Saturday, July 24, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three saturday July 24, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Aide claims Ford will get nomination By The Associated Press President Ford's top delegate hunter i yesterday that Ford now has more thu enough delegates to win the GOP ipr'dential nomination, a claim that t rival, Ronald Reagan, had made ear- i eor himself. ames Baker, the Ford delegate man, id the President has 1,135 delegates, a more than needed to secure the nmination leagan's campaign claims it will hAe 1,140 or more delegates on the first 4I at the convention in Kansas City Augst 6-9. 1IWEVER, The Associated Press ti of legally committed and public- declared candidates shows neither ws . enough to win. It places Ford at io delegates, Reagan with 1,024, 138 u titted and one for Sen. Ioward It-Tenn). It takes 1,130 to nomi ,i Baker told a news conference at delegate tally for the Ford cam a conservative count." ithe Repubhcan presidential nom- Go-fer The next Olympic decathalon runner to % a gold medal in 1980 may be Cl Ie Litsky. Litsky, 16, of Tenafly, N J. already has begun his training on ihe jo with the U. S. Olympic Commit- tee Charlie holds the job of press rep- resentative to the athletes. His job gives him a chance to practice running. "Say a nespaperman wants a pass to get in here. I do a quick 400 meters to the International Center down the road and drop it off to him . . . Once in a while some of the athletes will be in the middle of a poker game and one of therm will say, 'Why don't you go get me a soda?' I'm happy to do it. That's salter one hundred meters right there" Charlie Lisy is no kook. Hle's exceptionally bright, has won a number of medals competing in sprints, hurdles and cross - country AAU events at the club and high school level and has been attending track meets since he was eigh'. 'I've been to every indoor meet t 'adison Square Garden since 1968," he sans. "My father is a track nut. Ie didn't push me into the sport, though, never But I found out I loved it. It's my life " HI Happenings today is the last day of the Lin- coln exhibit at Briarwood, open from 9,y}am to 9:30 pm . . . The Outing Clu offers swimming and hiking, meet a 1:4) today at the North entyr of the It. ck am Bldg . . . The Caretaker will be 4resented at 8 pm tonight at Schor- inn Aud . . , Sunday at 8, Dr. Gloria 1heler will speak about "Western In- IllIC!ct s in the Lives of Japanese: A nt01r m, Missionary's Perspective". She be joined by speakers of various scagrtinds at the Ecumenical Campus Ceniter . . Oh, and don't forget, Mark The Bird" Fidrych is on the tube to- y , t2pm -Go get 'em! . . . Weather or not It will be hot and muggy again today wit a high of 85. Skies will be clear asd sunny, and the low tonight will be ii tie low 60's. ination still being -argued over, a certain amount of attention on Friday seemed to A be torning to the vice presidential nomi- nation. THERE WERE these developments: -house Republican Leader John Rhodes of Arizona said Ford may not have any alternative but to take Rea- gan as his vice presidential running mate because convention delegates may force the choice of Reagan, who has said lie won't take the job. -A spokesman for Reagan was asked if the formier California governor, should he win the presidential nomination, would think about President Ford as a vice presidential running mate. He replied that Ford would not be ruled out, provided he had the same political philosophy as Reagan. THE spokesman then made points stretching from "Obviously we don't think Ford would ac'ept," to "His name is not a name that ht-s come under any serous discussion in the mRea'icampt Ford, incidentally, has been asked if he tiould accept a vice presidential nom- in'ition and has always replied that he expects to win the Republican presides- tial nimsinlatiomi. Asked at his news cmiii ference Mondas if he was considering Reagan as a running mate, he replied: "h 'I will simIply reaffirm . I am not excludihg any Republican from consid- eration< s a potential running mate. On the Democratic side, meanwhile, Miim Carter's vice presidential run- ning mate kicked off his campaign mt the South. At Iilton head, S. C., vice -' presidential hopeful Walter Imondale, from Minnesota, said he was not forming a Southern strategy with Georgian Car- ter. "We have a national strategy," he said. "I'm going to campaign all overh< the couintry." Carter was at his home in PlansAP"I Ga., yesterday and a spokesman said he O n the team was studying the issues and strategy for the campaign. Mondale was to meet James Earl Carter, one of the Democrat's leading scorers, relaxes with a with Carter in Plains during the week- game of baseball. Just last week the Democrats placed him on their all-star end. team. D s -seeESc-sea By BARBARA ZAHS With incumbent Marvin Esch seeking greener pastures in the United States Senate, the race for the Second Congres- sional District seat he lea--es behind is wide open. But voter apathy and a lack of disagreement on major issues have produced a rather uneventful contest be- tween the five hopefuls vying for the Democratic nomination in the August 3 primary election. The candidates--Delbert Hoffman, Ed- ward Pierce, Mary Robek, John Spill- son, and Marvin Stempien-have been forced to try to drum up interest and support by touting their past political experience and qualifications for office, STEMPIEN, a ILiivonia lawyer amnd for- ner state representative, ha conlended that he is the only candidate with past legislative experience. tie served three terms in the Michigan tiiiisit of Repre- sentatiss, including two years as Ma- jisi Floor Leader. In 1972 Stempien was the leisimocratic Congressional candidate in the Second District, but he lost to Republican Mar- vin Esch in the general election. Pierce, an Ann Arbor physician, long active in local politics, left his private practice in 1968 to start the Summit Medical Center, a facility providing health care for low-income residents. PIERCE MADE a hid for the Demo- cratic nomination in 1974, but was de- feated in the primary election by John Reuther, nephew of the late UAW pres- ident Walter Reuther, by a narrow mar- gin o i1 votes. Spillson and Robek, seeking office for the first time, and Rioffman, a Monroe County Commissioner, are considered by some to be the three dark horse candi dates in the race- The seat in the lHiouse of Representa- tives that the candidates are vying for. lies in a politically split district. The Second Congressional District, which covers portions of Washtenaw, Wayne, and Monroe Coiunics, contains a mitx- ture of college campuses, factory areas, and suburbs. It also boasts the largest proportion of student voters (19 per cent) of any district in the nation. THE CANDIDATE who wins the nom.m itmation most garner the sutpmort of bt tlb student and the blue cullar rule. Like other Democrats rtuning for mf)- fice this year, all five Congressional hopefuls have been playing on the popa lar anti-Watergate theme, calling fo;m more openness and honesty in govern- ment. In addition, the candidates have been uniformly urging a reduction in the nation's unemployment and inflation rates. The candidates do differ, though, in the ways they have styled their cam- paigns. HOFFMAN calls himself the "candi- date of the people." Waging a low-coast campiign, he said he believes there are tuo many lawyers in Congress, adding that these people are not doing enouigh for the "working man." Spillson, 27, rnning for public office for the irst time, is concentrating on findingt an alternative energy sonurce and silving the nation's economic purblems. He also says he wants to restore faith in politicians and" convince peoiple that governoment cures about uIndividuals" Robek, althoug inot ruinning as a fu'iii inist, says she believes there should b more w mnmcm iii Cingress. A prifessir at Easearn Mieign Uniusemrsity, Rumbek is omeimher of the "Righ ,Ito ife" ;C "PEOPIE ARE til mititlst icii'iils cc swurve," she explmined. Riobek urges increased citiep patin in cotmmuunity aclisities 'Ihe American pimblic deserves a chan-ge that can only haimpen if peimle like myself become iuvolved," she said. ROBEK described herself as a "prob lens solver," but added that she thinks legislators should examine the alterna- tives carefully before selecting a course of action. See FIVE,;Page 4