Saturday, May 15, 1976 TILE MICHIGAN DAILY Paige Three Udall denies Carter charge By PIULLIP BOKOVOY Special To The Daily DETROIT-Presidential hopeful Mor- ris Udall responded yesterday to charges made by Jimmy Carter that Udall and Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho) made a deal that Udall would stay out of the Nebraska primary and Church would stay out of Connecticut and Mich- igan. The Arizona Democrat said, "There was and is no deal between Sen. Frank Church and myself concerning the Ne- braska and Michigan primaries . . . nor did Senator Church and I ever dis- cuss an arrangement concerning these or any other primary states." CARTER made the charges at an air- port news conference Thursday while on s campaign swing through Michigan. A Udall staffer told the Daily, "we're giving Church Oregon," but said the matter was a policy decision not made with the Church campaign people. "We feel that Mo's time and money are better spent in other states," he add- ed. UDALL has mounted an intense cam- paign in Michigan and yesterday re- vealed that his campaign people had taken a poll that shows him trailing Car- ter. "It shows we're gaining but we're still well behind . . . there will be a final surge but whether it will be enough we'll find out the night of the 18th," he said to reporters at WXYZ-TV studios. Udall in the past few days has been concentrating on getting free media time by doing a lot of interviews. His campaign is heavily in debt and his strategists believe this is the best way to reach a large number of people for the least amount of money. ACCORDING to a Udall staffer the campaign committee is about $300,000 in debt and Udall's personal debt is about $115,000. Much of this debt will be erased when the Federal Election Commission (FEC) starts disbursing money again. Udall has about$400,000 in unpaid matching campaign funds com- ing. Udall has been trying a new approach to his campaign this week. Each day he picks an issue he says Carter is "fuzzy" on and elaborately explains his own stand while pointing out alleged incon- sistencies in Carter' position. Yesterday's issue was the reorganiza- tion of the Federal bureaucracy. Stating Carter's claims that he cut the bureau- cracy in Georgia did not appear to be supported by the facts, Udall said. "During the years that Jimmy Carter governed Georgia the state budget rose by more than 51 per cent." Last March, Udall recalled, he asked the former Georgia Governor to name just one per cent of the 1700 government agencies he intended to terminate. "He didn't then and he hasn't since," Udall said, "but I repeat my challenge to- day. " Udall also appeared at a press con- ference at the Considine Recreation Cen- ter in Detroit's inner city with Black Caucus member John Conyers {D-Mich.) Udall was asked why no other candi- dates challenged Wallace and Carter in the Florida primary. He replied, "There was a common feeling among liberals to let Carter have a clear shat at Wal- lace." Udall will campaign today in De- troit and will leave the state for a day and return Sunday night. TU, Reliable Realty will resume bargaining talks By MICHAEL YELLIN After a week of court battles between the Ann Arbor Tenants Union (TU) and Reliable Realty Managemem Company both parties agreed to return to the bargaining table today and work to- wards a settlement of the TU rent strike. Negotiations were broken off last month over the issue of rent control. DESCRIBING Edith Epstein's, the owner of Reliable Realty, decision to re- turn to bargaining as "really good" Mary Hulick, a TU organizer, believes the union can "win a number of things through negotiations that couldn't be won in court." After two full days of legal proceed igs this week, attorneys for the two groups returned to court battle yesterday. Pinball returns Tommy, the Pinball Wizard, would feel right at home in New York following yesterday's decision by the City Council to allow the machines to return after a 34 year ban. Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia banished the pinball machines in 1942 because, he said, too many youngsters were wasting their money trying to hit the jackpot. The machines in LaGuardia's day offered a chance to win cash, today's legal machines do not. But not everyone wants to see pinball return to the big apple. Arthur Katzmann, a Queens Demo- crat said, "On the surface it appears to be an innocent device. But it will bring rampant vice and gambling to the city." Happenings .. . . . . begin this morning at 9:15 with the annual ECKANKAR Michigan re- gional seminar at the Campus nn . Sunday the seminar continues . . - also on Sunday, at 1:30 Friendly People is sponsoring a hiking and swimming out- ing, leaving from the west entry to the Rackham bldg. Weather or not It will be cloudy today with a 30 per cent chance of rain. Temperatures will be in the 70s, dropping into the 50s to- night as the chance of rain increases to 60 per cent, Arruging that Epstein reneged on a recognition agreement TU attorney Jeremy Rose sought a court ordered in- junction to "prevent Epstein from nego- tiating leases without the presence of the TU," as agreed to previously. UNION MEMBERS claim the landlord was trying to get tenants to sign leases with an added addendum saying they would not join the Tenant Union. The Tenants Union lost in their attempt to impose the restraining order prohibit- ing Reliable from signing any new leases without TU approval. Contending that County Court Judge Patrick Conlin misunderstood the facts of the case and describing the outcome as a "royal screw job," TU lawyers filed an appeal, now scheduled for Wednesday. WILLIAM RAYMER, Reliable's legal counsel, expects yesterday's decision will bolster Epstein's position during nego- tiations. The Tenants Union says "not lose maintains the Tenants Union has "no intractable position," and that there are solutions to their differences. Both sides seek a settlement of the three month old rent strike as soon as possible. A trial, scheduled for yesterday against one of the 19 striking houses, was ad- journed when it was agreed to return to bargain in good faith. Brown Calls for llobbyiss' gifts WASHINGTON (A) - California Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., saying the nation still cries for greater political reform, proposed yesterday that lobbyists be prohibited from making any gift what- ever to e i t h e r elected or executive branch officials. Furthermore, he said, public officials should have to report any gift regardless of the sources, that accumulates to $25 in a 12-month period. THE DEMOCRATIC presidential hope- ful, on a final campaign swing for his first primary test in nearby Maryland, made the proposal at a sidewalk news conference outside the National Press Club after canceling a luncheon speech there because of picketing NBC tech- nicians. See BROWN, Page 4 AP Photo CAUGHT HERE in a pensive moment, button czar William Crookston, president of Western Badge and Trophy Co., fondles a pile of Fonzie buttons. Production of the buttons is outstripping that of political campaign buttons because, says Crookston, candidates are spending their money on television. '7 Ocandidates hesitate to button down election funds LOS ANGELES -) - Jerry and Jimmy and Ronnie aren't giving the button makers much business this year. But the Fonz is. A heavy reliance on television, tighter budgets and possibly the sophistication of voters, are all taking their toll on that old election standby, the campaign button. "THE BIG money for TV went first," said William Crookston, president of Western Badge and Trophy Co. As the June 8 California presidential primary draws near, the candidates are not ordering buttons in heavy quantities. "I characterize the campaign button as a personal medium," said Crookston. "People seem more reluctant to say whom they're voting for." IT WOULD seem the only people an- xious for buttons this election year are collectors who salt them away and cam- paign workers. "I like to see people wear them be- cause it makes me feel good," said Lynn Nofziger, press secretary for Ronald Reagan. "They're a morale factor. But buttons don't win or lose elections." Larry Peck, California press secretary for the President Ford campaign, said, "They're nice to have, but when it comes down to how you allot your re- See '76, Page 4