Page 2-Tuesday, August 8, 1978-The Michigan Daily Governor's race nears finish. .. LANSING (UPI) - A whirl of last- minute campaigning brought three Democratic candidates for governor to the Capitol yesterday, each proclaiming he would win the nomination in today's primary election. A fourth candidate, also expecting victory, met reporters in Bay City to announce he would not file a PBB- related federal lawsuit against the state. Associates had devoted more than 100 hours over the weekend to drawing up legal briefs. SOME OF THE appearances were billed as the final news conferences of the primary campaign. Voters will decide today which of the meetings amounted to political goodbyes. A variety of polls and political obser- vations appeared to give an edge to" state Sen. Willian Fitzgerald of Detroit and East Lansing attorney Zolton Ferency, although no one discounted the candidacies of state Sen. Patrick McCollough of Dearborn and former Public Service Commissioner William Rails. Ferency appeared unannounced at the Capitol at the same time a press conference had been scheduled for Ralls. DRESSED IN blue jeans and a flashy red shirt, he joked informally with reporters but fought off the notion that he could not defeat incumbent Republican Gov. William Milliken in November if he wins the primary. Ferency, who has run for governor four times, reminded reporters that he polled 40 per cent of the vote against Arbor Day, or tree-planting day, was first observed in Nebraska on April 10, 1872. It is now observed by all states in the Union except Alaska. The Italian artist and writer Ben- venuto Cellini was born in 1500. George Romney in the prime of Rom- ney's popularity. "Milliken of this year is no Romney of 1966, obviously," Ferency said. DECLARING HE has a solid con- stituency among rank-and-file Democrats, Ferency said he can win the primary if he captures one-fourth of the undecided vote. He said he believes cross-over voting by Republicans will not be a great factor because local elec- tions will keep GOP voters in their own primary. Ralls, dressed in stark contrast to Ferency in an impeccable dark blue suit, declared himself "the only Democrat who can win in November" and added that 35 per Gent of the vote could win the Democratic primary. "I can bring the independence and freedom from past failures that my two Democratic opponents cannot bring to this race," he said - referring to state Sens. William Fitzgerald of Detroit and Patrick McCollough of Dearborn. "IT'S BEEN an exciting and exhilarating campaign for me per- sonally, and I am confident I will win the Democratic nomination for gover- nor." Two hours late, Fitzgerald strode into the same meeting room and brashly told reporters, "I think the lead for your stories could clearly be Fitz by a minimum of 10." He did not elaborate, but the im- plication was that he meant 10 percen- tage points. FITZGERALD workers had plastered the room with campaign posters, and the candidate hit hard on his major theme, charging that Milliken failed to provide leadership to produce and protect jobs for Michigan workers. Fitzgerald, by far the fundraising leader in Michigan's first public- financed gubernatorial election, also said the campaign was the most highly organized. "All of the polling data we have seen shows us running strong in every area of the state," he said. MCCOLLOUGH, meanwhile, ap- peared on the election eve to announce .he had withheld a federal lawsuit for the Oscoda County PBB Action Com- mittee against a burial pit for tainted cattle at Mio. McCollough, as well as the other can- didates, planned a day of plant-gate and similar public appearances before returning to their homes today to vote. Meanwhile, Milliken, unopposed in the Republican primary, continued with a variety of semi-official and private fundraising appearances. He had voted earlier by absentee ballot, aides said. ... Senate primary a DETROIT (UPI) - Former Detroit City Council President Carl Levin and millionaire publisher Philip Power claimed today's Democratic U.S. Senate primary was a horserace bet- ween them, with the four othercan- didiates destined to be also-rans. On the Republican side of the ballot, incumbent Sen Robert Griffin was ex- pected to win renomination easily, despite an aggressive challenge from Oakland County Prosecutor L. Brooks Patterson. LEVIN, VIEWED as the early fron- trunner in the Democratic race, con- ceded Power had made impressive gains, but said he was confident of vic- tory. "It looks very good and we're very confident," said Levin, who cam- paigned in shopping centers, on street corners and at plant gates yesterday. "There's one person who can come out of the pack and chase me - that's Phil Power. I think it's going to be between the two of us." POWER, WHO owns a chain of suburban Detroit newspapers, spent yesterday courting voters in the Upper Peninsula. "It's plainly between me and Carl. He's losing and I'm gaining and as people are making up their minds,' they're coming to me," Power said in a telephone interview. "I think we've got an upset on our hands." POWER, WHO HAS spent $700,000 of his own money in the campaign, said the race's momentum was'on his side. He said a recent poll showed he was "gaining rapidly" on Levin. "The whole strategy of the campaign has been to build that momentum in the last days, and that process has worked," Power said. Levin, however, said he believed Power's popularity had peaked and was on the decline. "I THINK THE momentum's against horserace him," Levin said. "People are fed up with his unlimited spending and they tell me they're tired of being bombar- ded every time they turn on the television or radio. "He's overdone it and I believe very strongly that the tide is running against him." Power predicted his personal wealth would not harm him among primary voters. "THE QUESTION OF money is irrelevant to anybody's vote," he said. "The key is to nominate someone whd has the ability to be independent enough to understand the problems and not to be tied to the special interests." LEVIN AND Power, who both plan- ned to spend election night in Detroit, saw little chance that any other can- didate could win the Democratic Senate nomination. The four other Democrats are former Grand Rapids Congressman Richard VanderVeen, state Rep. Paul Rosem- baum of Battle Creek, and state Sens. Anthony Derezinski of Muskegon and John Otterbacher of Grand Rapids. Election still tossup (Continued from Page 1) less than enthusiastic support from party regulars. POWER, campaigning in the spar- sely populated Upper Peninsula, said he has been gaining rapidly on Levin in the Senate race while Levin's early support has faded. "I think we've got. an upset on our hands," he said. But Levin, making a final sweep through Detroit's blue collar suburbs, predicted he would win a "solid vic- tory" and said momentum is a factor that will work against Power, rather THE MICHIGAN DAILY Vol. LXXXviII, No.60-S Tuesday, August8, 1978 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48100. Published daily Tuesday through Saturday morning during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published through Saturday mor- sing. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Ar bor; '7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. than for him. "PEOPLE ARE fed up with his unlimited spending and they tell me they're tired of being bombarded everytime they turn on the television and radio," he said. "He's overdone it and I believe very strongly that the tide is running against him." The fourth candidate in the campaign for governor, state Sen. Patrick Mc- Collough, yesterday withdrew a plan- ned lawsuit challenging the mass burial of PBB-tainted cattle near Mio - a tac- tic designed to embarrass Milliken. The other Senate candiEates are for- mer Grand Rapids congressman Richard VanderVeen, state Rep. Paul Rosenbaum of Battle Creek and state Sens. John Otterbacher of Grad Rapids and Anthony Derezinskt of Muskegon. Most amphibians and all reptiles have lungs, but many amphibians also breathe through their skin, which is why they must keep moist.