The Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXVI, No. 11-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, May 19, 1976 Ten Cents Sixteen Pages ord, arter victors Iii Klch gan pimaryV s 3Udall loses state by narrow margin From Staff and Wire Reports President Ford yesterday, in his home state's critical primary, crushed the conservative challenge of Repub- lican. Ronald Reagan, while "former Georgia Governor Jimmy Carter fought off Arizona Congressman Morris h s Udall for a slim victory in the Democratic primary. Ford's victory came at a time when a Michigan loss would have given Reagan's drive for the GOP nomina- tion almost unstoppable momentum. The former Cali- fornia governor had won five of the last six Republican contests, and observers - claimed that a Reagan win in Ford country would have BULLETIN P crippled the President's faltering campaign. Here are the totals in Mich- fatrn 'nresidential primary UDALL, BECAUSE of his ex- tensive campaign efforts in Michigan, had said that this primary represented his best chance to defeat Carter one-on- one. Despite his loss here, Udall has vowed,, to ride the race out until the July conven- tion in New York City. "We're going to the conven- tion with the second highest number of delegates," Udall told cheering supporters in De- troit last night. "We're going all the way." See FORD, Page 7 1±any prbuiulj 11u3 with 84 per cent of the states 6,331 precincts reportng: SEPUBIRICAN Ford 65 per cent Reagan 34 per cent Uncommitted 1 per cent DEMOCRATIC Carter 44 per cent Udall 42 per cent Wallace 7 per cent Uncommitted. 2 per cent Others 5 per cent DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL hopeful, Jimmy Carter, was all smiles last night as he hustled through Detroit's Metro Airport on his way to his Michigan campaign headquarters. Carter nar- rowly defeated Morris Udall in last night's Michigan primary. Brown takes Maryland WASHINGTON (')-California Gov. Edmund "Jerry" Brown yesterday won the Maryland Democratic presi- dential primary, capitalizing on his primary debut to wound the front-runner campaign of former Georgia governor Jimmy Carter. With 83 per cent of the state's 1546 precincts report- ing, Brown had 224,443 votes or 48 per cent and Carter 171,395 votes or 38 per cent. THE 14 per cent of the vote not going to Carter or Brown was split among five other candidates. Morris Udall, who abandoned plans to campaign in the state after Brown came in, had 5 per cent and George Wallace, winner of the last two Maryland primaries, had 4 per cent of the vote. On the Republican side, Ford led Reagan by a margin of 72,294 or 57 per cent to 55,113 or 43 per cent. Brown held Carter to a virtual standoff among rural and black voters, the former Georgia governor's main source of strength in Maryland. The 38-year-old gov- ernor was ahead in all metropolitan areas around Baltimore and Washington. CARTER claimed he could absorb defeats and still win the Democratic nomination on the first ballot. The question was how many. In Maryland, for the second ceek in a row, he lost to a campaign newcomer facing the primary voters for the first time. Sen. Frank Church of Idaho beat Carter in Nebraska last Thursday. Brown was moving quickly to build on his Maryland victory. He opened a campaign office in New York City today to woo uncommitted delegates in that state's big delegation. BROWN waged an intensive campaign against Car- ter in the Maryland presidential preference vote. But the 38-year-old California governor came to the presi- dential race too late to field a slate of delegate candi- dates, so his Maryland delegate support had to come from Democrats who were formally uncommitted to pledged to dropout candidates. Ford campaign manager Rogers Morton said in Washington that the President's victories in Maryland and Michigan will develop "the kind of momentum we need to get us through the days ahead." He said Ford can win all the rest of the primaries,. including the June 8 contest in Reagan's native California. Brown