ge 10-Thursday, September 15, 1977-The Michigan Daily Narciso, Perez face possible life sentence Young, Browne to vie for black vote (Continued from Page 1) white candidate and another perceived as the black candidate. Coleman Young succinctly summed up the irony in his emphatic victory speech Tuesday nightwhen he asked his supporters, "Is there any difference between 1973 and 1977?" The answer from the spirited crowd gathered from at the Detroit-Cadillac Hotel was a resounding "No!" IN 1973 YOUNG ran against John Nichols, an anathema to the black community which perceived him as a -Nazi-storm trooper bent on ruling the city with a policeman's blackjack. Many liberal whites agreed. It is certain that the black community does not look upon Ernest Browne with the same disdain. However, it is their perception of Browne that will be the key to November's election. Tabulations of Tuesday's results show that Browne received 10 per cent of the black vote, while Young received about five per cent of the white vote. Many observers feel Coleman Young's white vote total will probably remain constant. BUT WHILE BROWNE'S share of the black vote will be minimal, the main thrust of his campaign between now and November will be made in the black community. As Browne said himself on Tuesday, "Now that the primary is over, we'll have to concentrate more, but not totally, on the black people in this community." The fear that a second black can- didate in November's election might erode some of Coleman Young's sup- port in that community was on the min- ds of many of Young's supporters and campaign workers Tuesday night. IT IS NO secret that the Young camp was rooting for the white candidates, Wayne State University Law Prof. John Mogk and suburban contractor Thomas Dailey. During the night as election re- turns trickled in, mostly from absen- tee ballots, Young supporters, gath- ered around a television set, grum- bled when they saw Browne in second place. "I hope Dailey comes up and beats him!" shouted one. Mac Blount, a Young district coordinator, said he thought too that Dailey or Mogk would make it out of the primary. "Browne never had the black vote." Welcome Students TO THE DASCOLA H AIRSTYLISTS ARBORLAND-971-9975 MAPLE VILLAGE-761-2733 E. LIBERTY-668-9329 E. UNIVERSITY-662-0354 BLOUNT MAY HAVE been artict- lating a very real fear among Young supporters - that if Browne won the primary, the former councilman might steal some of Detroit's heavy black vote, which was formerly Cole- man Young's uncontested strong- hold. The registered voters in Detroit are just about half black and half white. Young was gambling on a white candidate coming out of the primary, so that the race in Novem- ber would indeed be a remake of the 1973 mayoral election. % Now he has to face a black opt- ponent one-on-one, and a black can- didate stands a chance of picking up some of Young's black votes. Said Browne campaign director Ron Hammer, "If we get 91 per cent of the white vote (the percentage that Nichols received in 1973) and 20 per cent of the black vote, how can Cole- man Young win?" BUT IF TUESDAY'S primary is any indication, Browne, with the backing of Detroit's white police and fire department unions, may not receive that coveted 20 per cent. In fact, police union backing may actually cost 'Browne some black votes. For example, on a city bus sporting a Browne campaign poster, someone scrawled, right over the picture of Browne's face, "The DPOA's Boy!" Another problem just ahead for Young is Browne can expect to pick up the backers of primary losers Dailey and Mogk. Both conceded to Browne the second place spot and asked'their followers to support the councilman. STILL, YOUNG yesterday finished first with 57 per cent of the vote, so even the combined Browne, Dailey and Mogk vote would not be enough to upset him. Young campaigned aggressively on his incumbency. His green and white bumper stickers read simply "Mayor Young," and one radio spot add told listeners in a stern voice "You put him there, keep him there." The incumbent has been called "a bigot" (by Browne campaign man- ager Hammer) and told he has "gut- ter values" (by Browne). Browne has said that Young is a bad influ- ence on Detroit's children and has tried to associate the mayor with East side hoodlums and thugs. YOUNG IS a scarred veteran of union politics and the Wayne State University soap-box circuit. Elected to the State Senate and considered a radical leftisL in the Michigan Democratic Conference, Young had to forego his 1969 bid for mayor because he was not allowed by law to hold on to his Senate seat simultaneously. Young's chance came in 1973, when he emerged as a darkhorse candidate from a crowded primary. ,k # * 4 AUDITIONS UAC Musket's CAARET MASS MEETING: Sept. 14-7 p.m. for all crews and actors AUDITIONS: Sept. 16-7 p.m. and Sept. 17-9 a.m. Pendleton Room, Michigan Union for further information call 763-1 107 SORORITIES ;, A SPECTRUM OF EXPERIENCES registration I9714 r -21