ELECTION LAWS See Editorial Page Y it igau &t ai'l ALRIGHT High T - 40 Low -- 24° See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVII, No. 150 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, April 8, 1977 Ten Cents Ten Pages I F UY EE NE v HAN CALL DNiL It's official Incumbent Democrat Albert Wheeler has been re-elected mayor by one vote. Yesterdaysmorn- ing the Ann Arbcr Board of Canvassers signed the certification papers which verify that Wheeler de- feated his Republican opponent Louis Belcher 10,660 to 10,659 in Monday's municipal election. Belcher now has until 9:10 a.m. April 13 to file for a recount. Belche said Wednesday that he intends to have most of the city's 67 precincts recounted. Wheeler will start his new term Monday. A goof We reported in Wednesday's edition that Sharon Wilke, a University student, was allowed to cast her vote in the city election Monday after the polls closed at Markley Hall. That is incorrect. The polls were about to close, but she had arrived at Markley just before 8:00 p.m., and was able to cast her vote. Happenings .. AFSCME members will collect donations around banks today for a support fund for work- ers fired in the aftermath of their recent strike .applications are availableat 554 Thompson for Project Outreach's "Internship in adolescence" for Fall, 1977 . . . the University Gospel Choir will perform on the Diag at 12:15 . . . the First Methodist Church at State and Huron, holds a Good Friday worship observance from 12:30 to 2:00 . .. Salat-A-Juma holds a religious organiz- ationali eeting at 407 N. Ingalls at 1:00 . . UCLA professor Sandra Thompson will lecture on "Serial Verb Construction in Asia and Africa: Syntax, Semantics, Pragmatics, and Typology" in the West Conference Rm. of the Rackham Bldg. at, 2:00 . . . the Undergraduate Women's Organiza- tion sponsors a women's coffee hour in Rm. 3411 of the Michigan Union . . . Assaf Kfouri speaks on "Lebanon - Post-War Developments" in the Union's Assembly Hall at 7:30 . . . Julian Moody speaks on "Food and Attitude" at 8:00, Canter- bury House, corner Catherine and Division . finally, tee "Legs Over Easy", an "inter-arts ex- perience" of dance, poetry, music, slides, film and sculpture, Studio Theater of the new Univer- sity Dance Bldg., 1310 N. University Court, at 8:00. " A fabulous flipper flopper It was bound to happen eventually. Remember that old "Who" hit, a little ditty by the name of "Pinball Wizard"? You know, it's the song about the deaf, mute and blind pinball player who: ain't got no distractions, can't hear no buzzers or bells, can't see no lights a-flashin' plays by sense of smell. Well, if those words strike a familiar chord, meet Bill Shalongo, a 21-year-old Penn State chemistry major who is blind in his right eye, has 20/24,000 vision in his left eye and-you guessed it-loves to flop those flippers. Instead of smell though, Sha- longo apparently uses a keen sense of hearing. "Basically, I play by sound, hearing the ball roll around on the wooden surface" says Shalongo. "You can tell approximately where it is by what bells it rings or where it hits the bumper." It works. "He really plays very well," says George Steele, manager of an amusement arcade near campus, "He's not just lucky." And you thought you were something special. " Sooty story For Rodney Arthur Salas, convicted burglar, the easy part was escaping from the county jail. Things got a bit sticky, though, when Salas tried to sneak into an apartment complex by way of the chimney. Naturally, as he slinked down the flue, Salas managed to wedge himself in such a way that his hand poked out of the fireplace in the lounge area. Still, when a housekeeper discov- ered the -unhappy fugitive and called firefighters around 6 a.m., Salas gave it the old college try. He told them he had been placed in the chimney by fraternity brothers at the University of Pacific, and that he needed to be dislodged by 8 so he could make it to athletic practice. Skeptical fire- men guessed otherwise and called the men in blue. Salas was' freed and, after a brief struggle, sur- rendered. Quick thinking, Rodney old man, but no banana. On the inside.. . .aThe Page 3 Digest offersrthe dismal facts of last month's 1.1 per cent rise in wholesale prices . . . Kevin Switzer chides orange juice queen Anita Bryant's anti-homosexual stance for the Editorial Page . . . Arts Page features Paula Hunter's preview of next week's Graduate Dance Concert . . . and nlav ball! The Tigers did just that yesterday and dropped their opener. Sports Page has the details. An active Ford dismisses age as handicap in 1980 By MARGARET YAO Former President Gerald Ford, who has tacitly indicated a willingness to run for the presidency again in four years, yesterday brushed aside mention of his age as a detrimental factor to his candidacy. He will be 67 in 1980. Ford, who closes out a five-day sojourn here today, told The Daily in an exclusive interview: "I don't think the numerical years of life are necessarily a fundamental criterion. I think it's the state of the man's mind, body and ideas that really are of importance." APPEARING DRAWN and fatigued after a hectic week of answering questions from breakfast to bedtime, the ex-President said tha: his role as adjunct professor has been "most enjoyable," adding that it is only one of several activities he has undertaken since he left office. "I plan to go to four or five college campuses a year, including the University of Michigan . . . I intend to make one documentary a year with NBC. and I also intend to write a book. "I intend to have some political involvement, more or less depending on certain circumstances. I intend to improve my golf game-and my tennis. So I'm not going to be sitting around and vegetating " he said. Carefully qualifying any talk of his candidacy in 1980 with a "maybe," Ford would not speculate on what factors may keep him from running. However, his wife, Betty, apparently is not likely to be a roadblock. Noting that he always consults her when making plans he said. "If past history is any guideline, I think Mrs. Ford wil' be supportive, whatever my decision." He also mentioned the names of Sen. Howard Baker of Tennessee, Gov. James Thompson of Illinois and Gov. William Milliken as potential Re- publican candidates. "BUT IT'S STILL too early to tell." he cautioned. "There are! senatorial, congressional, and gubernatorial elections in 1978, which may clear the air a bit." Asked about his unfulfilled, lifelong desire to be Speaker of the House, the former Minority Leader thoughtfully answered with visible emotion. "I obviously would have been very happy," he stressed "being Speaker of the House, I knew the routine, I knew the people, I was well-prepared by experience to exercise that responsibility.." He said his ascendance to the vice presidency and presidency was very fulfilling, but he added, "I still wanted to be a speaker -when you have a lifetime ambition that is not achieved, you regret it." Turning to higher education and the constantly rising tuition costs, the Michigan alumnus indicated that he felt the federal government was doing its share in helping students out. "I'M NO EXPERT, but the amount the federal government makes available nationally, is very, very high, either directly or by a loaning authority," he said. During his tenure in office he vetoed two bills that would ha: increased student loans and grants. Ford added, "It seems to me that the students shouldn't just expect the government to finance his or her education. The student, when possible, if his or her parents can't afford it, ought to make a contribution by his or her own labor, so to speak. That's what See FORD, Page 2 Doily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG Ford: Four more years? VIOLATES, CURRENCY REGULATIONS I sraeli leader Rabi~n resigns Citywinls building freeze delay By DAVID GOODMAN A ban on new city building permits, which critics charged would disrupt the local economy and push up rents, was over- turned by a state appeals court yesterday. Circuit Court Judge Robert Fink ordered the ban March 30 based on his finding that the city was dumping inadequately treat- ed sewage into the Huron River. Fink's ruling came on a class action suit initiated by residents of the high income Lansdowne development opposed to moder- ate cost apartment construction in their neighborhood. YESTERDAY'S appeals court action means that any ban on new construction in the city will be delayed until the court acts on the city's appeal of Judge Fink's ruling. According to City Attorney Bruce Laidlaw, this could take anywhere from five to 18 months. Ann"Arbor's present sewage treatment plant can handle up to 15 million gallons of sewage per day, or up to a rate of 28 million gallons per day for short periods of time. Both sides in the case agree the city now ex- ceeds these standards. They sharply disagree, how- ever, on how great a threat to health this presents. and on how long the city should be given to See CITY, Page 2 Withdraws bid for re-election in May By AP and Reuter JERUSALEM-Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, facing a personal financial scandal over alleged illegal foreign bank accounts, resigned from his post yesterday, .and then withdrew his candidacy for the premiership in Is- rael's May election. Rabin announced his decision 16 hours after two in- fluential Israeli newspapers gave new reports about he and his wife allegedly violating Israeli currency regula- tions by having dollar bank accounts in the United States. THE PAPERS mentioned sums of up to $20,000. When the allegations were first made last month, Rabin said there was $2,000 in a sin- gle Washington savings ac- count. "I don't deny that a mistake was made in not closing the account within the required six months," Rabin said at the tim e. ." i., s .;z By law, he should have closed the account six months after he left his post as ambassador to Washington in mid-1973. Rabin, 55, heads a caretaker Rabi cabinet which must stay in office until general elections in five weeks. But he said he was ending his office as prime minister "as far as is possible within the framework of the law." Rabin said in an unscheduled television broadcast' that ht made the decision after Israel's Attorney General suggested his wife Leah might have to stand trial for the currency offense. "I HAVE STATED many times that we bear joint responsi- bility for this. If there will be a decision to put her on trial, I stand with her," he said, adding that he would not hide behind any parliamentary immunity. See ISRAELI, Page 2 Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG footloose Just as you can tell a fireman by his red suspenders, a baker by his white apron and a banker by his pin-stripes, so too you can usually tell a'secret service agent by his shiny black shoes. These four federal feet stood guard outside a Rackham lecture hall yesterday where ex-president Ford was speaking. Their f aces were not available for comment. DN&: Science's Pandora's box? Carter asks for new research fguidelines WASHINGTON (Reuter)-The Carter Administration has called for a law to regulate genetic engineering, citing the danger that scientists could accidentally let loose a deadly new organism on mankind. Joseph Califano. Secretary of Health Education and Welfare, !There's always dan- ger of a Andromeda kind of Strain. watchdog group overseas research By LAURA LIEBLER First of two parts Two years ago recombinant DNA research was caught in a blizzard of controversy. University lawyers and microbiologists, historians and English instructors were all lost in debate. But the storm has since subsided here, and now only occasional flurries That's -why we feel we h a v e to h a v e such - S - , ,. ;;:>'? : ' ate :. } k