Wallace may bid for MONTGOMERY, A.a. (AP) - Gov. governor would appoint Allen's widow, George Wallace, who said earlier he Maryon, to fill the vacant seat until would not run for public office this year, November, when Wallace will run for is considering seeking the late James the seat ina special election. Allen's U.S. Senate seat, an aide said But Camp called the report yesterday. "premature," adding that the governor Wallace may run in a special election had made no decision about whom to to fill the last two years of Allen's term appoint or whether to run in the special because of an "unbelieveable" number election. of telephone calls, letters and Wallace could have himself appoin- telegrams he has received urging him ted by stepping down as governor and to do so, said the governor' press having Lt. Gov. Jere Beasley, who then secretary, Billy Joe Camp. would become governor, appoint him to Allen, whose Senate term expires in the post, but Camp said that was early 1981, died of a heart attack last Thursday at Gulf Shores, Ala. Wallace can appoint a temporary B roo ke: replacement but must by law call a special election to choose a successor to CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP)-U.S. Si Allen. (R-Mass.) said in court yesterday Yesterday, ABC-TV reported that an misstatement and a mistake" ina financi unidentified Wallace aide said the connection with his divorce last year, an the pressure of threats. Brooke's divorce from his wife of 31 y become final June 15. But action has bh I ' i ttle 'd Lawrence Pereera following published gave two different versions of his worth case and the other in his financial di ~ -C Senate. req es t ,or STANDING IN THE witness box for who is up for re-election in November, di those alleged threats. ex tra d ition"I had been receiving all sorts of thr and exposure, that my political life woul " said, staring at his estranged wife, Remi d in front of him in Middlesex County Proba "Scurrilous and malicious statemen about me. "THAT DID NOT excuse me. I am a WASHINGTON (AP) - Lawyers for took an oath to tell the truth and I misstate Joan Little failed for the second time in Brooke had said in a deposition in the three days yesterday to enlist the help owed $49,000 to Boston wholesale liquor of the nation's highest court to block her Tye. He told the court yesterday that i return to a North Carolina prison. Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall yesterday rejected a request that Little's extradition from New York be postponed. THE FULL court rejected a similar request Monday, clearing the way for her extradition. Your In their newest attempt, lawyers for Little contended that the high court's intervention was justified because Nor- th Carolina authorities have announced their intention to prosecute their client D U P E S for the crime of escape. Little was serving time on a (Duplicate Slides) breaking-and-entering conviction when she escaped from a state prison near Raleigh last October. She was arrested Eka hr in New York City last December. KIIc~ 7Im LITTLE, who is black, became a 1 rallying cause for civil rights and women's rights activists when she stood trial in 1975 on charges of mur- C olor C on dering a North Carolina jail guard. She was acquitted after testifying On 11 that she had stabbed the guard with an ice pick to defend herself against an at- tempted rape. BleRee) Little's lawyers have been trying toBe block her return to North Carolina,E title charging that a conspiracy exists to kill E6 51e 4 her. North Carolina officials have denied that any such plot exists. And Sam "PeoplewhService for you 'epewho look great are great" UM Stylists See Our Yelloi at the UNION 3180 Packard HAROLD, CHET, andDAVE The Michigan Daily-Thursday, June 8, 1978-Page 7 Allen's Senate seat unlikely. from the race three weeks ago, saying Camp said, however, that Wallace he would retire to private life when his might run for the seat in the special term expires in January. election because of "the magnitude of He cannot by law succeed himself as requests and encouragement" Wallace governor. has received. Most of the requests, Wallace has not yet fixed a date for Camp said, advanced the argument the special election to choose Allen's that unless Wallace were elected, successor but has indicated he may set Alabama would be without "an ex- it for Nov. 7, the day of the general elec- perienced name in the Senate." tion. That would save the state the ex- Alabama's other Senator, John pense of a special primary and special Sparkman, is retiring this year. election, since voters could choose par- Wallace, 58, had announced he would ty nominees for the special election in run for Sparkman's seat but withdrew the regular primaries Sept. 5. I misstated the facts' en. Edward Brooke that he "made a al accounting filed in d said he did it under ears had been due to een stayed by Judge reports that Brooke -one in the divorce sclosure to the U.S. 90 minutes, Brooke, id not say who made eats about disclosure d be ruined," Brooke gia, who sat directly te Court. s were being made member of the bar. I ed the facts." divorce case that he dealer A. Raymond n fact, he owed Tye $2,000. The rest of the money, Brooke contended, he owed to the estate of his late mother-in-law, Teresa Ferrari Scacco. Under questioning, however, Brooke acknowledged that the current amount of that debt was actualy $30,000. AT THE OPENING of yesterday's hearing, Judge Perera said that if he found that the senator's misstatements had misled his wife and her attorneys, he would reopen the case and hold another trial. The judge questioned Brooke directly for 90 minutes. When he asked whether "a reasonable person ight have been misled" as to his personal liabilities, Brooke replied: 'I don't think this would have any real material value on the ultimate settlement." Brooke's attorney, Robert McGrath, accused Remigia Brooke's lawyer, George Ford, of wanting to reopen the case to increase her share of the property settlement. "What he is looking for is what Mrs. Brooke has been looking for from the beginning-everything," said McGrath. Brooke's laywers distributed a financial statement listing Brooke's net worth at $184,105 and his wife's nest worth, after the divorce settlement, at $463,650. Remigia Brooke's assets were listed at $480,000 in real estate, counterbalanced by a debt of $16,000 on a mortage. Local Photofinisher" June s Photo Month ... take your camera with you. 1-39 only .40 ea 40-5000 .36 ea 1e Slides (E6 only) .. 2.84 & 4.64 n by 9, Out by 1-In by 1, out by 5 tact Sheets ......... 5.50 x 14 paper, includes negative processing sed des......... 284 & 4.64 e Day Color Print Service r Dodacolor and compatable films (C41 process) In by 10, Out by 5:30 w Page Ad for other services & hours Ann Arbor 973-0770