x0 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 8, 1995 Dems take Kentucky, hold Virginia houses The Associated Press After back-to-back election triumphs, Republicans failed yesterday in bids to seize control of the Kentucky governor's office and legislatures in Virginia and Maine. A GOP bright spot was in Mis- sissippi, where Gov. Kirk Fordice eas- ily won a second term. Emboldened by historic gains in 1993 and 1994, Republicans had hoped to show the party's revival would spread this year to state and local contests long dominated by Democrats. But any GOP hopes for another sweep were quickly dashed in Kentucky, and followed by several additional disappointments. Democrat Paul Patton fought back a tough challenge from businessman Larry Forgy in Kentucky's governor's race, extending his party's 24-year grip on that office. Democrats also coasted in three other statewide contests there. Despite the close margin, Patton sug- gested the results offered a message to the Republican Congress. The GOP fared much better in Mis- sissippi, where Fordice handily beat Democrat Dick Molpus, a three-term secretary of state. With 57 percent of the vote in, Fordice had 54 percent to 46 percent for Molpus. In Maine, Democrats hadtemporarily lost control of the House earlier this year because of party switches. But they reclaimed a one-vote majority by winning two special elections. Dozens of communities were elect- ing mayors. Big-city incumbents who won easily included Kurt Schmoke in Baltimore, Edward Rendell in Phila- delphia and Bob Lanier in Houston. In Gary, Ind., where 90 percent of the population is black, Scott King was elected the first white mayor since 1967. San Francisco's colorful three-way contest pitted incumbent Frank Jordan against a California political legend, former Assembly Speaker Willie Brown, and a prominent lesbian activ- ist, former Clinton administration offi- cial Roberta Achtenberg. As always, ballots were crowded with propositions. Two Indiana counties re- jected riverboat gambling, and residents of Springfield, Mass., said they did not want casino gambling. A Maine pro- posal to prohibit laws aimed at protect- ing homosexuals from discrimination was narrowly trailing. And in 15 municipalities, voters were offered a presidential preference ballot listing 21 prospective candidates, from Clinton and retired Gen. Colin Powell to perennial fringe candidate Lyndon LaRouche. Clinton and the Republican contenders ignored "CityVote" and said results would be meaningless. Many voters stay away from polls because of work, apathy Los Angeles Times NEW YORK - Inside the aged brick walls of Public School 152 in Woodside, Queens, the mem- bers of the PTA executive council are squabbling this morning about the rules of democracy. They have argued so loudly and so long that the school principal has banished them from a room off the main office to the library upstairs. The librarian in turn has fled to the teachers' lounge. A dozen parents debate the finer points of parlia- mentary procedure, the most ethical way to let a contract, the most representative manner of making a decision. The issue is which photographer should take class pictures this year. Laura AlQaisi, a pale, curly-haired mother of three, and Musharaf Hussain, a Pakistani- born CPA in suit and tie, do not hesitate to jump into the fray. But when the question before the parents is who should be the mayor of New York, or governor, or a member of Congress, or President of the United States, both of them opt out. Like most of their neighbors here, and like nearly half of the nation's voting-age population, they do not cast ballots in government elections. In the 1992 presidential election, for instance, only 55.2 percent of those 18 years of age or older turned out, according to the Committee for the Study of the American Electorate. In off-year congressional elections, participation sinks even lower. In 1994, the year that Republicans wrested control of Congress, only 38.8 percent of the voting-age public took part, the American Electorate group reported. That meant more than 113 million adults stayed on the side- lines. They contribute to a political silence that has been interpreted by academics as everything from content- ment with the status quo that breeds non-participation to simple apathy to profound alienation from all aspects of society. But what do these non-voters say when given a chance to speak for themselves? In Queens, they say they need time to make a living. Some talk of not wanting to take off work to vote and others of wanting to stay out of the jury pool - a widespread, but nonetheless false belief since jury pools are drawn not just from registration records, but also from other lists, including drivers' licenses. But most importantly, they believe a ballot is no way to make their views known, no way to have an impact. It merely presents a false choice. "You've got a couple of check boxes," says AlQaisi, 28. "Where do you put down your opin- ion?" Explains Hussain, who is 44: "The difference be- tween the candidates is so small. Dump one?" He turns his palms out. "But select who?" Many of the non-voters here are far from disen- gaged. They not only volunteer at their children's schools and tend to their sick parents, they run toy drives at church and organize prayer sessions at the mosque. They have protested South African apartheid and the Bosnian arms embargo. Why would they be involved at that level yet not vote? "Maybe because you see the end results" in community work, muses AlQaisi. "Even an election itself is just a beginning." Indeed, if the non-voters questioned recently here are the norm, they have concluded that America's problems are too complex to solve and that govern- . Bud, a 5-year-old retired racing greyhound (top), waits for her owner, Megan Connolly, 26, while she fills out her ballot in Portland, Maine, yesterday. in another city, Saco, Maine, 1-year-old Seth Rondeau (above) waits for his grandmother, Syndi Simard, to cast her vote on the anti-gay rights referendum, ment serves only the will of corporations, no matter who holds power. The true rulers in their America are the money men; who care more about special tax breaks and untram- meled commerce than fixing potholes, teaching chil' dren or putting the country's might on the side of justice in world affairs. - ELECTION Continued from Page 1 Putman is optimistic for what is left to come. "This is an even greater victory for the Republican party," Putman said. "I want to gather ideas from the commu- nity on what they want from council, and then I'll deal with what the rest of council is pushing for." Once again the 5th Ward elected Democrat and Mayor Pro-tem Christo- pher Kolb. He defeated Republican John Ballew and Libertarian Renee Emry. "Whenever there is an election you never know who will win," Kolb said. "I am hon- ored that my ward chose me to serve one more term." Kolb said he believes council will continue working toward a consensus.. Puttman Emry's candi- dacy was controversial because of her pro-marijuana stance and her trial for allegedly selling marijuana to two un- dercover police officers last summer. "I knew," she said when asked if the arrest had im- peded her chances of win- ning. But Emry , said she remains content that she got her message out.. Ballew said he will remain po- litically active Vereen-Dixon but is not plan- ning anything for the immediate future. "We had some great candidates this year," said Ann Arbor Mayor Ingrid Sheldon, a Republican. "There are some really nice people on council, and hope- fully we can all work together." Student par- ticipation was low in the elec- tion. By the time the polls closed . about 21 people : had voted at the <" 4th Ward's 1st precinct site at Kolb the Michigan Union. -Daily Staff Reporters Tim O'Conn-ell, Laurie Mayk and Anupama Reddy contributed to this report. STUDENT CUSTODIANS JOHN'S® THE MICHIGAN UNION IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR I