I HL M(.MiUAN DAILTY sunday, March 24, 1 74 Liberals dominat (Continued from Page 1) side to the city's northernmost construction of a McDonald's res- boundary on the other, with MillerI taurant on Maynard St. near Ave. marking part of the ward'sl Nickels Arcade, which passed de- top edge. spite widespread opposition raised As may be expected, Brunton isl by area residents. doing most of her door-to-door voter contact in the student area, THE FIRST WARD, unlike other while Hannaum is working the areas of the city, is almost evenly non-student blocks and McGee is divided between student and non- looking both ways for support. student areas. The ward contains All three hopefuls have served precincts with a concentration of in some capacity on the city gov- youthful apartment-dwellers, and ernment, Brunton is a member of other older neighborhoods consist- the Zoning Board of Appeals; Han- ing chiefly of permanent residents naum is on the Planning Commis- -including the Model Cities area. sion; and McGee serves on the The only dormitories in the ward city's Human Rights Commission. are West and South Quads. Roughly, the ward extends from UNIQUELY, THE First Ward State and Packards Sts. on one race includes three candidates who may all be described as liberal by THE MICHIGAN DAILY their partys' standards. Volume LXXXIV, Number 138 All three candidates have sup- Sunday, March 24, 1974 ported health care, child care, and is edited and managed by students at other human resource programs in the University of Michigan. News phone their campaign literature. Han- 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published naum is different here from other daily Tuesday through Sunday morning city Republicans, who generally during the University year at 420 May. tend to stress issues like garbage nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104.coect o iesnfikedgart- Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam. collection, police and fire depart- pus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and ment service, and street repair. Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states Hannaum does not, however, ad- and foreign). icesn Summer session publishec Tuesday vocate increasing city expenditures through Saturday morning. Subscrip" in child care, saying, "The city Lion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus must look to other realistic finan-' area)- $6.50 local mail (Michigan and Ohio) $7.0 no al(ma the cing alternatives for these prob- states and foreign.a lems." But Hannaum's bra id of liberal Republicanism is s 'ill ex- pected to erode McGee's vote-pull- ing ability among the ward's rela- tively conservative Democrats. McGee, meanwhile, as a result 1st Ward race of her stand in favor of the HRP Brunton of HRP places a low rent control ballot proposal, is to priority on meeting the city's debt the left of some other Democratic 'reduction commitments, and fav- hopefuls, who oppose the move. ors replacing the city's present property tax with a graduated in- RENT ,CONTROL is perhaps the come tax which she claims would issue that most clearly marks the be more equitable to low-income difference among the three candi- residents, and keep better pace dates. Beth Brunton, whose party with inflationary trends. i i drew up the plan, is solidly for rent control. Colleen McGee, in contrast, supports it with reserva- tions. Hannaum is flatly opposed to it. McGee's stand has attracted controversy recently, with both her opponents claiming she is obfuscat- ing on the issue and changing her stand, to suit her audience. While McGee has alwavs mentin d ha McGee also favors the graduated tax, but does not approve of HRP's plan to cut top city administra- tors' salaries. She supports the recent layoff of 168 city workers to cut expenditures. Hannaum, meanwhile, 'urges that the city seek federal monies to im- prove its financial situation. reservations, her opponents claim THE CANDIDATES have cited she does so most vocally before several unpredictable factors that conservative audience. could bear an influence on the out- come of the first ward race. A A ranking HRP member con- major problem for Brunton has tends the dispute may have seri- been the large number of unregis- ously impeded McGee's campaign' tered students. momentum - putting her on the r defensive and providing her op- Other unpredictables include stu- ponents with ammunition. dent apathy and the weather - bad weather traditionally is McGee says she will vote for the thought to improve conservative ballot proposal, adding that her chances. primary objection to the HRP plan is that rent regulation would The traditional charge against be, best implemented through an HRP that it will elect Republi- ordinance rather than a charter cans by "splitting the liberal vote" amendment, which would be diffi- cult to revise. ANOTHER issue clearly sepa- rating the candidates is the city's budget troubles. does not seem to apply in this ward. There seems to be sufficient liberal strength to offset the vote splitting effect of two liberal par- ties in the race. McGee, meanwhile, as a result Buy one at, regular price- Nomial Price ,,~ rc get the other at 1/2 price Was $8.50 Now x.44 MEMOREXRecordingTape Reproduction so true it can shatter glass. ULRICH'S BOOKS INC. 549 E. UNIVERSITY The University geology depart- ment's Core Library has 80,000 feet of cores representing some 370 Michigan wells, making it the largest stockpile of core in the state. Hair ricr I' l Attention Advertisers Let your voice reach the students of Michigan ADD THE AIRWAVES OF WrW - 650 AM--- to your promotional campaign 763-3501 I i, - t Part II JNION GALLERI 1st floor, Michigan Union MARCH 25-31 You are cordially invited to a reception at the gallery on March 25 at 8 p.m. Music provided by GEMINI Yi -'I 'i 'I _ ' I - Jacobson's Open Thursday and Friday Night Until 9:00 P.M. Saturday Until 5:30 P.M. a wispy little warm-up . .bicycle jacketing for sun or sudden showers in hand washable nylon, cropped at the waist with easy-snap closures. 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