THE Michigan Daily A Vol. LXXXIV, No. 57-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, August 7, 1974 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Pierce wins in upset; Levin takes primary Cavanagh loses governor's slot Former State Senator Sander Levin glided into an easy victory last night in the Democratic gubernatorial primary as Jerome Cavanagh suffered an over- whelming defeat in his uphill comeback bid. Levin, who captured 59 per cent of the vote according to early returns, was the acknowledged frontrunner throughout the entire campaign. Cavanagh, mayor of Detroit from 1962-1970, officially jumped into the race only three months ago after a brief bout with cancer of the kidney. THE THIRD contender, Southfield at- torney James Wells, received only nine per cent of the vote according to early returns. Cavanagh received 31 per cent of the vote with over one-third of the precincts reporting as of press time. Conceding defeat at 11 p.m., the for- mer mayor said he was disappointed but not bitter. Levin, who will now face incumbent William Milliken in the November elec- tions, said in a jubilant victory speech to cheering supporters, "I want to prom- ise the governor one thing-he ain't seen nothing yet." The former state Senator also added that he was pleased that the campaign had been so "open and constructive." Both Levin and Cavanagh ran low- key campaigns and leveled the majority of their attacks at the Milliken adminis- tration rather than each other. Their debates lacked a clear-cut focus and campaign reform emerged as one of the few salient issues. "My first priority as governor will be to reform campaigns," said Levin dur- ing a broadcast debate last week. "We have run the most responsible campaign in the history of this state." The only issue generating substantial publicity during the race were allega- tions that Cavanagh maintained under- world contacts while mayor of Detroit. LAST MONTH, L o uis Rome, former head of the' Michigan Crime Commission charged that Cavanagh was "unfit to be governor" because of his "proximity to the underworld." The former, mayor responded by slap- ping a $15 million libel slander and con- spiracy suit on Rome and Democratic National Committeeman Neil Staebler, who Cavanagh alleges a i d e d in the "smear campaign." Levin, a liberal Democrat, was nar- rowly defeated in his last bid for the See LEVIN, Page 9 Reuther runs close second in 5-way race In a photo-finish, 2nd U. S. Con- gressional District Democratic Par- ty Primary, Dr. Edward Pierce held a slim lead over John Reuther but appeared to have a major upset victory in his grasp early this morning. With about half the vote tallied, Pierce had received 6,596 ballots to 6,031 for Reuther and was declared the winner by many observers. The remaining three candidates in the primary trailed far behind Pierce and Reuther. CONSIDERED the front-runner as the polls opened yesterday, Reuther re- ceived an unexpectedly tough battle from Pierce who was given little real chance of winning. Running a well-financed professionally organized c a m p a i g n costing around $35,000, Reuther expected his closest rival to be Ypsilanti Asst. City Attorney Ronald Egnor. The Egnor drive collapsed, as he was battling for the third spot with Marjorie Lansing. The final candidate in the pri- mary Theo Williams ran far back of the field with about three per cent of the total vote. PIERCE, an Ann Arbor doctor who gave up his private practice five years ago to found the Summit Street medical center in order to provide care for low income persons, waged a campaign based on his longtime activism in local radical politics. At midnight, Pierce claimed victory saying "there is going to be a new voice in Washington and you're sure as hell are going to hear it." The winner of the primary will face incumbent Congressman Marvin Esch (R-Ann Arbor) and Human Rights Party entry Phil Carroll in the November elec- tion. While Reuther did not concede victory to Pierce and maintained he would pull out a win, he said his organization would support which ever Democrat won. EGNOR MADE a similar promise in his concession speech, which came ear- lier in the evening. "I urge all my sup- porters to join in working for our com- mon victory in November." Pierce's campaign was characterized as a grass roots movement by many ob- servers because it cost about half that of Reuther's and Egnor's and depending heavily on volunteer workers. Throughout the campaign, the five contestants all ran hard against Esch and the record of the Nixon Adminis- tration. They all held liberal-and very similar stands-on tax reform, re-distri- See PIERCE, Page 8 DR. ED PIERCE expresses his glee to supporters at his campaign headquarters after claiming victory over John Reuther in yesterday's Second Congressional District Democratic primary. Eckstein wins State Sen. McClary beatisCopi Elden -takes judgeship Bullard defeats Taylor These st oriesand moreo eslso elecion esuls onP. J3 C / 0 O