The Michigan Daily-Thursday, September 7, 1978-Page 59 Counci dances to a GOP tune Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG Members of the Washtenaw County Coalition Against Apartheid protest University investments in South Africa. 'Campus Iactivists pla0y poli,1t ics (Continued from Page 58) I'm misunderstanding this, but . Like Morris, Greene represents the Second Ward staunchly, especially on issues of student concern. Susan Greenberg (D-First Ward) is the Democratic newcomer to Council but she has wasted no time in taking her role as a minority party advocate seriously. At the very first session of the new Council, it was Greenberg who nominated Morris for the position of Mayor Pro Tem over Republican choice Gerald Bell because "it is im- portant to have a woman in that position" and for purposes of "minority representation" of the Democrats. BELL WAS chosen Mayor Pro Tem by the Republican majority, partly as his reward for "doing more for the par- ty than anyone else." Bell was one of Mayor Louis Belcher's loudest cheerleaders in the last electoral cam- paign, and has become known as the strong party man on Council.. As Bell is strictly partisan, Ronald Trowbridge (R-Fourth Ward) is the Republican maverick. Trowbridge is the most colorful Council member, a professor of English literature who talks in witticisms and makes irreverent jdkes on the most serious topics. In the Third Ward, the Republican junior member is Louis Senunas, a low- profile Ford Motor Company employee. Only recently has Senunas been obser- ved to be "coming out of his shell" by more than one Council observer. THE NEWCOMERS on the Republican side, and completing the seven-four Republican majority, are freshmen Clifford Sheldon (R-Third Ward), David Fisher (R-Fourth Ward), and James Cmejrek (R-Fifth Ward). Sheldon, a 35-year-old Ann Arbor Bank vice-president is a traditional less-government Republican who wants to see the city bureaucracy made more efficient. And like most Ann Arbor Republicans these days, he sees road repair as the major task ahead. Cmejrek, like Sheldon, has yet, to, establish an independent identity, but he does have his own area of special in- terest. Cmejrek, a local attorney, cam- paigned on the theme of government reorganization and restoring a weak- mayor system to Ann Arbor. The other Republican newcomer is the Fourth Ward's David Fisher, civil engineer, certified public accountant; and former Wolverine gridiron star. The election of the buly, but dapper, Republican wa's"the only real surprise in the last elections, since Sheldon's-and,. Cmejrek's seats were considered 'safe" for Republicans. Fisher's critics - and there are many - accuse him of being a puppet of James Stephenson, Ann Arbor's last Republican mayor. It was Fisher's election. that prompted Greenberg to remark that. she would have to wear a football helmet to Council meetings "to protect me from all the shit that's going to fly. By RICHARD BERKE Most incoming students have at least heard of the radical, politically progressive individuals who composed such a large chunk of the University's student body in the 1960s. Ann Arbor is the town where national leaders of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) were educated and, not long after, 2,000 students jammed in front of North Hall demanding an end to U.S. in- volvementin the Vietnam War. THOUGH THESE events are but history now, some new students may be surprised to see just how many of their peers wanted Ronald Reagan to win the 1976 election or that the majority of their classmates shy away from any kind of political in- volvement. Indeed, the University's student body had followed the national trend away from political activism and on to political serenity. But remnants of the rebellious 1960s have not completely vanished from campus. In fact, Ann Ar- bor still can boast a wide offering of political organizations, though they are not as plentiful as in the past. The Revolutionary Communist Youth Brigade (RCYB) is one of the more established and most visible political groups in Ann Arbor. Called the 'Revolutionary Student Brigade until last February, the group conducts various campus activities espousing Maoist principles. RCYB members have demonstrated against CIA recruitment on campus and, more recently, have actively denounced the University's ties with corporations operating in South Africa. ALSO ACTIVE on campus is the Spartacus Youth League (SYL),, whose members seek to sway students to the Trotskyite program of the worker revolution. Active on campus for five years, the group has a history of radicalism in Ann Arbor and has been known to stay independent of other local political groups. "We want principally to win students to our politics, Marxism, and to become revolutionaries," says SYL member Mitch Wright. "We try to inject a little social realism into Ann Arbor." WITH FIFTEEN members in the city, the Young Workers Liberation League (YWLL) is a Marxist organization. The group's purpose is to stand up for the right of youth to "earn, learn, and live," accor- ding to one YWLL member. YWLL conducts bi- weekly fall meetings and one of its major activities has been to raise money for the Wilmington Ten, the jailed group fighting for civil rights. Last fall, YWLL also sponsored a forum on affirmative ac- tion. The Young Socialist Alliance (YSA) reorganized themselves on campus last year after two years of inactivity since its past members graduated from the University. YSA member Dave Lechner stresses that his group wishes to get involved with concrete issues to help students and doesn't involve itself solely with philosophical principles. "WE LIKE GOING along with the majority as much as possible," Lechner states. "We are in- terested in getting something done." On the political scene, the Socialist Human Rights Party (SHRP) is an established alternative to the two traditional party organizations. SHRP's heydays were in the early 1970s, when the group successfully ran three candidates for City Council. Formerly called the Human Rights Party, the organization pushed for Ann Arbor's now-famous $5 marijuana fine. SHRP NO LONGER has the effect on city politics it had in the past, however. In the 1977 mayoral elec- tion, SHRP candidate Diane Slaughter received only 356 votes compared to the more than 10,000 votes won by each of the other two candidates. In last April's special mayoral election, Slaughter un- successfully fought to have her name placed on the ballot. With the increasing controversy over South Africa, local groups which have emerged to protest U.S. and University ties with corporations in that country have gained recent prominence. The Washtenaw County Coalition Against Apar- theid has been the most visible group, with mem- bers appearing at Regents meetings and holding forums denouncing racist policies in South Africa. The African Student Association and more radical South African Liberation Committee have also gained momentum. and support as South African apartheid becomes a critical campus issue. AT YOUR SERVICE . . Billing 764-0550 Circulation 764-0558 Classifieds 764-0557 Display 764-0554 News 764-0552 (including happenings) Sports 764-0562 Coop businesses offer an alternative (Continued from Page 57 ) Alternative businesses attract workers who have goals for "social or political change." Often they would not be doing such work unless they were part of an organizational alternative. Even in low-skill businesses, the RC group found, workers were excep- tionally well educated, frequently college graduates, with many holding graduate degrees. In these organizations however, education does not bring with it the usual status, and physical work likewise carries no stigma. The food coops, located at 722 Packard and 212 N. Fourth are probably the best places for newcomers, to enter the alternative business world. WORKING AN hour a week at a coop entitles coop participants to a 17.8 per cent discount on food bought at that coop or at any of the other coops in town. A bulletin board lists suggestions for daily tasks and volunteers often find themselves weighing raisins, prunes, or dried apricots, cutting cheese, working the cash register, or driving the coop's truck. But one need not work at a coop to shop there. Attending the coops' general mem- bership meetings or working on hiring, designing and remodeling, or fund- raising committees also earns the discount. Many coop members have found that working for coops has taught them valuable business and organizational skills. CAROLENA GOEHRING, a coor- dinator at the Packard People's Food Coop, stresses that the cooperative at- mosphere at the coop makes it "really a people's store." She says, "As a fresh- man, I would have found it very ex- citing." Wendy Page-Echols, a Packard coop coordinator whose infant son occupies a favored position in a cradle on the coop's desk, says freshpeople can "supplement their 'quaddie' diet with cheese, snacks, juice, trail mix and even organic popcorn" by shopping at the coops. In addition, the coops sell over two hundred different herbs and spices, books about nutrition, organic tooth- paste and soaps, herbal teas, and, of course, coop t-shirts. oll Mtjbtga :43atU Daily Photo by JOHN KNOX A local shopper scrutinizes the goods at the People's Food Coop. NEW & USED GUITARS GIBSON MARTIN EPIPHONE YAMAHA FENDER Accessories LP'S-TAPES STRINGS & MISC. MIKES P.A. SYSTEMS HARMONICAS AMPS ROAD FENDER EARTH FREEDOM E.M.C. Here's the cotton knit T-shirt young men are collecting in evrery color to team with their summer denims and khakis. The ring neck and sleeve detailing adds a touch of fashion to our wardrobe of colors. Ecru, navy, light blue, red or yellow. Sizes S-M-L-XL, 4.25. DRUMS LUDWIG SLI NGER- LAND BANJOS GIBSON . HARMONY % IWP' A