i2 Thursday, August 8, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, August 8, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 11 Kunselman, Eaton win Dem. City Council primary vote Beat out Grand and Higgins for Wards 3 and 4 after 8.6 percent voter turnout By TUI RA DEMAKER Daily News Editor Ann Arbor residents went to the polls Tuesday to determine the Democratic candidates for the Ann Arbor City Council, settling primary battles in both Ward 3 and Ward 4. Incumbent Stephen Kunselman (D-Ward 3) was re-elected to run for Ward 3 with 51.76 percent over current Park Advisory Commission Chair Julie Grand's 48.13 percent. Longtime neighborhood activist Jack Eaton won Ward 4, acquiring 62.47 percent of the vote over incumbent Marcia Higgins' (D-Ward 4) 37.28 percent. In both races, write-in candidates received less than one percent of the vote. Wards 3 and 4 are the only two of Ann Arbor's five wards whose incumbents were challenged in Tuesday's primary. Gathered at CUBS' A.C. Sports Bar and Restaurant on Tuesday night, Eaton and a group of supporters expressed' excitement as the results began trickling in. Despite an initial issue in Precinct 9, when the polling machines appeared to have temporarily malfunctioned, the results from Ward 4's nine precincts looked promising for Eaton almost immediately. He carried all precincts but the first, which Higgins won by three votes to Eaton's one. "I'm just humbled that so manN' people have put their trust in me." he said after hearing the official results. "We first have to realize that Irm one of 11 votes on council and I'm the junior member of council but m going to work hard to assert those priorities that voters told me were important to them when I went door-to-door." Eaton's victory marks the second time in two years 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com KATIE BURKE MERYL HULTENG Editor in Chief Business Manager kbreta~mch ndaivom mhutein mchgndailycom CONTACT INFORMATION Newsroom office hours: Sun.-Thurs. 11 a.m. 2 a.m. 743-2459 pt. NewsTips news michigandailt.co , Corrections cor.c..ons.irmchgrndaicom Letterstothe Editor rothedairvrmichigandaily.corr or visit michigandaiy.com 'ietter; Photo Department photo michigandaiy.com Arts Section art, michigandail.com Editorial Page -oi-s.nr.nm'ci7gandailv.com Sports Section o .r,..ch... andaiv.com Magazine staters michigandaifycam Advertsin hne7476-t5 tepartment spa )ihgnav.o- Classifieds Phone:734-64-05- Department eiasnedamicigandaiiv.corr EDITORIAL STAFF Elliot Alpern ManagingEditor ea" pe'mamich "adiy" o AaronGuggenheim ManagingNewsEditor aguggenhoamiehigandaiiycom SENIOR NEWS EDITOR: Tui Rademaker Eric Ferguson Editorial Page Editor opinionedit,rs aiga ndailv-com Greg Garno Managing Sports Editor sportseditors mchgandail..com SENIOR SPOR'TSEDITORS: Jeremy Summitt. AMexa Dettelbach John Lynch ManagingArtsEditor ,jpa v me hiandai .con; SENIOR ARTS EDITOR: Kendall Russ Marlene Laass e ManagingPhotoEditor AustinReed Managing Design Editor desiea"r.michigandaile.com Meaghan Thompson ManagingeCopyEditor coyds, ~mchigandai vcom BUSINESS STAFF Leah Louis-Prescott SalesManager The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published every Thursday during the string andstaner terms ty students at the bniversity tf Mrcnigan. One cty is available free of charge to all readers. Additionalcopies maybepickedup atthe Dai ys offie fo r0 hubscriptins tor fall tern, starting in Setemher ,via U.S. ma.l are $110. Winter term (January through April is $115, yearlong (September throughAyril)istt15.On aesityaffiliates are suhtect toanreducedsuhscription nate. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press. CAMPBELL From Page 10 able to finish the race. "You had to feel for him," LaPlant&said. Couldthe 4x100-meterrelaystill succeed without him? It's possible. The order of runners would need to be switched, the handoffs reworked, the leadership replaced. Was it likely? "Not at all," Clarke said in May. "I don't think so." The 4x100-meter relay qualified for the NCAA East Preliminaries witha chance at advancing to the Championships. Campbell couldn't go to cheer on his teammates or provide what he could do best after having surgery days before. He sat at home resting. Maybe he would watch the race if he could find it online somewhere. The relay never succeeded with- out him. I may have fibbed when I said it wasn't heartwarming. Here is the story of an athlete who walked on to the team with- out expecting to be running for a school. Here's the story ofsomeone who spent five years training for a chance to cement his name and prove that running in college was the right choice. Here's the story of someone so close to seeing every- thingcome together. And that was enough to satisfy Campbell. "The fact that I've been able to do this extracurricular activity and excel at it in some shape or form, that to me is just icing on the cake." he said. "I've done what I needed to do to position myself "Track meant a lot of me, but the end was coming up sooner rather than later, and it just kind of ended quicker than I thought." This story doesn't end with the injury, much like Campbell didn't end his career as an athlete when he came to Ann Arbor. He still hasn't given up on running, either. Recovery from a torn Achilles can take up to 11 months, maybe longer to return to the level at which Campbell competed. He still walks around with a boot on his left foot. In the mean time, Campbell has moved to Miami to teach English for Teach for America, a non-profit organization that aims to eliminate educational inequity. He's tossed around coaching track and involv-4 ing students in athletics. But that's all just part of the larger plan. "My plan for this Achilles is to get it back to where I can sprint again," he said. "Once I got to the point where I can sprint on my legs again, a that to me, will feel really good. "Then I'll have made it back." Garno can be reached atggorno@ umich.edu and on Twitter: @G Garno. Stephen Kunselman (D-Ward 3) celebrates winning the Democratic primary at Dorninick's Bar with supporters Tuesday. that he's run in the Ward 4 Democratic primary. Last year he lost to current councilwoman Margie Teall (D-Ward 4) in a close race. He attributed this year's different outcome to increased name recognition among constituents. "Last year I went to a couple thousand doors, I shook hands, I talked to people, I came within 20 votes," he said. "This year I went out and talked to those same people and some more and they just got to know me over time ... they're coming around to the idea that I was a realistic alternative." Councilman Mike Anglin (D-Ward 5) and University alum Hatim Elhady, who ran for Ward 4 in 2009 as an LSA senior, were among supporters gathered to celebrate Eaton's victory. Anglin, who will run for re-election in November, said he became involved in Eaton's campaign wh te discovered that his own seat Would be unopposed in the primary. Higgins did not return requests for comment either on her location during the election or her thoughts on the race itself. Kunselman's victory in Ward 3 is an end to what has been a somewhat turbulent race against Grand. She has run her campaign with an emphasis on an ability to communicate with constituents. Grand has criticized Kunselman for an alleged detachment from constituents. Kunselman, who had previously called her campaign's strategies "deceptive", responded with an emphasis on issues as well as his six years of experience on City Council. "I communicate with my constituents quite regularly," he said while celebrating his victory with his campaign and supporters at Dominick's Bar on Tuesday night. "You know, anytime they e-mail me, any time they call me, I talk to them and I communicate with them." Kunselman said he will continue to focus otr the issues that he feels most affects residents, including infrastructure, police and fire. He also said he plans to continue his fight for the protection of the neighborhoods which he said has suffered from recent zoning changes that have led to increased high-rise buildings. Grand did not return phone calls following her loss, but did say on Tuesday morning that her campaign and supporters would be following the race from Sava's Restaurant on State Street. It is unclear whether or not she will run in future races. Tuesday's results culminate months of campaigning for the four candidates and while Kunselman will still have a challenger in the race for the general election, Ann Arbor's 90 percent Democratic population means that securing the council seat will likely not be as competitive as Tuesday's race. The city does not hold a Republican primary. "This was the election," Kunselman said. "tm actualiy looking forrward to the general election because my opponent Sam Devarti is actually a good family friend.' See PRIMARY Page 6