Page Fourteen THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, May 5, 1976 Page Fourteen THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, May 5, 1976 Carter's son sees. Money left to Negro race d daDES MOINES, Iowa (P) - farmer for 10 years before his "I T H I N K I knem ,w in n When Joseph Dorgan left $334,- death in 1973 at the age of 79. strange man," said A 229 "to the people of the Negro "When he told me to dra race," his neighbors said he aDorgan, hssbachelor, lved will, there was no doubt By MICHAEL ILUMFIELD she continued, "but the press did it to spite his family. alone on his farm near Cum- mind that he was totall has been unfair. So people have mnsi ot eta oa cere " Predlicting a Nhichigan victory been sl in a liberal town like But Des Moines attorney Wil- He harbored grudges passed on In his will, Dorgan sai for his father in the May 18th Ann Arbor to show their support liam Wimer, who drew up Dor- to him by his father, said his treatment of blacks in presidential primary, J a m e s out of fear that their liberal gan's will and is coexecutor of neighbors, including one against United States was "our "Chip" Carter rallied local sup- friends will think poorly of the estate, said, "It's just not his sister for marrying the man est national disgrace. porters Monday at the candi- them." true. she did. The sister's daughter, "We stole them from date'. Fa irth Ave. he, dquar- ImMre. akn s ogns W tl hmfo dates Fring Carter bters Fojtik echoed Jones' conten- "I'm not the least bit sur- Msrcella Harkin, is Dorgan's land, crammed them into tern, nrawing Carter boosters Lion that Carter had "closest prised that that would be the sole surviving relative, like animals, and we've 'oe of25- e -oldrcloset."" support" in the area. "As I reaction of his neighbors," said Her challenge to the will was treating them like animal h- year-ol s. atecorn' talked to people informally, I Wimer, who knew the recluse dismissed last month. since." w that Nimer. aw the in my y sin- id the n the great- their boats been s ever paigner said his father's politi- cal stance is "more liberal on some t h i n g s than (Morris) Udall, hot more conservative on others, like government spend- ing if you consider that a con- servative attitude." "DAD WDILD cut the de- ftense hld'et in a lot of areas" Carter s'ii,' and ww"td reduce U.S. trutps abroad, veto the B-1 bomber, het support the Trident submarine '')ecatuse it would be able to patrol 8It cwttttries where we would i!ke our nuclear weantits out." Addressine the contrvsersi'ii bussing ise, ttte younvg ('artert said. "It's kind if 'i outdated issue in the south-we haven't realls' hrd nu'hi about it for at lI't iie'u or sx vents "Wits, we've tad 67 tter cent black I'tiutiment) in all of the publi' s 'hois in Pluins, Geor. gin (Carter's howe town) for a number of years,." he remorked. ASKED WIIAT his fhiber's po- sition on coiirti-ordered bussing is, Carter s'id, "The only time the Federal government should get involved is when a com. munity is oracticing segrega- tion. Then the different grotns should sit down and iron out their differences, as they did in Atlanta." "It's like coming out of the closet to say you support Jim- my Carter around here," said City Councilwoman Carol Jones (D-Second Ward), who, with County Commissioner Kathleen Fojtik, spoke in support of Car- ter at the Fourth Ave. head- quarters. Jones and Fojtik said that they found Carter's views sur- prsingly more liberal than they had expected. "(Fred) Harris was my first choice," Jones said, "but for a variety of rea- sons, that campaign didn't real- ly get off the ground. One of the things we learned from '72 is that our efforts don't help if your candidate doesn't stand a ghost of a chance. "CARTER HAS been branded a conservative by the media," found others who were in sup- port of Carter," she said. She theorized that liberals have been reticent in backing Carter because of an "albatross image tied around his neck as a conservative southerner." CHIP CARTER said he was finhing "incredible the differ- elr kinds of groups that are vot- iog for its. Not since Kennedy o ill sorts of people backed a catdidae- we're getting blue- c(llior and white-collar support of bulbhuobby and John Ken- net' variety," he stated. All three speakers said that forimier McGtuvern supporters were citributing to Carter's campaigning effort, and young Cter said that 'since George Wallace his gone down the tube, we're picking up some of his votes." Over 11 Carter relatives - children, brothers, parents - have been on the campaign trail working for the presidential hopeful. Built in 1803, Fort Dearborn developed into the city of Chi- cago. THIS SUMMER: BIKE ACROSS the U.S.A. DETAILS FROM COLLEGIATE BIKECENTENNIAL 615 Nevada Sausalito, CA 94965 (Enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope.) ' IN THIS WEEK AT: Ann Arbor's Premium Rock and Roll Night Club. WEDNESDAY thru SUNDAY CLOUDBURST Tonight Only: STUDENT NIGHT 50c Admission With Student I.D. HOURS: Fri. & Sat. 8 p.m.-2 a.m. WEEKLY HOURS: 9 p.m.-2 a.m. 50c Discount Off Admission WITH STUDENT I.D. 516 E. 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