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October 13, 1976 - Image 2

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1976-10-13

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Page Two

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Wednesday, October 13, 1975

Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 13, 1 976~

Foda
(Continued from Page 1)
ed a personal clarification
from Ford, Kuropas said all
who attended paid their own
way to Washington.
AFTER THE meeting, Ford
flew to New York City, where
he told a largely Jewish crowd:
"I intend to visit Israel and
other Middle East countries
when such a trip will contribute
to a permanent Middle Eastl
peace."

A

dmits error
A White House aide said Ford than a "ferocious outpouring
called'the meeting in hopes he of bitter words by Mr. Carter."
can "put the Eastern Europe Carter, in Eau Claire, Wis.,
matter behind him." Monday, said rumors allegedly
AT A Columbus Day cere- being spread by Ford campaign
workers about his having had
mony yesterday in Washington, an extramarital affair are
Ford again tried to smooth over "seamy" lies.
the debate remark by saying:
"People of the Old World still "IT'S JUST one of those kind
look to the New World as the of seamy things that is dis-
champion of freedom, the cham- tasteful, but it hasn't hurt us
pion of human rights. America' because there is no truth to
has been their hope and their any, of these allegations," Car-
help and we will never let them rt said

Hua named new
Chinese chairman

Plant paradise pro

(Continued from Page 11
-it will mean the top hierarchy
has been purged of its most
famous radicals.
ONE FOREIGNER said he
understood the move came last
Thursday when guards were
placed around their residences
and they were told not to leave.
Two days later the first post-
ers went up here proclaiming
Premier Hua Kuo-feng as chair-
man in succession to Mao.
Analysts are convinced Hua's
appointment, which was not con-
firmed by a government spokes-
man until last night, was settled

reason for the arrests, diplomatsI
speculated.
They said it was extremely un-
likely that the four politburoI
members could have hoped to
gather sufficient army support
for a military takeover.
The four all rose to power
together. Chiang Ching, a for-
mer movie actress who was
Mao's fourth wife, played no
political role until she helped
her husband launch the cultural
revolution in Shanghai.
VICE-PREMIER Chang Chun-
chiao, the most powerful of the
group, is the army's political
commissar and a member of;

(Continued from Page 1)
what drew freshwoman Karen
Russell to the ballroom yester-
day.
"My mother's in the hospit,
and she likes big plants th t
spread out," said Russell, "so
I thought I'd get one for her
room."
"I love plants and I guess'
I have a green thumb," she
added. "If you could see my
room you'd see what I mean."
Sophomore Ann Schneider
said she "was disappointed they:
sold out of all the things I want-.

ed. Last year I had a room that
looked like a jungle and I need.
to restock."I
Some of thetother plant Peru-,
secs were not as foliage-wiseI
as Russell or Schneider, how-l
ever. "A green thumb?" said
sophombre Jim Kulik. "No, theI
only thing it's green from is
from smoking some other stuff."
ALTHOUGH many of the
shoppers expressed a love for
plants, only freshwoman San-;
dy Green admitted, "I like to
talk to my plants."

hf crates
Mike McCollum, from College
Market and Research, observed
that the Dumcane plants were
selling thetfastest. "We've only
got one out of a hundred left"
he said early in the afternoon.
McCollum said the exotic red-
tipped Ti-plant and the Hoya
Carnosa Tri-color were the most
unusual plants being sold.
"We've all had your basic Spi-
der plant or fern but these are
new. hybrid plants which are
not like the other ones. I mean,
they don't sing Yankee Doodle
Dandy, but they're nice plants.'

4i

Ford's debate remark had down."
brought immediate outcries Ford held a strategy session A spokesperson for . Ford's
from leaders of various groups at he hi tey onsMon campaign committee denied any
representing Americans of East at the White House on Monday, role in spreading the rumors
European descent. The next and one of those attending was about Carter, but columnist
day, Ford began backing off Sen. Bob Dole, his running Jack Anderson, who first re-
the comment. He later said he mate. Dole, addressing the ported the story, said the ru-
did not concede Soviet domina- Eastern Europe issue, said mors were fed to him by four
tion of East European coun- Ford's debate statement has staff members of the President
tries. had no adverse effect other Ford Committee.
Anderson, who refused to
name the four Ford sources,
" said he had found no truth to
the rumors.
Anderson said on ABC's
A WOM RU EN'S GROUP uu"Good Morning America"
show that "Ford's campaign
aides have been searching Jim-
Exploring the issues and my Carters past for asex scan-:
-ebedal." He said the Ford cam-
oblems of being female paign sources supplied him
nd Je h with the name of a woman they
nd ewishsuggested had once had an af-
(a nd on campus).fair with Carter and that they
later offered him the names of
four other women-.
Wednesdays atl7:00 p.m.
Alice Lloyd Counseling Office if
FOR UNDERGRADS you
Meekreh see
news

some time ago.
AN ATTEMPT to tan
the decision could hav
Riegle,
e2year
(Continued from Ptg
The flap was the re
misunderstanding betv
Rex Barnes - Machi
bate chairman Jack!
president of Perry Dru
and the candidates' ti
secretaries. Robinson
ially given his approva
attendance, but char
mind at the last min;
he thought that YPCr
all prominent Detroit
people, didn't want th
cal affiliations publici
the candidates prevail
Join The D

the party standing committee. (Continued from Page 1) boycott has been played down,
A scholarly looking administra- funds (to pay teaching assist- at the University since "there:
nper with tor, he has been regarded as a ants) by re-arranging their pri- would be no more than the nor-
e been a likely future premier. orities, not raising tuition." mal class cutting here if we
did support the boycott."
OLIVER CARSTEN, a repre- Luker declined to predict'
sentative from GEO, added, turnout for the rally.
S or'se "GEO has always sided with MSA members also voiced
Eschendstudent government in the fight support of the newly formed
against higher tuition. I do, University Gay Rights Action
however, think teaching assist- Group. This group is composed
If 'ee tu l t1on ants should get (pay) they can of both the lesbian and gay
lve on." male advocates and members
Earlier in the meeting, Luker of the University and city com-
ge 1) LAST NIGHT Esch hedged on related progress on plans for munities.
a couple of earlier charges he today's anti-tuition hike rally
sult of a made against Riegle. and state-wide class boycott in ASSEMBLY member Wendy
weeN den Asked if he agreed with for- Lansing. Luker said a number Goodman stated that as a group
ne No. 5 mer State Gov. George Rom- of students had already contact- trvin to eliminate discrimina-
Robinson, ney's statement last week that ed him about participating. tion of any kind at the Univer-
ug stores, Riegle was "unstable," he sity "it is MSA's resoonsibility
wo press sought to temper the statement. HE ADDED that the class to see that these people are not
had init- Esch said that Romney was re-:
1 to press ferring to the Democratic can-
nged his didate's legislative record, not
ute when his personality. Asked if he,
members, thought Riegle's divorce was a
business- political issue, he said, "You!
eir politi- can't separate someone's per-
[zed. But sonal life from the public trust
~ed. Esch also qualified an earlier
charge he had made, that Rie-
aily gle had never written or spon-
sored a bill that became law.

discriminated against."
In other business, Assembly
member, Walter Borland was
elected the new MSA treasurer
by an overwhelming majority.
Borland said that within two
weeks figures would be avail-
able on the amount of revenue
MSA has received from the new
negative check-off funding pro-
cedure.
Under this procedure students
may indicate their withdrawal
of fingncial support for MSA by
che,king the appropriate box on
their t'ition bill. According to
LDker, at th- beginning of Oc-
toher. with 50 per cent of tui-
tion acco'inted for, 7,000 stu-
dTts had withdrawn support.
He said he predicts 60 per cent
fPiding for MSA this term.

MSA to support G EOrally

FeatureN

happen
call
76-DAILY

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"I'VE INDICATED that he's
not written any legislation,"
! Esch said.
"Most people have really had
it with these Nixon-style cam-
paign tactics," said Riegle, re-j
sponding to the charges. "I've I
been trying to clean up those
distortions. For Esch to make
that charge is totally without
foundation. He knows what he's
saying isn't true. When votes
are counted, I think my op-
ponent will find that that kind
of conscious distortion was a
real mistake for him."
Riegle said he was a chief
sponsor and author of the Na-
tional Community Schools bill,
the War Powers Act, and was a
leader of the move to, repeal the
Gulf of Tonkin resolution. He ad-
ded that he was prevented from
pasing many bills because he
served on both the House Ap-
propriations Committee and the
House International A f f a i r s,
Committee and the House Inter-
national Affairs Committee f o r
several years, which he s a i d
were "not legislative commit-j
tees."-
THE DEBATE was picketed
by about 30 members of a De-
troit - area anti-abortion group.
Diane Fagelman, speaking for'
a group calling itself "Life- 1
span," said, "I think it'll show
Don Riegle that there are peo-
ple out there who are for tIhe!
Human Life Amendment (which
prohibits abortion on demand)."
Riegle, who opposes the
amendment,wa4 routed by
staff aides through a different
entrance to the Northfield Hil-
ton to avoid a confrontation
with the group.I

Senate candidates Marvin Esch (left) and D
sues last night in Troy at the Northfield Hi
ence reacted politely to Riegle but saved th
turn to an unregulated free market system.

Daily Photo by CHRISTINA SCHNEIDER
Onald Riegle (right) clash over economic is-
ilton. The exclusively business-oriented audi-
heir biggest cheers for Esch's call for a re-

- .. - .------.--. . . .-.--. . . .-V-__
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THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SORORITIES
present a

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Open 8:30 a.m.

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Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday
October 12, 13 and 14
10 o.m.-8 p.m.
sponsored by the
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to benefit
MOTT CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL CARDIAC UNIT
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included with those dinners:
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