Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, April 5, 1975 I.; q 1 ., i+ , rfl-t '~1L1 Hopefu ls clash in 4th Ward Jobless I I L T r 0 dir~ i I OFFICE HOURS CIRCULATION - 764-0558 COMPLAINTS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS 10 a.m.-4 p.m. CLASSIFIED ADS -764-0557 10 a.m.-4 p.m. DEADLINE FOR NEXT DAY-12:00 p.m. DISPLAY ADS - 764-0554 - MONDAY thru FRIDAY-12 p.m.-4 p.m. Deadline for Sunday issue- WEDNESDAY at 5 p.m. DEADLINE 3 days in advance by 3 p.m. Thursday at 3 p.m. for Tuesday's paper II (Continued from Page1) nuclear family. "Nuclear fami-I lies," says Gibson, "end up r a i s i n g isolated individuals., Wanting to shut the door to their own room is the height of hap- piness for them." Bronson, despite personal mis- givings about locking the day care amendment into the city charter, has declared his sup- port for the proposal, "Because' I think it's something people in :. the Fourth Ward want." His support for the charter proposal is in contrast to the opposing stand he took at the inception of the race. Trowbridge, while supporting day care in spirit, nixes the Spresent proposal, contending, "It ought to be a council de- cision based on money available, { not fixed as a charter amend- Gibson ment." However, he has implied that he would not support ad- -.__ditional funds for day care in Usually flowers that need to any form, stating, "The Com- attract insects for pollenation munity Development Revenue purposes are brightly colored Sharing (CDRS) funds are and sweet smelling. plenty." FEDERALLY INSURED STUDENT LOANS SPRING-SUMMER LOANS Students wishinq to borrow through the University's Feder- ally Insured Loon Proqrom durinq the Sprina-Summer Term A. CITIZENS committee ear- lier this year proposed allocat- ing $123,000 of CDRS money to* day care funding over a one year period. The city is sched- uled to receive $2.5 million in, federal revenue sharing funds over a 12 month period and $12.5 million over the next six years. The rent control charter amendment, while not a hot is- sue ward-wide, is of major im- portance to student voters in the area. The GOP and Demo-, crat candidates' opposition to this proposal alone may cost them much-needed s t u d e n t votes. Bronson's opposition to the proposal stems from his dis- gruntlement with the actual reading of the charter amend- ment. "Ann Arbor does need. some form of rent control," ex- plains Bronson, "but the pro- posed Charter Amendment does not provide the needed flexibility and has many unworkable and' unacceptable sections." BRONSON has claimed the Democrats, if they win a major- ity on council, will pass some version of a rent control ordi- nance by July 1 should the charter amendment be defeated at the polls on Monday. Trowbridge, in opposition to rent control, has called it "ul-1 timately grossly unfair to the students." "I don't think landlords will invest in apartments if rent control passed," claims Trow- Troy grO bridge. rate GIBSON, at polar ends with both her contestants on this issue, contends rent control "would stop landlords from charging unreasonable rents and enjoying inflated profits. "It would give tenants more control over the maintenance of their homes and stop the specu-;to . 7% lation in land prices which is (Continued from Page 1) preventing new cnldslow bost hous- Bi Cniudfo ae1 ing," cne on stBtAFL-CIO President Geor ivilia conrl Go thep Meany issued a statement ca a topic that has sparked contro- culaent and sid:yesita versy city-wide, is another di- te enwndsi:"Te itu viding factor between the can- tie 3 9 in worse f yo inclu didates in this race. ,,-million; wo rkes ore ge al- ua- de to GIBSON, whose campaign statements rarely deviate from HRP stands, advocates a Com- munity Control Board (CCB) as drawn up by her party. The CCB, which was introduced by Councilwoman Kathy Kozachen- ko (HRP-Second Ward) to coun- cil in the form of a city ordi- nance but died for lack of support, calls for a ten person civilian board empowered to' "hire fireband set disciplinary procedures for police officers and the Chief of Police." Bronson, although he has cam- paigned in favor of civilian con- trol of the police, hasn't called for the stringent controls Gibson proposes. Trowbridge, clashing with his opponents' views, says he will favor a citizen "advisory" board "but nothing that takes total control." work part time because full-time jobs are not available." At a congressional hearing, meanwhile, Sen. William Prox- mire (D-Wis.) accused the Ford administration of "planning an economy of high unemployment and sluggish growth." Proxmire directed his state- ment to Budget Director James Lynn, who told the senator's subcommittee on economic pri- orities the government should not embark on any new spend- ing programs. THE SENATOR argued for a bill already approved by the House, to help the housing in- dustry. He said the measure would' create one million new jobs at a cost of less than $1 billion. LYNN AND other Office of Management and Budget offi- cials indicated they thought the cost would be much higher and the jobs created fewer. k E I ., - ) I E I. '' should submit application materials by APRIL 15, 1975 Fundinq is limited and priority will be given to those who apply by April 15 and those who will graduate in Auqust or December 1975, or those for whom summer attendance is a necessity. For additional information contact the Guaranteed Student Loan Office, 2503 S.A.B., or call 763-4127. i ip aids airlift 0. tocai frpU to doyour thinking for you. (Continued from Page 1) for the airlift through the Mili- tary Air Command at Scott Air Force Base in Illinois. In ad- dition, according to the spokes- man, Darragh was told that all available commercial air- craft were being withheld be- cause of President Ford's Viet- namese airlift plans. Darragh and approximately! 30 members of the Airline Em- ploye Volunteer Escort Service, an ad-hoc group of Eastern Air- line employees will leave on a commercial flight from an as yet undetermined city to Sai- gon to finalize the release of the An Loc orphans sometime this weekend. Darragh said that if all goes according to plan, the children will be leaving Sai- gon "either on the evening of April 9 or on the afternoon of April 10. Right now we just can't say."I WHILE IN Saigon, Darragh indicated that he would confer with SouthVietnam's Minister of Social Welfare, Phan Quang Dan, about the future release of some 650 children now staying 'faults day eare (Continued from Page 1) Frank Shoichet, HRP Second Ward city council hopeful and the principal drafter of the pro- posal, said last night, "This is the worst one from Kelley yet." "What they're saying is that there'll be a time when 98.3 per cent of city revenues will be committed to city purposes. It's like saying the moon is made of green cheese," he added ad- dressing himself to Kelley's first objection. AS TO KELLEY'S secondary remarks, Shoichet said, "It's projected revenue. When you do a budget, you project funds to be used." "They misread the law," Shoi- chet said of the third objection. The city is allowed to con- tract on individual and groups. They do it for day care." at the Hoi Due Anh orphanage in Saigon. Darragh said that if their release can be obtained, "we will turn them over to the AIA for adoption in the state of Michigan." Darragh said that his organ- ization was experiencing "credi- bility problems" with the South Vietnamese government., "In obtaining the An Loc or- phans," said Darragh, "weI were an incorporated organiza-, tion. But because our efforts to recover the Hoi Duc Anh chil- I dren are relatively new, we have not had time to incorpor- ate ourselves, and it's causing problems," he said. In addition to aiding An Loca Inc. in recovering the orphans, AIA has, over the past several days, been stockpiling baby food, clothing, medicine and blankets which they hope to airlift into Saigon. Nancy Fox,. one of the founders of AIA said that supplies from ten central locations in the Detroit metro- politan area, said the provi- sions will be transported to a warehouse in Pontiac pending its transport to Saigon. "We are determined," said Fox, "to get those supplies there one way or the other." Darragh said he regretted that he was uncertain about the origin of his group's flight to Saigon, but indicated "every effort" would be made to trans- port supplies to the point of origin as soon as it became known. Upon arrival in Atlanta, Dar- ragh said that the An Loc or- phans would be transported to temporary - quarters at Fort Benning in Columbus, Georgia. Darragh thought that most of the orphans would have no trou- ble finding homes. lolt says dycare needs new outlook (Continued from Page 1) happen," he said. "Schools have already cor- early childhood socialization, re- rupted kindergarden. They are flects his feeling that it is rot supposed to be gardens for chil- necessary to institutionalize day dren to play in. Well, it's boot- care centers by staffing them camp for first grade," said Holt exclusively with degree holders. who f u r t h e r admonisned, "There's no way to tell who's "Watch it or day care will be- got the skill to organize these come bootcamp for kindergar- programs. Any random colle- den." tion of people, if 'they get their Holt would like to "try to keep heads together can thi k r the world of learning out of it." plenty of things for little ' In fact, in a plug for his next to do," he said. book, he indicated that the first Citing aonther flaw in sentence reads, "This is a book present day care system, h in favor of doing and not educa- said some young people relate tion." to others more easily on a one- to-one basis. But regardless of ONE WOMAN from the audi- a child's social inclinations, he ence questioned how social vir- is placed in a room with up to tue could be instilled in young 30 other children. "There ought children if not through direct! to be ways in which kids who Charter Amendment "A" could cause problems for renters. You can be quite certain of that. It would create a rent control board of 5 "fireproof" individ- uals who's word would be law. According to the Amendment this board could decide what is "reasonable" in many situations. Reasonable to whom? To themselves. That's whom. There is even a passage in the amendment that forbids you to appeal their decisions to a court of law. The Amendment would give the .board unlimited blank check access to funds from the City of Ann Arbor. Can you believe it? Well, it's all right there in the thousands of words of Char- ter Amendment "A" - along with a provision that even makesyou a "Landlord" under certain conditions. Note this: if you wanted to sublet your apartment-- even for just a few months -you'd have to pay a fee to the board and wait for the board to figure how much rent you can charge. (Under the bill, there are just 5 people to review allthe rents for 17,000 rental units in Ann Arbor. Your "wait" might last for several weeks.) Clearly, Charter Amendment "A" would create more problems than it would solve. It would even create a shortage of apartments just as rent control has done in Cambridge, Mass., Boston and any other city where it has been tried. It isn't right for renters in teaching.1 The Boston educator replied, "Schools have been trying to teach virtue for a long time. ItF isn't done that way. It's how weI treat people, not what we telll them.1 "You're not going to make little children empathetic by preaching to them . . .it doesn't happen by making it1 AND THIS attitude toward like privacy can ind their own places," he concluded. Among several solution. to the problem, the author sug- gested the construction of card- board box cubicles to divide a portion of the room up in effect reducing the institutionalized at- mosphere. Following the luncheon at the First Methodist Church, Holt toured two local community day care centers. Such power is danger It leadsto abuse. On top of that power t getting the keys to the .s Ann Arbor. So who's it suppose ous to help? Vote "No" on "A" on April 7. hey'd be till. ' "A"hasasneaky Amgey 'Avm y gt you d s . x. -. ( The 26th day of Nissan (April 8) has been set aside as a memorial and day of mourning for the 6,000,000 Jews victims of Nazism 1939-1945 COUNTRY JEWI POLAND U S S R. RUMANIA HU NGARY CZECHOSLOVAKIA JEWISH POPULATION FIGURES 1939-1945 ISH POPULATION-1939 JEWS KILLED 3.200,000 2.100.000 850.000 404,000 3 15.000 2 800 000 1,500 000 425.000 200 000 260 000 % KILLED 85 % 71 4% 5 0 or) 49.5 %f 8Q.5 %f I n o m