-I LOW COST COOPERATIVE s CHILD CARE Two full-time coordinators; Half days available. CORNTREE, 1910 Hill Hrs: 8-5:30; CALL 994-4513 PART-TIME - STUDENTS & TEACH ERS MEN, WOMEN. ALL AGES. $500 commission per month to start possible. Part-time for follow- ing up thousands of inquiries about the world-renowned Encyclopedia Brittania. ALSO IN-STORE SALES For interview,, call Mr. Sultini 569-0575 An equal opportunity employer, Paqe 2-Sunday, September 30, 1979-The Michigan Daily Kcinichfaces close race in Cleveland's mayoral primary -J CLEVELAND (AP) - Dennis Kucinich, the scrappy mayor whose two years in office have embroiled him in bitter fights over the city's-tottering finances and his abrasive leadership style, will be judged by the voters Tuesday in a non-partisan mayoral primary. Five candidates are vying for the $50,000-a-year job and voters will narrow the field to two for the Nov. 6 general election. Kucinich, whose 33rd birthday is on Oct. 8, survived a recall attempt by only 236 votes a year ago. Last fall, he was sidelined for five weeks with an ulcer-in part becaue of the hectic pace of his former 18-hour days. The city also has failed twice to meet loan payment deadlines, with a third default looming next Saturday. POLLS SHOW him running a strong, second to Lt. Gov. George Voinovich. Voinovich, 48, is a Republican. Kucinich is a Democrat who unseated veteran Mayor Ralph Perk in 1977 without party support. Others in the race are Democrats Basil Russo, 32, majority leader of the City Council; and state Sen. Charles Butts, 37; and machine press operator Thabo Ntweng, 31, a candidate of the Socialist Workers Party. "It's a referendum on Dennis," said Cuyahoga County Democratic Chair- man Timothy Hagan. "What you are going to have is Dennis being judged by the voters in the primary." Hagan said the race is too close to call because of the uncertainty about the turnout. Of the 290,000 registered voters, polls show at least one-third have yet to make up their mind. ROBERT HUGHES, chairman of the county Republican organization, said he is sure the runoff wiill feature Voinovich and Kucinich. Kucinich has focused his campaign entirely on Voinovich and has often discussed, without apologizing, his out- spoken, often acrimonious style. "All I had to do in the last two years to gain the favor of the media, the praise of editors, the laurels of the Growth Association was to remain silent . . . and keep my lips sealed as dozens of dirty deals danced across my desk," Kucinich said yesterday in his only debate with his challengers. "If I had done these things I wouldn't be here this afternoon facing an uphill battle against the quiet onslaught of corrupt corporatepowers secretly fun- neling cash into the campaign of the Republican, in order to steal back the city quietly, like thieves in the night." KUCINICHI SAYS his problems were inherited and that he needs two more years to turn around the industrialized Lake Erie-port city of 600,000 residents. Voinovich, who attacked Kucinich for discord in government promises an administration of cooperation and maturity. "You'll hear noise from City Hall, but it will be constructive noise, useful noise-the noise of mature, experien- ced, professional city officials going tok bat for every single resident of Cleveland," Voinovich said. Similarly, Butts and Russo have been focusing on Kucinich and on bread-and- butter issues such as clean streets and beefed up police protection. Ntweng, who is viewed as completely out of the running, has nonetheless won applause with his jibes at the other candidates. "No one has professed to be the frien- ds of anyone," Ntweng says. "Bickering means nothing to us-the people." "WHERE DO OUR RIGHTS COME FROM?" Lecturer James Spencer, C.S.B. OCT 2,12:15 pm Michigan League Sponsored by the Christian Science Organization CLEVELAND MAYOR Dennis Kucinich will be opposed by four other candi- dates for mayor in Tuesday's nonpartisan primary. The two top vote getters will face each other in a run-off election for mayor on Nov. 6. Carter, Portillo end talks on pollution, oil (Continued from Page 1Y Carter administration negotiators would press Mexico to pay for damage caused to the U.S. shoreline by the recent oil well accident. Mexico has resisted such suggestions so far, and Carter has conceded publicly that no in- ternational agreement exists that would force Mexico to pay. At the conclusion of two days of talks here, both Carter and Lopez Portillo were 'smiling and saying they were pleased with the outcome. Their final, 90-minute session in the White House also covered the Middle East, Cuba, the U.S.-Soviet strategic arms limitation treaty, long-term prospects for U.S. purchase of Mexican oil, and cross-border sales of elec- tricity. I 0, 0 ERIC'S FACTORY OUTLET Warmups-40% off Women's Jog Shoes PUMA-TIGERS $1S-$20 Women's BANCROFTS $10.95 2 pair for $20 Men's BROOKS $12.95 SPEEDOS $9.00 Leotard & Tight Sets $9.25 40" Rain Jacket $16.95 White Stag Vests - Ir'S were $65 now $35.95 Rain Poncho-side snaps $1.75 Plaid Shirts $8-$12 Baconta T-Necks were $ i9.5o'now 510.50 406 E. Liberty- 663-6771 2 blocks off State St. WHITE HOUSE spokesman Jerrold Schecter said the two presidents spoke for less than 10 minutes about Cuba, but he refused to say whether Lopez Por- tillo had agreed with Carter's position that the presence of a Soviet combat brigade on the Caribbean island is unacceptable. The Mexicans are believed to be far less concerned about the matter than the Carter ad- ministration, however. The closest thing to a solid agreement that came out-of Lopez Portillo's visit, his second to the United States during Carter's presidency, was the anti- pollution accord. A joint statement issued after the final session said the two leaders "agreed on the need for both countries to prevent actions on one side of the land or maritime boundary from degrading the environment on the other side. They''also instructed their ad- ministrations to give 'a high priority to such questions." CARTER AND Lopez Portillo asked their negotiators to report on whether an anti-pollution agreement "is possible or appropriate," the statement said.t There has been concern in the United States not only over the highly publicized oil spill, but also over such less familiar problems as the* New River, a polluted stream which flows northward across the border. THE MICHIGAN DAILY r (USPS 344-900) Volume LXXXX, No. 22 Sunday, September 30, 1979 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornin during the University year at 42 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Septem- ber through April (2 semesters); 13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POST- MASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. 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