Saturday, May 11, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Threee Safurdca~, May II, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three City Council confronts '75 budget: Battle to balance By GORDON ATCIESON naily News Analysis City Council will be presented with Ann Arbor's 1975 nunicipal budget Monday, and the way the figures add up, the local financial pinch will become even more paihful next year. The $18.6 millio budget, which will go into effect July 1, contains virt-ually no funds for creating new programs or ex- pandi g present city services. Also, tititess vitters tipprivIe att ueter- gency lax hike that appeatrs u(1 the June 10 schl-at board el .-ttioit ballot, budgetary cutlicks svill be uecessiry restlting it a rCduced quality 'ind scope of om nicipal seric c iuctuding fire and [m- lice pIroteeti n, refuse collection, atid hmtait resotirce priogran. PIRIlIARY CAUtF at the budgel's nit terity is a 1-00,000II appropriation to i dace the city's auiprecedenited ciiinccitt de- ficit of more hain t uiillion. The slate goi ernmitent, alaco-et auivit hic ticil fis cil siitiou, I i i vi"t nter ordered the Cii to liminate that debt iitbut three Iarig the rscnt fiscal xir -the first in the d'lii reu i ctiot l n prog:m - tower Ii ' citmlye h5 1 tad lt be lid tiff l t blute etle budyvt antI si I inetutde funiis finr t ipayment of deits. Although nearly till dleptritomnts re- ceive larger chunks of the upcoing budget, the additional money comes its the form of "paper" hikes which cover the cost of inflation and salary jumps required by contract. THE LARGFST single increase goes to the.Police lepartment. That agency re- ceived a 24 per cent hike raising its total appropriation to approximately $4.4 mit lion. However, a department request for 25 additional officers was denied by the administration when it compiled the budget. A number of other departments includ- ing Fire, Housing, inspection, IHtuman Rights, and Parks also requested addi- tional serstoninel bitt caime itip empty- htanded tin that sctice whtei the bitiget was pit together, ALONG WITH the Police Dheparltment, the other aigencies which will receive budget inicretises topping 211 per cent of their current funding levels are the Per- sonnel, District Court, and Refuse Coller- tion divisions. The area perhaps hardest hit in the new budget is Human Resources, which encompasses drug treatment programs, child and health care, and other related services. Previously these operations received a large financial boost from federal Reve- nue Sharing dollars. In the upcoming See CITY, Page it n d si d p ti b s Gentlemen, be seated This man may not sit down again for weeks. It's John Lee Hoskins, a Cheyenne, Wyo., cowboy, shown disembarking after his horse fell during a "Western Style Polo" match in Denver. The game is played with inflated rubber balls and sturdy quarter horses-allotted one per player instead of the half-dozen ponies used in traditional polo. Teen seeks school board rost, challenges state law By JEFF SORENSEN 11 High School make him a qualified "If he could qualify legally to run, Sixteen-year-old Larry Mann filed a candidate. there'd be no problem," comments ominating petition yesterday for candi- HRP spokeswoman Diana Autin con- Duane Renken, president of the school acy on the Ann Arbor school board de- tends that the s c h o o1 board "keeps board. pite a state law which requires candi- young people off the group that rules Renken claims that although the stu- [ates to be registered voters. their lives." She says she hopes the dents have no actual vote, "They are Mann, backed by the Human Rights board will challenge the state law. represented already at all the board 'arty (HRP), is protesting the regula- CAPPAERT SAYS that "schools are meetings by the student advocates, they ion which requires board members to governed by the law of the state; I be- sit at the same table as the Teachers e at least 18. Nevertheless, school board lieve the state legislature would have Association and the Parent - Teacher ecretary Leroy Cappaert is expected 10 to omake a change in the rules." (PTO) Council." rule against Mann's candidacy on Mon- day. "IT'S FUNDAMENTALLY undemo- aratic not to allow students to run for the school board," says Mann. Mann states that if he is rejected as an official candidate, he will still attempt a write-in campaign and promises to "bring the issues out in the open to as many as I can." "Being on the ballot doesn't mean I'm elected, it only means that I can be considered by the voters," says Mann. MANN SAYS he's "not just going to talk about the age issue . . . I think I know what's going on at the schools much better than the other members because I'm a stuflent." a Mann also says that his experience in students' rights organizations at Pioneer Nixon faces legal trouble See Story, Page 8 The realitiesofrenovation: a cold dulsyclm torV read: By JEFF DAY slow-motion fans, wooden desks, and really awful in. here," library employe The guards at the door wear dust papery emptiness. Laurie Lanzen-Harris said, referring to masks. The main entrance has been Upstairs in the reference room the the fact that workers had to disconnect snow-fenced shut. Upstairs, on a side two murals-of war and peace-look all the heat in the building as part of hall, sits a broken toilet in a pile of rub- silently across at each other over a bar- their work. "Today we've got space ble that was once an office. Lest there be racks-size room of long wooden tables heaters, so it's not quite so bad." any doubt as to whet it once was, a upon which chairs have been set upside BUT OUTSIDE the woden doors of her cleaning brush sits in the pockmarked, down. office, it's fifteen degrees cooler, and bowl. But despite the dislocation caused by the halls are still carpeted with dust One imagines a tourguide wandering the library's $4 million renovation pro- that filled the building when the heat- through the crumbling, dust-filled halls, ject, business goes on as usual. The, cir- ing vents came down. narrating for a ragged crowd of sweat- culation desk has been moved to what A Burns security guard plays with her ing freshmen: "This," says the guide was the periodical room; the reference library-issued dust mask and comments, with a grotesque smile, "is our gradu- desk is in the newspaper room, and des- "it's been colder than a bitch. People ate library." pite the fact that a ladder descends oti- have been catching colds, walking off the But it's true, and all in the name of nously through a hole in the ceiling,.the job-itgot so bad, the library had to or- progress. card catalogue is where it always was. der space heaters. I think some of the WHAT WAS once the circulation desk Not that the renovation has been with- construction workers even brought in is now a brittle collection of 1930-era out its problems. "Yesterday it was their own from home."