Friday, April 4, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday1 April 4~ 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY , ... VOTE MONDAY, APRIL 7 &City Council can dida tes: An evalua tio First Ward: Curry vs. Gillespie THE FIRST WARD on the north side of Ann Arbor includes both white middle class neighborhoods and a large percent- age of blacks. The ward is solidly Demo- cratic. Two term councilman H. C. Curry has been challenged by Republican Adtric Gillespie for this position of leadership in Ann Arbor's black community. Curry, a carpenter, has lived in Ann Arbor for 20 years. Although he is at times inarticulate, Curry's record, especially in the area of civil rights has been excellent. As the only black councilman, he has spurred council to consider th issues of fair hous- ing and human relations. Unlike both mayoral candidates, Curry wholeheartedly supports the rent strike and the Tenants Union. Curry blames the delay in the Model Cities program on Republican opposition; to the makeup of the Model Cities policy board. The Model Cities program, which would begin the renewel of black neigh- borhoods in the First and Fifth Wards, has been held up pending hearings insti- gated by Republican councilmen and several area residents to determine if the present duly elected board is representa- tive. Curry defends the makeup of the pol- icy board and believes that any adjust- ments in representation can be made as the program progresses. Curry is an experienced councilman with a good understanding of issues. His shortcomings lie in his exclusively prag- matic outlook toward most issues, which has led to unwise votes in some areas of city planning. For example, he justified his vote for allowing the 26-story build- ing on Maynard to be built by pointing to the jobs that it would create for low income blacks, without regard to the ad- vice and intent of city planners.w In general, however, his voting record has been one of the most progressive on the council. ADTRIC GILLESPIE, like Curry, is a carpenter. At 29, he is the youngest of the council candidates and is also the most enigmatic. Supporting the platform of Republican mayoral candidate Richard E. Balzhiser, he seem as ease being what many would call a living contradiction -- a black Re- publican. However, Gillespie is independent of the Republican position in certain areas. Like Curry, he supports the rent strike and agrees with Curry that the Human Relations Commission should be strength- ened a n d given legal powers. However when asked what legal powers he would recommend for HRC, Curry has diffi- culty explaining just what specific re- lorms he would recommend, revealing a superficiality in his knowledge of the problem. When asked how he differs from Curry, Gillespie is hard put to name specific differences. Yet his stand on the city bus system and Model Cities action definitely parallel Republican policy. Gillespie says he could lead the black community better than Curry because he is younger and "speaks both langu- ages." But his confused and superficial view of the issues, coupled with Curry's success as a black leader, does not rec- ommend Gillespie as a replacement for Curry. While he seems sincere in his desire to solve the problems of the city, especially in the black community, Gillespie lacks a coherent program for council. H. C. Curry (D) Second Ward: Hobbs vs. Faber THE SECOND WARD, on the east side, is one of Ann Arbor's richest apd ,-- politically -- most important. Once a Re- publican stronghold, the ward h a s be- come an important swing vote because it now includes the highest concentration of students. The second .ward election should be an interesting test between the strength of Republican, candidate Mrs. Ruth Hobbs and Democratic opponent Robert Faber. Faber is an intelligent liberal who is genuinely concerned about the problems of the city. Sharing the views of mayoral candidate Robert Harris, Faber empha- sizes the need for long range planning to alleviate housing problems. Faber is par- ticularly concerned with planning a liv- able and beautiful Ann Arbor. The candidate is also concerned with the Model Cities program. He takes the commendable position, along with most of his fellow Democrats, that the present duly elected board should not be inter- This page was researched and writ- ten by Bill Lavely, Chris Steele, Jim Beattie and Bob Fusfeld. fered with or controlled. According to Fa- ber, any attempt to alter its operations would cause residents of the areas affect- ed to distrust the board. Moreover, coun- cil control of the board can only stall vi- tal planning of the much needed program to re-build the ghetto areas of Ann Ar- bor. Faber also recognizes that present property taxes is "strangling" low income residents and should be reduced and sup- plemented by a more equitable income tax. :iIRS. RUTH HOBBS, the Republican candidate, is likewise in favor of an income tax. Unlike most other Republi- cans, she feels an income tax would be equitable "if by ordinance there can be a curtailment of real estate taxes." Mrs. Hobbs' platform reflects liberal stands on other major issues, s u c h as; transportation and housing. She favors the institution of a bus system with city, university or state help if necessary, and solid backing of a low cost housing pro- gram. However, it is her interest in p u b 11 c housing that should concern voters. An officer in an Ann Arbor real estate agen- cy owned by her husband, M r s. Hobbs might experience a conflict of interest when trying to effect housing programs. Her seemingly good platform w o u 1 d hardly substitute for effective council ac- tion. Although The Daily was unable to secure a special interview with Mrs. Hobbs, it seems apparent citizens should look beyond her platform when -voting. Ruth Hobbs (R) Robert Faber (D) Third Ward: Kazarinof f vs. Emmons THE THIRD WARD on the south east side of the city is a well-to-do resi- dential area and a Republican bastion since it was redistricted two years ago. Democratic candidate, Nicholas Kaz- arinoff, a professor of mathmatics at the University, would represent the interests of the University community better than any other candidate. He combines an excellent understand- ing of city problems with a strong social conscience. Besides giving wholehearted support to the rent stike, and following the Democratic line in advocating an in- come tax and immediate bus service, he has been the only candidate to risk dis- turbing social norms by actually discus- sing substantive campaign issues in pub- lic. If elected, Kazarinoff has already pledged to work to fire City Clerk John Bentley, whose handling of voter regis- tF THE FOURTH WARD, on Ann Arbor's west side, is principally a white, sub- urban Republican stronghold. There, Republican Roy Weber is facing Doris Caddell, both candidates seeking first terms. Mrs. Caddell, a former teacher at Tap- pan Junior High, is an intelligent, in- formed candidate with a good grasp of campaign issues. She stresses that Ann Arbor is becom- ing a metropolitan area faced with "con- gestion and decay in the central city" which is stifling the "lives of people liv- ing there" and which "directly affects all other city residents." Mrs. Caddell strongly supports the rent strike and the aims of the Tenant's Union, tration has blocked many students from voting, as well as Claire Wheeler, the head of housing code enforcement.,Kazarinoff would also see the departure, of the city traffic engineer and the head of the pub- lic works department if he had his way. At a recent Chamber of Commerce breakfast Kazarinoff castigated the C of C for having no black members. The other candidates who spoke confined themselves to speaking on the micro- issues which the commerce members wre willing to hear. If elected, Kazarinoff would freshen council meetings stultified by platitudes and expediency. Admittedly, Kazarinoff's unconventional approach to city politics make his chances for election slim but his hard hitting campaign make him an outstanding candidate for council. 3Y CONTRAST, third ward Republican candidate Richard H. Emmons is one of the worst candidates for council and one with overwhelming odds to w i n. A conservative Republican, Emmons would work to obstruct policies in Ann Arbor. His statements on the issues are couch- ed in generalities and rhetoic which of- fer no guidance to the voter and no solu- tion to the city's problems. On the tenant-landlord relationship, Emmons has little to offer. He considers the Balzhiser ordinance, w h i c h would outlaw withholding of damage deposits, "willfully, fraudulently or maliciously," a gesture in the right direction. But he is not sure whether the ordinance would have any legal effect. Anyway, the or- dinance died at I a s t Monday's council session. Emmons, like mayoral candidate Bal- zhiser, seems quite disturbed by the thought of the city having anything at all to do with the -rent strike. "I would feel uncomfortable with the city being a party to the dispute," he says. Emmons' stand on the issue of student voter registration is as meaningless. In his pamphlets he encourages "the quali- fied young people of our community to register, vote and take part in the de- cision-making." But he doesn't seem wil- ling to define just what makes a young person "qualified." He would leave stu- dents at the mercy of the city c 1 e r k, whose strict interpretation of vague vot- ing qualifications have obstructed many students from registering to vote in the city where they live and work. As editor of The Michigan Alumnus and editorial director of the Huron Val- ley Ad-Visor, Emmons has taken a con- sistently uncritical view of Ann Arbor and the nation. His misguided dedication to the preservation of the status quo at the expense of large segments of the city's population can not be endorsed. Nicholas Kazarinoff (.D) Richard Emmons (R) ..I ourth Ward: Weber vs. Caddell arguing that both should expand to in- clude non-student tenants in low income areas. She also favors the enforcement of high minimum penalties for housing code violations. Like other Democratic candidates, she endorses institution of an income tax accompanied by a reduction in the prop- erty millage. Mrs. Caddell stands with the Democrats in her commitment to the maintenance of bus service and suggests integration of city, University and Ann Arbor school bus systems. ROY WEBER, a vice president of the Ann Arbor Federal Savings and Loan, is harder to pin down on issues. He has said so little and been so vague that even his campaign manager says "our litera- ture basically contains broad generalities which don't say much." While campaign platforms +are often hollow statements, Weber's whole cam- paign has been to avoid stirring any con- troversy. He declined an interview with The Daily and refused to enunciate his views on the rent strike or housing. However, Weber has stated a position on the proposed city income tax. He argues that such a tax might well cause a general tax increase in the fourth ward and that "there is no need for an income tax until the current rate of growth in the tax base begins to decline." He ignores that the present property tax weighs unjustly on low income resi- dents and that the present tax surplus cannot cover the pressing needs of the community, or even adequately staff city hall. Weber would also block the institution of a city bus system, until presented with a plan that is "reliable" and "economi- cal." Although the transportation issue has no urgency for Weber's well-wheeled constituency, one would hope. a city councilman might attend to the needs of Ann Arbor's low-income residents. Not ex- plaining his standards for reliability and economy, Weber would -apparently leave the bus question unresolved. His apparent lack of concern for the needs of a burgeoning community make Weber's candidacy unacceptable. Roy Weber (R) Fifth Ward: Stadler vs. Connelly THE FIFTH WARD in the northwest section of the city is divided-between middle class white subdivisions and the largest part of Ann Arbor's black ghetto. It is a'Republican ward, but only by a narrow margin. Republican Brian Connelly, an adver- tising executive, was appointed a y e a r and a half ago to fill the vacancy left by Richard Balzhiser, and his voting h a s paralleled Balzhiser's old, conservative record. the major issues of the campaign b o i 1 down to stalling while his opponent ap- pears genuinely interested in getting jobs done. Connelly was content to support t h e "Balzhiser ordinance" although he ad- mits he ealizes just how ineffective such an ordinance would be. Connelly has led the movement on council to delay the Model Citis program through a series of public hearings which ostensibly seek to solve the problem of an stunt their ability to make long range plans. But he insists on coupling the tax reform proposal with t h e proposed in- come tax, which would result in tax in- crease unpalatable to voters. Stadler, however would separate the two issues on separate ballots, which would put each in a better position for passage. HlENRY STADLER'S approach to other problems aims directly at the causes rather than the politically. attractive ex- pedients.- ting a bus system established on a more permanent basis than Connelly would ap- prove. Stadler recognizes the problem t h a t Connelly refuses to recognize: that the buses must come before ridership is es- tablished, and that a six month "experi- ment" will neither attract riders or work to change the habits of Ann Arbor com- muters in any meaningful way. Further, Stadler's support for mayoral candidate Harris' damage deposit pro-