The Michigan Daily Vol. XC, No. 10-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, May 21, 1980 Ten Cents- Sixteen Pages Beats Reagan by 2-1 margin :~ ~Bush nabs startling victory in state race Miami riot aftermath AP Photo Keith Powell, 13, tours the destruction of his neighborhood yesterday in the Liberty City area of Mjiami. The city's riot-scarred neighborhoods were declared "under control" yesterday, but teenagers 250 miles away in Tampa reportedly stoned cars and looted stores. See story, Page 14. Appeals court rules Regents can relocate disrupted meetin s From AP and UPI George Bush won the Michigan presidential primary election in a star- tling runaway last night and put Ronald Reagan's drive toward the Republican presidential nomination on hold for the moment. Bush was gaining 58 per cent of the vote to Reagan's 32 per cent. The for- mer United Nations ambassador said victory was "a very big shot in the Voters in Quebec overwhelmingly rejected their separatist government's appeal for a mandate to lead them out of the Canadian confederation. See story, Page 2. arm," and means "I shouldn't be writ- ten off." REAGAN WAS favored in yester- day's other primary - Oregon, where President Carter sought to write off Sen. Edward Kennedy and convince Democrats their race is over. Preliminarv results of the ARC News poll of Oregon voters indicated Carter and Reagan were running strong. Carter and Kennedy stayed off the ballot in Michigan, where Democrats held a primary that didn't count. Kennedy said the Democratic race is "absolutely not" over, and accused Carter of trying to put up a smokescreen by suggesting his renomination is assured. "I'M ELATED. It was a major win," Bush said in Cleveland. The Michigan GOP primary drew a sparse turnout. This was the vote with 48 per cent of the precincts counted : Bush 177,066 or 58 per cent, to lead for 53 delegates. Reagan 94,429 or 32 per cent, for 29 delegates. Rep. John Anderson, out of the Republican race but still on the primary ballots, was gaining eight per cent of the vote. "THIS IS A great victory for George Bush," said Gov. William Milliken, who awaited the outcome in the governor's mansion in Lansing. "It is proof of his ability to appeal to a broad range of the electorate. While he came to Michigan a longshot, he is emerging as the party's best shot for a victory this fall." Bush said in advance that a victory in Michigan would upset Reagan's "ban- dwagon psychology." He campaigned the state with Milliken at his side and said the governor's help was crucial. REAGAN'S MICHIGAN campaign chairman, John Gnau, conceded the election at 8:55 p.m. "The good news is that a combination of Michigan and Oregon put him over the top of delegates needed with one vote to spare," Reagan's Michigan campaign director, John Gnau told a disbelieving crowd of about 50 at a suburban hotel. "The disappointing news is that we didn't carry Michigan. I want to See BUSH, Page5 By MITCH STUART The University Regents did not violate the Open Meetings Act by moving their March, 1979 meeting to avoid demonstrators protesting the University's investments in South Africa, the Michigan Court of Appeals ruled yesterday. But Washtenaw County Coalition Against Apartheid spokeswoman Heidi Gottfried said yesterday the group will appeal the decision, to the U.S. Supreme Court if necessary. THE APPEALS BOARD said the Regents' action was "within the spirit" of the act. "Certainly, the Regents should not be required to have demonstrators who breach the peace at a meeting physically and forcefully expelled by law enforcement officials," the court said. Nearly 200 people, many of them WCCAA members, protested the University's investments during both days of last year's March Regents meeting. At that time the Regents ob- tained a temporary injunction allowing them to bar protestors from the meeting room and admit only the press and selected members of the public. UNIVERSITY GENERAL Counsel Roderick Daane said the central issue is the definition of the word "exclude" See COURT, Page 11 .Bush .. 'Don't write me off'