ige Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Frigoy, December 31 1 v 10 MS4 continues vote tally: two seats won (Continued from Page 1) A corling to Fabian, the Mark regarded the remainder of the l1y-Oxford UHC election may ballot. be repeated due to a mix-up in NO RESULTS have been tal- filing procedures. One candi- lied yet on the MSA athletic date's name did not appear on events ticket policy referendum. the ballot. Although he had filed Results of the UHC election were not available at press for office before the deadline time. his petition was misplaced. U s SI li n;F{ i- lY si dst e w th n J o 16I to of h p Ford relative killed in crash Mmm" I 9.7 Loft Save and bund le old newspapers for recycl ing LEBANON, Tenn. ( P) - Les- KING'S WIDOW, Virginia, e Henry King, President said she had talked with the ord's half - brother, was legal- President. "I knew it was too y drunk when he was killed much for him to come, it involv- esterday in the head-on colli- ed too much, and I knew that don of his car and a truck, I had their prayers and sym- tate officials said. pathy . .. He sent me his love King, 53, was driving the and sympathy and Betty's wrong way on Interstate 40 at also." he time of the crash. Operators of Citizens Band radios who saw King driving A ROUTINE test by the Ten- the wrong way on the Interstate essee Highway Patrol of the said they tried unsuccessfully ood alcohol in King's body to warn him off the highway. egistered 0.14 per cent, said King had a CB radio, but it was Tim Henderson, the state Safety in the trunk of his car. department's information direc- King and Ford were sons of or. Under state law, a reading Leslie King. Ford's mother and f 0.10 per cent is considered the elder King were divorced egally intoxicated, in 1915 when Ford was 2. Henderson said there were FORD'S name originally was 2 fifths of wine and liquor in Leslie King Jr., but it was he car and an empty half-pint changed to Gerald Ford Jr. f Scotch whisky on the floor. when his mother remarried. Ford, who did not know his Ford was a teen-ager when alf - brother until the future he learned that the elder Ford resident was a college student, had adopted him. oes not plan to attend the fun- King was one of Ford's ral,, the White House said. The staunchest advocates in Ten- nessee - particularly in the rvice willbconductedtmor- Democratic stronghold on the ow in Cookeville, Tenn., where Cumberland Plateau a n d ing 'lived. Cookeville. Court asked to IV stay execution, (Continued from Page 1) Attorneys for other convicts on Utah's death row also have indicated plans to intervene, as has the ACLU. Meanwhile Warden Sam Smith of the Utah State Prison said he was attending to details in preparation for Gilmore's execution by firing squad at 7:37 a.m. Monday. That execu- tion time, decreed Wednesday by the 4th District Court Judge Robert Bullock after the state pardons board declined to les- sen the penalty, is less than five months after the slaying of which Gilmore was convicted. UNDER UTAH LAW con- demned persons choose between the firing squad and hanging, and tradition has seen those choosing the firing equad strap- psd into a wooden armchair with a hood on their heads. ei VALUABLE COUPON *£r4 I K Mr. Tony's delicious 9" or 12" PIZZA! Mr. Tony's delicious 14" PIZZA! SUBMARINES & PIZZA 1327 S. University FREE, FAST DELIVERY!!6'U1L Offersood for picku, dine-in or FREE DELIVERY at 1327 S. UniversitC location onEi COUPON EXPIRES DEC. 9, 1976 7 WORKSHOP on E N i "nderstanding and Relating to Aging Persons" NO CHARGE I Doily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG They could've danced. all night Students in Sylvie Pinard Lambert's Jazz Workshop class dance up a storm yes- terday in Barbour Gymnasium. StdnsiIyvePiadLmetsJzzWrso ls"aneu asomys 1 Friday, December 3 7-9 p.m. Saturday, December 4 )9 a.m.-3 p.m. Mark Kinney and Staff W/ESLEY FOUNDATION 602 E. Huron at State St. 668-6881 1 310 MAYNARD WEEKLY SPECIALS But Gilmore told Bullock, "I don't want a hood on my head. I'd like to stand and not wear a hood." Smith would not say whether he would grant Gilmore's re- quest. BUT HE SAID, "We don't see (the execution) as a show or ex- perience where someone can express bravado, go out in a blaze so to speak." If the execution is carried out, Gilmore will be taken from his isolation cell shortly before dawn ,and escorted to a secret spot on the 1,095-acre prison grounds. A red heart-shaped 'target would be pinned over his heart and five volunteer marksman, standing behind a screen 10 yards away, would fire at his heart on signal from a squad leader. Four of the rifles would have live bullets and one a blank so the marksmen, wlo already have been 'selected, would never know whether they fired a fatal shot. ASKED YESTERDAY what would be done if the volley was not fatal, Smith said that was not exnected to happen. But any coup. de grace would be by the firing equ ad, he said. While awaiting his execution, Gilmore has completed deals for film, book and magazine rights to his story worth about $500,000. sources in New York and Hollywood said yesterday. Much of the profits will go to charity and to families of Gil- more's victims, said Neow York literary agent Scott Meredith and . movie producer Charles Fries. MEREDITH, WHO is han- dling book and magazine rights, said, "I was mighty reluctant to handle this, but then they toll me that 40 per cent of the money would go to the families of the victims, and that made the difference. A spokesperson for the Amer- ican Broadcasting Co.' said the network bought script approval of the film for an undisclosed price. Before the unly'm l your records, wa not sound GUM9 my f rom,, nngout IBM BMW was man Mll I " a F RI DAY: TUESDAY: 1/2 price on beer 7 P.M.- 1 P.M. WEDNESDAY: 12 price on beer & liquor 7 P.M.- I0 P.M. 15c Hot Dogs 2-5 P.M. NEW GIANT 7 FT. T.V. Sfor viewing your favorite televised sporting events NO COVER 310 MAYNARD *u Magnified,you can.see record vinyl wearing away. The villain behind this destruction is friction. (If a diamond, cuts through steel, you can imagine what a diamond stylus does to vinyl records.) Fortunately, from outer space has come a solu- tion to record degradation. It's called Sound Guard* A by-product of re- search into dry lubricants for aerospace applications, Sound Guard record preservative puts a micro- scopically-thin (less than 0.000003") dry film on records to protect the grooves from damage. 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