10- Thi Mininn L'dlly- Vr~nll Ai imugua 1, LUU'+ iu - i ne micnigan uany - ivionaay, AUgUSI lb, 1UU4 EDWARDS Continued from page 1. in detail on the Kerry-Edwards cam- paign Web site, calls for 200,000 young people each year to commit to two years of service - working full-time in jobs such as building low-income hous- ing and assisting teachers in urban and rural schools - in exchange for four years of college. The initiative also aims for 300,000 college students each year to work part- time tutoring and mentoring children and low-income teens. In exchange, they will receive scholarships, of up to $2,000. In an interview after the rally, Phelps said he was impressed by the initiative. "If I could do two years of commu- nity service to have four years of col- lege paid for, I would've jumped on it," Phelps said, adding that he has been attending college for five years so far. "Four years of school and two years of service - I've almost done that much doing school part time." The Kerry campaign estimates a cost ofroughly $13 billion over the course of 10 years for the tuition plan. According to the campaign Web site, that cost can be covered with the money saved by an overhaul of the student-loan program. The plan involves eliminating "wind- fall profits" for banks - caused when interest rates on student loans exceed the rate that the government guarantees lenders - and forcing banks to bid on student-loan contracts. During the rally, Edwards focused almost exclusively on economic issues. He described plans to give businesses tax incentives to pro- vide health insurance for employers, receiving loud cheers for reiterating a proposal to end tax breaks for compa- nies that outsource jobs. The state Republican party issued a press release Friday, accusing Edwards of supporting a "plan to decimate the auto industry" by increasing fuel- efficiency standards for automobiles. Edwards addressed concerns over those standards at the rally, saying he and Kerry plan to ensure that new fuel- efficient vehicles are "built by (United Auto Workers union) workers." Edwards's remarks on jobs and unemployment struck a chord in resi- dents of Flint, where the unemployment rate is 14.5 percent. The national rate is 5.5 percent. Jerry Winfield, a neighbor of Phelps who watched the front-lawn discussion from his own porch across the street, said he appreciated seeing Edwards in the economically downtrodden area. "Coming into a neighborhood where people have lost their jobs - I like that," Winfield said. He added that he felt Edwards, having grown up in a working-class family, "seems like he cares about the people." Bill Karl, a retired construction worker who applauded enthusiastically during the rally, said he "liked all of (Edwards's speech), every bit of it." But NEWS the issue he cares most about, he said, is "bringing jobs to America." "The younger generation needs jobs here," Karl said. "Not out of the coun- try, like the Republicans think is best for our economy." Although many union members and other area residents who attended the rally said they supported Edwards and Kerry because they felt the Democrats would curtail job outsourcing, some say the Kerry-Edwards ticket's anti-out- sourcing message belies a more moder- ate, pro-trade agenda. According to Jason Zengerle, a senior editor for The New Republic, Kerry economic advisor Laura Tyson advised an audience of pro-trade for- eign diplomats to "simply ignore some of Kerry's anti-trade language" at a National Democratic Institute forum during the Democratic National Con- vention in Boston. Frank Moxam, a resident of New Mexico who attended the Flint rally while visiting family in Michigan, said Edwards's language on trade was mis- leading and that his policies would not have a great effect on job outsourcing. "Perot was right: we're hearing that big sucking sound," Moxam said, refer- ring to aprediction by the 1992 presiden- tial candidate that the North American Free Trade Agreement would cause American jobs to move to Mexico. If Kerry and Edwards wanted to stop outsourcing, Moxam said, they would advocate tariffs and pledge to pull out of NAFTA. WEB SITE Continued from page 2 No matter what will be posted on the Web site, good or bad, Bruce DeKraker of Campus Rentals, an agency with more than 30 properties in Ann Arbor, said he feels that good landlords should not be concerned about students' comments. "You can't make everyone happy 100 percent of the time, but we're as help- ful as we possibly can be," DeKraker added, "I'm not too worried." Mironov said that the Web site will be the first of several housing initia- tives that will serve as a new way to resolve landlord-tenant disputes among students. He added that the Web site will be "the beginning of the strategic plan on how housing activism will be organized post-tenants union." Created by students in 1968, the Ann Arbor Tenants Union is a non- profit service, independent of the University. It is designed to resolve landlord-tenant disputes outside of court. Funding of AATU has been a hot topic for debate in MSA for sev- eral years. In the spring of 2003, under the guidance of Mironov - then General Counsel - MSA finally withdrew all funding from the organization. The funding had consistently been a crucial 5 to 10 percent of AATU's budget. "Landlords' replies will help even out the playing field." -Jason Mironov MSA President The withdraw, following claims of AATU as being ineffective, came despite a student mandate to increase funding. AATU services are no longer avail- able to University students. The demand for student services provided by AATU were then shifted to the University's Housing Informa- tion Office and Student Legal Servic- es, where the AATU currently directs University students. Yet, entering the 2004 MSA elec- tions, Mironov campaigned that stu- dents' housing rights were not being properly protectedandpledged$20,000 of MSA funds towards the redevelop- ment of an AATU-like program. According to Mironov, MSA is cur- rently, "looking for more viable routes directed at filling any type of void felt surrounding student housing." This new Web site, Mironov said, is a test to see how students react to such a program. He further explained that, "we don't expect the first version tobe the final." a S 0 S 0