Doge Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, August 4, 1972 'age Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, August 4, 1972 Brodsky to appear Iems run for sheriff in primary on area TV show University poet - in-residence Iosif Brodsky will appear on the "Lou Gordon Program" in De- troit and five other cities this weekend. Brodsky is the Russian poet who was forced to leave the So- viet Union in June after sev- eral years of difficulty with the Soviet government over his non- conformity to the government's positions. Most literary experts regard him as the finest living Russian Poet. Prof. of Slavic Languages and Literature Carl Proffer, who helped Brodsky through the red tape of immigration and invited him to come to Ann Arbor to teach and continue his writing, will appear with Brod- sky on the Gordon program. The Brodsky appearance is scheduled for 10:00 p.m. Sun- day (Aug. 6) on WKBD-TV, Channel 50, Detroit. The pro- gram will also be seen in Bos- ton, Philadelphia, Cleveland, San Francisco and Los Angeles. (Continued from Page 1) dispatching of officers to crimes and the records will still be kept in a central location. "We have to stop the begin- ning of dozens of two- to three- man independent police forces, We can contract to the small town and supply them with the number of men they need and they will pay the costs," Postill added. Moon attacks Postill's pro- gram "because it will increase the burden on the taxpavers just like (Sheriff Doug) Harvey has done over the years." "We have to clear away the deadwood and get more officers on the road into the high crime areas," Moon says. "This can be done by replac- ing a $13,000 deputy with some- one else to do the job of trans- porting prisoners to the jail or courts. We could get retired po- lice officers and pay them $7,500 to do the job and get those regular officers out on the road," he adds. He also advocates bringing "compassion and understand- ing into the sheriff's depart- ment." "We have to stop treating the prisoners like animals," he says. "We have to give them blankets and mattresses. We have to give them a library so they have more to read than just a Bible. We should stop making them cut their hair and shaving their beards and mous- taches. There is no reason to make them do it, they don't make women cut their hair." Moon thinks he will win be- cause "I have more strength than Postill in the out-county, because they know he wants to double the budget with his sub- station plan. His only claim to fame is that he has been fired by Harvey twice-not once." Postill has been fired twice for what Harvey claims was in- subordination. Postill claims that he was fired because. "I was tryingwto organize the depu- ties into a union and Harvey didn't like that." Postill claims a broad base of support "from all factions of the community - the old- time party Dems, student groups, thetUnited Auto Work- ers, and the American Federa- tion of State and County Mu- nicipal Employes." He has also worked at gath- ering the absentee ballot vote which may total over 4,000 in this primary. "We are doing a mailing to the absentee people and then followingythat by phone calls," he says. "We really pushed on these to stop Harvey while he was still run- ning in the primary." Harvey is now running on the Forest fires bvr. more thaw trees American Independent Party's ticket. Horn is running to "establish t r a i n i n g programs at the schools, and to establish a more mobile and unified sheriff's de- partment." "We should also improve the jail patrols, provide the prison- ers with crafts," he says. Horn's training program calls for "films in the elementary schools dealing with crime prevention, in the junior high we should have films about the problems of drugs, and the high schoolers should be presented with films on demonstrations." Horn's campaign literature describes him as "a man cut from the cloth of the hardwork- ing taxpayer, a family man with two jobs, a no-nonsense patriot. Richard Horn believes in en- forcing the laws." The much less publicized race for the Republican nomination for sheriff has four contestants. Robert Adams, Carl Koch, who claims 15 years of law enforce- ment experience, Harold Ow- ings, presently the county un- der-sheriff, and William Stand- er. Emergency state called (Continued from Page 3) ers to agree to ship the supplies. Longshoremen in Aberdeen are already servicing the islands of Orkney and Shetland and as well as oil rigs in the North Sea. Islanders now are planning to try to break the dock blockade with an airlift to the mainland. A committee of dock employers and union representatives contin- ued efforts to find a settlement. Trades, Union Congress leader Vic Feather said he hoped a con- ference to vote on a return to work might be held next week. TV & Stereo Rentals $10.00 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY, PICK UP AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 Britain announces poll of N. Ireland likely for fall (Continued from Page 3) He has invited leaders of Ul- ster's Social Democratic a n d Labor party, the main political voice of the Catholics; to meet with him next Monday. T he party had refused to meet of-' ficially with the British in the past but indicated it would talk with Whitelaw next week. "The party appealed to Catho- lics to mute their anger. In the present situation, restraint and silence are the best expression >f resentment," it said. Whitelaw's plebiscite announce- ment came toward the end of a day of relative quiet in North- ern Ireland. One British soldier was killed by a terrorist bomb. A seventh person died yester- day of injuries suffered 1 a s t Monday in three bomb blasts in the village of Claudy, 12 miles southwest of Londonderry. The latest deaths raised to 487 the. know fatalities in three years of communal strife in Northern Ireland. Late in the day, British troops and guerrillas exchanged gun- fire across Ulster's border with the republic at Belleek near the west coast. One gunman was re- ported hit and no army casual- ties were announced. Tension in the street persist- ed. A full company of 150 Brit- ish troops was needed to escort. Protestant workers to their jobs at the Sirocco engineering plant in East Belfast. It was the tense aftermath of a shooting incident on Wednesdayewhich touched off a battle between mobs of Protestants and Catholics. British military headquarters claimed an imposing haul of arms and ammunition in its searches of former Irish Repub- lican Army strongholds, since invading the enclaves Monday. 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