LoCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Monday, December 1, 1997 - 5A -Young remembered for his toughness, honesty DETROIT (AP) - He was tough. He was honest. He broke color barriers. He once took on Congress. Friends and colleagues of former Mayor Coleman Young mourned his death Saturday, remembering him as one of a kind. "There won't be another Coleman Young," said U.S. Rep. John Conyers Jr,, (D-Detroit). Young, a civil rights and labor leader and World War I1 sol- dier, was among the nation's first big-city black mayors when he won the first of his five terms in 1973. "Coleman Young was a legend in his own time - a leader, a fighter, a pioneer in the battle for equal rights and against racial discrimination. His humor, gusto and passion for life .Will never be duplicated," said Gov. John Engler. President Jimmy Carter, who returned Young's support in #he 1976 presidential election with hundreds of millions of dollars in federal aid for the city, called Young "one of the greatest mayors our country has known." "With compassion and vision, he provided the leadership tiat lifted Detroit from a climate of unprecedented violence to one of hope and greater prosperity," Carter said. "Our thoughts and prayers are with his family during this difficult time.' President Clinton called Young "not only a great mayor of Detroit but an inspiration to so many city leaders throughout e nation." "Mayor Young was truly an outstanding public servant who will be missed," Clinton said. Conyers was a teen-ager when he met Young, who was active in politics in Detroit's Black Bottom neighborhood, as was Conyers' father. While Young was well known for his salty language, he could also be the consummate charmer, the member of congress said. "He has a magnetic presence, a splendid orator. He was a happy-go-lucky guy, but he had a mind like a steel trap. If you're laughing with Coleman for too long, you're going to ase your pants," Conyers said. Young was "charming, entertaining, humorous, thought- flu," said former U.S. Sen. Donald Riegle Jr. "I think Coleman, in my mind, is the Jackie Robinson of American electoral politics," Riegle said. "He really broke the color line, by being elected mayor and going on to a num- ber of further re-elections. "He was a brilliant thinker. He had his own way of express- ing himself. He could be blunt, especially if he thought some- one was pushing him," he said. "But under all that, was an YOUNG Continued from Page 1A heritage of struggle and you have a powerful force," he said. "This city will not be overcome." Despite criticism from some that Young was arrogant and ineffective, he was re-elected by substantial margins in 1977, 1981, 1985 and 1989. When he announced in 1993 that he would not seek a sixth term, he said: "I've decided 20 years is enough. I'm tired." He was succeeded by former Michigan Supreme Court Justice Dennis Archer, who defeated Young- backed candidate Sharon McPhail. Young, one of the first black mayors of a major U.S. city, was credited with steering Detroit clear of bankruptcy in 1981, leading business and residential rebuilding along the Detroit River and racially integrating the fire and police departments. He had a reputation as a 24-hour leader whose passion for Detroit and furious work habits bordered on obses- sion. "Being mayor is not a job to him - it's his life," Roy Levy Williams, a Young appointee to a civilian police board, said in 1991. But he was criticized for what oppo- nents saw as caring more about down- town development than neighborhood improvements. It was a common com- plaint, but one he rejected. "When I took office, there wasn't a damn thing standing on 12th Street,"he said in 1989. "1 stood out here and made a speech up to my hips in weeds.. The downtown was dead." White flight from Detroit didn't begin with Young, but it continued unabated during his administration despite such projects as the completion of the Renaissance Center, a towering riverfront convention center. By 1990, Detroit's population had fallen nearly in half, and the metropoli- tan area had become one of the nation's most segregated. Detroit had just under 2 million residents in 1950, 1.2 million in 1980 and just over 1 million in 1990. That count showed Detroit was 76 per- cent black and its suburbs less than5 percent black. When he announced his retirement, Young cited problems still facing Detroit, including unemployment, crime and budget deficits. But over- all, Young said, his legacy was posi- tive. "I still believe in Detroit," he said. "I still believe our best days lie ahead:' Several scandals marked Young's later years. in 1991, his police chief and a deputy chief who was a business partner with the mayor were indicted in the disap- pearance of $2.6 million from a fund used to pay informants and make drug purchases. The deputy chief, Kenneth Weiner, pleaded guilty. Former Chief William Hart was convicted and sent to prison in 1992. In 1989, Young settled a paternity lawsuit filed by a former city employee. Genetic tests confirmed the claim that Young had fathered her son. Former Detroit Mayor Coleman Young leaves a news conference in Detroit in June. exceptional intellect." Mayor Dennis Archer, who succeeded Young, said the city has lost "a great warrior." "Mayor Young was not one ever to bite his tongue," he said. "His compassion, his intellect, his courage, his wit and even his occasionally sharp tongue were the essential.ingredients of a man who tried to lead us to a world as it should be, rather than accepting a world of the past." The battles Young fought included one before the U.S. House Un-American Activities Committee. His labor orga- nizing earned him a subpoena. Asked if he was a member of the Communist Party, Young refused to answer. He told the panel he considered its activities to be un-American, he said in his autobiography, "Hard Stuff." San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown said Young was a pio- neer and role model for blacks. "He had to be the hero of black Americans while at the same time he had to carry the mantle of organized labor," Brown said. "While at the same time, he literally had to be a staunch middle of the road Democrat in order to be successful at all" Cardinal Adam Maida, archbishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Detroit, said history will judge Young as the "linchpin in the renaissance of Detroit. "As we approach the millennium, Mayor Young's personal- ity and accomplishments will loom large," he said. Saeo t eCA n d dres s 6 y £ S &4 s t u c t e n t qovernmen t * ** **** **** a general student body informational meeting discussing the Government's current projects and future visions Anderson Rooms A, B, C, & D (Michigan Union) 5:00 PM, Tuesday, December 2, 1997 Refreshments will be served L Im