Residents fulfil their work requirement by cleaning, doing repairs, serving as house officers, participating in one of icc's committees or preparing meals. Most houses serve lunch and dinner daily, with "guff" - food for do-it-yourself breakfasts and snacks - on hand as well. Two of the houses - Lester and Black Elk - serve strictly vegetarian meals, and many of the other houses offer non-meat alternatives. The types of meals, as well as all other house policies, are determined by residents on a democratic basis at house meetings held every other week. Residents vote on issues ranging from house magazine selection to how to discipline a house member who is not doing his or her share of chores. The principle of democratic control is one of the five main points of the icc's philosophy. Open membership, neutrality in religion and politics, constant education and continuous expansion constitute the remainder of the group's fundamental principles. The icc government is comprised of a 26-member Board of Directors. Only the 18 house presidents, who serve a one-year term, are voting members. The icc President, Executive Director and six coordinating members also serve on the board. The coordinating members chair the ice's five standing committees: education, membership/ recruitment, finance, development, and coordinating. require that all unmarried male students shall live in houses under the direct supervision of landladies, and that allfreshmen shall live in approved houses. - The Michigan Daily Thursday, Aug. 11, 1932 Although the landlady crisis was solved within a day when Ruth Buchanan volunteered to supervise the unmarried males, co-ops have seen their share of more severe problems throughout their 58-year history. Just as World War II began, the University was home to 11 co- ops - eight men's and three women's. However, while the University's male population was fighting the war, local property owners' speculation led them to bid up the property values on rental housing - leaving only three co-ops by 1946. The years 1%8-1985 were turbulent for the co-op system. The icc tripled its size between 1968-71, but saw no expansion in facilities. This created many problems during most of the 1970s and early '80s. Jim Jones, executive director of the icc since 1985, explains that co-ops in the early 1970s had "tremendous waiting lists" during a time when many fraternities and sororities were folding for lack of members. "(But) the organizational structure hadn't caught up with the expansion," Jones says. "It didn't make a whole lot of difference... until the recession of the early '80s." During the recession, vacancies on campus reached 13 The d'ower Structure explained.. . "THEM" Lansing The Regents THE story by Christine Kloostra, photographs by Amy Feidm A new housing project, sp by the Student Socialist dub announced yesterday. The clz to rent several rooming hous fall, which they willre-rent t who will take care of the pla themselves, and also prepar own meals. --The Michig Wednesday, Aug. Michigan Socialist Ho first student co-operative the nation, opened during height of the Great Depr an attempt to provide aff housing - two dollars av room and board - for economically- strained st Today, affordable hou continues to be a major r( top: an intense game of ha Is a pre-dinner ritual at MI House, top right: Chris Lan senior gives Toby Rabinov massage for his work cr Michigan House, bottom: I gatheres around the Idtch to enjoy a home-cooked n Michigan House. AnnERPI i~nArbor's alternative housing , students are attracted to co-ops. individual r 1n Room and board ranges from $305 time. onsored to $420 a month, a far cry from the While th was 1932 cost, but still 15 percent demanded o ub intends below market rates. changed sin es next Because co-op houses are demand has o students owned and operated by the Inter- same. Toda) ces Cooperative Council (icc) - a expected to e their corporation owned completely by hours a wee co-op residents - prices are kept gan Daily at a relatively low level. 10, 1932 The icc was established in 1937 to help coordinate the co- use, the ops and in 1944 the group house in incorporated and purchased its g the first house. Today the icc owns ession as 18 co-ops which house roughly brdable 560 students. week for Shoe repairs, barbering, and udents. laundry will be done by members of ising thehouse as part of the three-hour-a- eason week contribution of work which will be demanded in addition to the two dollar charges for room and board. ckysack More than 20 persons have definitely IChlgan stated their intention ofjoining the var, LSA project. vItz a - The Michigan Daily s dit at Wednesday, Aug. 17, 1932 Everyone Throughout its history, the co- en table op system has strived to function neai at as an efficient unit while meeting the short- and long-term needs of iTHM The accompanying chart was sold to me by "Deep Shit," a mysterious high-level agent in the Collegiate Intelligence Agency. According to his story, it is but one of the classified documents located in "Sub-Basement Q," the hidden headquarters of his Jesse organization, Wbkatedkin the Walkerlittle-known tunnels below the steam tunnels. It is far from exhaustive, and readers are urged to contact Weekend magazine should they come to possess any missing links in the chain. As to the identity of "Them," my inquiries were met by the sight of Deep Shit turning white as a sheet and muttering something about "Things mankind (sic) was not meant to know." At that, I wisely turned our conversation to other, more Earthly matters. (Special thanks to Cathy Yeung for putting the document onto the computer.) public relations machinery to let it be known that he opposes David Duke in the Senate race. Faced with a two-way run-off between Duke and a Democrat, George may just blow his small mind trying to do the right thing. Bush's problem is that, like Duke, he opposes affirmative action and minority hiring quotas. Despite their claimed differences, David Duke and the Republican Party are ideologically compatible. The newly balanced (or unbalanced, according to your taste) Supreme Court will probably tackle the affirmative Duderstadt Cor Organized Crime Bureaucracy More [ Bureaucracy Food Deputized The Phones Misfiled Employee Service Security Transcripts. Paychecks Secret Dungeon Alumni MUD Racist UCARFliers The Dragon Steam Guard The FootballSta Gur Townie TeamTunnels Tone emInter-Fraternity Tne Your F The LeftCuni WCBNConi South Quad GamE Noriega Acquaintance Corey Maoist LaGROC Rape Seminars Dolgan International Movement Revolutionary Preacher The Masons Workers Mike MSA Ann Arbor Metro League Times PIRGIM CCF The Scientology PSC he Daily he Shanties CDAR Guy by the Delegations Opinion Jesse Engineering Arch Page taffHelms Page taff he UGLi The Michigan Book Publishers Shaky "Mr. X" Review JakeTM Ulrich's Faculty Undercover West Pricing Homeless CIA Recruiters Quad Department Action r T.A.'s Committee L-. Conservative TAGAR ixon Corp. CoalitionCop Steve Ann Arbor News Letters From the Engineers Cokel [ Duderstadt people esidents at the same e type of work of co-op members has ce 1932, the time stayed almost the The co-operative housing project of percent and many financially- y residents are the Student Socialist club struck its strapped students moved into co- contribute four to six first snag yesterday in the Dean of ops because of their affordability k to their homes. Students office. For University rules and convenience. However, many action issue. To expect that Souter replacing William Brennan will not cause progressive laws to be overturned is like expecting Pat Buchanan to vote Democrat. Beneficiaries of affirmative action legislation are finding themselves deserted at a rapid rate. Traditionally week-kneed liberals are muttering distractedly about the inherent structural problems with affirmative action (which is not the point), as the Dixiecrats begin to notice the populist storm that Duke is whipping up. Conservatives meanwhile are clutching Shelby Steele to their bosoms as proof that their agenda is, well... ideologically sound. In the grand tradition of political news, where what goes wrong today is vastly more interesting than what goes wrong everyday, editors are sending busloads of reporters after David Duke. He has merited feature stories in major dailies and newsweeklies around the nation, and Duke has learned to moderate his media message. He steers his followers away from obvious racial slurs, conscious of the importance of a moderate image. It remains to be seen whether or not Duke gets elected- probably not, but his star still ascends. The question that remains unanswered: when will the shock of recognition strike? This is the second in a two-part series. Ronan G. Lynch is a weekly feature and co-editor of Weekend Magazine 8 WEEKEND __ _ _ - - - - ---- October 5, 1990