Collins, Johnson leave football team THE REAL WORLD we 40 One hundred three years of editorial freedom *rn4o I Yoi GVNo22A"Ar O M +ian- ~tyyOcot 2£ 993x.93Th Mchga Dam I 4 City Council Elections Tuesday Nov. 2 is election day in Ann Arbor. Each ward chooses one council member. By JAMES NASH DAILY STAFF REPORTER The dimensions of Ann Arbor's first-ever November municipal elecion can be neatly summed up as five wards, five parties and 14 candidates. Beyond simple statistics, many city issues are at stake, including the future of Ann Arbor's debt-ridden budget and the city's relations with the Univrsity. 'U' sunracers arrive down under By PETER MATTHEWS DAILY STAFF REPORTER The University's College of Engi- neering is short almost two dozen students this fall. The 21 renegade undergraduates jumped a 747 and took a 9,526 mile trip to Darwin, a coastal city in Australia's remote Northern Territory. In the land down under, the daily temperatures are soaring. It is sum- mertime in this tropical region only 12 degrees latitude south of the equa- tor. Are the beaches covered with au- tumn-pale bodies dripping sweat and coconut tanning oil into maize and blue towels? Not. The expatriated students are mem- bers of the University's solar-pow- ered car team. They have gone to Australia to compete in the World Solar Challenge. The team's Maize & Blue is one of 64 solar cars that will take part in the 1,864-mile race through the Australian outback. Teams from 17 countries will si- lently zoom across the start line on Nov. 7. Japan - the country with most teams entered --has 23 cars that were financed and developed by private corporations like Honda, Toyota and Nissan. All 11 United States entries are from universities. Last summer the University's team beat 33 other collegiate teams in Sunrayce 93 - a 1,100 mile solar- powered car race that began June 20 in Texas and ended seven days later in Minnesota. The University's team took $66,000 in cash and prizes and put it toward preparation for the World Solar Challenge. Comparing the Australian race to the one last summer, the University solar car team's project manager, Engineering senior Furqan Nazeeri said, "The World Solar Challenge is a much more difficult and demanding race. We'll be up against multi-mil- lion dollar solar powered cars and professional racing teams financed by major corporations." To improve the University's chance of repeating the summer vic- tory, team members have improved their Maize & Blue car in several ways. After a stringent diet plan, the car has lost 150 pounds from its June weigh-in at 650 pounds. High-efficiency silver-zinc batter- ies costing approximately $30,000 have replaced the more standard bat- teries used last summer. To feed these batteries, more than 1,500 photovol- taic cells have been added to the 7,600 that formed the winning car's solar array. Moreover, about one-half of these 9,267 cells are now high-effi- ciency silicon. This type of razor blade-sized solar cell comes with a $110 price tag. Under full sunlight, the solar ar- ray, which looks like a cobalt blue See SOLAR, Page 2 ® 1st Ward: David Raaflaub (Libertarian): A perennial candidate for elective office on an anti-government plat- form, the Ann Arbor attorney has embraced technol- ogy in his bid. Raaflaub is tout- . ing a proposal to bypass City Coun- cil in the decision- making process, allowing citizens to vote by phone. "Thiswouldbe an exercise in pure democracy," he says, "as each voter would have one vote every week." Raaflaub claims touch-tone vot- ing would eliminate politician's stranglehold on power. "There's no reason this couldn't Martin Rhodes (Tisch): Nearly 15 years after spending time in jail for breaking the law, Rhodes now wants to help write it. A high-school drop- out, Rhodes be- came entangled in a life of crime and drugs,he spent 15 years behind bars. The cycle was broken in 1979 when Rhodes enrolled in a GED pro- gram at Jackson Community College. He went on to earn a bachelor's de- Patricia Vereen-Dixon (Demo- crat): A political novice, the 19-year Ann Arbor resident stresses empow- erment as the cor- nerstone of her *campaign. Vereen-Dixon, the manager of Ar- rowwood Hills; Cooperative, says she's a voice for Ann Arbor's low- and moderate-in- . come tenants. The idea of a cooperative can be extended beyond housing, says the University alum. She suggests Ann Arbor enter into a cooperative with other municipalities to cut back on 2nd Ward: Peter Fink (Republican): A councilmember for 18 months, Fink says city government's focus should shift to long-range planning. "We need a long-term solution to the ongoing budget deficit," says the owner of Galt Co., an auto- motive sales firm based in Ann Ar- S bor. Fink, who sits on the Ann Arbor Parks Advisory Committee, says the committee's five-year plan to reduce deferred maintenance could be a nodel for city departments. Jane Michener (Democrat): 'Let's Keep Ann Arbor Better Than be applied on a national level," says the candidate. "The technology is there. There is really no excuse." Raaflaub, a graduate of the Uni- versity and Wayne State's Law school, adheres to an anti-tax philosophy. He says the best way to balance the bud- get is to slash expenditures: "If you have a $10 million shortfall, take $10 million from the bloated city budget." Raaflaub says strains in Univer- sity-city relations are inevitable in the present political climate. "The University is the state of Michigan at work in Ann Arbor. Ann Arbor is a small city government try- ing to relate to the state of Michigan. It's a very unequal situation, and as long as the University continues to pursue its self-interests as it sees fit, there is very little that can be done." gree in general studies from the Uni- versity in 1990. Now he's jumping into politics, a move he says is motivated by a desire to shatter stereotypes of ex-convicts. "As much as I'm running to win, I'm running for all those who came before me who were afraid to run because they had criminal records, and for all those who come after me so they know that they can," he declares. Rhodes resists the idea of a prop- erty tax increase, holding it out only as a last resort. He favors a users tax for people who work in Ann Arbor but live elsewhere. city employee health insurance rates. Admitting she doesn't "know much about taxation," Vereen-Dixon says it's up to voters to decide what city services fall victim to budget cuts."I don't think we necessarily have to cut anything." Vereen-Dixon says prospects of improved University-city relations are encouraging. She's a member of the Board of Minority Scholars for the University and Washtenaw Commu- nity College, experience valuable for fostering ties between institutions. "I do think it's important that we develop a better relationship," she says. "One thing I don't want to do is form another committee. We need to make better use of the ones we have." Fink says expenditure reductions must be made before any tax hike can be considered. Fink, who got involved in city politics though a committee of homeowners reviewing property tax options, ran his first election on a fiscally conservative platform. He says his Council term has been marked by increasing cooperation between councilmembers. Fink says the Council needs to take small steps toward mending rela- tions with the University, a process he says has already begun. "We have to work it a day at a time," the University alum says, "mak- ing little inroads and achieving small victories. The key is building small bridges and not tearing them down." must be preserved. A University alum, Michener is a gn . . . . i ° , - Firefighters prepare to attack the frontline of a brush fire that scorched more than 700 acres yesterday in Thousand Oaks, Calif. Flames devour acres, force hundreds to flee . , Driven by desert winds, fires scorched California yesterday burning nearly 100,000 acres. Hundreds of homes were destroyed and six firefighters were injured. ASSOCIATED PRESS Wildfires driven by searing desert winds torched thousands of tinder- dry acres in Southern California yes- terday, destroying scores of homes and forcing hundreds to flee in terror from wealthy suburbs and rural ham- lets. Six firefighters were injured, three critically. Among the evacuees were elderly people carried on gurneys from two convalescent homes and patients at a hospital. One 3,000-acre fire threatened the Wild Animal Park in northern San Diego County, where zookeepers evacuated 26 endangered California condors and four Andean condors. By midafternoon yesterday, 11 In that fire, an estimated 45 homes were destroyed or damaged in the northeast suburb of Altadena. Overwhelmed firefighters ran out of water and called for reinforcements, and helicopters made daring water drops in futile efforts to douse burn- ing homes. Smoke and ash eclipsed the sun over downtown Los Angeles, free- ways and schools were closed, and wind-borne embers picked out homes at random, quickly engulfing roofs in flame. "They said, 'It's coming up the canyon! It's coming up the canyon!' so we just got out of there as fast as we can. I have nothing but what I'mwear- ing," said Sandra Bohlen, whose Santa Susana Knolls LC A VENTURA LOS ANGELES COUNTY: L . Altadena Los Angeles 1,000 acres. Out of control. a Started before dawn yesterday. c C ORANGE COUNTY:i Villa Park Ri 300 acres. Out of control. 31 homes damaged, two severely. Reported late Tuesday. Cause: suspicious. VENTURA COUNTY: Green Meadow area 15,000 acres. Out of control.. -t Ahouse, mobile home and an outbuilding burned. SAN DIEGO COUNTY: Guejito (Wah-hee'-toh) N 2,500-plus acres. 10 percent contained. E Two homes, several outbuildings damaged or destroyed. CWild Animal Park moved 26 California condors and four Andean