Friday, Augusf 6, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Reagan snatches up 6 more delegates Minor clashes mar NEW YORK (A)-Ronald Rea- gan picked up six more dele- gates from New York and New Jersey yesterday and said he believes the tide is turning his way in his uphill fight against President Ford for the Republi- can nomination. R e a g a n campaign leaders have forecast in recent weeks they would soon be announcing large numbers of Reagan sup- porters now counted in the Ford ranks. And Reagan conceded he still needs to win more of the dwindling number of uncommit- ted delegates to take the GOP nomination this month in Kan- sas City. THE SIX NEW supporters brought Reagan's nationwide to- tal to 1,035, 65 delegates behind Ford and 95 fewer than needed for nomination. In New Jersey, there are now 59 Ford delegates, four for Rea- gan and four uncommitted. Pre- viously Reagan listed no New Jersey delegates. Reagan campaign chairman John Sears predicted more an- nouncements for Reagan from New Jersey. "Today's announce- ments will make it easier for other members of the delega- tion to come out for us," he said. The four New Jersey dele- gates said they were influenced favorably by Reagan's choice of Sen. Richard Schweiker (R-Pa.) S. Africa protests continue (Continued from Page 3) townships. In the Wednesday confronta- tion, police gunfire dispersed 20,000 blacks who were trying to leave Soweto and march on police headquarters at John Vorster Square in Johannes- burg. POLICE LATER confirmed that two blacks were killed by police gunfire in that clash and a 15 - year - old black girl was trampled to death by a. stampeding mob. Eighteen per- sons were wounded by gunfire, police said. as a running mate. THE ADDITION of two dele- gates in New York increased Reagan's total in that 154-mem- ber delegation to 20 in the con- tinuing Associated Press dele- gate survey. Ford has 126, and 8 are uncommitted. The AP tally counts only those publicly stating a preference or legally bound and not delegates who are leaning. George Clark Jr., chairman of New York Citizens for Rea- gan, clI a i m e d more hidden strength in New York. "I be- lieve that the number now is 22. By the end of the week I be- lieve it will be 25, and I contend that at the convention we will have 37 to 40," Clark said. Reagan campaigned with Sch- weiker in New York and in New Jersey yesterday and claimed several times the alliance with Schweiker, who had one of the Senate's most liberal voting rec- ords last year, has boosted his campaign. "I am very optimis- tic. I don't believe we lost sup- port anyplace, but we are get- ting support we didn't have in the Northeast, he said. BUT REAGAN'S claim that he is holding his own nationwide contradicts what his campaign aides and most neutral observ- ' GE on TA (Continued from Pate 3) trot: you hire the GSAs, you set up the program, you supervise the program." He added, "It (the GEO plan) would be very cumbersome and inflexible; it's not guar- anteed . . . to work and it's going to cost a lot." The debate ended as GEO agreed to consider a University counter - proposal that includ- ed some coordination with fac- ulty. Also discussed was GEOs request for input into curricu- lum design. GEO MET brick - wall re- sistance when it introduced a proposal dealing with - pay for union officers, contending they should be compensated for time spent processing grievances. ers said Wednesday after Rea- gan and Schweiker met with Mississippi's delegation. In other political develop- ments: -Sen. Robert G r i f f i n (R- Mich.), Ford's floor manager at the convention, predicted a rela- tively peaceful GOP gathering with "a lot more harmony and togetherness . . . than news- men might like or expect." GRIFFIN SAID Ford's first- ballot victory would be apparent before "the gavel comes down in Kansas City." -Sen. H o w a r d Baker (R- Tenn.), among those high on Ford's list of potential running mates, said while he doss not partictilarly want the nomina- tion, "I certainly would take it." He urged the President to choose someone from the Sun Belt states of the South and West. -AN AIDE TO Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. of California said the governor plans to meet with Democratic presidential nomi- nee Jimmy Carter, a former rival, in Carter's hometown of Plains, Ga., where the former Georgia governor has been working on plans for the fall campaign. Dclose raining Forsyth said that union of- ficers, as GSAs, had a flexible enough schedule to process un- ion grievances without neglect- ing prior committments or un- dergoing great inconvenience. He also asserted there weren't enough grievances made to con- sume any great amount of time, anyway. GEO retorted that the Uni- versity compensated other Uni- versity unions for time spent servicing contracts and should do the same for GEO. newest Beirut truce BEIRUT, Lebanon (M) - A general cease-fire appeared to be taking hold on most fronts in Lebanon's civil war yesterday. But it was jeopardized by fight- ing between right-wing Chris- tians and a hard-core handful of Moslems defending a Beirut slum. The cease-fire suffered an- other potential setback when Christian, Syrian and Lebanese- leftist officials reportedly failed to attend a truce meeting at Sofar, a mountain resort near Beirut, to review progress of the accord. A leftist source said only a Palestinian guerrilla rep- resentative showed up. THE LATEST in a string of more than 50 cease-fires went into effect at 1 a.m. yesterday. It had been negotiated by the Arab League and the Syrians, who are to serve as guarantors. Residents of Beirut took ad- vantage of the latest break in the 16-month-old civil war. A steady flow of refugees, many carrying personal and household effects, moved from the Chris- tian sector across "no man's land" into Moslem-controlled west Beirut. The absence of rightist lead- ers at Sofar may have been directly related to the last-ditch battle at the Beirut slum of Nabaa, a Moslem stronghold in Christian east Beirut. OBSERVERS theorized that the Christians may not join fully in the truce agreement un- til after Nabaa is under their total control. The most crucial phase of the truce, however, may come when A r a b L, e a g a e peacekeeping forces try to set up buffer zones at "hot spots" along the front lines in the next day or two. The Christian radio claimed originally that Nabaa had fallen just before the cease-fire went into effect. But the Christians later admitted that fighting was continuing there and at the Tal Z a a t a r Palestinian refugee camp, another east Beirut stronghold of the Moslem- Palestinian alliance. t TOMORROW AFTERNOON .,. MARTIAL ARTS FILM EVENT OF THE YEAR! SAMURAI TRILOGY -Academy-Award winning -TOSHIRO MIFUNE as the legendary Musashi Miyamoto SATURDAY, AUGUST 7 MLB 3 12:30 P.M. $5 for all 3 films; for advance sales CALL 995-4821 MHTP the " narbor film cooperative TONIGHT in MLB 3 Woody Allen's Campus Premiere of LOVE AND DEATH (1975) 7 & 10:30 Woody Allen's satire on Russian novels, Napoleoi warsand movie classics from Eisenstein to Bergman, complete with one-liners on just abouteverything. Allen, and Diane Keaton star, TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN (1969) 8:45 ONLY In his directing debut, Allen plays \tirgil, product result of an unfortunate childhood: bully, bickering parents, acutecelo playing, and a neurotic tendency to win a girl by stealing money. His downfall comes whes he misspells g" on his holdup note. Stars Allen, and Janet Margolin. $1.25 Double Feature $2.00 MLB 3 EXPERIMENTAL ANIMATION NIGHT 8:00 ONLY TIle history .at,1t visual develapment of the asImlteS 11m thtasuuh the work af tIs best artists. Stall Catsn. LeazLye. OscarFischinge ,raNrman Mcaaren, the Wh ite t anlv, .Lte just some of the artists whose work is featured. As enplasis oa visual beauty is the goal of this program with tcmlpter graphics and work by women artists represented. Special fhms by Blorow- czyk, Jan Lenica and Faith Hubley's WOMEN OF TsE WORLD for WY. MLB 4 ROBERT BRESSON'S 1970' AU HASARD BALTHAZAR All in all, no film I have seen has come so close to convulsing my entire being as At' Hasard Balthazar . . . It stands by itself one of the lofiest pinnacles of artistically realized emotional experience."-Andrew Sarris Acknowledged by every major French film maker to be the greatest French film maker, Bresson creates an agonizing parable that may well be the masterpiece of his fine career. SAT.: Robert Redford in DOWNHILL RACER CINEMA GUILD TONIGHTAT OLD ARCH. AUD. 7:30 & 9:30 Admtssion $1.25 ROBERT ALTMAN'S 1975 America wrapped up in a country music fest. Our most controversial direc- tor's most publicized, most innovative film. Brilliantly scored (Academy Award for best song) , and wonderfully acted, it remains one of the best films of 1975. Henry Gibson, Lily Tamlin, Keith Corradine, Rone- Blakely, Karen Black, Geraldine Chaplin, Allen Gar fie'd,and lots more. TONIGHT AT ANGELL HALL AUD. A CINEMA 7:3IG 10:30 Admission $1.50