The Michigan Daily-Saturday, August 2, 1980-Page 11 Milliken says import share of car market will soon decrease GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) - Gov. William Milliken says he feels imports will not hold their current share of the U.S. auto market, but concedes the domestic industry may not return to the high employment levels of a few years ago. MIlliken, appearing on the television show Michigan Forum to air across the state tomorrow, said even though other states have not followed Michigan's lead in offering incentives to boost car sales, he hopes to see action when legislatures begin returning in the fall., IN A wide-ranging interview, the governor also discussed his differences with GOP nominee Ronald Reagan, the ill-fated bid to put Gerald Ford on the ticket and prison overcrowding. Milliken said the unemployment-rid- den auto industry, mainstay of Michigan's economy, "will be fun- damentally changed" by its current or- deal. "That it will come back I have no doubt," he said, however. "WHETHER employment will ever reach the peak levels . . . of the past five years, I don't know and I don't even think the industry knows," he said. However, he insisted imports - which have cornered 27 per cent of the domestic market - will not expand that share and in fact will begin to lose some of it in the coming year. Milliken said he hopes Michigan's 50 per cent sales tax break on new cars will be copied elsewhere, but said the state cannot afford to extend the offer beyond July. TURNING TO the recent GOP con- vention, Milliken said Reagan's unsuc- cessful bid to put Ford on the ticket was an important signal of his willingness to broaden the base of his campaign. The moderate governor conceded he and the conservative Reagan have "some very serious differences in point of view" but insisted the nominee offers great hope for the country and has suggested "innovative approaches" to its problems. He predicted Reagan will win the election and said it is "clearly possible" for Republicans to seize control of Congress from the Democrats for the first time since the 1950s. GAINS ALSO can be made in the Democrat-dominated state legislature, although it will be "no cake-walk for Republicans," he said. Milliken said the move within the Democrgtic Party for a compromise candidate "will not materialize as a serious effort" and Carter will be renominated. Milliken said voter approval of a 0.1 per cent income tax to build new prisons is needed to avoid "major steps" to reduce the population or a federal court takeover of the system. ED CLARK, PRESIDENTIAL candidate of the Libertarian Party urges his supporters, during a campaign stop in Lansing yesterday, to help him qualify for the November election. Clark will need about 4,000 votes in the primary to get on the state ballot this fall. C krksays state law limits voters' choices LANSING (UPI) - Libertarian Par- ty presidential candidate Ed Clark said yesterday Michigan's tough ballot requirements for minority parties vir- tually prevent voters from being ex- posed to new ideas. 'Clark, who addressed students at the Cooley Law School, is fighting to win a spot on Michigan's November ballot. His Libertarian Party earlier this year submitted 18,000 signatures to meet the first step for ballot eligibility - but must win about 4,000 votes in the Aug. 5 primary election to assure him a spot in November. PERSONS VOTING Libertarian next week must not select candidates in other races or their ballots 'will be in- valid. "A lot of people will vote for us, but they'll slip up and vote in other partisan races," said the 50-year-old California attorney. Independent presidential hopeful John Anderson and Citizens Party can- didate Barry Commoner also face similar difficulties in winning spots on the November ballot. MICHIGAN'S third-party requirements - considered the toughest in the nation - are "designed to keep new ideas from coming before the voters," Clark said. Clark, who will debate Commoner at the University tomorrow, said Illinois congressman Anderson's candidacy does not offer voters the change they are looking for. "The American public has been looking for alternatives for a year and Anderson attracted a lot of people," he said. "That shows the depth of desire for new alternatives, but Anderson has not offered any alternatives. "ANDERSON OFFERS only a dif- ferent personality." Clark called for a reduction in U.S. military strength in foreign countries and a greater emphasis on domestic protection. He also proposed a massive tax reduction as a means of producing new jobs and lowering the unem- ployment rate. HOW TO GET BETTER MILEAGE FROM YOUR CAR... Obey the 55 mph speed limit. Keep your engine tuned. Avoid hot rod starts. Drive at a steady pace. 55 ) \ For a free booklet with more easy energy-saving tips, write "Energy," Box 62, Oak Ridge, TN 37830. ENERGY. We can't afford to waste it. U.S. Department of Energy