5 I 50 I Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, July 24, 1970 Friday, July 24, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Dems Vic Lansing U' -- Four Democrats are dueling for the right to run against Gov. William Milliken. but it really looks like a two-man tussle. Close observers see the race boiling + down to a battle between former state party chairmen Sander Levin and Zol- ton Ferency. They are much better known than the others---George F. Montgomery of { Detroit and Macomb County Prosecutor George Parris. Levin has the money and Ferency is familiar as the party's 1966 candidate against George Romney. Milliken, meanwhile, faces an ef- fortless primary contest with magazine publisher James Turner. Ferency failed four years ago in a landslide loss, but claims to be the frontrunner in this test. Levin, how- ever, has the muscle to mount a-mighty flurry just prior to the Aug. 4 primary. Through the end of March, Levin campaign officials said more than $30,- 000 had been spent on his behalf. This compared with only $9,300 for Mont- gomery and $6,900 for Ferency through the end of June. No figures were avail- able for Parris. Nor were through-June expenses for Levin, who has rich re- serves. A dinner in Detroit recently raked in $60,000, which Levin leaders said was the biggest single haul ever for a state- wide Democratic candidate. Levin also has won the endorsement of the state AFL-CIO, the United Auto Workers Union and a number of edu- cators and black leaders. A 38-year-old attorney, Levin h o l d s degrees from the University of Chicago, Columbia University and the Harvard Law School. He chaired the state party in 1967-68 and has been in the Senate for six years, serving as minority lead- er in the 1969-70 session until he decided to run for governor. Levin's campaign cry has been a call for leadership. He once said Milliken was "more the caboose than the engine of government." Like Milliken, Levin has made a point against pollution. He sponsored in the Senate the far-reaching environmental protection bill to extend the right of lawsuit to protect natural resources. Milliken also had pushed hard for its passage and is urging the legislature to for slot against make other antipollution measures top priority in August. Ferency and Montgomery sought an agreement to limit primary campaign expenses to $50,000, but Levin would have none of it. Staying under that figure will pose no problem for the others. Ferency particularly has made a point of relying on a low-budget, volunteer campaign with student help. Obviously, however, he now reaps the benefit of rememberance from the 1966 campaign and the dollars - the Democrats spent on him. It cannot set too well with some party faithful. Ferency resigned as state chairman in 1967 after refusing to support Presi- dent Lyndon Johnson. He had served in the post since 1963. The 48-year-old attorney said on a recent campaign trip that his opposi- tion has gone into a state of "panic." and will mount one of the most "ex- pensive, pressure-packed, last-minute campaigns ever staged in Michigan' The liberal Ferency, a maverick who said early that he hoped to base his campaign on a coalition of anti-war voters, campus youth, suburban liber- als, women voters, blacks and union members, has trained his sights on na- tional issues. He argues that issues of national importance are intertwined with state concerns and a governor must be con- cerned when Federal funds aire spent on war, the space race, missiles and super- sonic planes. He says a governor must take a stand on how federal money is spent, In a recent campaign speech, he said "the rebels are against double stand- ards. They are fed up with being second class citizens and they are demanding that the country live up to its prom- ises." In another talk Ferency argued that voters this year will have "a clear choice between a Republican policy of continuing our commitment of men, money and material to an expanding conflict in Indochina, and a new Demo- cratic policy of immediate withdrawal from Indochina with greater attention and financial resources being directed toward meeting critical domestic needs." The 36-year-old Montgomery suffers Iliken Montgomery says a high-budget cam- paign is the wrong approach because "We'll never be able to outspend the other party." "Zolton and I are in competition on a votes-per-dollar basis," he adds. "Lev- in has to be in a dollars-per-vote race." Montgomery says that if he wins the nomination, he will favor in the fall a "modest budget that won't bleed the party white." But he concedes "I've got a lot of hands to shake" in the few days re- maining, Personal contact and an emphasis on Michigan problems also keynote the campaign of Parris, 48-year-old pro- secutor of Macomb County. Parris attended the University and Wayne- State law school and has held his present job for 10 years. If he is beaten in the governor's primary, he will still have two years to go on his current term as prosecutor. Taxes on homeowners and crime in the streets are two issues which get a lot of attention from Parris. When he announced his candidacy, Parris said taxes have soared without improvement in government. He said the "school systems are over- loaded and our homeowners are over- taxed, and yet more burdens and taxes are continually heaped upon them like so many band-aids on a bad sore." He also said crime must be stopped because "no society can continue to exist when each man lives in fear of another, when every darkened doorway is an ambushe, very street in our cities, every dirt lane in our rural areas a rendesvous for rape, murder and as- sassination." A Parris campaign official says the prosecutor is "the only one of the candidates who really states the im- portant things about Michigan." "He's not interested in running off to Washington to get publicity," the aide added. On the Republican side, Milliken en- joys all the exposure of incumbency and has not had to pay much attention to the Turner challenge. Indeed, Turner has spent far more time attacking the attorney general than the governor. Gov't. 1f Weathei Candidate Ferency from a recognition problem even though he has been in the House for six years and in the recent session served as majority floor leader. One difficulty is that there are two George Montgomerys in the legislature -George F. and his father. Both are Democrats from Detroit and both serve in the House. To the reader or listener. the only way to separate them is to be aware of George The Younger's middle initial. It is sometimes overlooked. George F., the candidate, is a tall former schoolteacher who says he ex- pects to win by getting 180,000 to 200,- 000 votes. He predicts about 600,000 votes will be cast in the race. "There hasn't been the interest in this race that I thought there would be," Montgomery says. He is basing his campaign on personal contact and on a triple-E slogan: En- vironment. Education and Economy. He gears his arguments to state concerns, because "I'm not running for Congress and I think we have to be definite about what we're going to do for Michigan." -Associated Press TWO MOTORCYCLES belonging to John Norman Collins are unloaded by' a sheriff's detective yesterday morning as testimony in the Collins' murder trial continued at the Washtenaw County Bldg. The motorcycles were submitted by the defense as exhibits. a Star, prosecutionwines cros-examined sharply WASHINGTON (A') - The government yesterday indicted 13 leaders of the radi- cal Weathermen faction of Students for a Democratic Society on charges they had plotted to set off bombs in four major U.S. cities. Most of the young men and women named in an indictment returned by a federal grand jury in Detroit are in hiding or are out of the country, said Asst. Atty. Gen. Will R. Wilson, head of the Justice Department's criminal division. He could not say when the fugitives might be ap- prehended. The indictment said the committee would direct clandestine . and under- ground groups called "focals" that were to carry out the actual bombings and obtain material to build up an explosives arsenal. Atty., Gen. John N. Mitchell, who an- nounced the indictments, said they are the result of an investigation begun last March 6, when three persons died in a blast in a New York townhouse. Two persons named as co-conspirators but not defendants in yesterday's indict- ment-Diana Oughten and Theodore Gold-died in the New York explosion. which police said occurred when dyna- mite bombs being manufactured in -the townhouse went off accidentally. Wilson said only one bombing incident alleged to have been planned by the 13 Weathermen actually took place. That was in the Detroit Police Officers As- sociation building last February, where a bomb was planted but fizzled. The indictment said the 13 began the conspiracy last Dec. 27 in Flint, Mich. At a second meeting in Flint two days later. the indictment continued, Weather- men leader Mark Rudd said the persons attending the meeting "should partici- pate in bombings of police stations and banks throughout the country. ..." Defendants in both indictments include the 23-year-old Rudd. who led the 1967 uprising at Columbia University, a nd Bernadine Dohrn, a former national sec- retary of Students for a Democratic So- ciety. Other defendants named both in Chicago and Detroit are William Charles Ayres, 25, another leader of the Columbia uprising: Kathie Boudin, 27; and Linda Sue Evans, 23. Two others named in the Detroit in- dictment were listed as co-conspirators in the Chicago indictment. They are Cathlyn Platt Wilkerson, 25, and Dianne Maria Donghi, 21. Miss Donghi was picked up yesterday by FBI agents on Broadway in Manhat- tan and taken to FBI headquarters. Miss Evans and Miss Donghi are the only ones to be arrested so far. DIANN~ quartet arreste By JONATHAN MILLER Sharp cross-examination of a prosecu- tion star witness took place during yes- terday's testimony in the murder trial of John Norman Collins, the accused slayer of Eastern Michigan University coed Karen Sue Beineman. During the morning session, the de- fense also introduced as exhibits two motorcycles which belong to the defen- dant. Some of the witnesses who identi- fied Collins in court on Wednesday as the man who had tried to proposition them further identified one of the motorcycles as the machine that Collins allegedly rode at that time. In the afternoon the prosecution called upon Mrs. Joan Goshe to take the stand. Mrs. Goshe is apparently the only wit- ness who will testify to having seen Miss Beinemann with Collins. Mrs. Goshe told the court that Miss Beinemann had ordered a wiglet from her shop the day before her disappearance. When she came to collect it the next day she told Mrs. Goshe that she was going home with a man on a motorcycle. Mrs. Goshe claims she observed the man, and saw Miss Beinemann leave with her. When asked if she could see that man in court she pointed out Collins. On cross examination Mrs. Goshe ad- mitted that she had lied twice under oath, once in the filing of a marriage license and once at an earlier hearing of the Collins case. Under sharp questioning by assistant' defense counsel Neil Fink she was forced into contradicting a large number of her earlier statements, particularly in regard to the size of Collin's motorcycle and her relationships with the press and the police. She told the police that the motorcycle she had seen Collins riding was, "like a Honda 320 or 350." She attempted to deny this in yesterday's cross examina- tion. Collins in fact was riding a Triumph Bonneville 650, a motorcycle which bears little resemblance to a Honda 350. She also denied having spoken to the press. However. Fink asked Detroit Free Press reporter William Schmidt to stand up and asked Mrs. Goshe if she had seen him before. Mrs. Goshe said she didn't think so, but Schmidt has said privately that he interviewed the witness last year. Fink also mentioned the names of sev- eral other reporters, all of whom Goshe denied having heard of or spoken to. The court is not sitting today, the trial will resume on Monday. POT IN, SEX TABOO Womn Miss America contest loosens up admitted Heavy Duty Steering and Suspension Parts t BALL JOINTS " IDLER ARMS *TIE ROD ENDS ATLANTIC CITY. N.J. (A)- Miss America 1971, unlike her predecessors, will be allowed to give her opinions on marijuana smoking, the Vietnam war and other controversial issues. But sex remains taboo. In revealing a major depar- ture from pageant tradition, Miss America officials em- phasized Wednesday that -ques- tions of a "distasteful personal nature' such as, "Do you use the pill?" would remain on the ta- boo list during the contest here in September. AlbertMarks, chairman of the pageant excecutive commit- tee, said he had lifted the pro- hibition against controversial topics because "I took a good look at the whole picture." "We were always a f r a i d youngsters with no prior back- ground would put a foot in their mouth, but today's youthful so- ciety doesn't need over-protec- tioi." Marks said, however, that contestants would not be re- quired to give their opinion,. Recently, Katherine Huppe of Helena, Mont., resigned as Miss The Fabulous I C. HEARD Any conversation concerning all great Jazz musicians will in- cude a name that is synonymous with the highest caliber of traditional jazz drum players . .: J. C. Heard. Listing Woody Herman, Benny Goodman and Count Bosie as representative greats that J. C. Heard has played with and will serve as a preview to the countless credits you will find here. J. C. Heard: The singer-The dancer-The talker--The drum- mer, this is the performance of TODAY or of "TODAY'S GOOD EVENING ENTERTAINMENT." OPEN 11 A.M. SERVING BUSINESSMEN'S LUNCHES Montana, citing restrictions on what she could say and do about politics and other current events. Miss Huppe, 18. said that aftersshe won the title she had to sign a contract forbidding her to write anything not approved by the sponsoring Billings Jay- cees and to campaign for any political candidate or cause. Mayks said a prohibition against support of political can- didates and parties would re- main. "The Miss America Pageant Sis not politically motivated or politically oriented," he said. but added that the lifting of pro- hibitions on other controversial topics may , not have filtered down to state and local pageant levels. Prohibitions against the con- testants socializing during the week-long pageant with any men, including their fathers, will remain, Marks said. "We don't want to give the public the impression of any wrongdoing here," Marks said. WELCOME! I Summer Hours Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:30 p.m. DASCOLA U-M Barbers formerly Lee's E. Univ. at So. U. as-dealers LAS VEGAS, Nev. .0) -- The state labor commissioner says this town's gambling casinos have to quit dealing women out of jobs at the craps and black- jack tables. Casinos elsewhere in Nevada have long hired women to deal cards and run dice games, but until now Las Vegas has re- served such employment for men. The breakthrough Wednesday was made by Miss Arden John- son, 32, who had filed a dis- crimination complaint against the Desert Inn hotel, owned by Howard Hughes, the mysterious millionaire. Miss Johnson, a divorcee with two children and an experienced dealer in casinos in other Ne- vada cities, told Labor Com- missioner Stanley Jones that her application for a Desert Inn job turned up nothing but snake eyes. So he directed all casinos to open up dealer jobs to women forthwith and added that he ex- pected to see women dealing blackjack and wielding crap game sticks within 20 days. "I've worked with women be- fore and they don't handle it well," complained Glenn Fore, a dealer at the International Hotel. "Mechanically they are capable, but not emotionally," said a blackjack dealer at Caes s Palace. "They don't de- velop the same rapport with a high roller. The house would hurt." WASHINGTON (/M - President Nixon's special adviser on campus un- rest yesterday urged the chief execu- tive to pay greater heed to views of students and blacks and to employ the moral force of his office to reduce racial tensions. Without going into details, Alexand- er Heard, chancellor of Vanderbilt University, issued through the White House a summary of some of the rec- ommendations he made to Nixon while serving, May-8 until now, as presi- dential adviser on campus disturbanc- es and restiveness. In an introductory statement to a 40-page document, Heard said he is convinced Nixon does exhibit serious concern over campus developments. However, in an accompanying memo he sent Nixon on June 19, Heard made it clear that at that time he question- ed the administration's approach to the campus upheaval - including kill- ings at Kent State University a n d Jackson State College - that followed Nixon's decision to intervene with U.S. ground troops in Cambodia. Toward the end of his final public report, Heard said that detailed rec- ommendations drafted by him and his associates, notably President James E. Cheek of Howard University, were in- tended as private communications and that their implementation might be handicapped by making them public. Sunmmarizing some of the recom- mendations, however, Heard first list- ed an urging "that the President in- crease his exposure to campus repre- sentatives, including students, faculty and administrative officers, so that he can better take into account their views in formulating domestic and for- eign policy." Meanwhile in Washington the Pres- ident's Commission on Campus Un- rest was told yesterday that the great- est problem confronting higher edu- cation is not student violence b u t rather "appeasement and capitula-. tion" by school officials. Sidney Hook, a philosophy profes- sor at New York University, said the frenzy to accomodate activists trans- forms "an agenda of study into an agenda of action, and converts the university into a political organiza- tion." And that, he said, "invites po- litical reprisals from a public that does not s h a r e in its political commit- ments." He said both the establishment and students must recognize that the func- tion of colleges and universities is the quest for knowledge and that the schools are not to blame for social and political evils. The solution of war, poverty a n d -other issues, Hook said, lies in t h e hands of the electorate and "not of a. privileged elite." But Dennis Hayes, former president of the Stanford student body, s a i d "the r e a 1 struggle is between those who believe the American course is sound, and those who believe that the American dream has been betrayed." He said, "There are those who seek to divide us who, for reasons of po- litical expediency or corporate profit, attempt to set worker against student, black against white. Heard issues unrest report Pa ex! phi WASH Black Pa top Illin destroyin transport yesterday subcomm The eig line was over to ti W. Bates Indianap he got t' Black Par. "He sa if and w reaches i volution told the s He sai Indianapc the Chic said to be Michigan The ou the same Admin. t a. State: ments in enemy's i It also:l time," of systems; food dist bus and t stations. Most of parenthes The ot "Problem Revolutio chaotic c tion to t the mass chase the tionary's party reac Bates, was assig in Indian assumed the ChicE pared on party. But Ste gator for Panther a he had see section of 314 S. 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