Rage Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, July 10, 1976. Ford calls Reagan qualified' (Gcsatiased tan P a;e 1 were to become president . . . During an interview with Fort Meanwhile, Reagan, having Wayne, lrd., television station appealed fotr GOP national con- WPTA-TV on May 2, he cited vention delegate votes from Co- Reagan statements that U S. lorado, said yesterday he would military forces stationed in be willing to draft a list of ac- Panama should be employed if ceptable vice presidential can- necessary to keep the Panama didates and let convention dele- canal open. Ford declared: "I gates choose his running mate think some of his campaign rhe- from the list. toric would lead me and per- haps many Americans to think REAGAN ALSO told dele- that he might be very rash in gates to the state party conven- how he uses his power if he tion that Vice President Nel- Couiion Off's bill to form state power plants son Rockefeller would have no place in a Reagan administra- tion, except perhaps as an oc- casional emissary to a foreign nation. "I believe there is substan- tial difference philosophically in our approach to government, and therefore I would not par- ticularly see a place. for him," Reagan said. ACCORDING TO an AP Press survey, Ford now has 1,028 dele- gates committed to him while Reagon has 979, with 1,130 needed to nominate. There are 171 uncommitted delegates and 80, including those in Colorado, still to be selected. After to- morrow, 55 remain to be chos- en in Connecticut and Utah. Ford gained 24 delegates Thursday to Reagan's three. The president beat his challen- ger in North Dakota's Repub- lican convention ten delegates to three and picked up support of previously uncommitted delegates in five states and ter- ritories. Reagan's chief Colorado spokesman predicted the for- mer California governor would win all nine delegates being se- lected at district conventions and another 16 up for grabs at the state convention tomorrow. Reagan has a 6-0 lead aver President Ford in delegates - picked earlier in the state. BUT A FORD spokesman, Robert Flanivan, predicted the President would win control of the state's delegation by taking 17 delegates. "We'll probably get five out of the districts and 12 out of the state at-large," he said. Reagan arranged to meet with delegates to three congressional district conventions as well as with state convention delegates and received time to address the state meeting tomorrow, Ford did not personally cam- paign in Colorado. On the Democratic side, Jim- my Carter's bandwagon, with nomination nearly assured, roll- ed on yesterday as more dele- gates pledged support and the last labor holdouts surrendered. Carter, who has already con- ducted talks with several vice presidential possibilities, will meet tomorrow night in New York with Sen. Henry Jackson, a former presidential aspirant and will probably talk with three or four more hopefuls in the near future. The latest UPI count gave Carter a whopping 1,804 dele- gates, 300 more than the num- ber necessary to snatch the nomination on the first ballot. By CHRIS PARKS LANSING (UlPi) - Gov. Wil- liam Milliken's electric power commission has endorsed, on an 8-4 vote, a watered-down version of a controversial propiosal to put the state in the power gen- erating business. A Michigan Power Authority (MPA), proposed earlier this year in the commission's pre- liminary report, would be al- lowed to build and operate elec- tric power plants and sell power to existing utility companies. PROPONENTS believe the MIPA could generate power more cheaply than the investor- owned utilities. Others said it may- be the only way to get essential new plants built. Representatives of the state's lwo largest electric companies, however, voted against the plan yesterday. It wa s alsagreed to recom- mend refomsto saoten die lag between the time utilities file for rate in reases and the time the statePubli cService Commission acts on the requests as a "sbort-term" solution to the state's need for electric power. SHORT-TERM solutions are required, commission members said, because the Michigan Power Authority could not be ready to produce electricity in less than eight to ten years. It is believed the state faces a criti- cal need for more generating e difference!!! .; * PRERREOR:: E3I rT 3 -ars SnIAT lfexpesience *asdisuccess DAT Small classes a LSAT Voluminous homeĀ« CREI study rmaterials ATGSB tourses thai are cosaty paeS Tape facilies fsr ECFMG missedlessons NAT'L MED BDS NATL DENT BDS write or call: * " 1945 Pauline Blvd. Aria Arbor 48103 SE6'.:"3149 EDUCATIONAL CENTER * 7f ST P PR7PM N s*EGAUSTsSdN1 S9 * sweanune, om capacity before the end of this decade. They said utilities would be better off financially and thus better able to build needed plants if they did not have to wait so long for the PSC to act on rate requests. Company officials said the lag and the failure of the PSC to grant the full amount re- quested has hurt their credit rating and made it impossible for them to borrow money to build new plants. SOME MEMBERS wanted the commission to recommend that the PSC give companies larger rate increases, but this was not incorporated in the final report. In an attempt to reach a conmpromise, the final version of the MPA was considerably modified, giving utility com- panies the right to help plan MPA plants and to provide per- sonnel on a contract basis to run them. "If the plants are planned, operated and maintained by the existing companies, you lose the thing you're after," former General Motors Chairman Rich- ard Gerstenberg said. Gersten- berg is on the board of Detroit Edison Co. "You're trying to develop a competitor," he said. "The closer you get them together, the less competition you'll have." The outline approved by the commission also includes a call for more energy conservation. Commission members will get a look at a proposed draft of the final report when they meet again, Aug. 4. Waterman: Demolition blues (Continued from Page 6) can you do here but shoot bas- kets?" I looked at him. "Isn't there any other use for it?" "SURE THERE IS" He laughed, and swept his arm out over the vastness below. "The Natural Resources people tell me it would be ideal for some of their large-scale mod- els. Or perhaps you could ring it with two floors of offices, here-" he pointed -- "and here. Leave a large open court- yard in the middle with the sunlight coming in, It's a very sound,'creative idea. And it wouldn't cost much" He was silent a moment, leaning on the railing. The mu- sic of the piano floated in from the hallway behind us. "You know," he said, "this used to be a place where stu- dents came together for almost all their social activities. But nobody's very concerned about tt now - so the slide-rule en- gineers get their way. "When the University sent their proposal to the Regents they told them a full study of all alternatives to demolition had been done. The fact is, no study was ever done, nothing at all was put down on paper." His mouth hardened into a thin bitter line. "It's shock- ing; no two-bit realtor would knock down a building without some kind of study." HEPIHERD AND I turned away from the gym and went back downstairs. "What about the building codes?" I asked him as we crossed the main floor of the gym to the Barbour side. Our footsteps echoed strangely around us. "They said the main reason for tearing the build- ings down is that they don't meet some of the safety codes and it would be too expensive to fix them up." "You'd think that in a build- ing of such statewide histori- cal significance they could at least look into the possibility of working out some kind of an adjustment," he answered. We were standing in the cen- ter of Barbour gymnasium now. Built in response to demands of women students for a facility of their own, it was for many years, said Shepherd, as im- portant focus of the early wo- men's rights movement. "There's some hope here," he told me. "There's been some serious talk going on about us- ing Barbour as a Women's Center" - consolidating the many scattered women's organ- izations of the city under one roof. Shepherd and I moved out of the main gym area into the front hall of Barbour. "HIS ISN'T JUST a gym, hdeclared as we passed a suite of offices. "There are fine facilities here for a library, for office space - there are many choices about what to do." We slowly retraced our steps back to the Waterman side, and Shepherd began to talk about conflict - of - interest situa- tions that he felt had influenc- ed the decision fo demolition. "You know Paul Rasmus- sen?" he asked. (Rasmussen is Asso iate Dean for Research and Facilities for the College of Literature, Science, and the Art. "e helps make those U-M Stylists at the UNION Open 8:30 o.r-5:15 p.m. Mon.-Sat, HAROLD, CHET and DAVE decisions about what buildings get used and which ones don't-. but he's also a member of the Chemistry Department( which has its eyes on the Waterman site.) So he wears two hats; and he's one of the people who failed to do a proper study of these buildings." We had paused in the door- way between the two gyms. Three or four young men had come in, and they were drib- bling a basketball down the wooden floor . . . TIIE UNIVERSITY WAS talk ing now, Shepherd told me. (although President Robben Fleming denies it) about knock- ing down the West Engineering Building and its archway "be- cause nobody wants it." The problem, Shepherd was saying, lay in the nomadic na- ture of administrators such as Fleming. They had no roots is the University, no ties to its past. "They're extremely smart. shallow people," he said, "who don't understand the real spirit of this University and don't care about it. This is just a job to them; they move in and they move out again. And none of this-" he swept out his arm to take in the expanse of the two gyms "-none of this means anything to them." A talk with Fleming later on, seemed only to prove Shep- herd's point. "I must admit," Fleming told me, "that I just don't view Waterman as having any particular architecturat value." He said he was uncer- tain as to whether a study Of alternatives to demolition had been done. "But I know that there were extensive discus staons among variorts commit- tees before we went tor the e- gents," he added. Still, some people are deter- mined not to let the mnattef slide. Dorothy McGuigan of the Center for the Continuing Edr cation of Women, tells me tha a letter is being written to the Regents asking them to p0t pose demolition of Wate rt Barbour until, "the Unisershe community has been consulted.' Back at the gym doorway Shepherd sighed "What can be accomplished in the face a these locusts? The things I re gard as interesting they regard as barnacles to be scraped away." But as we walked back a)ot into the sunlight, he admi ted that the prospects were not entirely glum. "There's at- ways hope," he said. "Right ai to the end." TODAY at 2and8 p.m. MICHIGAN REPERTORY 76 AT THE UNIVERSITY Of MICHIGAN Cesents JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR' JULY 5-10 (ll*\ /4,o . ) msiac by AN[REW LLOYD WEBBE, Lyrics by TIM RICE. in the Air-conditioned Power Center PERFORMANCE TIME 8 P.M. JULY 10 MAT. 2 P.M. Tickets at Power Center Box Office, M-F 12:30-5 p.m. and all Hudsons