SEN. EDWARD KENNEDY (left), along with his wife Joan, speaks to a group necessary for a first-ballot victory. Carter, after learning of his primr of campaign workers Tuesday night at his headquarters in Washington. Kennedy tories, makes a fist in a victory salute as he leaves a Tuesday night r: told his supporters he will remain in the race for the Democratic presidential by his campaign workers in Washington. nomination although President Jimmy Carter (right) has won the delegates KENNEDY WAITS TO RETURN CARTER'S CALLS: Carter, Kennedy to meet From AP and UPI floor in August. President Carter complimented Sen. CARTER EMERGED from the last Edward Kennedy yesterday on a of the presidential primary elections "tough and effective campaign" as he yesterday with more delegates than it arranged a peacemaking attempt with will take to renominate him, but Ken- the presidential challenger who says he nedy, victor in five out of the last eight won't quit. primaries, said he would campaign all Carter and Kennedy agreed to meet the way to the Democratic National at the White House this afternoon to Convention. discuss the Democratic race - and "They want to chat about the future Kennedy cancelled a speech in Boston of the Democratic Party in the hopes some believed would be a declaration to their conversation will contribute to a fight the president on the convention brighter day for both," said Jody Fighter Kennedy plans Powell, Carter's press secretary. Carter said Tuesday night the nomination campaign is over now, ad- ding he would set to work to unite the Democratic Party. BUT KENNEDY countered that the message he read in the last primaries was a signal to go on with his challenge for the nomination. He had said earlier he would welcome an opportunity to talk with Carter because he wanted to tell the president personally they should meet in campaign debate before to use today convention time. Carter has rejected Kennedy's repeated debate demands. Carter tried twice to telephone Ken- nedy Tuesday night to extend an olive branch after the primary campaign, but was not put through, Powell said. Powell, who tried to downplay the confrontational aspects of the incident, said the president telephoned Kennedy about 6:30 p.m. Tuesday and again at 10:30 p.m. ON THE FIRST call, the White House operator was informed that Kennedy "was resting and they didn't want to disturb him," Powell said. When the second attempt was made, Kennedy aides said the senator was enroute to an appearance before sup- porters, where he told them it was just "the first night in the rest of the cam- paign." K~enne'dvcfinailly did ,retur, the rcalls convention WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter has the delegates he needs for renomination, but strategists for Sen. Edward Kennedy are questioning whether he can hold them at the Democratic National Convention. And they are mapping an effort that would reverse the overwhelming primary verdict with a stunning con- vention upset. The plan calls for creative use of party rules. THE KENNEDY contention: since a convention majority can set any rules it wants on delegate commitments, nothing is settled yet. Carter's current majority is ample to adopt rules bin- ding his delegates, but Kennedy aides believe Carter will be politically weak when the convention convenes and his support will fade. Carter delegates are not bound to rules to beat Carter vote his bidding on preliminary questions, but Carter managers say they will prove as loyal on rules and a party platform as on the nomination it- self. Interim party rules say that delegates who were pledged to a par- ticular candidate when they were chosen in primaries or caucuses must vote for that candidate at least on the first ballot at the Democratic National Convention in mid-August. JIM FLUG, communications director for the Kennedy campaign, says this rule won't be binding unless the conven- tion makes it so. "The bottom line is that ifa majority of those delegates want to reject or pick some candidate, they have the full power and authority and capacity to do it," Flug said. Fl Signs are growing that there may be Carter made Tuesday night. a real shootout at the New York conven- In an impromptu talk with reX tion; the rules are loose enough and Carter, when asked whether K contradictory enough that anything sounded conciliatory, repli could happen. wouldn't say that." The Carter campaign is concerned Of Kennedy's delaying in re enough to have set up a delegate the call, the president said, "He tracking operation to keep their thumb very busy, as have I, and he r on all their delegates and keep any the call in an adequate and from straying. fashion." The rule binding delegates is con- tained in the convention "call," a TONIGHT AT document notifying state parties of the national convention and setting out basic rules for electing delegations. Prior to the convention, the call con- Bo ,rBo ndi stitutes the temporary convention rules. CINEMA II PRESENTS YOJIMBO (Aktra Kurosawa, 1962) Toshiro Mifune stars in this classic Samuri movie. Wandering into a town with two corrupt factions at war, he hires himself off to BOTH sides. Guess who is still around at the end. Kurosawa and Mifune make YOJIMBO violent, funny, exciting, and beautiful throughout its two hours. (112 min.) MLB 3 7:30 & 9:30 $1.50 Tomorrow: THE BLACKBOARD JUNGLE WILD IN THE STREETS porters, ennedy ed, "I turning e's been eturned timely The Ann Arbor Film Cooperie Presentiat.t Meichigan Theatre: Thursday, June 5 PSYCHO (Alfred Hitchcock, 1960) 1, 3, 5, 7T& 9-MICHIGAN THEATRE Often cited as the most frightening film ever made, Psycho is the story of a secretary (JANET LEIGH) who absconds with $40,000 and comes upon a lonely motel near a Gothic house inhabited by a strange young man (ANTHONY PERKINS) and his possessive mother. Need we continue? Will you ever shower again? If you've only seen it on T.V., you've really never seen it. Chilling music by Bernard Herrmann. With VERA MILES, MARTIN BALSAM. Admission: $2.00, matinees $1.50. Tomorrow: A BOY AND HIS DOG with Jason Robards and George Pal's THE TIME MACHINE at MLB. mgff, ti