Page 10-Thursday, June 15, 1978-The Michigan Daily Moderate Southerners victors in By The Associated Press Democratic candidates for senate seats Two young, moderate Southerners held for a quarter of a century by have emerged from the latest round of nationally known conservatives. non-presidential year primaries as Arkansas' Gov. David Prior won the m TONIGHT thru SUNDAY at SECOND 9C/IANVC Roger & the Human Body Thursday's Specialst Towners Night - Greek & Dorm Night Admission 50C with proof of local address Admission free with chapter card or meal ticket , APPEARING MONDAY STRUTTIN Monday's Special - Tequila Night Special low price on all tequila drinks r"MUSIC AND MEA LDEAL"i Dine at the restaurant after 4:00 P.M. and receive FREE admission to Nightclub that eve- 1 ning. SUN.-THURS. E.,L,16 E.1.1bert ...::: 994-5350 Democratic nomination to the Senate seat held by the late John McClellan for 35 years ina primary runoff that all but assured him his election. AND IN SOUTH Carolina, Charles "Pug" Ravenel, a 40-year-old invest- ment executive, won the right to face Senate stalwart Strom Thurmond in November. Pryor, a two-term governor, withstood charges of scandal within his campaign or- ganization to defeat U.S. Rep. Jim Guy Tucker, by a margin of 55 percent to 45 percent. Pryor, 43, will face Tom Kelly, a political amateur who ran unopposed in the Republican primary. DURING TH E runoff, Pryor, the first governor to appoint a black and a woman to the Arkansas Supreme Court, reverted to the campaign rhetoric used against him by McClellan when he sought unsuccessfully to unseat the powerful Democrat in 1972. He attacked Tucker, a 35-year-old lawyer, as a friend of unions and liberals. Pryor himself had received $100.00 from unions in 1972. Late in the campaign, the chairman of the state utility regulating com- mission charged that Pryor's campaign manager tried to get favorable treat- ment for a utility owned by an uncle of Rep. Ray Thornton, who finished third in the May 3 primary. Tucker said it was an attempt by Pryor to swing votes from conservative constituents of z < FOLD BACK THIS FLAP 8 SEAL WITH TAPE FROM > C Daily Classifleds Student Publications Building 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MIch. 461l09 primaries Thornton. A prosecutor's investigation cleared Pryor, and the governor ac- cused Tucker of instigating the scandal. IN SOUTH CAROLINA, Thurmond, a 74-year-old Republian, formerly a Democrat, had no opposition in the primary for the seat he has occupied since 1954. Ravenel captured more than 50 percent of the vote, easily outdistan- cing his closest challenger, John Bolt Culbertson, a Greenville lawyer and perennial candidate. Ravenel was already known by the voers, having won the Democratic gubernatorial nomination in 1974 in his first campaign for public office. He was taken off the ballot when the state Supreme Court ruled he did not meet residency requirements. In South Carolina's Democratic gubernatorial primary, Lt. Gov. W. Brantley Harvey was forced into a June 27 runoff with former state Sen. Richard Riley. On the GOP side, U.S. Rep. Edward Young narrowly defeated former Columbia businessman Raymon Finch. The current governor, James Ed- wards, the first Republican to occupy the office in a century, was unable by law to succeed himself. In other primaries, Maine's atorney general, Joseph E. Brennan, won the Democratic gubernatorial nomination over state Sen. Philip Merrill and state Rep. Richard Caray. The Republicans chose Linwood Palmer, minority leader of the state House, over Charles Cragin, and state Sen. Jerrold Speers. Cheers! N.C. legislature legalizes liquor by the glass RALEIGH, N.C. (AP)-If you're of the persuasion to imbibe, raise a glass and toast the North Carolina General Assembly. Yesterday the lawmakers made it legal to buy a mixed drink in their state. The state Senate voted over- whelmingly to go along with House amendments to a bill that would allow local governments to permit sales of liquor by the drink. THE VOTE LEAVES Oklahoma alone among the 50 states in banning the sale of all forms of liquor by the glass. Several other states, however, have local option laws. The new law would replace the prac- tice of "brown-bagging" in which customers continue brown bagging or seek a mixed drink license. But they won't be bellying up to the bar in North Carolina immediately. The measure just allows counties and cities that now permit sales of liquor by the bottle to hold referendums on whether to allow mixed drink sales in certain restaurants and clubs. Gov. Jim Hunt, a teetotaler, opposed the bill but does not have the power to veto the legislation. SHORT or LONG Haircutting By Experts DASCOLA STYLISTS Arborand-971-9975 Maple Villoge-761-2733 E. Liberty-668-9329 E. University--662-0354 FOLD