idereda
vet
ID CL
rea lly tra rmed it.
"If they can do this on on tre t,
we can do in every (Highl n Par)
street," he aid.
She will I 0 work to encourag
residen to actively prevent people
from littering in th community.
"Once you ta e pride in you elf,
I think it becom contagio ," h
aid. "T ke pride in your h m ,
whether you rent it our own it."
Another problem, he ay ,i in
adequate equipment in th Public
S fety Department Lampkin ug
ge ts the city all too often ee
equipment form Detroit and
Hamtramc which is "breaking
down."
Jnstead th y hould e k equip
ment from more affluent are .
lAMP KIN WARNS that city
crime is likely to rise, because of an
increase in homel ne caused by
the Governor cutoff of General As-
istance and other social ervic .
Sh warns that many people 'ill
be homele vulnerable to crime
and tempted to commit criminal' ac
in order to urvive training public
rety resources.
"What we will ee during the
winter is wall to wall bodies," he
warned.
Lampkin sugge ts that if elected
he will work to get old schools,
which are being abandoned by the
Highland Park Schoo System, ed
belte for in pUght.
Fran Ro s: increa e com
munication make HIghland Park at
tractive, safer, drug free.
INCUMBENT COUNCIL
MAN Frank Ross, who is running
for reelection, state that the main
problem facing Highland Park i a
lack of communication between the
council and the mayor's office.
It is, not possible to adequately
deal with the deficit unless the ad
ministration provides council with a
financial tatement--6omething �
council has "v�hemently asked for"
and theadmi . vation failed to pro-
-"'"-o.........,__ .. "de, d.
Both Mayor and council, he
added, "will have to come together
to see w.hat priori tie are."
"We have to keep pushing it to
over barriers," Ross said. "Our city
1 in grave dangor."
Ross would Uke to raise money
. by increasing enforcement of traffic
and parking laws.
"SPEEDERS ARE GOING into
the city every �ming am after
neon, "Ro said. "Greater enforce
ment would not only raise revenue
but increase safety for our citizens."
He added that every meter has
been removed, so that the city can
not enforce parking regulations.
However, he adds, "Unless I see
what we have been doing, how we're
operating and have a road map of
what we're doing, I can't make in
fdnned budget decisions."
: Ross adds that it impo ible to
bting in business, unl we "create
sO image of something different, a
c y that is ecure, sage, and drug
f¢e:"
: R is call·
g�t Highland P r
. HE BELIEVES IT i po ible to
get young people, who think the only
way to get money through selling
d tugs , into training programs for
lesitimatc employmenl.
: Others would have to leave High
I d Park.
: Thi , he adds, would require a
jdint effort by the Public Safety
Ilepartments, courts, the mayor and
city council. Ross wants to form a
,*ighborbood coalition to monitor
their neighborhoods and publiC om-
to unite to ee the law is ade·
quatelyenforced.
"An area 2.9 miles i manage
able," Ross aid, noting that in
Detroit the Joy of Jesus Church was
Ie to keep drugs out of 42-50
bl through a imilar program.
HI , h d ,will
be decided by union contr ct
negoti tio nd de ling with the
fin ncial problems caused by pen-
io in th Public S fety Dep rt
m nt.
He would al 0 use the Traffic
Division in Public Safety to rai e
revenue.
scon aid h would solve city
financial problems by "continuing to
run thi city a busin and rna e
n ry cuts." •
id there are 1 s expendi-
Y he ha en-
courag d community clean up m
paigns and got h t ff to de n
all y on a weekl basi .
"Iwa out there in blue jeans," he
aid.
She recall creatin community
activi tie to encoura e uni ty and ci ty
I .
.I.
H D D that in th n xt t rm
h him elf would try to be more open
to communication with the next
mayor-whoever i cho en.
Phili
One of the mo t trying a pect of being a
parent i encouraging your child to make the
right choice - not.ju t to follow along. In
today' complex ociet ,growing up involve
more pre ure and ch ice than ever before.
Studie how that young people do thing
becau e their friend do. Smoking i one
of tho e thing. .
We don't want children and teenager
to moke.
Tha' why the tobacco indu try i offering
a booklet aimed at helping parent meet the
challenge of providing their children with the
tool to re i t peer influence. The booklet,
"Tobacco: Helping Youth Say 0,' i
de igned to keep parent and children
Morris
communicating about important i ue like
moking.
To continue it long. tanding commitment
that oking i not for young people, the
tobacco indu try aloha trengthened it
marketing code and i uppo ing tate
legi lation to make it tougher for young
people to buy cigarette . We are al 0
working with retailer for trict compliance
with tate law prohibiting ale of cigarette
to minor.
For your free copy
of "Tobacco: Helping
Youth Say 0," return
the coupon today.
.
.r,
.�
',,:
I"
, �,
,.
PIDLIP MORRIS'
U.S.A.
Doesnt. ant Kids·
To Smoke
NAME
------------------------------�
ADDRESS
------------------------------
CITY
----------------------------------
STATE ZIP
L - - - - - - -.- - - - - - - - - - --------�
Please Print