The Michigan Daily-Saturday, August 9, 1980-Page 7 JOLNS EX-NAZI FOR CONGRESSIONAL BID Mental patient victor in primary DETROIT (UPI) - Republicans saddled with a former Nazi as their congressional nominee in one suburban Detroit district were shocked yesterday to learn the party candidate in another congressional race is a mental patient. Neither is given the slightest chance to win in November but state GOP leaders aren't happy with the results of Tuesday's primary. ALFRED LAWRENCE Patterson, a patient in a state mental hospital, said he spent $30 to $40 on his winning GOP congressional campaign in the 17th District. He made no public appearances and didn't even vote - because he couldn't get. out of the hospital. But he outpolled two other candidates. "I'm very happy I won. I've always been interested . in politics," Patterson told The Detroit News in an in- terview at the Northville Regional Psychiatric Hospital. . Patterson, 25, told the newspaper he was commit- ted to the hospital by his father July 14 at the request of the Secret Service. He said he was committed because he wrote a letter threatening to have Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.), prosecuted for losing a prison reform proposal he had sent Kennedy. "THEY (THE Secret Service) talked to my father, who is afraid of the federal government and will do anything they say," Patterson said. "There's nothing wrong with me." Patterson was listed on Tuesday's ballot as "L. Patterson" and election officials said voters may have confused him with well-known Oakland County Prosecutor L. Brooks Patterson. He said he did not deliberately try to deceive voters but that voter confusion "probably helped." PATTERSON FACES incumbent Democratic Rep. William Brodhead in November and Brodhead is ex- pected to chalk up the customary Democratic lan- dslide. State GOP Chairman Melvin Larsen said he is in- vestigating Patterson's status at the hospital. "If he's currently under care ins mental institution we certainly would not be in an advocacy position to elect him as a U.S. congressman," he said. "I would treat it as I am the 15th District - we do not have a candidate there so the party does not have an obligation." In the 15th District, GOP primary voters nominated Gerald Carlson, an ex-Nazi and self- proclaimed white supremacist who once taped a telephone message saying blacks should be banned from, two Detroit suburbs. Party leaders urged November voters to write in the man Carlson defeated - James Caygill. Incumbent Rep. William Ford, unopposed in the Democratic primary, is a shoo-in for re-election in that district. THE MOVIES AT BRIARWOOD 1-94 & S. STATE. 769-8780 (Adjacent to J C Penney) *DAILY EARLY BIRD MATINEES-Adults $1.50 State agencies to * test dump areas for PBB contamination ST. LOUIS, Mich. - Four state agen- cies have announced plans to conduct massive soil sample tests to detect PBB and other dangerous chemicals near the now-defunct Velsicol Corp. plant. City officials said yesterday they had reviewed the plan, which calls for 20 soil samples from each of 97 sites around the city. The tests are to begin Aug. 18 and will be paid for from state funds. SECONDARY SOIL samples to be taken later would bring to 3,000 the number of cores tested for the presence of PBB and other chemicals manufac- tured by Velsicol, formerly known as Michigan Chemical Co. Officials of the state Departments of Natural Resources, Public Health, Agriculture and the Mid-Michigan District Health Department said they would test to see if the chemicals had spread from three known dump areas. Officials said the tests also would be used to determine if there were ad- ditional chemical dump sites inhGratiot County. STATE AND city officials began, working on the plan in June after an area near the Edgewood Golf Course was discovered to have been a chemical dumpsite. Upset by chemical contamination, which has plagued the St. Louis area for more than seven years, city officials called for a project to identify all areas of contamination and provide a clean- up solution. "What we want to find out is the ex- posure potential of these chemicals," said David Wade of the state Public Health Department. "Do these chemicals pose a dangerous risk? If they do, we should remove them or cap them or fence them off. "IF THEY, don't, then we'll finally know," Wade said. Wade said soil tests will be used to detect poly-brominated biphenyls in any of the other 60 chemical compound Velsicol manufactured and dumped between 1950 and the plant's closing in 1978. Results from the tests will be released in late October or early November, Wade said. Officials said the Gratiot County Landfill will be the main target of soil sampling. Wade said the first soil sam- ples will be taken within a half-mile radius of the landfill where 90 tons of PBB were dumped by Velsicol. Velsicol manufactured the PBB which accidentally was mixed with cat- tle feed and contaminated the state's food chain in the mid-1970s. g 1:00 7:00 09:45(R) 0 0 Fri & Sat 12:00 mid THE SPECIAL EDITION 10:00 - M _ _ - " _ = 1:00 3:45 OF THE THIRD KIND : 5Pa 230 11 VV I\ VLi r err rr ant a v . sue. FLL7E rrrp I A Fri & Sat 12:00 mid INEMA I . ~PRESENTS r LAST TANGO IN PARIS r (Bernardo Bertolucci, 1973) A graphic affair between a sexually aggressive expatriate (MARLON BRANDO) and a young modish Parisienne (MARIA SCHNEIDER), who is unused to the cruelties of sadness and who wavers between the harsh and dominating cynicism of her lover, and the dreamlike fantasies of her filmmaker fiance (JEAN- PIERRE LEAUD). Billed as pornographic, it is more controversial than porno- oraphic and more brilliant than controversial. Hauntingly scored by Gato Bar- bieri, tis film is as hot as an August night. Italian, with subtitles. 35 mm print. (125 min.) ANGELL HALL 7:30 & 9:45 $1.50 FRIDAY: DOUBLE INDEMNITY plus THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE Fri & Sat 12:00 mid No matches, lighters, or other open flame of any type. ...r rv. -.. OR- r