rage inree Thursday, September 5, 1974 I HE Ml(.Hl(pAN U77Z7- age ree - "4d,,.'irr~.r , rra .. r4 ..b '.:; :7:y ?fl'W r r ,f f~ Ms r g"7 'v Farmer's Market-a community affair By SARA RIMER There is no better place to eat breakfast on a Wednesday or Saturday morning than < the Farmer's Market..A jug of tangy cider, as loaf of homemade raisin bread, and a. crisp apple make the typical Residence Hall fare of dishwatery coffee and soggy French toast unpalatable. Breakfast is a community affair with the people as mixed as the cornucopia of .fruits, vegetables, and flowers that fill the stalls of the market located at the corner of Fifth St. and Catherine. WANDERING LEISURELY down the aisles, shoppers gulp down home grown and home baked goodies with an appetite sharpened by the post-dawn chill. As early as four in the morning, the farmers'back their trucks into the, booths . that some of them have rented for over 30 years. and begin setting out the fine produce that draws the city's most dis- cerning, marketers. :At 8:30 shoppers - ranging from tweedy professor types to wizened old women who o remember when "eggs were only 30 cents a dozen" - arrive armed with baskets, net bags, and just about any other kind of re- spectable receptacle. WEEL-HEELED WOMEN dressed smart- ly for the day's marketing in stockings, skirts and styled hair, exchange recipes, good mornings, and admiring comments with students clad in faded jeans and brand- new Earth Shoes. The students' overalls and bandanas .parody the authentically dirtied pants and checked scarves the farmers have been wearing to market for years. VfltatVdAl.. EM s' ..t.....*g ~rr.......sfti Escalating food prices are ignored as shoppers pile their arms high with rhu- barb, carrots, apples, flowers, homemade bread, lettuce, and zucchini whose perfec- tion makes standard grocery items resem- ble plastic imitations. THE FARMERS who are not busy clink- ing change into tin cans, weighing produce, advising buyers on exactly how much to water their new geraniums, or how to ex- pertly fry parsnips, stand watching the streaming crowd." The Market is an ideal spot for people- watching, whichever side of the table one happens to be on. Cameras click frequent- ly as local photogs catch the rainbow of colors and the busy mood of people point- ing, smiling, smelling, tasting, milling, and jostling. During the past year, however, the mar- ket has become more and more craft-orient- ed as ceramic bowls, delicately crafted sil- ver jewelry, hand-tooled belts, and cro cheted shawls slowly take their place be- sides rows of onions, eggs and flowers. Of 135 stalls rented on an annual basis, only seven are permanent craft stalls. Most of the hand-made wares are sold by tran- sients who sell just for the day.> SPRINGTIME AT the Farmer's Market is a garden of earthly delights-of Wander- ing Jew, baby's breath, phlox, berries, ap- ples, turnips, parsley, sage, rosemary and thyme. But as Market Master Rita says wistfully, "It's the fall that I love the most -when the bittersweet comes out. And the pumpkins, gourds, squash and Indian corn..." 4 : FF ong. RPP HAS permanently aban- doned the HRP, and of late is trying to work on the periphery of the Democratic Party, much to the chagrin of the traditional SDemocrats. ! Throughout these internal wranglings, HRP was compe- tently served by its two Coun- ci membersW JesryrDe rck from the First and Second Ward respectively. DnleGrieck a former Democrat and SudentGovenmentCoun cii icepresden in he aei By JUDY RUSKIN Shiny, new chome and plastic plated, the Briarwood shoping mall is a consumer's dream - or perhaps nightmare. Briarwood is Ann Arbor's first, and so far only, completely enclosed shopping center. Lo- cated on a 155 acre site off State Rd. and I-94, a few miles away from campus, the mall offic- ially opened its doors last November. APPROXIMATELY 121 stores and services will eventually grace the 933,457 square feet that is Briarwood proper. However, it is esti- mated that only 85 stores are currently open. The exact number of stores now in business is a company secret. It is also company policy not to release fig- ures on the cost of constructing Briarwood,, referring to the mall as a "multi-million dol- lar" project. The project caused much controversy when the Taubman Co., which constructed the main- moth mall, first brought the proposal before the city council in 1971. Environmentalists and the no-growth advocates argued such a massive complex was merely an extension of urban sprawl into Ann Arbor. THE SHOPPING CENTER and the crush of traffic it would generate would have a disas- trous effect on the area's ecological balance, they argued, and would further cut back the already shrinking "green space" between Ann Arbor and Detroit. The environmentalists lost, however, and con- struction began. The mall has caused traffic problems. The 6,872 space parking lot empties directly onto two-lane State Rd. In an effort to handle the New, mammoth mall draws droves .of eager shoppers increased traffic flow, the city has attempted to widen the road. The construction, however, has been slow, hindered by, among other things, a strike by highway repairmen. DESPITE ITS FLAWS, Briarwood does offer a wide variety of stores and shops. Sears and JC Penny's have both opened large department stores in the mall. Hudson's will open a branch at Briarwood sometime this summer. In addition to the department stores, there are currently or will be in the future, twelve women's clothing stores, 9 men's stores, and ten shoe stores. There are ten restaurants and food specialists at the mall, ranging from Big Boy's hamburger emporium to a Chinese restaurant and old fashioned ice cream parlour. THERE ARE FOUR movie theatres under one roof at Briarwood plus innumerable spec- ialties stores. These include book stores, camera shops, sporting good stores, jewelry and fab- ric stores, and many others. The stores, long and narrow in shape, open into spacious covered walkways - all of which meet at a central point: the grand court. A maze of low walls, cushioned seats and brick staircases lead to the court and its tre- mendous gushing fountain. THE STORE FRONTS are designed to be inoffensive. Chrome, plastic and occasionally neon decorate the walls and windows. Nothing is garish, just appropriately mod without being extreme. Individual store fronts are as memorable as a University classroom. HRI By GORDON ATCHESON During the past two and a half years, the Human Rights Party (HRP) has led a roller- coaster existence filled with ups and downs, turns that seemed to spell certain death, and an uncanny ability to keep on mov- ing when the going gets tough. As Ann Arbor's alternative to the traditional two party sys- tem, the radical, student-domi-; nated HRP has wrought a re- markable change in the local balance of political power. HRP'S PRESENCE has forc- ed the Democratic Party to actively vie for the student votes and thus adopt stands somewhat to the left of those the Dems previously held on many issues including mari- juana use, child and health care, and gay rights. At the same time the Repub- licans have been able to pick up moderate support among keeps rolllng ai those abandoned by the liberal-1 ization of the Democrats. Similarly, the GOP has bene- fited from vote splitting in the liberal - radical community since HRP burst on the scene. A ear ago last April that di- visiveness proved an important: factor, when the Republicans! took undisputed control of lo- cal- government for the first time in half a decade. Prior to the Republicans' re- turn to power, however, HRP held a unique and extremely in- fluential position on the political scene, despite its lack of a broad - based constituency on a city-wide basis.y FOLLOWING THE general' elections in April 1972, HRP had control of two seats on City Council. The GOP held five and the Democrats the remain- ing four. Thus, the fledgling par- ty had garnered the swing votes which the two "established" parties would have to woo to dello, it was never quite the pass most legislation. same afterwards. HRP no longer enjoys such HRP has never duplicated the a dominant role in council's de- enthusiasm of that first elec- cision making. When the dust tion. Ideological splits began to settled after last April's mu: surface as never before. And nicipal election, the radicals there was a two-year dry spell were able to retain only one before the party could win seat on a council with the Re- again - then only in a do-or-die publican Party holding a ma- situation. jority for the second consecu- tive year. IN THAT TIME, HRP, short HRP's glory days are over. on money, failed to win any Ironically, the party probably race in the November 1972 elec- With the 1972 electio jvirginity and like the yc covers the lusty pleasures a drunken night in a bo quite the same afterward peaked with its birth and the tio two 1972 victories that nobody ne -not even the most idealist loo HRP members - predicted or: believed after first hearing the era election returns. con log THEY WON THOSE council pro seats on pure human energy, a -b lot of hard work, and more than be a few tears. Their organization at was shakey but the party drew C enough volunteers that the lack Ra of political savvy was easily ov- -i ercome. wh With that election, the party on lost its virginity and like the' m young man who discovers the ele lusty pleasures of the flesh dur- po ing a drunken night in a bor- ;r r:fr" y :$:::r:'s:*x:* r cil vice president in the late 60's when that group took an n, the party lost its active role in radical politics, oung man who dis- proved the driving force in'H- RP. Blending political astute- S of the flesh during ness with blistering attacks lev- rdello, it was never eled at the opposition sitting around the council table, De- Is. Grieck became the party's un- official leader. n and the city elections the SHUTOUT IN 1973, HRP en- xt spring. The party's future tered last April's city election ked precarious. with both its seats at stake and The group had developed sev- the party insiders knew if they al factions all jockeying for were lost the organization ntrol. The hard-core ideo- would be mortally wounded. gues - opposed to any com- Neither DeGrieck nor Wech- omise with the other parties sler sought re-election, making battled more pragmatic mem- vintory that much more diffi- rs who loosely organized in cult to obtain. Nonetheless; defensive move. 'backs to the wall, the HRP On the sidelines stood the members geared up their po- ainbow People's party (RPP) litidal machine and pulled out ntermittent HRP supporters a razor-thin 40-vote-win in the hose political philosophy was Second Ward. ce summed up in the state- HRP Candidate Kathy Koza- ent: "the invention of the chenko, who openly campaign- ectric guitar was the turning ed as a lesbian, probably won dnt in western civilization." I as much because of her oppo- See RADICAL, Page 4 N GOP controls city as leftists bicker By GORDON ATCHESON Mayor James Stephenson has his silver-grey hair neatly styled to fall just above his shirt collar. Wearing gold wire-rimmed glasses and two-inch cuffs on his pants, he looks like a middle-aged moderate. He ain't. "GENTLEMAN JIM" holds no love for the marijuana tokers and only slightly more com- passion for college students - who he argues have no permanent stake in the community. This man aypifies the Republican Party. To many he is the local GOP. And like the party, he owes his position of control to the disorganization and internal wringling that has beset the city's liberal-radical constitu-_ ency. Gavel in hand, Stephenson often leans back in his padded leather chair at the head of the City Council table and smiles at the Demo- cratic and Human Rights Party (HRP) coun- cil members at the votes on an important or- dinance are tallied up. Stephenson smiles because he knows that the votes that are needed to pass just about any measure are in his pocket. UNDERNEATH IT ALL, he may even be an appointment to get into the third-floor City Hall office. THAT STEPHENSON - smirk, gavel,, and two-inch cuffs - should be the highest elected official in Ann Arbor, a town appropriately nicknamed "the dope capital of the midwest," is a graphic display of the paradoxical politi- cal situation here. In the central city, surrounding the Univer- sity like the white of an egg, the liberals and radical generally live. Everything is geared toward the student and street freak. The shops specialize in blue jeans, subma- rine sandwiches, roach clips, and hash pipes. All the book stores stock Anthro. 101 texts and blue examination booklets in mind-boggling quantities. MOyING AWAY from Ann Arbor's hub, the town begins to change. The farther out to- wards the suburbs, the more traditional the city looks. And the politics of the residents tend to get more conservative. Somewhere in that transition is a line of demarcation, an invisible meridian across which the Republicans live. Mostly they are established residents with "roots" - jobs out- side the University, two cars and PTO mem- BUT COMPARED TO the mobile, mercurial college town dwellers, the Stephenson house- hold and the family down the block or the next street over are birds of a feather. Some of them are Republicans because they have no where else to fall on the political, spectrum simply by process of elimination." They don't agree with the Democrats-many of whom are also "established" citizens but adopt positions that are just too liberal to be given genuine consideration. Of course to the left o fthe Democrats, is the Human Rights Party, a rag-tag band of dissi- dent college students supporting legalization of marijuana, community control of the police, and Gay Pride Week. AND BENEATH THAT threatening HRP exterior, the party -members admit -, no pro- claim - they want to socialize and communize the system. They would decapitate capitalism. The Democrats have no pretetse of advo- cating such profound surgical alterations in a system that has served them pretty well for quite awhile. But the liberals and the radicals still compete for the same votes in this town. While the parties in the past have teamed up on some items, they always run head-to- head in the elections. That carves up the elec- toratal majority into two distinct camps, are plums that should belong to the liberal- radical voters who on paper out-number the Republicans. STUDENTS HOWEVER, have a, propensity for - not casting ballots, falling victim .to apathy, spring fever, and final exam panic. That hurts. Without a strong student turnout, the GOP looks a lot more imposing. on elec- tion night. Then with two parties squabbling over votes, the effectiveness of each one is cut. The two groups, moreover, have nevexr been able to compromise on candidates. The HRP members find the idea philisiphic- ally repugnant' and some of them claim they would rather have a Stephenson in office than "liberal" Democrats. THE DEMS, likewise, refuse to compro- mise because it would be a blow to their pride. Besides they supposedly detect an odor of slow decay surrounding HRP. Only a mat- ter of time, they say, until the third party is as dead as the Know-Nothings of a hun- dred years ago. Meantime the council score card reads: Re- publicans - six seats, Democrats - four, and HRP - one. Somehow those numbers don't seem fair,