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March 17, 1972 - Image 8

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The Michigan Daily, 1972-03-17

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Page Eight

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Friday, March 17, 1972

Muskie, Jackson, Nixon file
for state presidential primary

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LANSING ({P) Sens. Henry Jack-' Gov. William Milliken said yes-
son of Washington and Edmund terday that a campaign by Wpl-
Muskie of Maine formally entered lace "may not be a healthy thing
the state presidential primary yes- .for this state," because of the
terday, swelling the field of Demo- emotions raised by busing school1
crats to six for the May 16 race, children to achieve integration.
President Nixon's affidavit for Muskie's image as a front-run-
the Republican race also was re- ner for the Democratic presiden-
ceived yesterday, tial nomination was severely dam-
aged in Tuesday's Florida primary
Meanwhile, New York Mayor i hc alc i ado
mn which Wallace hthr n
John Lindsay joined Rep. Wilbur busing and received 42 per cent of
Mills of Arkansas and Sen. Ed- the vote. Muskie finished a poor
ward Kennedy of Massachusetts in fourth with nine per cent of the

moved into Illinois and Wisconsin
for important primary contests
there next Tuesday and April 4.
In Illinois, Muskie is opposed
by former Sen. Eugene McCar-
thy and McGovern.
Candidates on the Wisconsin
ballot include Muskie, Wallace,
nine of the Democrats who fought
in Florida and Rep. Patsy Mink
of Hawaii.
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announcing newould not file an
affidavit for the race.
Jackson and ,Muskie will run
against Sens. George McGovern of
South Dakota and Vance Hartke
of Indiana, Rep Shirley Chis-
holm of New York and Gov.
George Wallace of Alabama in the
Democratic presidential primary.I

Sen. Hubert Humphrey of Min-
nesota, who finished second in the
Florida race, was expected to an-
nounce his intention to run in the
state race today as he opens his
state campaign headquarters in
Detroit with an appearance there.
Meanwhile, the other candidates

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DAILY OFFICI
Day Calendar
FRIDAY, MARCH 16
Astronomy Colloquium: H. Prince,
"Solar Flares and Particle Emission,"
P&A Colloq. Rm.. 4 p.m.
Swimming: Region VI A.A.U Cham-f
pionships, Matt Mann Pool, 10 a.m.;
finals, 7 p.m.
School of Music: R. Crawford, "It
Ain't Necessarily Soul," Sch. of Mus.
Recital Hall, 8 p.m.
Grad. School of Business Admin. W.F.
Kerby, Pres., Dow Jones & Co., Inc..
"The Role of the Press in Today's So-
ciety," Rackham Amph., 8 p.m.
University Players: F r i e d m a n ' s
"Steambath." Arena Theatre, Frieze
Bldg., 8 p.m.
UAC: Jazz Concert - Alice Coltrane,
Leon Thomas, Hill Aud., 8 p.m.
Gilbert and Sullivan Society Small
Co.: "Thespis, or the Gods Grown Old.,"
Res. Coll. Aud., 8 p.m.
International Folk Dance: Barbour
Gym, 8 p.m.
General Notices
Environmental Health Seminar: Her-
bert Cornish, "Use of Enzymes and
Isoenzymes in Toxicology," Sch. of Pub.'
Hlth. Aud., Mon., Mar. 20, 1 p.m.
Society of Women Engineers is hold-
ing its first nationwide conclave this
weekend (Mar. 17-19): Women engineers
from as far as Calif., incl. Nat'l Pres.
Naomi McAfee, will attend; evening
discussion with members of Coll, of
Engineering to be held Sat., Mar. 18,
Main Markley Dining Hall, 7 p.m.; for
further info., call B. K. Berger, 769-5704.
CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT,
3200 SAB .
Further info. about the following
annets. available at CPP in the Career
Planning Library or call 764-6338.
OHIO UNIV. 3 NDFL (Nat. Defense

A L BU LLETIN ! nation, girls in Ann Arbor schools
will be allowed to participate with
!boys in noncontact varsity sports.
..._...:: :>.....:....:..::<:::.::.......:;:: By a 5-3 vote W ednesday night
Foreign Lang.) grad fellowships to be the school board approved partici-
awarded to candidates for M.A. in In
ternat'l Affairs specializing in African pation in sports by female stu-
Studies for 72-73. Must be Amer. cit- dents, paving the way for two girls
izens who will complete undergrad to try out for the Huron H i g h
educ. by Aug., 72 and who intend to
pursue study of African langs. and Af- School tennis team.
rica to the Ph.D. degree. The ruling.formalized an earlier
ROSARY COLLEGE, grad. school of decision to allow the two, Cynthia
library sci. has full or part time study} Morris an Emily Barett to try out
for MS in library science: also special forrtetam y
programs in law, music, medican and for the team.
school librarianship. By the terms of the board's
NORTHERN ILLINOIS UNIV. an- ruling girls may now participate
nounces full and part timeresidence in tennis, swiming, golf, track and
hall staff positions.
COLUMBIA UNIV. intensive one-yr. baseball.
program of reporting, writing, and edit- A bill to reverse a state I a w
ing within framework of print and prohibiting girl's participation in
broadcast media workshops, leading top
M.S. in journalism. these sports is pending in the state
BOSTON UNIVERSITY, M.S. in Com- legislature.
munication Research with Internship Allan Bush, head of the Mich-
Prog. providing practical research exper.
to complement a theoretically oriented iga n High School Athletic Associa-
program in Comm. Res. tion, declined to comment on the
SUMMER JOBS-INTERVIEWS TODAY board's action, saying the associa-
CAMP MA-HI-YA, Mich. Social Work flop has yet to rule on the sub-
Camp. Will interview Fri., Mar. 17,
10 to 5, counselors (for boys) experi- Ject.
enced, nurse & cooks. If the association attempts to
CAMP MAPLEHURST, Mich. coed. bar girls from participation court
Will interview Fri., Mar. 17, 1:30-5:00 action will be taken, according to
waterfront, arts and crafts, riding, wa- I
ter skiing; register by phone (763-4117) attorney Lawrence Sperling who
or in person at Summer Placement Ofc, represented Morris and Barett be-
212 SAB. fore the school board.

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