age Twelve' THE M1Ch(7AN DAiLy Wednesday, April 18, 1973 ~'d~& Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, April 18, 1973 LOOKS TO FUTURE: -: x'! Harris (Continued from Page 1) him so well in hammering to- gether council majorities event- ually led him on a collision course with the increasingly militant no-growth sentiment which was gaining strength in his party. in 1971 and '72.. On two major issues - the Briarwood Shopping Center and the Packard-Beakes By-Pass -- Harris found himself all alone in taking what he still defends as a "pragmatic" rather than a "ro- mantic" approach. In the spring of 1971 the Taub-- man Co. came to City Hall re- questing permission to build a massive regional shopping com- plex at the corner of State Road and I-94 on the city's south side. Environmentalists and the no- growth, liberals were outraged. Such a massive complex, they argued, was merely another extention of urban sprawl into the city. The center and the crush of traffic it would gener- ate, they asserted, would have a disasterous effect on the area's ecological balance and would further cutback the already shrinking "green space" be- tween Detroit and Ann Arbor. While most of his party ac- cepted this view, Harris did not. The "realities" of the situa- tion, as he saw them, were that the center, if it were not built in Ann Arbor, would surely be grabbed up by some develop- ment - hungry Pittsfield Town- ship across the road. The issue, as Harris framed it, was not whether there should be a re- gional shopping center but whe- ther it should be on the north or south side of the highway. Reasoning that building the center in Ann Arbor would allow the city to'tax it and regulate its construction, Harris bucked his party and most city liberals and supported the center. It was ap- proved by council and is current- ly under construction. The issues in the Packard- Beakes flap were essentially the same. For years, city businessmen had wanted to improve the con- nection between Packard St. on the South side and Beakes on the north side via Ashley and First Streets. The route, if completed, would afford motor- ists, from the rapidly growing subdivisions north of town an easy route to the south side, by- passing the business district. The city's blacks on the other hand had vehemently opposed the plans for years. They feared that Beakes, which runs through the center of the city's heavily black north side,- would become a busy highway, splitting their community in two. ponders The Democratic contingent on council, led by black First Ward Councilman Norris Thomas, was united in opposing the project. Harris supported it. Regardless of whether the con- nection between B e a k e s and Packard was approved, Harris argued, Beakes will soon be in- nundated by some 40,000 cars a day. As he saw it, it was just an- other case of taking the prag- matic a p p r o a c h. The traffic would be there anyway so the city may as well provide for it. With his support, the measure passed City Council. The project died, however, when .the city's voters failed to approve a bond issue to fund it. Harris sees these clashes with his party not as ideological rifts but as simple matters of prac- ticality versus romanticism. "I really think if they (his party) had known more of the facts it would have come out dif- ferently. But there was a great romantic desire to be against 'the beast' without asking 'who is the beast? or 'If we kill the beast, then what?' ". As rits were beginning to show within his own party, a new threat emerged on the horizon:. the radical Human Rights Party. The party's small-scale write-in campaign in 1971 had been all but ignored in the wake, of the Harris-Garris race. The entire election was bathed in the glare of the ultimate clash between liberalism and -reactionary con- servatism, and the issue of a third party seemed almost irrele- vent. But h lot of things changed over the following summer. The 26th amendment to the Constitution gave 18-year-olds the vote. And in Michigan the state Supreme Court ruled that city clerks in college towns had to allow students to register and vote. Through frenetic registration efforts, HRP managed to expand the - electorate by some 7,000 new student votes in time for the April election. As' a result, the Democrats were completely shut out. They lost the student-heavy Second ward to Nancy Weschler. Even more-shocking was the loss of their traditional stronghold, the First Ward. The winner in Ward One, iron- ically enough, was HRP's Jerry De Grieck who had worked as an area co-ordinator in Harris' original 1969 electoral victory. "It was a combination of two things," Harris says of the Dem- ocrats' defeat, "lousy campaign- ing and probably not the right C city cha candidates given the newly ex- panded electorate." The teacher also gives some of the credit to his victorious pupils. "It was just superb work by HRP." He also conceeds, somewhat surprisingly, that De Grieck and Weschler played a vital role in their first year on council. "They (HRP) have shown an energy at a time when it was lacking in the Democratic party. "For instance, on unit pricing, they had to push it or it never would have surfaced because our party wasn't generating it. "On rent control, I think we hhd assumed from an earlier legal opinion that you couldn't do it under state law. Now, maybe you can, maybe 'you can't. But it is certainlybquestionable, and if they hadn't surfaced it, you wouldn't have a rent control com- mittee now." Despite his acknowledgement of HRP's role as a catalyst for change, Harris does not feel a Democratic-HRP coalition is a viable vehicle for running the city. "The trouble with coalition rule," he says, "is that you can't do anything bold. An HRP-Dem- ocratic coalition is far too fragile to undertake a prolonged fight. If you're in your right mind you don't start that way . . . because you're spending more energy try- ing to steal constituents from one another than you are trying to win the fight. "With a coalition, I think you'll always have weak government- it may be a liberal government but it will be a weak liberal gov- ernment. We've had this in the last year and we haven't gotten a whale of a lot done." Now, as he departs from City Hall, Harris leaves Ann Arbor pretty much as he entered it in 1969-dominated by the Republi- cans. His vision of the future, however, is not as gloomy as one might suspect. "I'm not starting out convinced that Jim (Stephenson) will re- peal everything he voted against' when he was a City Council mem- ber," Harris says. "My hope is that he won't act as conservatively as his ideology would lead him to lbecause of two things: (1) fear that ,Repub- licans will lose future elections, and (2) when he sits in the may- or's office he may feel some ob- ligation to people who didn't vote for him but are still Ann Arbor- ites and are entitled to their own way of life." Further, Harris. sees a GOP majority as merely a passing lnges phase and looks ahead to a time when he hopes the Democrats will return to power. "The Democrats," he says, "could hold the mayor's post and a majority of council for at least half -a decade . . they could put it together in a way that I never could. "I never had the money and the personnel and the majority at the same time-certainly I never had it long enough to put many programs through. "I don't think any city's ever put it all together. You can get it in a city that's predominately black, but they're so broke the problems overwhelm them. "But in Ann .Arbor there's enough wealth and the problems aren't that bad. You could put it together for the first time in American history. "It's a r a t Ii e r tantilizing thought." NEW AT NO COVER CHARGE Every Wednesday & Thursday at 9:00 DISCOVER: EDDY' KAY SINGER OF FOLK MODERN BEST OF 50's & 60's SING-A-LONG BLUES 114 E. WASHINGTON 665-3231 BEER, WINE & COCKTAILS I THE UNION GALLERY 77 - ---- -- ------- - ----- - ------ ------- III Presents NUMER3: NEWOMAN .SHOWS Paintings by BETH URDANG A ril 27 through May 6 Opening Reception: Friday, April 27, 7-10 p.m. GALLERY HOURS: Wed. through Sun.12-5p.m., Fri. eve. 7-10 p.m. I'II II l 4 F I I Display Advertisers... III I I Read and. Use Daily Classifieds { i a i ---- FUTURE WORLDS LAST LECTURE: SCIENCE OF CREATIVE INTELLIGENCE - Why Wqit Till Tomorrow! 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