Summer Daily Suimiter Ediionof 111 tICHIGAN DAlIY Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Saturday, June 9, 1973 News Phone: 764-0552 Sc h ol Board endorsements NEXT MONDAY, the Ann Arbor school board election will be held. The Daily feels that Diana Autin is the best qualified person for the position of School Board Trustee. Autin has been vigorously pushing those issues which we find the most vital. For instance, she believes that there must be com- munity control of schools. As trustee, she will work for a community school board of students, staff, parents, and other residents, possessing the power to make all major decisions concerning their school. Autin also aims to secure the constitutional and human rights of all students. She believes that students must be able to choose their own curriculum, and to learn at their own pace. And while she recognizes the fact that people's educational rights need to be pro- tected, she doesn't feel that compulsory attendance of schools is necessary to such protection, and would thus work to abolish the compulsory rule. Her plans also include working for the end of sex- ism, racism, and tracking in our public schools. ALTHOUGH 18, Autin does not lack in the experience necessary to become a trustee. Her youth is actually an asset, as she can truly be said to represent that group with which the schools must work: the young. As a student at Pioneer Hih School from 1969-1971, Autin actively worked for student rights (involving the Student Bill of Rights ) She was the first chairperson of the HRP's public schools committee, and continues to work for them, establihins lines of communication with students and other groups in the Ann Arbor community. VOTERS WILL be able to vote for a total of three per- sons for the Schonl Board. We find Henry Alting and Patricia Pooley competent for the remaining two positions. Henry Altin: is a narent alarmed by the alienation of parents and teachers from the school board. He be- lieves that the school administration has develoned into too complex a bureaucracy to be useful to anyone other than themselves. Alting would work to open up the school board meetings to the general nublic. He also wishes to see the board nursue more modernistic goals for the school sys- tem. Alting is a proressive nerson who sees the need for new programs to replace those old ones which have failed Patricia Poolev. also a parent, realistically sees the need for a liberalized education system which recognizes the differences in the educational needs and desires of individual students. Pooley is also opposed to the punitive measures be- ing used in our schools which only cover up the symp- toms of violence which the current school system helps to create. A STRONG showing at Monday's polls, with votes cast for Diana Autin, as well as for Henry Alting and Pa- tricia Poolev, could help bring the Ann Arbor School Board back into touch with reality. Miapes: Vote yes THE DAILY supports both the school millage .renewal proposition and the library millage proposition. The school millage of 11 66 is not an increase over the past millage, but merely a renewal. It is vital that the school system receive local financial suaport through millage. Without it, schools will see a 33 per cent fund- ing cutback. The cuts will basically be in the social serv- ice departments - psychiatrists, counselors, etc-and in extra-curricular activities. THE LIBRARY millage must pass if the Ann Arbor Pub- lic Library is to continue oneratine without drastic cutbacks in service. The pronosal will authorize the School Board to levv up to one mill per year for the Library. Cost to the taxpayer would be one dollar (one mill) per $1,000 of assessed property valuation. WE ADVOCATE the passage of these millages with qualifications. In the future, income for the school and library must come from a graduated income tax, and not from millages and property taxes, which are regressive and unequitable. However, for the continued full-time operation of both the school system and the Library now, a "yes" vote is urgent. Local conservatives can't accept Ann Arbor as it really is MANY PBSERVEIRS have been fooing the recent actions of local goveramieat units with on increasing sense of incredulity. libera ismn verstis cansers-atisot no anger seems to be the ismie. A mitch more fundamental problem has developed in the seeming in- ability of Republican policy-mak- ers to come to grips with Ann Ar- bor as it is in 1973. Local conservatives appear to be operating under the delusion that Ann Arbor is still a small, sleepy village, more or less isolat- ed from the "evils" of modern ur- ban society chrois 1)rks FORTUNATELY or unfortunate- ly, however, Ann Arbor is coming more and more to resemble i t s larger neighbors. Among the symp- toms are: -Serious inner city decay and resulting crime (often heroin re- lated.) Despite its small size and high average income this city is developing a ghetto, -Tension (often race related) in the schools, -Housing problems. Rents (es- pecially in student neighborhoods) are incredibly high, and housing is often shoddy and substandard, and -A diverse and culturally avante- guard populace. (Wide-spread use of soft-drugs) homosexuality, co- habitation etc. are realities. THE REIGNING conservatives, however, unable or unwilling to deal with real problems - are in- stead contenttwithcosmetic ac- lions aiimed at maintaining t h e pretense of small town innocence and imposing parochial morality on a community where it is absurdly out of place. The conservative answer to strife in the schools? Isolate "trouble- makers" and tuck them away in an "alternative school". A simple solution. We will have "their school" for the bad apples, and "our school" - a neat, quiet facility for a neat quiet commun- ity. THE BEHAVIOR of the city ad- ministration has taken on a sim- Doils Photo by KEN FINK AND HOW ABOUT the city's cultural diversity? The Republicans profess not to see it, claiming it's all a creation of their liberal predecessors - something which can be eliminated or at the very least driven underground by the new Republican morality. ilar aura of unreality with the ascension of the GOP. The city's most pressing issue? Garbage collection, says Mayor James Stephenson. Have to keep the town tidy, you know. What about central city decay? The downtown needs expensive "specialty shops" for wealthy com- muters from outlying subdivisions. And the rent situation? R e n t control is a radical measure rele- vant only in big cities. Landlords aren't "slum lords" here - they're friendly neighborhood businessmen, ust trying to make a few dollars on the side. council chambers) and no lenient marijuana law (pot is social poison -every small town hick knows that). So, in line with the rest of the nation, its back to the 50's with the GOP. Back to white buck shoes, Pat Boone, and the country club. Back to the days when business was boosted not regulated. Back to the days when dope and sex were something you didn't even talk about in a city council cham- ber. Back to the All-American City. And God help the 53 per cent if us who don't see things that way. And how about the city's cultural diversity? The Republicans pro- letters to The Daily should fess not to see it, claiming its all be mailed to the Editorial Di- a creation of their liberal prede- rectoror delivered to Mary 0 ceatttoRafferty in' the Student Pub- cessors - something which can be lications business office .in the eliminated or at the very least driv- Michigan Daily building. Letters en underground by the new Repub- should be typed, double-spaced lican morality. and normally should not exceed 250 words. The Editorial Direc- HENCE, NO Gay Pride Week tors reserve the right to edit (gays belong in closets, not city Alletters submitted. I understand he was quite influential before he fell into bad company!',