SUNDAY MAGAZINE See Inside Y A& A6F tr4t 9 an 11i& REGRESSIVE High-47 Low-16 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 157 Ann Arbor, Michigan--Sunday, April 11, 1976 10 Cents Eight Pages V Milliken, the Mafia and wxyz Governor William Milliken said yesterday that a segment from an interview with him broadcast Friday night by WXYZ (Channel 7) was "the shod- diest cheap shot and the grossest breach of ethics I've ever encountered." The film story showed the governor storming out of his office after Reporter Vince Wade asked a touchy question about his ap- pearance at the opening of a Southgate restaurant owned by a reputed Mafia leader. Wade had begun the interview with a query about the 1976 presidential contest, then handed the governor a copy of a newspaper carrying a photograph of Milliken six weeks ago at the opening of Anthony Zerilli's Spaghetti Palace. When Wade asked him to explain, the governor responded: "You didn't ask me anything about this. You got me here under false pretenses." Later, Milliken's press secretary charged the Channel 7 reporter with "deliberate misrepresentation." Happenings ... ... show no signs of impending finals. Today, at 2 p.m. in Michigan Union Rm. 3209, People for Self-Management discuss the "Scanlon Plan for Worker's participation" . . . The Senior Physical Therapy Students conduct an open house with tours and demonstrations from 2:30 to 4:00 at the Physical Therapy Dept. on the third floor of 'U' Hospital . . . Dr. Nathaniel Branden answers the question "Does God Exist?" for anyone who's still not sure at 3:00 in Conference Rm. C at the League . . . Environmentalist Barry Commoner speaks on "The Poverty of Power" at 7:30 in Rackham . . . You can catch the film "Last Grave at Dimbaza" on the conditions in South Africa at 8:00 at the Ecumenical Campus Center, 921 Church . + Happenings continue Monday with a meeting to discuss the creation of a Free University in Ann Arbor next fall at Canterbury House, corner of Catherine and Division, at 8 p.m. Here we go again Smilin' Jimmy Carter's "ethnic purity" gaffe last Tuesday promises to dog him as much as Ron- ald Reagan's infamous $90 billion welfare plan and George McGovern's embarrassing $1,000-a- person tx idea. "Why do you keep bringing it up if you consider it racist?" asked the presidential candidate of reporters in -Kansas City before jet- ting to Detroit yesterday. "I have disavowed it and apologized for it," said Carter, who would just as soon drop the subject. But the former Geor- gia governor seems pessimistic about acceptance of his plea: "I will keep apologizing it and keep explaining it to the press until they are satisfied," he said. It's gonna be a long campaign, Jimmy. Day of the dolphin Is Flipper running kamikaze missions for the Pentagon? That's what the folks at Red Star, the Soviet Army daily newspaper, charged yesterday in a story about the training and education of sea creatures in San Diego, Calif. The newspaper claimed dolphins are being "turned into kami- kazes" at the Marine Life Sciences Dept. of the Navy's Center for Underwater Research, where "They are loaded with explosive and taught to intercept enemy ships and submarines." Further- more, "Dolphins with knives attached to their flippers are taught there to fight with underwater divers." And you thought they were cute. What's your price? Sixty men in New Delhi, India were sterilized last week in exchange for free tickets to an eve- ning's entertainment featuring nearly 100 top, ac- tors and actresses. The incentive is so popular, in fact, that the show's being held two extra days so more men can undergo the vasectomies. Tickets for the stars normally run as high as 29 bucks. d Ho phead Katie Wise, a veteran police dispatcher for the Rock Island, Ill. Police Department, is sorry she answered the phone yesterday morning. "This guy calls up and says, 'You're not going to believe me. I'm not drunk, I haven't been drinking. But I just saw a kangaroo hop through my neighbor's yard." The caller was a rate clerk for a local transporta- tion company. The clerk said he was walking his dog about 6:30 a.m. when a 3-foot-tall kangaroo hopped over the hill across the street. A squad car dispatched to the scene failed to find the mis- placed marsupial. On the inside.. . Steven Selbst writes about genetic counseling for this term's last Sunday Magazine, an issue which bids adieu to Magazine Editor Cheryl Pite as she prepares to move on to bigger and more lucrntive enterprises at The Detroit Free Press . .. and our Sports Page, whose editors are staying put for as long as anyone can forsee, features an account of the Tigers' opener ag-inst Cleveland by Paul Campbell. Dems launch state primary race Woodcock suggests possibility of supporting Carter campaign By PHILIP BOKOVOY and ELAINE FLETCHER Special To rhe Daily DETROIT - Democratic Presidential hopefuls J i m- my Carter, George Wallace and Morris Udall launched their Michigan primary campaigns yesterday in the Motor .City, and one influ- ential Detroiter - United Auto Worker (UAW) Presi- dent Leonard Woodcock - strongly hinted that he would leap onto the Jimmy Carter bandwagon. Last night, the three can- didates pounded away at the problems of unemploy- ment and the economy be- fore a crowd of over 2500 at the annual Democratic Jefferson-Jackson fund- raising dinner. EARLIER, Woodcock fell just jest short of personally commit- ting himself to the Carter cam- paign. "I personally am very sym- pathetic to Carter," said Wood- cock., "I might be endorsing him before the Michigan p r i- mary but not until after Penn- sylvania.'' Woodcock, along with Detroit Mayor Coleman Young, accom- panied Carter to a rally of about 1200 supporters, in the UAW's local 174 union hall. Young has already said that he is endors- ing Carter. Today he reaffirm- ed his support, but only "through the Michigan state pri- mary." AT THE dinner, however, it was Udall who received t h e warmest reception from Michi- gan Democrats. "I was down in the dumps about the U d a l l campaign, but as I got into town a -sign said 'Welcome to MO- town'," said the strapping Ari- zona representative, drawing a laugh and later a standing ova- tion from the crowd., Carter has been reluctant to campaign in favor of Federal jobs for the unemployed. Only recently he switched his position to support a Federal job pro- gram if the national unemploy- ment rate should rise above three per cent. Last night he reaffirmed this new stand saying, "we need to work together to let all people have a chance to work." EARLIER in the day Carter again denied that he had sought the vice-presidential nomination after the 1972 na- tional convention. According to Georgia legislator Julian Bond, Carter invited Bond to the Georgia governor's mansion to ask if Bond would suggest his name to McGovern as the number two man on the 1972 ticketrafter Missouri Senator Thomas Eagleton withdrew. "I never invited him (Bond) to the governor's mansion and I did not discuss it (the vice- presidential spot) with him," Carter told the Daily. Bond called Carter a "liar and prevaricator" when he ap- peared locally earlier this week, for denying this. CARTER and his supporters See DEMS., Page 2 Ford asks restraint i~n Lebanese crisis By AP and Renter DALLAS - Amid reports that Syrian troops have crossed into Lebanon, President Ford yes- terday urged restraint by all parties in order to achieve peace in that strife-torn coun- try. "Our policy in Lebanon is to achieve a permanent cease-fire and to accomplish a political settlement of a very complicat- ed and controversial problem," Ford told a news conference as he campaigned for a second day for votes in the May 1 Tex- as primary. RONALD REAGAN, Ford's challenger for the Republican presidential nomination, attack- ed the administration's Leba- nese policy later yesterday. The former California gover- nor, campaigning in Seattle, charged that the United States "missed the boat in Lebanon." "The U. S. ignored that situ- ation as it was developing at a time when we might have been helpful in preventing this blood- shed," Reagan said. He said the United States "should have volunteered its services" but not with troops. FORD, WHEN asked about published reports that Syrian military units had moved into Lebanon, replied, "I don't be- lieve there has been any rash action by any party so far and we certainly will use our maxi- mum diplomatic influence to make certain that doesn't hap- pen." Ford also told the news con- ference that he endorses inde- See FORD, Page 2 Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN FORMER GEORGIA Gov. Jimmy Carter, Alabama Gov. George Wallace and Arizona Rep. Morris Udall prove once again that politics. make for strange bedfellows during yesterday's Jef- ferson-Jackson Day dinner in Detroit. When they aren't posing for pictures they are to be found attacking each other as they each seek the Democratic nomination for President. Walilacefidsfrenlycrowds d urN Motor Cty Ctooer duf- ig NO LOT Cit'ly stOparw ' By LOIS JOSIMOVICH special To The Daily DETROIT - The plane's en- gine screams as it swoops down onto the runway like a downed eagle. Painted on its tail a r e three words in bold brown paint -"Trust the People". "Here he comes," shouts someone, and the crowd ap- plauds as G e o r g e Wallace wheels himself across the windy airfield, flanked by a line of supporters and police. HE HAS arrived in Detroit for a day of stumping in antici- pation of the May 18 Michigan Democratic Primary. "I'm glad God gave us a good day," sighs a hard-core Wallace fan. Flash bulbs pop and gum cracks as Alabama's fifty-six year old governor prepares to speak into a microphone rigged up on the field. Wallace, with a soft drawl and a slight smile, thanks his aud- ience for their support. "I WANT TO say that, if we're ever run out of Alabama, we'll go to Michigan," he says. Wallace expects a win in Michigan - where he pulled in fifty-one per cent of the vote in the 1972 Democratic P r i - mary. Although he is "not counting on the support of the upper echelons" of the labor move- ment, he believes the "rank and file" of workers are behind him. "He's stepping forward for the working class, regardless of his health," said Carl Suther- land, a Wallace supporter from Madison Heights. AND HIS expectations may not be entirely unwarranted. About one-hundred fifty people came to greet the Alabaman at Detroit Metropolitan Airport yes- terday morning. Another 300 to 350 showed up for a mass Wal- lace rally at the airport's Ra- mada Inn later in the day. The women were arrayed in their best pantsuits or skirts "to look nice for the governor." Some wore earrings made of Wallace campaign buttons. THERE WAS abgreat show of red, white, and blue, and sou- See WALLACE, Page 2 SOC, MO.VE wi i win in MSA election By PHIL FOLEY The Student Organizing Committee (SOC) and MOVE have emerged the big winners in the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) election. The victors in the three day election were announced yesterday by Election Directors Elliot Chikofsky and Mark Bernstein following a marathon ballot counting ses- sion lasting 14 hours. Ten of the 13 seats on the Assembly were taken by campus parties with SOC and MOVE claiming three apiece. Campus Coalition and Screw MSA both received two seats, and the remaining three seats were taken by independents. The only three candidates to get seats on first choice votes under MSA's preferential voting system were Amy Blumen- thal (SOC), Bob Garber (Screw MSA), and Calvin Luker (SOC). SOC's third winning candidate, Wendy Goodman, was among the top five vote getters. The remaining five full-year seats were taken by F. Scott Kellman (MOVE), Mike Nash (MOVE), James Hudler (Screw MSA), Kenneth Wang (Campus Coalition) and G. J. (Jasper) DiGinseppe (Independent). The half year seats were taken by Dan Browning (MOVE), Brian Laskv (Cam- p's Coalition), Janey Katz (Independent) and Gerald Tim- mis (Independent). Along with Proposal A (CIA 'NSA recruitment on cam- pus), students passed Pronosals B throluih H by a wide margin. The proposals asked whether MSA practices in= Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN ALABAMA GOV. George Wallace proved yesterday that there is a form of bussing which he approves of. He received this warm greeting as supporters met his plane at Metro Airport, be- fore an appearance at the Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner in Detroit last night. Few students willing to work.o By MICHAEL YELLIN Despite the increase in student voting during this week's Michigan Student As- sembly (MSA) elections, few students are willing to work as MSA appointed members on University committees. Along with fac- ulty and administration members, the com- mittees make recommendations on Univer- sity policies. Jim Tompkins, acting chairman of MSA's Permanent Interviewing Committee (PIC), n 'U committees' says Mitchell, "and that's where all the decisions are made. Nobody's willing to work for nothing." PIC virtually ceased to function when its former chairman, Glen Engman, quit last month to be seated as president of the InterFraternity Council. It is alleged that Engman left behind a mass of work with no one to attend it. Engman claims that his leaving did not affect the number of students applying for committee seats, saying there is just "not therefore can't take part, he claims. Still a member of PIC, Engman says he is in the process of compiling a pamphlet ex- plaining the entire system. Elliot Chikofsky, who sits on the Academic Affairs Advisory Committee, expressed un- certainty on the students' role on this body. "I'I IS A little unclear about who we advise, I feel like its a body without a purpose," he says. Chikofsky points out another problem with the committees. He