GRADUATE STUDY In PUBLIC POLICY Professional degree program Interested juniors and seniors are invited to attend a meeting about the Master of Public Policy and other programs offered at Michigan's Institute of Public Policy Studies. Qualified applicants are able to complete both a. bachelor's degree and the two-year M.P.P. in five years of study. Thursday, Dec. 6 at 12 noon Mason Hall, Room 429 Page 12-Tuesday, December 4, 1979--The Michigan Daily POLLS SHOW GAINS ON KENNEDY Carter formall announces candi !I a/ WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter plans to keep his re-election an- nouncement today a low key affair because of the Iran crisis, but cam- paign aides are pushing hard to raise $2.5 million this week in a coast-to-coast series of fund raisero. Carter plans to make the announ- cement sometime during the day, probably at the White House. He will then attend a fundraising dinner tonight at a Washington hotel. He already has recorded a five minute television an- nouncement to be broadcast at 8:55 s 13 r p.m. EST Tuesday on the CBS network. The campaign paid for the air time. CAMPAIGN AIDES say they have organized nearly 2,800 "grassroots" receptions around the country to coin- cide with the announcement. The par- ties, mostly in private homes, are in- tended to raise money, distribute cam- paign material and get volunteer workers moving. Also keyed to the announcement are large fundraising dinners during the week in Washington and 11 other cities. "We expect to raise close to $2.5 million" during the week, said Robert Strauss, Carter campaign chairman. STRAUSS SAID an ABC-Louis Harris poll yesterday showed Carter has vir- tually pulled even with Kennedy. Asked if he was surprised by the poll, Strauss said, "I didn't think we would climb that fast." Carter originally had planned to make a six-state campaign swing star- ting Wednesday, including appearan- ces at dinners in New York, Chicago, Atlanta and Austin, Texas, But he can- celed those travel plans because of the Iran crisis. The fundraising efforts themselves, however, are going ahead full steam even without Carter's personal presen- ce. dacy toda'. CARTER'S re-election campaign i in fact far better financed and bette. staffed than was his come-from nowhere 1976 election campaign. Four years ago, Carter was still litti known former governor of Georgia wit a campaign staff of 40 or 50 people and no real nationwide organization. His traveling staff consisted for the most part of Jody Powell, whom Carter sometimes pelted with pillows at night to stop his snoring in the motel rooms they shared to save expenses. This time Carter was again something of an underdog, having at one time trailed Sen. Edward M. Ken- nedy among Democratic voters by a 2-1 margin in opinion polls. But the momentum has, for the moment at least, shifted to Carter because of Kennedy's badly reviewed appearances in several television in- terviews and because of widespread public support for the president's han- dling of the Iran crisis. Last week an AP-NBC poll showed 65 per cent of those questioned supported Carter's handling of the Iran situation. And a Louis Harris-ABC poll taken af- ter the first week of the embassy seige showed Kennedy's lead over Carter beginning to slip on a number of specific issues. Sale Kennedy denounces shah, Iranian captors RENO, Nev. (UPI)-Sen. Edward and had stolen "umpteen billions of Kennedy sharply denounced the dollars from his country." deposed shah of Iran yesterday, but in Kennedy also said the shah is stalling reply to high-level criticism of his his departure from the United States by remarks said Americans do not have to delaying a selection of which country to support the shah to gain freedom for go to, while Americans are being held U.S. hostages in Tehran. hostage in Iran. The fact that the regime of Shah IN WASHINGTON, Secretary of Moharhmed Reza Pahlavi was op- State Cyrus Vance said Kennedy's pressive does not justify the militants comments were "clearly unhelpful." holding U.S. diplomats captive, Ken- "I regret what was said," Vance told nedy said. reporters on Capitol Hill. "I think that KENNEDY SAID in his one of the strongest weapons we have in statement-in an interview with San bringing about the return of the Francisco television station KRON-TV hostages is the strong consensus that -the shah "ran one of the most violent exists. Anything that tends to unde- regimes in the history of mankind" is mine that is clearly unhelpful. consistent with criticisms he has made Asked whether Kennedy had under- for several years. mined the consensus, Vance replied, The shah, Kennedy said, "was "I've said, I think, all that needs to be looking out for one person-himself" said. 11 die as 'Who'fans panic at Ohio concer C CINCINNATI (AP)-Panicked fans stampeded their way into a rock con- cert by "The Who" last night, and Fire Chief Burt Lugananni said at least 11 people were killed in the crush. A number of persons were injured and were taken by ambulance to at least four hospitals. The number of in- jured was not immediately known. RAY SCHWERTMAN, a 49-year-old usher, said the crowd surged into the 17,000-seat Riverfront Coliseum just before the gates were to open at 7 p.m. "First, they threw a bottle through a window in the door. Then they pushed through the hole, making it bigge Three or four of us tried to hold the back, but it was no use. "We couldn't hold them back . , They carried in one boy and laid him or a table and he died. Others were laying out on the plaza," said Schwertman. Cincinnati Public Safety directoi Richard Castellini said the victims were apparently trampled or suf. focated. The concert, which was sold out, wen on as scheduled after the victims wer taken away. Th o time to lo. Sale Wednesday Only. 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. THESE ARE JUST A FEW OF THE MANY "12 HOUR SALE" BARGAINS SAE 7388 SONY TC-U30 CASSETTE DECK With Dolby. DC servo m'otor. Auto shut-off. LED program me- ters. Three position equali- zation. Regular $239.88. Save! p166 SANSUI AU-317 STEREO AMPLIFIER DC power amplifier. 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