OPINION Page 4 Thursday; March 31, 1988 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCVII, No. 122 420 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 tenant rights Shredders hide militarism I IN SUPPORT OF fair rent in Ann Ar- bor and tenants' right to organize, peo- ple should protest the abusive treatment of the Pittsfield Village Tenants Union (PVTU) by McKinley Properties. McKinley Properties has allowed the 420 unit Ann Arbor complex to fall into extreme disrepair while continuing to raise rents. In response to the poor living condi- tions and violations of the city housing code, the tenants of Pittsfield Village organized a tenants union and went on rent strike after inaction and abuse from McKinley properties. The landlords re- fused to make needed repairs or to bring the buildings up to city housing code. McKinley was attempting to gentrify the complex. The company raised rents to affect the class of people who could live in the apartments without making any improvements. As part of a strategy to purge the members of the PVTU and to raise the rents McKinley has refused to renew leases of tenants who had lived there as long as 25 years. There is no difference between a refusal to renew the lease and an eviction. As those tenants on rent strike even- tually reached settlement (of at least two months free rent), the landlord - in every case - asked for either a ter- Israel's cl IT WAS REVEALED LAST WEEK that Israel is holding over 3,000 Palestinians in detention according to the Israeli Prime Minister Shamir. In addition, the Israeli army now bars the press and for- eign officials from entering the occupied territories. These steps indicate a differ- ent strategy: hiding brutality from the outside world. This approach is not new. Many journalists in the occupied territories have complained of harassment by the Israeli army. The army has beaten a reporter, confiscated film, and broken cameras. The Israeli army also reserves the right to censor or shut d o wn newspapers, and declare certain refugee camps off-limits to reporters. The media, however, was never previously barred from the entire occupied Israel's motives behind this are clear. In the words of Henry Kissinger last January, "Israel should bar the media from entry into the territories involved in the present demonstrations ... and put down the insurrection as quickly as possible - overwhelmingly, brutally, and rapidly." This advice coupled with Shamir's statement last week that "harsher measures" are needed against the Palestinians, gives an indication of what is to come. One method Israel has used to quell the riots is random arrests. Three thou- sand Palestinians are under detention so far, 700 of which were interned in the last week. The Israeli courts permit them mination of the lease or a writ of evic- tion as terms of agreement. Although McKinley was refused the writ in all cases, the property company refused to renew the leases of all the tenants who were involved in the PVTU. The retaliatory evictions are a clear violation of the Retaliatory Evictions Defense, which is part of the Tenants Rights Act of 1968. This defense guarantees that a landlord cannot termi- nate a tenancy in retaliation for tenants attempts to secure or enforce rights which arise from the tenancy. In other words, a tenant cannot be evicted or denied a renewal because they have asked for repairs or improvements stipulated by the lease or housing code. The PVTU case demonstrates the need for strong rent stabilization legis- lation which links any increases in rent to maintenance of the buildings and fair treatment of the tenants. Rent control would also prevent the immediate gen- trification of apartments around Ann Arbor and make it easier for lower in- come people to find affordable hous- ing. Today at 4:30 p.m., a demonstration will be held at the McKinley Properties office at 543 North Main to protest the gentrification and retaliatory evictions at Pittsfield Village and to support the need for rent stabilization. ampdown to be arrested and held without trial, without charge, or without bail for up to six months. This detention period was just extended from a previous limit of 18 days. Israel has also prohibited the 1.5 mil- lion Palestinians in the occupied territo- ries from either leaving their home or leaving their village. The 65,000 Jewish settlers living in the occupied territories have no restrictions. The settlers are also permitted to openly carry weapons, whereas any Palestinian doing so can be shot on sight. The media's handling of the conflict has been far from satisfactory. When the first Israeli soldier was killed while on duty last week, all the major media carried gory accounts or pictures of the soldier, and focused on the Palestinian brutality. The focus should have been on how this was the first Israeli soldier to be killed since the riots began. Over a hundred Palestinians have been killed so far, supposedly by Israeli soldiers in self-defense. The death of any one Palestinian never receives the sensa- tional treatment this event did. Currently, The Israeli Army has shot or beaten to death 122 Palestinians. Thousands more have been wounded and Shamir has steadfastly refused to any sort of international peace confer- ence as proposed by Yasser Arafat and the United Nations. The occupied terri- tories don't need "harsher measures," but negotiations. By Ingrid Kock An ad in last Friday's Daily was blunt: "If you're working on thermonuclear weapons design, binary nerve gas delivery systems, strategic cryptographic or com- munications security systems, strategic defense initiative of other projects under DOD sponsorship, we recommend the GBG cross-cut 200 high security (paper) shredder..." The ad was no joke. Commu- nications Electronics was prompted to run it by FBI agents in Michigan who an- nounced that the University was a "target" for Soviet and Chinese espionage agents because of its top secret research. The FBI is whipping up cold war rhetoric "commie spy" talk, and Commu- nications Electronics is apparently taking a lesson from General Electric, Hughes Aircraft, and the University of Michigan itself to try and cash in. Can research on thermonuclear weapons design, chemical weapons and the Strategic Defense Initiative really go on at the University? Of course it can. For example, Professor Isadore Bernstein from the School of Public Health tests mustard gas on human and rat cells. In his project proposal to the Army, Bernstein outlines the effects of the poisonous agents he works with: "Ingestion or injection of these agents can lead to severe gastrointestinal effects, fasiculation, difficulty in breathing, depression of the respiratory center and death". According to Professor Bernstein, his research is for defense against the use of mustard gas. But we should ask professor Bernstein: whom will he protect from the Ingrid Kock is a University alum who works for fair rent in Ann Arbor. deadly effects of mustard gas? Will Professor Bernstein provide chemical weapons defenses to the Nicaraguans in case of a possible U.S. invasion? Is he now providing it to the Iranians who are being attacked by Iraqi chemical weapons (obtained from Western Europe)? Or, will his chemical weapons "defenses" (in the event that he is not simply constructing more deadly types of poison mustard gas in the School of Public Health) be used by U.S. military personnel as they drop mustard gas on the unprotected people of Latin America, Africa, Asia, or wherever cold war hysteria brings the U.S. to fight communism? What do the FBI, weapons research, and paper shredders have to do with a suppos- edly free and open university? The University administration's blind determi- nation to obtain defense dollars puts the University into a vulnerable position po- litically. As the peace movement strengthens on this campus, military re- search is an obvious target. Is is possible that the FBI wants to hide the growing militarism on campus not from the Chi- nese and the Soviets but from us? Just as the CIA representatives squirm from the light and refuse to address their "mission" when they come to recruit on campus, the weapons researchers and the University administrators don't want their secrets to escape from behind the closed doors of weapons laboratories and the Fleming Administration Building. The regents decided a year ago to dump University research guidelines that banned classified research destructive to human life. Of course the research guidelines had become a fraud - the University admin- istration cheated and manipulated its way around these basic decent standards so as to make them almost useless. But it is note- worthy that by rejecting the guidelines, the regents made clear their position that research destructive to human life is ac- ceptable at the University of Michigan. This action is comparable to the statement that the administration made to the effect that racism is unacceptable at the University of Michigan when it retained Dean Steiner after his racist remarks. Unfortunately, all of this talk about en- emy spies, paper shredders, and the re- gents' cavalier attitude make weapons re- search seem like a game. It's not a game. Real people will die if Bernstein's poison is ever used. Real people will die if the hordes of professors going after Star Wars money succeed in building a new genera- tion of weapons that could not only be a component of a first-strike system, but would consist of lasers, electron beams, and x-rays that could be launched at the Third World. And of course, real people are dying now all over the world, includ- ing in our own community, because one trillion dollars a year are spent on arms while basic human needs go unmet. Thankfully, there is a new wind blow- ing. There is a subtle but growing accep- tance and openness in this country to new ideas of change for a peaceful and just world. In order to take heart to proceed to overcome militarism, and the related injustices of racism, sexism, and homo- phobia, we should look at a victory that was won last week on another campus. At the Gallaudet University for the Deaf, stu- dents obtained the resignation of their hearing president and continue to struggle to replace members of their board of trustees with deaf trustees who are more responsive to their needs. The bottom line for the students at Gallaudet is "No com- promise." Let's adopt the same position in pursuing our ideals of a peaceful and just university. LETTERS: Rent control will increase diversity To the Daily: As a concerned student in the Ann Arbor community, I feel obliged to discuss the im- portant role of diversity in Ann Arbor. Ann Arbor is a unique city largely because of the diversity of its residents: students, workers, families, Blacks, whites, Hispanics, Asians... This diversity has al- lowed me to encounter a vari- ety of individuals who have helped me learn about myself and the world. When confronted with rising rents in Ann Arbor, many of these people are forced either to live elsewhere or live on unre- alistic budgets. My buddy and yours, Shakey Jake, is a perfect example of an integral individ- ual in Ann Arbor who cannot afford shelter in an inflated Rent control works market. As Ann Arbor slowly becomes a community of wealthy individuals, the need for affordable housing which will invite lower income, di- verse citizens back to the community is vital. Rent sta- bilization aimed at providing a diverse community, fair rent, Common S To the Daily: Common Sense is what Thomas Paine titled his revolutionary journal in the 1700s. That is what the people of the time needed a good healthy dose of. That is what the debate regarding rent stabi- lization in Ann Arbor needs today. The landlords have bragged about their willingness to spend "up to half a million dollars." The struggle to pass proposal C will have spent less than ten thousand by April 4. Common Sense. The landlords lie about how' as well as fair profit for land- lords is a proposal which benefits everyone in the com- munity. So on April 4th, while Shakey is singing the blues on State street, go and vote yes on proposal C. -David Kalt March 29 ense on rent rent stabilization works. They use statistics from the 1970s, a time beset with inflation and the energy crisis. Economic realities are different in 1988. The fact is that rent stabiliza- tion has been beneficial for over 200 communities around the U.S. Why do the landlords not have more up-to-date statistics? Common Sense. Look at both sides. Enter the debate with an open mind. Vote Yes on C April 4. Use some common sense. -Michael V. Smith March 30 Students resist the extensive PIRGIM campaign: Masses over money To the Daily: I am tired of hearing the illegitimate justifications given by the opponents of rent con- trol. They claim that if rent control were enacted, needed repairs would not get done be- cause the owners couldn't raise rent to cover the costs of re- pairs. Would someone please explain to me how a landlord can legally rent a dwelling that is not already certified a s habitable? In no other area of business can one sell a good that is out of order and then demand extra money for fixing it. The usual transaction for houses which need repairs, when the landlord refuses to make the repairs, is for rent to be deposited in an escrow ac- count at City Hall until the re- pairs are complete. Rent control is needed in this town because the people who take part in its most basic businesses, including the uni- versity, need a minimum of housing security. I am firmly convinced that the owners of the majority of rental housing spaces in this town are rolling in the dough. Any landlord who cannot afford the costs of maintaining their properties at standard habitability is in fact bankrupt and should have their properties turned over to the city. However, many of these landlords are in fact large cor- porations with lots of employ- ees. If they can afford to em- ploy full-time receptionists, elsewhere and has failed. I have lived in the city of East Palo Alto, California a while ago and rent control there worked successfully. I think the land- lords'lobby knows perfectly well that they were excessively selective and slanted in their reports. Having dealt with some of the rental corporations in this town, and having read their literature, I conclude that the most vocal among them feel no ethical constraint in squeezing renters for as much money as they can get, while at the same time spending as little as possible on providing a usable product. In the coming referendum, they deserve a clear message from us voters that we will not be abused any more: We value the future of our city, our local businesses, and our university too much. -Matthew Fields March 16 To the Daily: I am in the Marion Correction Institution. I a m from that area in which your newspaper operates. I have no family or money, I fell victim to that killer drug crack and I am looking for pen pals for positive advice to help me kick this problem in the butt. -Richard Beasley 198-592 P.O. Box 57 Marion Correction Inst. Marion, OH 43302 March 26 Inmate seeks letters IN LAST WEEK'S MSA elections, stu- dents voted against continuing the cur- rent refundable fee system funding the Public Interest Research Group in Michigan (PIRGIM). Students-who re- sisted the extensive and expensive pro- PIRGIM campaign should be com- mended. PIRGIM easily out-campaigned and out-spent their less visible opponents. In the process, PIRGIM plastered the campus with posters and leaflets pro- moting their organization. It is ironic that a group purporting to fight waste spent over a thousand dollars on multi- colored posters, according to estimates. The posters were quite well done, artistic contest. The real issue i s whether or not PIRGIM deserves direct funding rather than receiving funds through MSA like other campus orga- nizations. What doomed PIRGIM in the end were allegations that funds, that were coming from University students, were not being used for students' benefit. Instead the funds, some of which are still not accounted for, were being sent to Boston and utilized by other PIRG organizations. If PIRGIM wants the financial sup- port and trust of the University com- munity, it must demonstrate responsi- bility. They must demonstrate that they will not waste funds and will not be- HI-iO.D 'E.M1 OFF RIGHT HE.RE.0"\