Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, September 7, 1972 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY ._ l l ._ e... ... 'U, and police: new campus unit ........: r:"::.' i.}:$;;': :'::{:::. .} .".. r."}:4::,:?:"'.a"Y"aS i% ti%. ? S:i:o:iti{ :::e "This past year a contro- versy arose over whether the University with its tight budget could afford to keep $> paying for city police services. The result of the controversy is a new campus police unit." By GENE ROBINSON Supplement Co-Editor In the past, security and other police problems on the Univer- sity campus have been handled by the city police department, in loose conjunction with the University's contracted security guards. This past year a controversy arose over whether the Univer- sity with its tight budget could I-I I-I I-I i w -I V , a 1k 's E ' FP*" 'rat ., ,. n " ' ~ A t of r , M f JtJ': ;'' ? ' i afford to keep paying for city police services. The result of the controversy is a new campus police unit. The campus police unit will be assigned on a full-time basis to the University as a separate unit of the Ann Arbor police force. Police Chief Walter Krasny will direct the operation of the unit, which will be entirely fi- nanced by the University. The history of the formation of the campus police unit has been one of disagreement among University, city and state offi- cials. On Jan. 15 it was reported that President Robben Fleming had reached an agreement with Gov. William Milliken over the formation of the University unit. In a letter to Mayor Robert Harris, Fleming stated that Mil- liken was supportive of the city- University relationship w h i c h the plan proposed. Milliken had previously de- manded that the University end payments to the city for police and fire services, saying that ApnnArbor was the only city in the state which received such payments from a college it housed. Milliken's objection was that the University paid a flat rate of 18 per cent of the police de- partment's budget. Under the new plan, the University would pay only for those services it receives. The new plan came as some- thing of a shock at that time, since only a month earlier Uni- versity Director of Safety Fred- eric Davids had suggested a completely separate and inde- pendent University police unit. According to the plan, Davids would determine the makeup and total number of the campus police unit, but the police group would ultimately be under the supervision of P o l i c e Chief SKr asny. These men would be assigned full-time to the University unit and the University would pro- vide them with their own com- mand structure. The University would also cover the cost of salaries, fringe benefits and di- rect operating costs for the unit. Davids, however, openly dis- agreed with the plan. He said he had doubts as to whether the arrangement was the least ex- pensive for the University. He said the new plan would force the city to duplicate many services that the University could provide with existing per- sonnel. Davids favored a plan similar to the type presently existing at Wayne State University and Eastern Michigan University. The difference between those plans and the one presented by the University is that under Wayne's ssytem the force is un- der command of an officer re- sponsible to that university. Despite Davids' objections, the new "University Unit" plan was accepted. In March, University officials agreed to the creation of an advisory committee com- posed of students and faculty members to provide an outlet for grievances when the opera- tion of the unit began. The committee was authorized by at a meeting between Flem- ing, Davids, Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Wilbur Pierpont, and University Coun- cil, a student/faculty/adminis- trator group empowered to ad- vise on University police and security affairs. According to Pierpont, the contract between the University and the city concerning the new unit will last for only one year. At that time, he said, the Uni- versity will have a chance to evaluate the force and make recommendations f o r changes in its operation. The proposed advisory com- mittee would work in conjunc- tion with Davids, who would in turn work with Krasny on the operation of the unit. The concensus of University Council at that time was that the University community would h a v e greater decision-making powers in the police unit, and that decisions should eventually be made by a board of students and faculty members. city. council: a morass of politics By GENE ROBINSON Supplement Co-Editor With a population of well over 100,000, including pver 30,000 students, the city of Ann Arbor has unique problem in govern- ment and management. Keeping tight reins on the city's problems is City Council, an 11-member governing board com- posed of two council members from each of the city's five wards and headed by the mayor. Each ward sends two persons to the council to serve a two- year term. The terms are stag- gered so that each ward at all times is represented by both a newly-elected and a senior council member. Until three years ago, City Council was a Republican strong- hold. At that time, Democratic Mayor Robert Harris scored a major upset by winning a gen- eral city election and bringing with him a Democrat-controlled council. Because of the city's residen- tial patterns, certain wards tra- ditionally vote in certain pat- terns. The First Ward, lived in by a good portion of the city's blacks, traditionally has voted Democratic. The Second, domi- nated by students, is also tra- ditionally Democratic, while the Fourth and Fifth Wards are white, middle-class, and Repub- lican. The Third Ward has long been considered a "swing ward" because of its heterogenous composition. Harris and the Democrats ran on a platform which appealed to the student community. During recent city elections, however, the Republicans gained ground and controlled the council at the time of last spring's elections. Last spring, aided by the 18- year-old vote and a State Su- preme Court ruling allowing Uni- versity students to vote in the city, two members of the radi- cal Human Rights Party were elected to City Council. T h e students rejected the D e m o- crats entirely, and the o t h e r three vacant council seats went" to Republicans. City Council is now composed of five Republicans, four Demo- crats (including the mayor) and two Human Rights Party mem- bers. Since six votes are re- quired for Council to take. any action, both major parties must deal with HRP to get anything passed. As City Council is partisan, its members often spend more time in political dogfights than taking care of the welfare of the city. An example of such. political partisanship was last spring's dispute over the city's w a r d boundaries, which are still bog- ged down in council committees. State law requires that th e boundaries of. the city's five wards be re-drawn, after every federal census. The re-drawing is to be done by the city's Ward and Boundary commission. However, earlier this year the Republican majority on t h e council decided to bypass the Democrat-controlled ommission and present council with Its own redistricting plan. The Republican plan would have virtually assured the GOP of a Council majority by placing the traditionally liberal sections of the, city entirely in the first two wards, leaving the remain- ing three as Republican strong- holds. Democrat Harris vetoed t h e Republican proposal after it was passed by the Republican coun- cil. A new ward and boundary commission is currently working on a new plan, and because, of the new, more left-oriented makeup of the council, the plan will almost certainly be less fav- orable to Republicans. Republicans and Democrats on council rarely vote other than along party lines. Since their election, the two HRP represent- atives have voted with whic'h- ever party offered more conces- sions. HRP and the Democrats, for example, passed a city ordin- ance last spring making pos- session and sale of marijuana a misdemeanor, punishable only by a five-dollar fine. The two radical council mem- bers, however, have joined with the Republicans in defeating Democrat proposals they thought were inadequate. 4 r. FAMOUS FOR FINE t, )D 6 DINERS JCLUB CHINATOWN ATMOSPHERE GCCKTM LB NRP scores a 'human victory' AME~caNcx vXPRESS TELEPHONE TAKE-OUT SERVICE 118 WEST LIBERTY BETWEEN MAIN AND ASHLEY OPEN WEEK DAYS 11 A.M.-8 P.M. FRI. & SAT. 11 A.M.-10 P.M. SUN. 12 NOON-8 P.M. CLOSED MONDAYS & HOLIDAYS ... _ _.. . ._ .. ___.. >I BOOKS and SUPPLIES By CHRIS PARKS On the night of April 3 in a small storefront on Thayer St., hundreds of young radicals and "street people" whooped, shout- ed, laughed, hugged each other and brandished clenched fists for > whirring TV cameras, celebrat- ing a victory that had been well over a year in the making. That night the Human Rights Party (HRP) - a strange amal- gam of old students activists, left-leaning members of the Uni- versity community and d o p e smoking street people - h a d scored victories in two of the city's five wards. Elected as members of City Council w e r e Jerry De Grieck, former Stu- dent Government Council vice president, and Nancy Wechsler, a local activist. Few city government "pros" has given HRP a chance of real- ly pulling it off. Perhaps most astonished by the victory were the Democrats who were for the first time in recent memory com- pletely shut out in a city elec- tion. Edged out by Republicans in moderate to conservative wards, and isolated from tradi- tional student support by the HRP campaign, the Democrats -the majority party until last year - came up empty-hand-. ed. Just weeks before the election Democratic Mayor Robert Har- ris - himself a student-backed reform candidate just three years ago - sat in his downtown of- fice and spoke confidently about the election. Drawing slowly on his cigar and leaning back in his chair he offered this an- alysis: "We will win in the Second Ward (a heavily stu- dent-populated ward which en- compasses the central campus area). It may be close, but we'll win. Jack (Kirscat; a' Democrat) will win in the First Ward - the Dems always win in the First Ward." Harris was wrong. The day after the election, dejected and a bit whimsical, he gave grudg- ing praise to the youthful vict- ors. "They ran a tough cam- paign," he said. "We underesti- mated them." Tough was the word, fUr Ihe HRP coup was constructed of sweat and more sweat. Five months before the election, two historical legal decisions paved the way for the HRP campaign. A constitutional amendment giv- ing 18 year olds the vote was approved and the state Supreme Court ruled that college students &aust be allowed to register and vote where they go to school. Immediately HRP went to work. While the Democrats slept, they were out hustling votes. Throughout the spring they re- gistered students as, they signed up for classes and as they' wait- ed for meals in their dormitories. And after pressuring the City Clerk for permission, HRP work- ers registered students in their rooms and apartments and at huge "get out the vote" rock and roll concerts. Then, on election day They reaped the harvest they h a d sown. Using fleets of cars and buses they shuttled students to and from the polls from e a r l y morning to closing time at night. And the massive effort paid off. The student-dominated third pre- cinct of the First aWrd gave HRP Candidate De Grieck a whopping 1,000-vote margin - a major boost on his way to un- seAing incumbent Democrat John Kirscht. In the Second Ward as well, HRP victory margins in stu- dent-dominated wards were im- pressive. HRP was swept to victory on a wave of "throw the rascals out" sentiment. Many students were voting for the first time and were relieved to have an alternative to choosing between the Republicans and Democrats as had their parents and grand- parents before them. For HRP to survive and grow, then, it will have to prove that it really offers a constructive alternative to the general mod- erate conservative to moderate liberal range of American poli- tics. This may prove difficult, as the party controls only two seats on an 11-member council. Clev- er and tinely use of temporary alliances with both Republicans and Democrats will be necessary for the party to have an ef- fect. Thus far their record has been encouraging if not spectacular. Within weeks of the election an ordinance making the penalty for possession or sale of marijuana in the city only a $5 fineiwas passed. Furthermore, steps are being taken: to extend the pro- tection of the city's Human Rights ordinance to homosexuals. Clearly, HRP will have to rle- liver in a. concrete and visible way on their promises to change city government. The first big test of voter confidence will come in April, 1973 when the next city election rolls around. The fledgling party, however, faces a number of serious tasks. The first of these was the lo- cal school board election in which HRP ran three candi- dates. Continuing its determination to challenge what it considers unfair restrictions in the elec- toral system, the party nomi- nated as one of its candidates Sonia Yaco, a fifteen-year-old junior high school student. Al- though too young to qualify for office, Yaco ran to dramatize the fact that students have no representation on the school board. In November, the party will be tested in a number of diffi- cult elections. In the state representative and congressional races, if they choose to enter them, HRP workers will be faced with run- ning a campaign outside the city on unfamiliar turf where their student support will have less impact. -IA A% .. N_ .3 - I A A 4 SMEDICINE' DENTISTRY PUBLIC HEALTH fllIEDDE(V Our store is specially equipped to fill your every need, and a well informed staff, including MEDICAL and DENTAL students to serve you. DflflVCTlDE NATURAL FOODS GRAIN and FRESH FLOUR ORGANIC VEGETABLES, NUTS, SEEDS, DRIED & FRESH FRUIT, TEAS, HERBS, SPICES & BOOKS I EDEN FOODS i