quality of public school education and mental health services, curb the power of health maintenance organizations and lessen the tax burden on middle- income families. The lone Republican contender against Engler, Dr. Gary Artinian, said he opposes both abortion and physician-assisted suicide, but like the other candidates, is opposed to a school voucher system that would allow parents to send their children to private schools — including Jewish day schools and yeshivot — with public tax dollars. Owen framed the voucher issue this way: "The people who support vouch- Above: Larry Owen, Democratic candidate for governor. Right: Candidates for the state House of Representatives and state Senate in the 39th and 15th districts, respectively. From left, state Sen. Willis Bullard, senatorial can- didate Barbara Dobb, state House candidates Henry Leeds, Debbie Schlussel and Margaret Scott, Lois Shulman (wife of House candi- date Marc Shulman) and House candidate Ron Wolf Issues included abortion, taxes, school vouchers and health care. ers are not conservatives. They are radicals. [School vouchers] will destroy the one institution that is the consistent glue of this society." Schwartz remarked that vouchers would lead to a "class system in this country that is horrible to think of.", The question of taxation elicited a variety of responses from the guber- natorial hopefuls. Artinian, a cardiol- ogist, proposed a property tax freeze for senior citizens, kindly attributing the idea to Ross. Owen proposed the same freeze, only until the death of the homeowner or the sale of the house. He also proposed that mid- dle-income taxpayers receive a $1,000 tax cut. With the exception of Artinian, the candidates endorse curbing the power of health maintenance organi- zations to limit people's choice of a physician. Ross proposed a patient bill of rights that would allow free choice of doctors and to allow patients to sue HMOs if coverage for a needed procedure is denied. In the closing remarks of the candi- dates, Schwartz corn- pared Fieger to Harry Truman and suggested that in a "two-man" race, Fieger would tri- umph over Owen. Ross's comment that Fieger "is no Harry Truman" and his assertion that the campaign for governor is a three-man race elicited the only hearty applause from the audience all evening. The second part of the forum, in which state Senate and House candidates shared the stage, featured a few uncomfortable moments, most of them when Lois Shulman deferred questions to her absent candidate husband Marc. The candidates — State Sen. Willis Bullard and his opponent, State Rep. Barbara Dobb, and Republicans Henry Leeds, Margaret Scott and Ron Wolf, who are run- ning for a state House seat in the 39th district — also answered pre- pared questions and written ques- tions by the audience on the same issues posed to gubernatorial candi- dates. Dobb, a moderate Republican who decided to run against a long- time incumbent because state law bars her from seeking another term in the House, ripped Bullard for his alignment with Right to Life forces that oppose abortion. Holding a flier from Bullard's campaign that features a photograph of a baby, Dobbs lashed out at her fellow Republican's political ties. Bullard replied that he twice sup- ported a proposed ban on partial- birth abortions. Scott, Leeds and Wolf are all social moderates, supporting freedom of reproductive choice and the need to support public school education. Scott, an assistant prosecutor in Oakland County who is making her first bid for elective office, noted that Schlussel and Shulman are both against abortion. "Marc Shulman signed away his campaign to Right to Life," she announced. "Debbie Schlussel had to sign away her campaign to Right to Life in 1990." Schlussel ran for the same seat against Dobb eight years ago, losing by one vote. Lois Shulman initially retreated from answering a question about her husband's wavering position on abor- tion, but finally replied, "Marc is pro-life and I am pro-choice and we've been married for 20 years." All the candidates said they sup- port better delivery of mental health services, oppose prayer in school and oppose school vouchers; Scott assert- ed that Shulman and Schlussel sup- port vouchers and tax credits. Lois Shulman said her husband supports "giving parents more choic- es." The forum was sponsored by The Jewish News, Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit, National Council of Jewish Women, Institute of Retired Professionals of the Jewish Community Center, Hadassah and Temple Shir Shalom. ❑ 7131 1998 Detroit Jewish News 11