Ninety-eight years of editorial freedom Vol. XCVIII, No. 111 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Wednesday, March 16, 1988 Copyright 1988, The Michigan Doily Greeks question rent control By PETER MOONEY Some fraternity and sorority members are worried that a proposed rent control ordinance will prevent them from making needed repairs on their houses and that it will discourage others from establishing chapters in Ann Arbor. But rent control advocates said Greeks might be exempt from the proposal. The concerns come less than three weeks before Ann Arbor voters decide whether to accept a referendum establishing rent control in the city. If passed, the ordinance would limit rent increases to 75 percent of the annual inflation rate. Michael Appel of the pro-rent control group, Ann Arbor Citizens for Fair Rent, said the ordinance would not affect Greeks because it considers fraternity and sorority members as part owners of their houses, not as tenants. BUT LEGALLY, the national fraternity or sorority is considered the house's owner, and members are viewed as tenants, said Mel Laracey, supervisor of the Ann Arbor Housing Bureau. While co-ops are specifically exempted from the rent control proposal, fraternity and sorority houses are not, said Kit Steinaway, a member of the Kappa Alpha Theta rsoroity's board of directors. Under the ordinance, property tax hikes and new services to tenants - such as building an addition to the house - could be charged to tenants, but costs for repairs could not be passed on. THISsRESTRICTION would prevent needed repairs because "we could not charge the rent to pay for them," Steinaway said. Rather than improving houses, fraternities and sororities would end up "just patching" damaged property, she said. Steinaway added that fraternities and sororities that have recently come on campus often carry large mortgages, and would have to struggle to stay on campus. She said chapters without houses would be unable to afford homes because they wouldn't be able charge enough rent to cover their costs.. 'There isn't anybody who's going to start up a fraternity or sorority if they have no chance to make ends meet," Steinaway said. APPEL SAID he hoped the See GREEKS, Page 3 MSA meets on sanctions Assembly leaders discuss student groups' plan privately Stretching into spring Daily Photo by ELLEN LEVY Sophomore wide receiver Greg McMurtry stretches in the opening football practice of the year. The annual spring football session will culminate with the annual Maize and Blue intrasquad game on April 16. Gephardt visits state By RYAN TUTAK The Michigan Student Assem- bly's steering committee last night met in a closed session to discuss its position on a policy against racial and sexual harassment reportedly be- ing drafted by representatives from several student organizations. The policy, which is being writ- ten as an alternative to Interim Pres- ident Robben Fleming's proposed anti-discrimination policy, would set up a judicial system in which stu- dents and employees would judge and apply sanctions to any member of the University community accused of racist or sexist acts.' MSA President Ken Weine and Student Rights committee chair Mike Phillips have reportedly taken part in the drafting. The University's Board of Re- gents are expected to vote Thursday on Fleming's proposal. Neither Weine nor Phillips would comment on the steering commit- tee's discussion. Weine said only that "I support the unity process (of the student groups). Under certain situations, sanctions are necessary, if the pro- cess is controlled by students," he said. Though Phillips told The Daily Sunday that MSA opposed a stu- dents' draft and that he was against any policy that included sanctions for non-academic behavior, he clari- fied his position yesterday. "I recog- nize the need for a policy dealing with racial and sexual harassment and gay and lesbian bigotry," Phillips said. Law school student Eric Schnaufer objected to the closed meeting, saying that such meetings send a negative message to students who oppose a code. "There's a dan- ger that, in secret, students would support a code. MSA would never support a code in public." Schnaufer, who has been a staunch opponent of policies governing students' non-academic behavior through the code debate's history, said he helped write MSA's critique of Fleming's proposal. Schnaufer said he opposed Flem- ing's proposal. "If students made a code, it would not be any better." "Students would be more severe on other students than faculty would be," said Schnaufer. "I wouldn't support a code if God wrote it. He wrote one - the ten command- ments. And I don't support that. And every student can probably find one commandment that they don't sup- port." In other business, MSA passed a resolution to offer a $1,000 reward for information leading to the con- viction of the person who made death threa.ts to two members of the Lesbian and Gay Rights Organizing Committee. In case the assembly needs funds for similar incidents, the assembly reduced their $2,500 reward for in- formation leading to the conviction of a person who made a death threat to a United Coalition Against Racism steering committee member to $1,000. By ANNA BORGMAN Special to The Daily Rep. Richard Gephardt of Missouri kicked off the Michigan leg of his presidential campaign yesterday with a bus tour across the state. The candidate said throughout the day, "Michigan is very important to my campaign. The odds are against me, but just as they were against Harry Truman, we're gonna win in Michigan." He also said he believes the Democratic race will be decided before the national convention this summer. Gephardt's traveling companion was Michigan At- torney General Frank Kelley, state chair of the candi- date's campaign. About Gephardt's chances to win the Democratic nomination, Kelley said in an interview yesterday, "I think Michigan is pivotal. If he can win or do exceptionally well here in Michigan, it'll be a turnaround." After winning in Iowa and South Dakota, and fin- ishing a strong second in New Hampshire, Gephardt finished a distant fourth in last week's Super Tuesday primaries. Gephardt addressed the Detroit Building Trades Council late yesterday morning to start his tour, cater- ing to the all-important Michigan labor vote. He said, "America is in decline and I don't want America to be in decline. That's why I'm running for President." See Gephardt, Page 2 Bush, Simon take Illinois primary CHICAGO (AP) - George Bush won in the Illinois primary, but Sen. Bob Dole vowed, "we're staying in the race" for the Republican presi- dential nomination. Sen. Paul Simon led Jesse Jackson in the battle between Democratic favorite sons. The Simon-Jackson battle made third place attractive to their Demo- cratic rivals as Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis bid to leave Sen. Albert Gore and Rep. Richard Gephardt far behind. Bush, having won his first primary in a Midwestern industrial state, also hoped increase his seem- ingly insurmountable lead in the separate contest for convention delegates. Kansas Sen. Dole spent the day campaigning in Wisconsin and Con- necticut in a demonstration of his determination to stay in the race - even though he had speculated about withdrawing if he suffered another big defeat. CBS News, relying on polling- place interviews with the voters, said Simon would be the Democratic winner, as of press time. Independent MSA candidates want increased student input By KRISTINE LALONDE The 10 independent candidates running for Michigan Student As- sembly seats on May 22 and 23 say the assembly needs reorganization and a stronger focus on students. Presidential and vice presidential candidates David Hart and Brian Pearlstein, both LSA seniors, are taking the most extreme stance. They said their slate seeks MSA's dissolution because they don't be- ELECTION8 lieve the assembly is a necessary part of the campus. Pearlstein said MSA wastes money on personal use and in fund- ing campaigns. He said t h e organizations which MSA oversees cnuld aily n nrt without MS A said the slate advocates a one-credit course on sexism and racism for all incoming students. They also want to require landlords to put all secu- rity deposits in escrow and use the interest to develop low-income housing. Gilbert was unavailable for com- ment. Five other independents are run- ning for MSA representative seats. Jeremy Efroymson, an LSA sopho- more, said the assembly is too in- volved in foreign issues and should focus more on campus problems. JASON LANDAU, an LSA sophomore, said campus organiza- tions - including MSA, the Inter- Fraternity Counsel and the Residence Hall Association - should work together with the administration to improve students' lives. He said MSA is a separate agent working its own path and it should have joint goals with other members of the University community. LSA sophomore James McBain MSA should have a campus focus and should not waste time discussing resolutions that have little to do with students' every day lives. He said he would focus on issues such as parking, rent control, new dorm facilities and the English Composi- tion Board structure. Michael Gunther, an LSA junior running for MSA office as an inde- pendent, was unavailable for com- ment. Daily Photo by KAREN HEMANLVW Eithel Partlow-Sech, Chief Social Worker at the University's Counseling Office in the Michigan Union, helps hundreds of students each year with a wide range of problems. Scial worker goes out of her wayto counsel'U students By BETH FERTIG Six years ago, University coun- selor Eithel Partlow-Sech flew to Paris. A University exchange student needed help immediately. "I found out about it on Wednes- day, learned on Thursday that I was Profile0 going, and left Friday without a passport," said Partlow-Sech, the m e , -*- *L o The University assumed respon- sibility for the student, and a driver and nurse were sent to the airport to meet Partlow-Sech and her compan- ion upon their return. "They drove us to University Hospital, left her there, and I col- lapsed for two days. That was my weekend in Paris. It was the most exciting thing I've done all the time I've worked." BACK HOME in Ann Arbor, hundreds of students every year have turned to her for help with a wide rn ~e --anra ,n - rrrl -lv a C a ing me address situations." Hal Korn, Director of Counseling Services, said Partlow-Sech has made an enormous contribution to the program, which is estimated to have seen seven percent of all University students last year. "She's just an expert counselor and psychotherapist," Korn said. "She's good at meeting whatever problems students bring... I think she has made an outstanding contri- bution to the lives of innumerable students." D., Y;-_ .A . - - -,