100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

July 04, 1993 - Image 12

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Citizen, 1993-07-04

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

conti nu d from P ge A3
) t of rna-
continued from Page 1
-City M e 'c ,a De-
troit Firm, would d rubbi h cleanup
at S23 per hour, enerall borer eNI'
at S23 an hour, gen ral buildin main­
tenance at 23 an hour and J'lO\\' re­
moval at $750 per oc urrence.
. R Bellant, of the American Fed-
erationofState, County and Municipal
Employees, which oPPO privatiza­
tion and represen the workers being
fired, charged that firms might char
lower prices in the beginning to get the
cities to layoff their worke and ell
or neglect their equipment, but would
raise prices higher, when the city was
unable to perform cleanup functions.
He al 0 warned th t finn could
'add on fraudulent expens later,
which were not included in the.origmal
bid tating thi w ca ed by infla­
tion.
An organization has been formed
called the Highland Park Citiz n'
Council to oppo privatization in the
city.
lIE T th end of the
f cal year, just before the new budget
w' a"leantim ,II
H vev r, he noted that thi would
r te anger and po ibl Y ab enteei m
amon the 44 public safety employ­
who were cheduled for layoffs
on Thursday July 1.
Totin they were d rued their pay
ch ks just day. bel' re they were be-
1 n laid off. he u ted m ny would
be di gusted at th p peet 0 ing
to w rk "to ri k their lives."
Wamwnght: aid th payl Tues-
day wa; a d monstrati n of the pro -
1 me:' th crty f ced and howed the
on why u he' had to be made.
BEST CHANCE:
Match
JUNE 26, 1993
Lotto Ticket
A SPECIAL OFFER
"A Child Learns" and "A Parent's Prayer"
c Y; 0 Wall Plaque/Photo Frame
Ev ry hom nd family should hay a Child le rn
nd a Parents Pr yer w II pi que photo frame!
Complete order form nd mail tod y
Send Check or M.O. for $7.99 plu $2 for hlp handling to Point 5 Zero
Catal Sal ,P. 0 Box 196 , etroi t. MI 48219.
Name __
Address
City, St te,2JP --_. _
[J Y ,I h v enclosed my total payment of $999 inside your s tl f ctlon
is guaranteed. Plea e lIow 1-2 week delivery.
p rent, e t
chool."
McPh '1 pro
i � of YouthD em.
city owned neighborhood cente ,
funded through priva e and city mo­
ni would be 0 n 3 p.m. to 8 p.m,
off ring remedial tutori , literacy
trainin and job kills. She too ored
coop rativ app h between the
city and i uburb to youth pro­
grams. Mcphail aid he . two
children a Ingle mother."
I T R H LS a ubur-
ban/city youth exchange program .
McPhail' answer to th q tion 0
cooperativ resour and bridging
th cultural and geographical racial
gulf. Sist r Schools propos to tak
one city hool and one uburban
chool and have the students go back
and forth, wh reby city youth can
.benefit from the uburban faciliti ,
while e f ting an exchang in cul­
ture.
"We create teams that are cultural,
recreational and educational, n t city
vers ubu • ut half city, half ub-
"I BELl future of De-
troit i not one of ppearance, like
orne Madi on Avenue Ad cam­
paign. .. 1bere have been many scams,
like building up the downtown area,
but th m e are lipping more
deeply into poverty." White censured
McPhail' office for charging th par­
ent' of the even children who died
in the April house fire on Mack Ave­
nu with criminal neglect, saying that
poverty and neglect was the real cul-
WO 'S GUE candi-
date, Driver, disagrees that small b i­
ne development in Detroit i a
viable olution to economic empow­
erment for Detroit's Black commu­
nity. "Seventy to 80 percent of Blae
work for 181'8 capitalist corporations.
The more important question is,
ho' going to control e major
industri to empower the ,
rather than what few people are going
to fight for a few crumbs. It' ridicu-
10 to reduce Detroit to mall busi­
nesses when it i full of Blae people
sweating and working el e­
where ... The idea is not to force people
to sbop at teeny-weeny over-priced
party to " .
Sharon McPhail had one cl ing
admonition, "Don't be fooled," .
McPhail said, in what become a
ignature exp ion, "hire omeone
with a pi ritual reason to become
mayor." It' very piritual to me."
Attendant mayoral candidate
were: Dennis Archer, Sharon
McPhail, George Costa, Jerome Sav­
age, Jerome White, Shonte Driver,
and Rose Bebero.
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban 0 velopment, 4n Michigan, 0 trolt, M 4.8226.
FIND OUT ABOUT HUD HOMES, CALL 1-800-767-4HUD 0 YOUR LOCAL REAL
.. . .
AND YOUR COMMUNITY. PURCHASE A HUD HOME AND' YOU'LL MAKE
• AN INVESTMENT IN YOURSELF AND YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD. , To
THIS NAIL
HELPED TO REBUILD
A ROOF. THE ROOF HELPED
TO REBU I LD A HOUSE. THE HOUSE
HELPED TO REBUILD A NEIGHBOR-
+
0)
0)
.
t"'-
> .
..J
Z
o
HOOD.
AND THE PERSON WHO REBUI�T THE
HOUSE GOT A RETURN ON HIS INVESTMENT IN MORE
WAYS T AN ONE.
WITH A LITTLE MONEY AND SOME
}
WORK HUD HOMES CAN BENEFIT BOTH YOUR BANK ACCOUNT

Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan