" Page Fourteen THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, June B, 1976 Page Fourteen THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, June 8, 1976 Candidates Hopefuls gear up Parties spi * (Continued from Page 5) prepare f or last primaries Councilman Lois Belcher (R-Sth Ward) seconded Allen's (continued from Page 1 Ford also borrowed some "Though I have a great deal 1 battle Ironically enough, while ris- strategy from his vastly suc- of sympathy for the small busi- ine star Brown could not get on cessful Michigan campaign as nessman." said Relcher, "I'm lit Council ... (Continued from Page 1) DEMOCRATS: Carter has 909 delegates to 307.5 for Udall, who is running second. Carter's major task is to overcome his recent defeats at the hands of Church and Brown and restore his psychological momentum, a term which has been very big this year. But even in losing he will accumulate delegates and a big win could put him close to 1,200 of the 1,505 necessary for nomination. The other intangible factor is Hubert Humphrey. He an- nounced after Carter won the Pennsylvania primary that he would not campaign actively for the nomination. Then last week he implied in several in- terviews that if Carter came out of today's races with less than about 1,250 delegates, he might enter the race. the ballot, moribund Alabaman George Wallace and Scoop Jackson (neither having active- ly campaigned here) are of- fered on the ballot. On the Republican side, Ford has zeroed in on Reagan's Rho- desia gaffe, blitzing the Cin- cinnati area with commercials that intone "Governor Reagan couldn't start wars, President Reagan could." DESPITE cries of foul play, Ford's attacks have caused Reagan to soften his hawkish stand on Rhodesia. And in turn, the ex-governor has criticized Ford for supporting plans to construct a nuclear power plant in nearby Moscow (Ohio). The nighthawk, a valuable in- sect eater, makes the longest migration of any North Ameri- can bird. he took a motorcade tour of western Ohio communities. The tour reminded many observers of Ford's much - publicized whistle - stop trip through cen- tral Michigan. FOREIGN VISITORS WASHINGTON I') --America as observed by foreign visitors from the time of the Revolution to World War I is the theme of an exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery t h a t runs through Nov. 13. The Gallery is a bureau of the Smithsonian Institution. CARIFESTA SET KINGSTON, Jamaica (A)-The second Caribbean festival of the arts, Carifesta '76, opens here July 23 for an 11-day run. The festival will draw partici- pants from 35 countries in the West Indies or bordering on the Caribbean Sea. l wO1Ci, 0 i l4L1V , il worried about the competition that might arise between the sidewalk merchants and store owners when store owners de- cide to have sidewalk sales in front of their own stores. "AFTER ALL," he added, "They pay to have the snow plowed and the sidewalk swept . .. and then somebody from New York comes along and sets up a booth ..." Democrat Jamie Kenworthy (D-4th Ward) countered that the sidewalks belonged to the city, not to local store owners. "I don't think we should al- lows them (property owners) to have final say over what hap- pens on city sidewalks," he said. THE PROPOSAL went to a vote. It was defeated by the six-member Republican major- ity. BOOK SALE -QUANTITIES LIMITED- Hadinahame: CIRCLES & STANDING STONES... $3.00 ... ... .... . ... .. was $5.00--NOW $3.00 Fox: REGIMENTAL LOSSES IN THE CIVIL WAR..W$. . ................. $35.00--NOW $21.00 Buse: APPLIED ECONOMICS .. was $19.50-NOW $11.70 Fleischner: JUDAISM IN GERMAN CHRISTIAN THEOL- OGY SINCE 1445 .......... was $7.50-NOW $4:50 Wentorf: ADVANCES IN HIGH-PRESSURE RESEARCH . .....................was $19.50-NOW $11.70 Cabell: BEYOND LIFE . was $17.00-NOW $10.20 Wolff: GEORGE GISSING ...... was $17.50-NOW $10.50 Zulaf: AMERICAN PERIODICAL VERSE: 1973 . was $17.50-NOW $10.50 Bond: AN ENCYCLOPEDIA OF ANTIQUES ........... was $18.00-NOW $10.80 Castanqo: HISTORICAL DICTIONARY SOMALLA . was $9.50-NOW $5.70 Worton: FREEDOM OF SPEECH AND PRESS . was $4.50-NOW $2.76 Davinson: BIBLIOGRAPHIC CONTROL .............. was $8.00-NOW $4.80 Deuch: KITCHEN MANAGEMENT FOR INSTITUTIONS . was $12.00-NOW $7.20 Osborn: PROBLEMS OF PROOF ................... . was $32.50-NOW $19.50 Walter: INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS ........... was $10.50-NOW $6.30 Campbell: COLLECTION OF HIGHLAND RITES AND COSTUMES............ .was $8.00-NOW $4.80 Robinson: WHY PUPILS FAIL IN READING ........ ... was $6.75-NOW $4.05 Scalzo: ELEMENTARY COMPUTER ASSISTED STATISTICS . was $13.00--NOW $7.80 Mansell: MICROFORMS IN LIBRARIES . was $16.50-NOW $9.90 Ferauson: HELLENISTIC ATHENS, was $16.50-NOW $9.90 Soense: MYTHS AND LEGENDS OF BABYLONIA AND ASSYRIA . . ..............was $15.00-NOW $9.00 Stephens: HISTORIOGRAPHICS ... was $9.00-NOW $5.40 Cattell: INDUSTRIAL RESEARCH LABORATORIES (14th Edition) ...............was $50.00-NOW $30.00 Gould: GRASSES OF TEXAS . .. was $20.00-NOW $12.00 Hill: CHILDREN ARE PEOPLE .... was $4.95-NOW $2.97 Burroughs: EDUCATION IN VENEZUELA.......... ........................ was $9.00-NOW $5.40 Carrol: IRELAND IN THE WAR YEARS 1939-1945 .... .......................was $10.75-NOW $6.45 David: REFERENCE GUIDE FOR CONSUMERS. ..... ................was $14.95-NOW $8.97 Eacker: PROBLEMS OF PHILOSOPHY & PSYCHOLOGY .......................was $10.00-NOW $6.00 Ford: A COMPARISON OF FORMATIVE CULTURES IN THE AMERICAS,........was $37.50-NOW $22.50 Ecker: ANATOMY OF THE FROG .. . . .......................was $40.00-NOW $24.00 Sauter: THE STAINED GLASS OF WILLIAM MORRIS & HIS CIRCLE-a cataloque was $70.00-NOW $42.00 Smith: TENNESSEE HISTORY .. was $17.50-NOW $10.80 Johnson: POEMS OF EMILY DICKINSON was $10.00-NOW $6.00 Rehrauer: FILM USERS HANDBOOK..s .I.. . .................wacs $1500-NOW $9.00 Gross: SEXUAL BEHAVIOUR .... was $13.00-NOW $7.80 Mercer: ANCIENT CARPENTERS TOOLS . .... ..................was $13.00-NOW $7.80 Dickinson/ Bowers: THE VIDEO TELEPHONE. .................. was $10.00-NOW $6.00 Glasser: FUNDAMENTALS OF APPLIED INDUSTRIAL MANAGEMENT ..... . ....was $12.00-NOW $7.50 Lana: ASTROPHYSICAL FORMULAE.s ... . ............was $80.00-NOW $48.00 Hill: MARK TWAIN'S LETTERS TO HIS PUBLISHERS .. ................. was $15.00-NOW $9.00 Freud: HISTORY OF THE PSYCHOANALYTIC MOVE- MENT .................was $10.00-NOW $$6.00 Ouinlon: HUNDRED MILLION DOLLAR LUNCH . ........ -. -... . was $7.00-NOW $4.20 Reinecke: BIBLIOGRAPHY OF PIDGIN & CREOLE LANGUAGES .......... was $25.00-NOW $15.00 A similar fate awaited Coun- dil member Liz Keogh's (Dist Ward) revision of the city or- dinance concerning tenant's rights booklets, AND WHEN Council member Roger Bertioa (R-3rd Ward) presented an amendment to the city's bicycle ordinance, the battle lines grouped rapidly again around party loyalties. Bertioa's amendment would change wording in the ordi- nance which forbids bicyclists from using the roadway where there is a mandatory bikepath beside the roadway. If the Ber- toia amendment takes effect, all bikepaths will be assumed to be mandatory: cyclists would not be allowed use of the street whenever there is a path be- side it. Both Jones and Kenworthy took exception to the proposed amendment, but there was no convincing the majority. The new ordinance passed on first reading; Henry called for a public hearing, however, and one will be scheduld before a final decision is reached by Council. Coupon war strikes city food stores (Continued from Page 1) filled a paper sack with re deemed coupons. Although most customers are bringing in a few dollars worth of coupons at a time, there have been extreme cases. One customer said, "i stood behind a woman on Saturday who had two carts filled mostly with baby food and disposable dia- pers. Her bill came to $102 but she paid only $73 (with her coupons)." Most stores will keep the pro- gram for a week or two longer. However, the deluge of coupons and customers is taking its toll on employes. "It really slows our work down," said Strauss, looking haggard. Ter e ISa "; :difference!!! PREPARE FOR: " S MCIAT Over 35 years , * e m and success " WU Smallclasses S LSAT auminous home " " GRE studyrmaterials " " " :ATGSB "atd * CA IEfITape faciltiessr Sreews of * C ATlesses and for use. * urn of supplementary " L X materials " - FLEX i Makeup for " ECF G sesed lessons :ECFMG : SNAT'L MED BDS i : NATL DENT BDS : " writ or call: * * 1945 Pauline Blvd. " An Arbor 48103 * " 662-3149 EDUCATIONA cENTER * TEST eeEnARss I A IS:SSIN rE eS "d NEW STORE HOURS: 9:00-5:00 Mon.-Fri.; 10:30-4:00 Sat. Phone: 662-6594