Page 8 --The Michigan Daily-- Friday, April 2,1993 In an effort to better represent the voices of the community, the Daily has reserved this extra page to print letters to the editor. The following submis- sions do not necessarily represent the opinions of the editors. Students have many summer options Morris shouldn't compare opression To the Daily: During this time of the year, some students decide to move out of the residence halls, and into off campus housing. But before you sign your lease, there are a few precautions you should take. Do not sign a lease for an apartment you have not seen. Managers often show tenants a "model" apartment rather than the actual unit in which you may want to live. The model could have new carpet, furniture, and other fixtures, while the unit they want you to rent has old, worn out furnishings and possibly a different layout or smaller rooms. Insist on seeing the unit you want to live in, get it in writing if they tell you that your apartment will be just like the model, or live some- where else. Never sign a lease without reading it first. Make sure everything in the lease is the same as what the landlord told you verbally (e.g. rental amount, beginning/ending date of the lease, pets allowed, etc.). Have the landlord write any promises that he/ she made to you into the lease (e.g. numer or paricmg spaces ana costs for them, if any; laundry facilities; new carpet or other renovations). If any clause in the lease is confusing, ask the landlord to explain it to you. Some things that landlords put into leases are illegal, and therefore are unenforceable, even if you sign the lease Negotiate with the landlord Just because an apartment is advertised at a particular rate, does not necessarily mean that it is what you have to pay for itOffer the landlord less rent than what he/she requested. The worst that can happen is they will say no; if you don't ask for it, you certainly won't get it! You can also negotiate on fees and the beginning and ending dates of the lease. Be sure to do all negotiating before you sign the lease, and put all agreements with the landlord in writing. As the end of the term nears, many students will be moving out of their houses and apartments for the summer. Some may be looking for ways to get out of their lease. The AATU offers a suggestion on how to break your lease. The most popular Stop AIDS through change in behavior, not money To the Daily: I feel an obligaton to respond to Daniel Ramirez' letter to the Daily, "Safe Sex may be possible today" (3/ 17/93). To me, this represents the incredible amount of ignorance associated with current feelings about AIDS. First of all, please spare us your incessant whining about Reagan and Bush. As it happened, President Bush directed an unprecedented amount of money towards AIDS research, for all of the good it did,which wasn't much. The fact is that HIV and AIDS are viruses, and in all of history, mankind has never cured a virus. Throwing money at the problem won't make it go away. AIDS is a "behaviorally spread". disease, and behavior modification is the only way to stop it as of yet. Mr. Ramirez insists on dismissing the arguments posed by the previous letter, "Safe Sex cannot exist today..." (3/8/93) by saying that the author was a freshman and therefore, his/her arguments were meaningless. On the contrary Mr. Ramirez, the fact that he/she was a freshman means that they haven't yet been corrupted by this politically cleansed liberal University, and that their views actually come from the outside world. Jeff Marsh Engineering Sophomore I& Wie the To the Daily: In Natosha Morris' column "Informative Action," (3/19/93), she claims not to appreciate the use of "the entire Black race in America as an example of comparative degrada- tion," but then goes on to do exactly what she condemns - except to a different minority, homosexuals. Worse, while paying lip-service to the idea that both "African Americans and homosexuals are oppressed groups," in herfcompari- son she implies that the legitimacy of the gay-rights struggle is somehow less than that of the fight for racial equality. Homosexuals, she says, have not been fighting for rights for more than "a decade or two," have done little more than "a march here and a protest there," were not brought to this country involuntalily, have no nation to call their own, and will never suffer from extensive systematic dehumanization or degradation. In all these cases (the first two of which are both insulting and untrue), she herself compares the homosexual experience with that of African Americans. But where the people she criticizes argue that all humans should be treated equally (i.e., that homosexuals should no more be discriminated against than should blacks), Morris implies that homo- sexuals don't have the historical justification for equality that African Americans do. Later, she argues that African Americans should not be dehuman- ized by regarding them as a "blob of colored mass," and as an example suggests that "Black" women were offended by the sexist sign at West Quad. Then, however, she argues that the only time homosexuals and other "so called minorities want to identify with African Americans is when they need to muster under- standing and support for their [own] cause." Is it not likely that African- American homosexuals identify with African Americans more often than they are in a gay pride march here or there? Morris dehumanizes homo- sexuals by lumping them together in one mass concerned only with their homosexuality, just as she criticizes others for lumping African Ameri- cans together in a common-colored mass. By her own argument, it is difficult to take this as anything less than an "insult." Her only justification for what she does seems to be her repeated assertion that "race and sexual orientation are not the same," and that African Americans "are a race of people, not a choice of lifestyle." Setting aside the basic anthropologi- cal illegitimacy of dividing homo sapiens along racial lines, in aligning "sexual orientation" and "choice of lifestyle," Morris is either claiming that homosexuality is "only" a choice (i.e., has no biological component), or else that homosexuals have the opportunity to hide their sexuality and thus escape discrimination. In other words, keep quiet about it and everything will be all right. Ignore the sky-high rate of suicide among closeted teen homosexuals, ignore the fact that remaining closeted cuts the throat of one s chances of having a fulfilling emotional relationship. Besides ignoring those little costs of her proposal, Morris misses the point entirely by not recognizing that the equality deserved by one oppressed group is deserved by all. Homosexu- als should no more have to stay closeted than Blacks should be confined to ghettoes. Ultimately, there is no need for Morris to downplay the oppression of another group to highlight recognition of the burden suffered by African Ameri- cans. Jonathan Harrison RC senior 0 EVAN PETRIE/Daity way is to sublet. Subletting is one of the most common ways a tenant can get out of paying full rent on a place they do not wish to live in. When you sublet, you essentially become a landlord. You negotiate a contract with the tenant, and you can collect a security deposit from the subtenant. Your landlord can require in your lease that the tenant get his/her approval before subletting, but he cannot unreasonably withhold} approval of a subtenant. One disadvantage to subletting is that if the subtenant does not pay all of the rent, the original tenant can be held responsible by the landlord. The original tenant would have to sue the subtenant for the rent money, or take it out of his/her security deposit. Model sublease forms are available at the Tenants Union. After your lease is up, and you have decided that you will not renew your lease, your main concern will be getting your security deposit back. When moving out, you must give your landlord a forwarding address, in writing, within four days of the date you move out. It might be a good idea to send it certified mail or give it to him/her in person. If you are moving out of state, consider giving the landlord a local address that will accept mail for you. Some landlords will make deductions because they think it will not be worth the tenant's expense of returning to sue in Small Claims Court. This is an illegal, but typical landlord tactic to make more money. If you have any problems, or questions about your lease, call the Ann Arbor Tenants Union, come to our walk-in counseling, or send us an e-mail message. Monique Johnson Jeri Schneider Ann Arbor Tenants Union Two 'U' faculty members are 'femi-nazis,' repress freedom of expression To the Daily: I was astonished to read in Harper's Magazine of Steve Rosenstone's and Debbie Meizlish's absurd and vindictive attack on a student, Shawn Brown, who used a rather ludicrous, though innocuous, example in an essay concerning telephone polls. The hypothetical case, involving a man entertaining several willing females in his penthouse, was somehow twisted, in a huge leap of logic, to construe sexual harassment of Meizlish. What it really revealed was blatant repression of freedom of expression, and an attempt by Rosenstone and Meizlish to ensure that students use only politically correct speech, because Shawn Brown didn't include either of them in his example. The term "femi-nazis," coined by Rush Limbaugh, appropriately describes the two humorless faculty members, who apparently have a thought control agenda in the works. Jason Larix Missoula, MT 0 To anorexic girl in aerobics class:You look terrible, honey by Wendy Shanker LSA senior I'm sending this one out to the anorexic girl in my aerobics class. You look terrible, honey. Ifeelawful thatwhen you look in the mirror, you see excess flesh. I only see skin and bones. Iknow thatmy thighs won'tearnme a permanent page in the Sports Illlustrated swimsuit issue, butI'drather beme than you, kicking twice as high as anyone in the class with half as much body mass. I don't know why you are the way you are. But I realize that you are one of millions of women who spend an inordinate amount of time stressing about the way they look. I'd heard a lot about this issue, so over a recent vacation I read Naomi Wolf's The Beauty Myth: How Images of Beauty Are Used against Women. Wolf's thesis is that women, as a re- sponse to the success of feminism, have been "punished by an ideology that is using attitudes, economic pressure, and even legal judgement's regarding women's appearance to undermine us psychologically and politically." I found this very disturbing. The book was way too focused on the plight of white, middle-class urban women. I also felt her concerns to be that of schol- ars, rather than women living in the real world. I found Wolf's thesis to be the big- gest myth of all. I'm tired of hearing fashion magazines and the diet industry being blamed for how women are 0 0 puters for helping us run our lives more efficiently. If a woman wants to pay big bucks to look however she wants to look, let her do it. She's not being forced into itby amale-dominated soci- ety. Au contraire, more power to ya. I love fashion magazines. I fully realize that I am not one of the women pictured in those magazines. I know my body will never look that way, be- cause I do not contain the rare supermodel gene in my DNA construc- tion. That's all rightwith me. Idietand exercise and wear makeup and spend a load on clothes because I want to look good. Forme. For others. I strive to be influence you? Sure. Could it make you strive to attain goals that are a physical impossibility? Sure. But the dive over the edgeinto anorexia, bulimia, compulsive eating and exercising, is not an impetus found on the pages of Cosmopolitan.. Those magazines are spending more and more space focus- ing on issues like women's mental and physical health. Yes, the new trend of the "waif' like model is as upsetting to me as it is to anyone. As opposed to the tall, breasty, killer thighs, big hairmodelsof the 80's, magazine covers arenow plastered with models who look more like pre-pubes- good living. As long as women are susceptible to poor self-image, adver- tisers will use that angle to sell prod- ucts. Wolf doesget a couple things right. She talks about learning to love our- selves andloveour bodies. Shewrites, "If a woman loves her own body, she doesn't grudge what other women do with theirs." This goes for you too, anorexic aerobics girl. Whatever pain you are feeling, please stop taking it out on your body. You are too young, you have too much potential to be wasting yourself away to nothing. After 21 years, I'm tired of thinking