The Michigan Daily-Sunday, February 19, 1978-Page 7 Conniving campus cupids help send kids to Special Olympics By PAULA LASHINSKY response we got," said club member students. The club's major goal is to Rita Mulheck. "We didn't make enough raise enough money to finan'ce the chil- It proved to be one of the most pain- to cover all the children's travel ex- dren's trip to the Special Olympics this ss wavs of raising moneV All the penses, but we have other projects star- summer. le ea wys gi llr, cuiy. rl Iy asked was that people come and have a good time. The University Physical Therapy Club sent out a call to all "conniving cupids" to attend their all-campus semiformal benefit dance for the Chil- dren's Special Olympics. AND COME they did. Over 250 stu- dents paid the $2.50 ticket price and came to the League ballroom to dance to the sounds of Gabriel, a local band. Proceeds of the dance, held Friday night, will help send a group of Washte- naw County children to this summer's Special Olympics at Central Michigan University. The Special Olympics are an annual event where physically and mentally handicapped students meet and com- pete in various sporting events. "We aren't sure of an actual figure yet, but we are very pleased with the ted too." The Physical Therapy Club, a cam- pus service group, has made a year- long project out of raising funds for Washtenaw County special education teacher Lynn Zander's class of physi- cally and mentally handicapped Mi WOH F ~NYE "The club's efforts will help us pay for putting the kids up in dorms at Cen- tral," said Zander. "In addition, we hope to be able to purchase new equip- ment which will help us compete again- st other groups." SANS SOUCI large furnished 1 and 2 bed- room apartments available for fall occupancy Located across from U of M stadium Bus Service every 15 minutes from Hoover St. to State St. call 995-3955 visit resident manager at apartment K-1 February sunset Daily Photo by JOHN KNOX Somehow during the winter months we forget to notice things like the sky-perhaps because it is usually filled with clouds. But if we could stop looking at the tips of our boots meandering through snow drifts and over ice patches, we might just see a sky as beautiful as this one. The HRP: Still alive and well in Ypsilanti (Continued from Page 1) Lion like Ypsilanti when it fizzled out in allegedly progressive Ann Arbor? Jackson has the answer. "There was always friction between the Ann Arbor HRP and the Ypsilanti coalition of leftists because there were so many factions. At the University of Michigan to be radical was chic; and Ann Arbor was a hotbed for trend- setting. People who follow trends are usually from wealthier backgrounds, but it's no longer fashionable to be radical, he said. Nicholson added, "In Ann Arbor the HRP got to a point where there were five caucuses that hated each other," he said. JACKSON ALSO TOOK exception to the common Ann Arbor conception of Ypsilanti as being a redneck town. He contends there is a strong radical tradi- tion there which goes back to the days of the Underground Railroad, when black slaves used to stop off in Ypsilanti on their way to freedom in the North- west. He also noted the state commu- nist party operated out of Ypsilanti in the thirties and forties, and the current chairman of Michigan's Communist Party was born in Ypsilanti, and was active in politics there. Jackson and Baize were first elected to the Ypsilanti City COuncil in 1974, El- fI and both won reelection in 1976. This time they are running as part of a Democratic-HRP coalition, and face the Democratic primary elections on Monday. Their compatriot Nicholson is in the middle of his first term in office.' All three councilmen enjoy reminiscing about their political youth, especially Jackson. "THE YEARS AGO this month I was in my first anti-war demonstration at 15," he said. His family moved to suburbia U.S.A. from Panama when he was 13, and he "didn't fit in." "So," he says, "I quit school at 16 and lived in a Weatherman Co-op." The Weathermen were members of an extreme leftist faction of the group Students for a Democratic Society. "I didn't go underground with the organization," he continued. "They weeded out 80 per cent of us, and I was too young.'' His next large scale political act was when ,he participated in the East Lansing Cambodia Strike in 1970, where he was arrested for the first time. In December of that year he came to Ypsilanti and worked on the un- derground newspaper "The Second Coming" (which Nicholson was quick to ,point out was "not a religious publication by any stretch of the imagination). Less than a year later he was again arrested for throwing imitation blood at a Marine Recruiting table. "EVERYBODY got away but me," he moaned. "The judge asked me who else was involved and I said I did not know their last names. Then my attor- ney stood up and said it was a common sociological fact that hippies do not use last names." He was sentenced to 30 days in the county jail, and probation which he finished just prior to being elected to Council in 1974. Although his cohorts' pasts aren't quite as colorful, they are no less radical. Baize spent his early political years working on environmental com- mittees, cutting down billboards, and participating in many demonstrations. NICHOLSON made his political debut in Flint at age 17, when he sat on the Model City Council, a citizens' advisory group. Recalling those days he said, "I saw how ineffective administrative bureaucracies were, and it really irritated me." He later led the Eastern Michigan University student strike,; and even- tually became chairman of the bargain- ing chairman of the bargaining com- mittee of the Eastern Clerical Union. Although their branch is the only viable faction of the HRP in the state, the three councilmen remain optimistic about a resurgence for the party. "THIRD parties could be viable if the left coalesced from its various fac- tions," said Baize. Nicholson said they were told that in order to achieve a "realistic approach and to remain an ongoing political en- tity" they would have to assimilate themselves into a major party. They watched Tom Hayden's Senate cam- paign in California in 1976 to see how well he did as a leftist Democrat, and they say they have attempted to follow, the same course. "We've come into a different realm and our caucus is widely recognized as a political power which must be dealt with," said Nicholson. "The entire Yp- silanti Democratic party went through a restructuring this summer and we have a substantial amount of weight and impact in the party - we can't just be shunned. Our politics are still essen- tially the same, they're just phrased differently." Jackson added, proudly, "They thought we were a flash in the pan like Ann Arbor's HRP, but they've changed the way they approach us, and so have we." HAVE A -your friendly MICHIGAN DAILY STAFF Bimbo's Downtown Offers You A New Special Every Day Of The Week-ALL YOU CA EAT!Adults Children YOU CAN EAT! ''.I""' '" Hey Baby... going my way? find out! Advertise in the Daily Classifieds under Transportation. Call 764-0557 , SUNDAY - Italian Buffet .. . MONDAY - Spaghetti ... ... with Meatballs $1.25 extra TUESDAY - Barbecue Chicken or Beef Ribs .......... ....... ....... unaer Y 3.75 2.25 2.50 1.65 ...... 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