The Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXVI, No. 67-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, August 13, 1976 Ten Cents Twelve Pages GOP platform leans to Ford Miss. delegation in doubt KANSAS CITY, Mo. (,I - President Ford emerged from the first round of Republican platform sessions yesterday with a slight edge over Ronald Reagan, but a new hazard appear- ed in Ford's path toward the presidential nomi- nation in the form of trouble within the volatile Mississippi delegation. Debate is also stirring over the possibility that Sen. James Buckley, the conservative Re- publican from New York, will jump into the race. If he does, it is not clear what it will do to the presidential nomination race that already looks too close to call. Both Ford and Reagan strategists said they were satisfied with platform planks approved so far. But on foreign policy issues, Ford's posi- tions prevailed by narrow margins. THE REAGAN FORCES prepared to fight again before the full platform committee and on the convention floor. "We feel at the moment, the platform is pro- gressing quite well," John Sears, Reagan's cam- paign manager, told a news conference. Dean Burch, a Ford adviser, followed Sears to the podium in a conference room a floor below where the platform committee was meeting, and said, "I don't anticipate there will be anything in the platform we can't live with." In a statement issued earlier, Clarke Reed, Mississippi Republican chairman, said his state's delegation was disturbed by reports Ford "is considering several possible running mates to the left of the mainstream of the Republican party." The Ford camp has fought the proposal, suc- See GOP, Page 2 BULLETIN Republican platform writers voted narrowly late last night to endorse ratifi- cation of the Equal Rights Amendment, which was supported by President Ford and opposed by Ronald Reagan. The 51 to 47 vote on the amendment now before the states made a floor fight likely on the women's rights issue when the full GOP convention meets next week. THE REPUBLICAN CONVENTION promises to be exciting, but the same obviously can't be said for preconvention proceedings as evidence by Rep. Silvio Conte of Massachusetts, chairman of the GOP subcommittee on human rights, who can't stifle a hearty yawn at the meeting of the committee in Kansas City. B~uckley Tal Zaatar falls to Christian forces BEIRUT, Lebanon (, - The Palestinian camp of Tal Zaatar fell to Christian forces yester- day after a fierce seven-week siege. Thousands of wailing refugees poured out to safety. Palestinian sources claimed a handful of holdouts were still fighting hand-to-hand with ri'ht--;-g gunmen who storm- ed -t,... the camp. Bttt they ad- mitted that Tat Zaatarthad, in effect, been conquered. A WEEPING old man, just out of the camp said of the re- maining defenders, "There can't be more than seven of them in any one spot . . . The boys who were fighting, may God rest their souls, were all killed."- Palestinian spokespersons claimed their fighters were "tricked' early yesterday when Red Cross trucks approached Tal Zaatar accompanied by Christian gunmen. The guer- rillas held their fire, thinking it was an evacuation mission, the Palestinian spakesman said, but then the Christians launch- ed a surnrise attack as the trucks drove away. The collapse of Tal Zaatar - reduced to rubble by thousands of artillery rounds - clears Christian - held east Beirut of the last significant stronghold of the alliance of Palestinians and leftist Moslems and rein- forces the virtual partition of Lebanon. THE FALL gave the right- win, Christian leadership per- haps its greatest victory in 16 months of civil war. Palestinian chieftains had vowed to de- See TAL, Page 2 J Postill case postponed By LANI JORDAN CHELSEA-In an attempt to salvage a weaken- ing case, assistant county prosecutor Lynwood Noah moved yesterday for a one week adjourn- ment of Sheriff Fredrick Postill's preliminary examination on felonious assault charges, in order to call two new witnesses, including one from Wisconsin. The hearing, now in its fourth day, stems from last month's brawl at a Chelsea wedding recep- tion involving Postill, county jail administrator Frank Donley, and suspended sheriff's deputy Basil Baysinger and his wife, Shirley. Both Noah and defense attorney Neal Bush had rested their cases when Noah asked 14th district court judge Henry Arkison to adjourn the hearing until next Thursday rather than mak- ing a decision on binding Postill over for .trial. Bush agreed to the unusual procedure stating outside the courtroom that "I wouldbe glad to have Marvin Bell (the witness from Wisconsin) testify. It could only aid our case." BUSH ADDED that if Bell's testimony was not consistent with what he (Bell) had stated in a state police report following the incident, it would prove that Bell had been contacted (by the prosecution) and given a different version of the brawl to report on the witness stand. In another unsual move, Postill took the stand yesterday to testify on his own behalf, Bush startled the crowded courtroom by immediately asking the sheriff, "Did you ever choke Basil Baysinger with handcuffs (the basis of the felo- nious assault charge)?" "Absolutely not," Postill replied firmly. Bush then continued to question the sheriff on his participation in the brawl. Postill related that Baysinger had approached him inside the reception hall and the two had started a friendly conversation. Baysinger testified Tuesday that Postill and Donley had started the coaversation. See POSTILL, Page 10 Postill