeared in the Michigan Daily. The first is an article entitled, "Say it ain't so, Joe," referring to the plagiaristic comments of Senator Joseph Biden. It was an article that shed a lot of light on the problem of plagiarism. I'm glad to see that the Michigan Daily denounces such acts of theft. The second article I'm writing about is entitled "Deaf- inite Dinosaur" by Mike Rubin, which appeared in the September 15 Daily. In the article Mike Rubin refers to J. Mascis' aural articulation as that of "a young child's fragile eggshell mouth spitting out gobs full of broken Indians." Upon reading this I immediately remembered a poem written by James Douglass Morrison which appears in a song performed by the Doors entitled "Peace frog." The poem describes a scene from Jim Morrison's childhood involving a busload of dying Indians who had been involved in a horrible accident. These are a few words from the poem in which Morrison describes his own reaction: ...Indians scattered on dawn's highway bleeding. Ghosts crowd the young child's fragile eggshell mind. Blood in the streets in the town of New Haven... (0 Nipper Music/Doors Music ASCAP) Being the voice of the students, I think the Michigan Daily should follow its own advice and give credit where credit is due. -Dominick J. Perrone September 22 Rally for medicaid abortions ',1 . ~ ' 0 To the Daily: This year, 400,000 signatures, representing less than four percent of the population of Michigan, were collected to defund medicaid abortion for poor women. The initiative was upheld by the state legislature, bypassing the governor's veto. In response to this attack on women's rights, People's Campaign for Choice, with leadership from Planned Parenthood, is working to put the question of Medicaid funding. on the November ballot. Defunding Medicaid denies poor women equal access to safe abortion. Regardless of . one's personal feelings about abortion, it is sometimes the only choice women have. Since the legalization of abortion in 1973, the mortality rate for women h a v in g abortions has dropped by 75 percent. Further, the federal government, through Medicaid and other commercial health insurance, will refund 9 0 percent of the cost of sterilization. Medicaid recip- ients are two to four times more likely to be sterilized than non-Medicaid recipients. The choice to sterilization or to abortion is altered by economic conditions over which many women, including teenagers, have little control. There will be a massive petition drive to collect signatures today, September 23 from 11:30-2p.m. o n campus. Stop by the Pond Room on the first floor of the Michigan Union between 11:30-1p.m. to circulate a petition. -Karen Klein September 22 UCAR succeeds in fight To the Daily: In a recent letter to the Daily (9/21), a critic of the United Coalition Against Racism claims that UCAR does not try to change racists' values, but merely opposes those values being translated into action. The critic even asks: "As far as deterring other acts of racism, what has been accomplished if we are left with an externally racist-free Civil rights activist speaks today intuition, though, that racism is deeper than overt acts of racism is correct, albeit obvious. Confronting overt racist acts can challenge and change underlying racist values. For example, there is value in hearing racist remarks such as the critic's because individuals and groups like UCAR can publicly identify To the Daily: Today at 8:30 p.m. in the fourth floor ampitheatre of the Rackham Building . three progressive campus groups, the United Coalition Against Racism, and . the Latin American Solidarity Committee, Free South African Coordinating Com- mittee, will come together to host a forum on racism and Detroit and the political and social climate in which the policies can be pursued. Mr. Nesbitt, a social activist in the African-American community: for more than 20 years will offer his insights a n d experiences in a vital progressive analysis of the problems of domestic racism, South African apartheid and the - I 'urn UE1! AW/