City elec tions: Eighty-one years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor; Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 1972 NIGHT EDITOR: ZACHARY SCHILLER Vote HRP on April 3 WHILE THE thought of electing radicals to City Council might have been an idle dream .several years ago, the coming of the eighteen-year-old vote and a con- centrated effort by the - Human Rights Party have almost made that dream a re- ality. In this context, we endorse the entire slate of Human Rights Party candidates, and express confidence that they indeed can be elected. While endorsing a straight ticket often resultsfrom political dogmatism rather than intelligent thought processes, we feel that the Human Rights Party repre- sents a unique caseof a unified party. The candidates are bound by party rules to support a platform drawn up at an open party meeting. The five City Council candidates all had major roles in formulating the platform, and in fact, were chosen as candidates by the party's open nominating convention partially be- cause of their commitment to HRP's goals. Thus, the candidates and the platform are inextricably bound together. If one supports the platform, extending that support to all of the party's candidates is only natural. The platform the HRP candidates have committed themselves to is an excellent, one. Among their programs are those which would provide: --Community control of public services, including low-cost housing, health care and child care facilties - all on "an ability to pay basis;" -Community control of the police de- partment, including an end to enforce- mient of such victimless crimes as drug laws, loitering and curfew violations, abortion and homosexuality; -A comprehensive transportation sys- tem to serve everyone in the community; and -A guarantee of equal rights to all persons, regardless of race, sex or sexual preferences. ALTHOUGH A number of Democratic candidates are currently advocating similar platforms, we have no confidence in the ability of these candidates to carry out their programs or to listen to their constituents. Too many times in recent years, we have watched Democrats compromise their ideals because they were unwilling to show the perseverance and strength that is needed to reform the practices of city government. Moreover, too many times we have seen the Democratic Party willingly join hands with the interests of big business - the landlord, the billboard company, and the development corporation -- all for the benefit of an elite at the expense of the people. We are simply tired of compromising, and endlessly accepting ,a "lesser of two evils." We demand representatives that will be responsive and receptive to the community's needs and suggestions. WE FEEL HRP will do just that. As was the case with the HRP platform and candidate nominations, all future deci- sions of the party will be made at fre- quent mass meetings. All who attend are eligible to vote. Thus, who can argue with the party's literature, which exclaims, "Vote HRP, elect yourself?" We urge you to join us in our confi- dence Monday at the polls. Chance The endorsements of City Council candidates and the recommendation on the Ashley-First bypass proposal repre- sent the majority opinion of the edi- torial staff of The Michigan Daily. We urge you to give creful consideration to our recommendations, but whether or not you agree with us, we urge you to vote in Monday's election. City Council ?ndorsements First Ward JERRY DeGRIECK (HRP)-On three occasions; in three past elections, The Daily has endorsed the candidacy of Jerry DeGrieck. And once again, we are giving him our endorsement - this time for the First Ward City Council seat. This record of 'four endorsements in four campaigns reflect a deeply held be- lief that DeGrieck can be an exceptionally effective advocate for progressive legisla- tion on any governing body to which he is elected. While serving as executive vice president of Student Government Council two years ago, DeGrieck was a prime mover in :- cal campaigns against the Vietnam war, classified research and on-campus recruit- ing by discriminatory corporations. Just as important as his political stance, however, is his proven ability to get things done within the framework of established bureaucracies. As a past member of the University's Office of Student Services Policy Board. DeGrieck helped pass OSS's strict guide- lines on corporate recruiting. He also played an important role on the Com- mittee for a Permanent Judiciary, in ne- gotiations for a new campus jidicial mechanism in which students would be judged by their. peers. DeGrieck is no stranger to city politics. As one of the founders of the Radical In- dependent Party, now known as the Hu- man Rights Party, he ran a spirited cam- paign for the Second Ward City Council seat- despite restrictive election laws which forced him to run as a write-in candidate. High rents and inadequate service by the city's landlords are pressing ills De- Grieck has pledged to combat. "An elect- ed, tenant - controlled policy board," he says, "must be established to enforce a strict housing code and rent controls." DeGrieck also calls for increased com- munity control and citizen participation in overseeing the police, city services and city policy making. And the structure of his party - which calls for open meetings to set policy - is a first step toward fulfilling these pledges. Second Ward NANCY WECHSLER (HRP) - Wech- sler is by far the best choice for City for a radical change HRP CANDIDATES (left to right) Nancy I echsler, Jerry DeGrieck, Genie Plamondon, David Black and Nancy Romer Burghardt. Council in the Second Ward. Through her statements and her actions, she has dem- onstrated both a fine understanding of the problems facing the city and a staunch determination to get things done. While she supports the efforts of suchc "counter-institutions" as the Ann Arbor Free Health Clinic, she sees it as a model for future city-subsidized, community-t controlled services. Among these servicesl would be a low-cost, non-profit grocery c store in the central city. Wechsler would be a most articulate3 As a member of the Rainbow People's Party, Plamondon has worked on grass roots community services ranging from summer rock concerts and a food cooper- ative to the organization of Tribal Coun- cil, a coalition of youth and community oriented groups. Bound by HRP rules to vote according to the directives of open party meetings, Plamondon offers Third Ward voters a chance to promote diversity and inclu- siveness on council - which, in the past, has been dominated by a privileged few. VOTE MON.DA Y.! education programs should be initiated in the schools and the rest of the com- munity." An important part of Black's candidacy has been a lawsuit brought by HRP on his behalf, which challenged a city law re- quiring candidates to have been registered to vote in the pity one year prior to run- ning for city office. As a result of Black's suit, that law was ruled unconstitutional in a federal court. We agree with Black when he called the successful challenge, a victory "for all the people in Ann Arbor." Fifth Ward NANCY ROMER BURGHARDT (HRP) - Burghardt is an extremely well quali- fied candidate for City Council. A former Harlem school teacher and Peace Corps volunteer, Burghardt has long been active locally in the Ann Arbor Tenants Union, the Women's Liberation Child Care Ac- tion Group and as a coordinator of the Human Rights Party. Her dedication to these pursuits is indicative of the energy and social consciousness she would bring to City Council. Her strong pro-labor stance is also im- pressive. In the past, she hasrbeen active in strike support activity for AFSCME, United Auto Workers (Buhr Co.), the County Professional Hospital Association and the Ann Arbor Educationg Association. We are convinced that through her af- filiation with HRP, Burghardt would do much to increase the "community con- trol" of municipal programs, and would subsequently become a representative of women, blacks, chicanos, students and other groups which are not currently rep- resented on City Council. 4 * representative of the city's women; her rapport with the women's movement in Ann Arbor is excellent. In addition, Wechsler promises to open up the activities of City Council .to the citizens of Ann Arbor by making public the information that goes into City Coun- cil decisions. Third Ward GENIE PLAMONDON (HRP) - The candidate from the Rainbow People's Party, Genie Plamondon, would bring to City Council imagination and impetus from a segment of the community that has had little representation in the city government. Fourth Ward DAVID BLACK tHRP) - Black is in the unenviable position of running on a strong, progressive platform in one of the most overwhelmingly conservative areas of the city. In his campaign In the Fourth Ward, Black has emphasized eliminating police harassment of blacks, young people, and homosexuals and reform of existing drug laws. "The problem of drug abuse will never be solved through police crackdowns," he says. "Marijuana should be legalized. The city should fund treatment and mainten- ance programs for addicts, and honest drug $I 'U' election interference YESTERDAY, University officials met with representatives of the Rainbow People's Party (RPP) to give a belated explanation of why they denied use of University facilities to RPP for a "Get Out the Vote" concert-rally tomorrow night. Their reasoning was obscure and their tactics of questionable honesty. And, by refusing to discuss the issue other than by means of President Fleming's terse statement of the day before, the Univer- sity increased the impression that it is trying to hide something - that some- thing being a blatant attempt to intimi- date RPP and minimize its effectiveness in Monday's City Council election. RPP was making a decidedly non-par- tisan effort. They simply wanted to "Get Out the Vote" and had invited all candi- dates to appear and pass out literature. They went through all the channels, re- serving Hill Auditorium a week ago. No one told them then of any objection. Thus, the notion that ' Fleming and other administrators are politically mo- tivated in refusing permission for this rally gained credence from the legal ar- gument Fleming tried to make on ' t*xr Utzi Editorial Staff ALAN LENHOFF Editor SARA FITZGERALD..............Managing Editor TAMMY JACOBS ................. Editorial Director CARLA 'RAPOPORT . .........Executive Editor ROBERT SCHREINER................ News Editor ROSE SUE BERSTEIN .,.............. Feature Editor PAT BAUER.............Associate Managing Editor LINDSAY CHANEY............Editorial Page Editor MARK DILLE$N. .........Editorial Page Editor ARTHUR LERNER..............Editorial Page Editor PAUL TRAVIS ............... .......... Arts Editor GLORIA JANE SMITH.........Associate Arts Editor JONATHAN MILLER......... Special Features Editor TERRY McCARTHY............Photography Editor ROBERT CONROW ....................Books Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Linda Dreeben, Chris Parks, Gene Robinson, Zachary Schiller. COPY EDITORS: Robert Barkin, Jan Benedetti, John Mitchell, Tony Schwartz, Charles Stein, Ted Stein. DAY EDITORS: Dave Burhenn, Daniel Jacobs, Mary Kramer, Judy Ruskin, Sue Stephenson, Karen Tink- lenberg, Rebecca Warner, MarciakZoslaw. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS. Mark Allshouse, Susan Wednesday. "Massive violations of the law, particularly with regard to the use of marijuana," at the RPP's Dec. 10 Free John concert, says Fleming, puts the Uni- versity in the bad position of letting something illegal go on. AS A LAWYER, Fleming should really know better. In the first place, there is no proof, legal or otherwise, that such massive violations actually occurred. No arrests were made, no warrants issued, no convictions obtained. And, as Fleming well knows, the burden of proof rests with the accuser - in this case Fleming and the University itself. In fact, if Fleming is worried that the University may be "condoning illegal acts," he has a lot more to worry about than people smoking dope in Hill Audi- torium or Crisler Arena. All along he should have been worrying about the way the University looks the other way when-kids smoke dope in dormitories and all over University property-including the football games that our highly gen- erous and influential alumni come to. In practice, while the University claims not to "condone" any illegality on cam- pus, it in fact does - among those the ridiculous laws against cohabitation - conveniently ignored by the University whenever possible and when not, hushed up. THIS IS in fact what the University tried to do with the Rainbow Peo- ple's Party. They waited until 72 hours before the concert-rally -- after hun- dreds of people-hours and thousands of dollars of expense for RPP - to let the news out. With little time to protest and get the decision changed or find another location for the concert, the apparent re- sult is that the RPP will have neither use of University facilities nor any other place around town. Actually, the University's whole rea- soning is subjective in the extreme, for the refusal of University facilities to a bona-fide paying student organization on Ashley-First: A roa tonowere VOTERS SHOULD reject the proposed Ashley-First bypass in Mon- day's election. The project, formerly known as "Packard-Beakes," would expand Beakes St. into a major thoroughfare linking the down- town area to the north side of the city. When the proposal was originally made, the bypass was lauded as a panacea to revitalize the central business district by easing auto- mobile access to the area. The main flow of traffic on the proposed bypass, however, would be through the north-central area of the city, comprised mostly of' low income and black residents. According to recent estimates of the city's Traffic Engineering and Transportation Department, Beakes would carry over 44,000 cars a day. Model Cities authorities and other community leaders have con- demned the plan, asserting it will disrupt and isolate the black com- munity by creating two residential triangles, divided by Beakes. The completion of the bypass, they say, could also encourage the city to re-zone the area from residential to commercial or multi-unit apartment land usage-with a resultant displacement of low income blacks. BACKERS OF the plan claim that Beakes would carry the same amount of traffic whether or not the realignment is completed and therefore would not place an increased traffic burden on the north side community. But their reasoning is faulty. If, as they claim, the project would not generate any significant amount of new traffic through the area, it could not possibly be such a bonanza for downtown business. In a similar manner, those in favor of the proposal have built up their positions through fallacious financial arguments. The bypass supporters contend that the only construction the project requires is a series of street realignments and extensions that would cost the city no more than $1 million - in addition to another $1 million that has already been spent buying properties along the proposed route. But what they fail to mention is that the Broadway Bridge - which must be used by southbound traffic to reach Beakes St. - will not be capable of handling the projected traffic flow of the by- pass system. The result will be that a costly re-construction of the bridge will be necessary within a few years. THE TRUE motivation of the bypass supporters has not been very well camouflaged. The same Republican councilmen who, say that the sorry plight of the central business district makes the project desirable, six months ago gave their approval to the construction of the mammoth Briarwood Shopping Center - which itself may have been the death warrant for the downtown area. City Council: You can change all this Letters to The Daily Burnham To The Daily: ROGER WILNER recently at- tacked Tom Burnham in this col- umn as a "fraud." What could be a greater violation of Wilner's own principle of campaign honesty than this unfounded slanderous attack on a candidate's integrity? Ths is an obvious attempt to buy off votes for Tom's political oppon- ents. I know Tom personally and am doubtless better .ualified to speak of his character than Mr. Wilner. It is Tom's type of sincereity which is needed to bring honest government back to city haP and insinuations to the contrary are at- tT.mnts to deciveu ithe voting- nub- that any "expertise" he has in landlord-tenant relations would most certainly be based on his background as a landlord agent. On matters that directly affect students: damage deposit protec- tion, eight month leases without the unfair '25 per cent increase. rent control,2strict housing code enforcement, and legislation pro-, tecting the rights of tenants to bargain collectively, Mr. Burn- ham, a staunch conservative on housing, has chosen to remain si- lent and hope nobody notices. Can Burnham represent tenants, on one hand. and Peter Fink (own- er of 1320 . University, Park PlazaApartments, for whomn Burnham works as a landlord Wechsle r To The Daily: I WOULD LIKE to urge second ward residents, and especially fel- low Democrats, to vote for Nancy Wechsler for City Council on Mon- day, April 3. The Humap Rights Party has been less than accurate in equat- ing the national and state Demo- cra tic parties with the Ann Arbor City Democratic Party and in con- cluding that all Democrats are bad. The Ann Arbor Democratic Par- ty has consistently adopted party platforms equally as human as that of the HRP. Further, our Democratic mayor, 0