The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, September 28, 1982-Page 5 Headlee blasts Mayor Young for mismanaging city's finances Hey, good lookin' From left to right, Mary Butler, Pat Tootell, Nina Fahrner, waiting to be picked up by the bus. Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER and Nia Patrickackos all sit at the Fourth Ave. bus station .Wallace favored in today's runoff United Press International Republican gubernatorial candidate Richard Headlee said yesterday that Mayor Coleman Young has mismanaged the state's largest city and ailing Detroit should not get help .from Lansing. Headlee told reporters at a Detroit news conference he did not consider himself anti-Detroit but he conceded he was pleased by the Legislature's failure to pass a $4 million aid package for Detroit last week. "WHEN OTHER units of local gover- nment throughout the state and the state of Michigan have had to make drastic budget cuts because of the serious economic conditions, and Michigan taxpayers are being asked to tighten our belts, the tax dollars of har- dworking men and women should not be sent to any community that mismanages its government and squanders tax dollars," Headlee said. Headlee said he was happy House Republicans refused to support the "equity" package backed by the gover- nor. Political observers in Lansing said it appeared Headlee called lawmakers and told them not to vote for the measure. "An 'equity package' for a Detroit with good government is fair to the rest of Michigan. As governor, I will say 'yes' to Detroit when Coleman Young says 'no' to waste, fraud and abuse in city hall." HEADLEE also took issue with a Detroit News Survey showing his HUNGRY FOR EUROPE BUT NO MONEY? 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THE NEWS poll showed 50 percent of the persons surveyed supported Blan- chard, compared to 27 percent for Headlee. The GOP candidate said he had his own poll showing Blanchard with a slimmer lead than the newspaper sur- vey. However, Headlee refused to release the details of that survey. Abortion for Headlee also renewed his attack on Blanchard for comments made on the abortion issue, saying the Democrat was making "anti- Christian" remarks reflecting his "immaturity." m From AP and UPI MONTGOMERY, Ala.- Former Gov. George Wallace, hoping to ride to victory on the wave of a new coalition of blacks and blue-collar voters, faces Lt. Gov. George McMillan in today's Democratic gubernatorial primary runoff. McMillan, at 38 a quarter-century younger than Wallace, predicted vic- tory yesterday as he hop-scotched the state for news conferences, saying there has been a "dramatic tur- naround" since the Sept. 7 Democratic primary. 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