Wednesday, June 16.' 976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Rizzo recall petitions filed PHILADELPHIA (P) - Cri- tics of Mayor Frank Rizzo, a one-time city cop who rode a wave of law-and-order support to two mayoral election victor- ies, filed petitions yesterday asking for his recall. They claim he lied about the city's finances to win easy re-elec- tion. The petitions with 209,000 sig- natures were filed with the City Board of Elections after a 60-day petition - collecting drive by a coalition of anti- Rizzo forces with a long list of complaints. IF THE commissioners rule that enough signatures are val- id - 145,000 are needed-Rizzo would face a referendum to de- termine whether he stays in office. 'V The last mayoral recall elec- tion in a major city occurred last year in Seattle, but Mayor Q-YWes Uhlman won. The last suc- cessful recall in a big city was in Los Angeles in 1938 when Mayor Frank Shaw was recall- r - ed because of his role in a scandal involving acceptance of payoffs fror racketeers. Supporters of the 55 - year- old mayor denounce the effort as unconstitutional, saying it would permit a minority to set aside the decision of a major- RIZZO critics insist the pro- cedure is legal under the Phila- delphia Home Rule Charter. High times That provides a recall can be Far above the streets of Boston, John Otto spreads a fresh launched with signattres of at least 25 per cent of the voter coat of paint on the Customs House Clock. The timepiece is turnout in the previous elec- reported to have the largest clock face in the United States. tion. State law binds delegates to candidates LANSING (UPI) - Michigan against the two ballot commit- lease from the governor would delegates to the Democratic ment "unless I hear different- be fine, unless it would be a national convention pledged to ly from Governor Wallace." tight race." Morris Udall and George Wal- "Who's going to come out Cullers said it was "only a lace apparently are still oblig- there and put you in jail?" he matter of time until Carter had ed to stick with their candi- said. "I can't imagine what the nomination anyway" and dates for two ballots - even they'd do to you if you didn't said Wallace's move to support though Jimmy Carter has a stay with them for two ballots. him was "a good political fir-t ban nnmtinntin d vA cn =rY The three-member board has 15 days to check the signatures, and if enough are certified as valid, Rizzo would have 10 days to decide to resign or face a "yes-no" recall vote which, barring legal delays, could be held as early as Oct. 10. Rizzo, a former cop who worked up to police commis- sioner, has been a controver- sial figure ever since he came on the political scene, the per- sonal choice of former Mayor James Tate to be his succes- sor. Tate later broke with Rizzo and is backing the recall effort. RIZZO, calling his opponents "bleeding hearts, dangerous radicals, pinkos and faggots," took control of the city Demo- cratic organization after it sought to dump him because he backed Republicans for some offices and once called Richard Nixon the greatest American president. Rizzo campaigned last year on a slogan that he held taxes down. But a month after he was re-elected with 57 per cent of the vote against two oppon- H u RY --astwo Days! SHOWS TODAY at 1 :00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9 :00 OPEN 12:45 TODAY--all seats $1.25 until 5:00 eats, he admitted a budget defi- cit of nearly $100 million. ANOTIEIR charge against Rizzo arose from a demonstra- tion in March outside the Phila- delphia Inquirer, which had ridiculed the mayor in a satiri- cal article. Rizzo filed a $6-million libel suit. A few dys later several hundred pro-Rizzo construction union members surrounded the Inquirer, prevented distribution of two editions and beat up two photographers. ENDS SOON SHOWS TODAY AT 1:00-3 00 50 7:00-9 00 OPEN ot 12:45 TODAY all seats $1.25 until 5:00 FROM GHET1O TO SIJPERS'AS 0. PG J- rsi oaio nomination sewea up. Under Michigan law, dele- gates are committed for two ballots unless a candidate formally releases all his dele- gates by withdrawing from the race or issues a written release to the delegation. UDALL, in announcing his support for Carter, said his delegates were free to back the former Georgia governor. But he did not issue a blanket re- lease which fulfills the Michi- gan requirements. Wallace, likewise jumped on the Carter bandwagon but also has not issued a formal, writ- ten release. Carter won 69 delegates in Michigan's May 18 presidential primary, compared with 59 for Udall, two for Wallace and four uncommitted. ART CULLERS, Wallace's Michigan campaign director and one of his two delegates, said he would vote for Carter on the first ballot despite the two ballot rule. In a telephone interview Cullers said he was not happy about having to vote for Car- ter, but would comply with Wallace's wishes anyway. "Carter was not my choice, bat I have been a port of Governor Wallace's campaign for a number of years and I will go along with it," Cullers said. "HUT THAT'S the only way I would have done it - if the governor asked us to. I wouldn't have done it volun- tarily." Cullers said he would go "I WOULD think a word re- move." - - ~ ~~~ n -m m ~~ m H APPY HOUR Mon - 8-10:30 1 5c HOT DOGS every Friday from 2-5 p m. while they lost. HALF PRICE ON BEER, Tuesdays 8-Midnight. 310 MAYNARD I ni no= . n" rs i a 'o A Wa HURRY! After Tomorrow 1i iS NO MOn'!! SHOWS TODAY at 1:00-3:00-5:00- 7.00 9:00 OPEN at 12:45 TODAY-all seats $1.25 Until 5:00 An Allied Artists Release Na One under 18 admitted