, . •• • f • Highland Park Councilwoman: t' who voted for the Chrysler gree­ ment in 1987, said he upported it because he thought the company w building a tate of the art complex to compete with other industries, but would keep its world headquarters in Highland Park. "We were operating under the as- umption that we had solid under­ standing that Chry ler would stay in the city," Ross said. "Never in my mind was it that Chry ler would leave." Mayor Porter, who wa on the council at the time, said he voted again t it, along with then Council Pre ident Martha G. Scott. Porter aid he wanted a pecial agreement with Quysler that the city would receive )Un notice before the HIGHLAND PAR - Council­ Noman Chri tine Franklin charged that in making deci ion to move to Auburn Hill , Chrysler w violating the agreement in 1987 allowing it to benefit from Auburn Hill tax brea . State law require the city being vacated to approve a corporate move in order for the corporation to receive tax breaks at its new location. In the amended nd res­ tated contract ap­ proved by Chry ler Cor­ poration and the city are the words, " •.. Chrysler ha expre cd i in­ tention to retain ita World Head­ quarter in the City (High and Park) and to ",*�!1 Mayor11naey otter d that he ould cbee th 1 wyers to ICC if thi could be in rpretcd Iy binding, but he added be felt per­ sonally that it probably. could not be used to prevent the rporation from leaving. . COUN.CILMAN Frank Ro S, liIiI,_ ....... lItorllll iii __ He noted he glad that Quys- ler did give the city three years notice anyway. STEVE HARRIS, Public Rela­ tions Representative of Chrysler told The Michigan Citizen that in 1987, Se PACT, A10 WANDA F. AOOUEMOAElMlohlgan CItizen WATCHING THE PARADE GO BY-Young eastside Detroit youth sored by the group Mack Alive, which consist of 14 churches along njoy the recent parade along Mack Avenue. The parade was spon- Mack Avenue between St. Jean and East Grand Blvd. II ADDED THAT Lederer did not meet with the people. "He' never there," he aid. "We're beginning to call him the See ACORN, A 10 ACO P OTE T :KILLING Detroiters call for justice 'City lets vacant houses rot' By RON SEIGEL aYJIMIRWIN AHooIttwl P,... Wr#fw DETROIT-The billboard a few blocks down Van Dyke Avenue read, "Hip Hop with a Red Pop." But nobody at Aby's Self Serve gas station and party store was buying Sam Shuayto's strawberry soda last Thursday night. Outside the store, about 50 protesters marched and chanted to protest the fatal shooting of 22- year-old Raffael Dent by an Arab­ American store employee, and to urge a boycott of Shuayto's busi­ ness. Inside were a couple of rela­ tive ofShuayto, who wasn't there. In between were three Detroit police officers, a television news crew and, over one 45-rninute period, not a single customer. The 0 protesters -all of them issupp ed to determin wheth r the house can be repaired in 20 day . She said there is a po ibility for people to get loans from the Com­ munity and Economic Developm nt Department. She charged that the city took o­ long to re pond that many house are tripped, burned or used by drug dealers. She aid implementing the law would provid housing for I w in­ come familie and al 0 alleviate the danger of abandoned hou es, build­ ing up Detroit neighborhoods. KATHL N ANDECKI, leader of the ACORN affiliated or­ ganization Neighbor for Neighbor (NFN) aid the sit-in w waged out of frustration, bccau e of the failure of Detroit Building and Safety En­ gineering Director Craighton Lederer to meet with re idents about complaint that he failed to imple­ ment city law on vacant buildings. Sandecki charged the Depart­ ment of BUilding and Safety En­ gineers with failing to implement the Nuisance Abatement Ordinance, which allow citizens to buy up and repair abandoned houses in the city. The ordinance, he aid, is not work­ ing because of failure of the depart­ ment to follow its 120 day time line for re ponding to applicants. When a citizen makes an applica­ tion for uch a house, the d partment DETROIT - Five demonstrators from the ACORN Community Or­ ganization were arrested in a sit-in of the Building and Safety Engineering Department last week, but had their charges thrown out Tue day, Sep- o tember 8. According to Amy Schurr, head organizer at ACORN, the 30th dis­ trict court ordered the charge of tre pas ing dropped, stating that the demon trator were in a public building, However, they aid the city could have ticketed them for failing to obey the order of a police officer telling them to leave, Schurr aid. ACO RN paid a 50 bond for each demons trator at the time of the arre t, but the money wa returned when th charges were dropped, Schurr added, African American, most of them young and. including several of Dent's relatives --chanted" What do we do? Shut 'em down!" and waved at passing cars and trucks that blared their horns in support. "We've been coming out around the clock." said Ro ie Chatman. "We want to hut them down. We want to bring them to justice." Dent was hot about 3 a.m. Monday after an argument that ap- See PROTEST, A10 Q. What would you do to end the Detro· teacher strike? ETTI ROBINSON: "1 would tart negotiating in the pring. And if an agreement w n' t reached, I would fine the Board and the Dfl'.'; DER 0 : "1 would give th teachers a raj e. They are underpaid for the job they do."