Page 2-Wednesday, March 12, 1980-The Michigan Daily
5 receive deferred
penalty for cat death
Carter, Reagan take
southern primaries
(Continued from Page 1)
Reaction to the sentencing was
mixed.
"The judge has done all he can," said
Doris Dixon, head of the state office of
the Fund for Animals, "but I personally
wouldn't like to see them work with*
animals.",
"I THINK the judge tried to make a
public spectacle to embarrass them,
and that was good," said Diane
Allevata, executive director of the'
Humane Society for Huron Valley. But
The nation's farm population has
dwindled to an estimated 6,5 million
and the number of farms to 2.4 million,
according to a-new U.S. Department of
Agriculture definition of farm.
she added that "he didn't have to
provide them with deferred sentences.''
When asked for her opinion on the
sentences, Shelagh Abbs, a member of
the Fund for Animals, said, "That
stinks. These are people who will be
working with animals?"
Abbs said her organization will con-
tinue "to harrass them. This is not over
at all."
"B. K. (the name of the cat) may
have died, but this issue is not going to
die," claimed Dixon. She said an effort
will be made to publicize this case and
work for harsher animal cruelty or-
dinances.
Members of the Fund for Animals
wore armbands saying "In memory of
B. K." which pictured a black and white
cat with a red tear dripping from its
eye.
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663-0511
(Continued from Page 1)
also stayed away to fight another day.
The vote and percentage for the
leaders of the Florida primary last
night with 49 per cent of the precincts
reporting showed Carter with 339,157
votes, or 67 per cent, and Kennedy with
81,380, for 16 per cent. Brown had per
cent of the vote, with 23,642. Among the
Republicans, Reagan had 121,210 votes
for 56 per cent, and Bush had 65,312, or
31 per cent. Anderson claimed seven
per cent of the vote and Crane had three
per cent.
IN GEORGIA, With 65 percent of the
>precincts counted, Carter had 198,261
votes or 88 per cent to Kennedy's 17,598
or 8 per cent. Brown had two per cent.
Reagan had 73,505 or 77 per cent, to
Bush's 9,898 or 10 per cent. Anderson
and Crane claimed seven and three per
cent, respectively.
In Alabama with 38 per cent of the
precincts counted, Carter had 84,518
votes or 82 per cent to Kennedy's 13,720
or 13 per cent, and Brown's four per
cent. Reagan had 68,260 or 71 per cent to
Bush's 24,031 or 25 per cent. Crane had
two per cent.-'
Carter was winning 76 delegates in
Florida, 62 in Georgia and 43 in
Alabama for a indicated total of 267
toward the 1,666 needed for nomination.
Kennedy was winning 23 in Florida and
1 in Georgia and 2 in Alabama for an
indicated total of 142.
REAGAN WAS winning 51 delegates
in Florida, 36 in Georgia and 18 in
Alabama for a indicated 165 toward the
998 needed for nomination. Bush was
winning no delegates in Florida and
Georgia and 9 in Alabamp for an
indicated total of 45.
Dorm lottery
" s
winners sign
leases for
next year
(Continued from Page 1)
who reapplied.
Couzens Building Director Jim
Asberry said 45 men and between 15
and 20 women lostthe lottery in that
dormitory.
In South Quad 17 women and 68 men
lost in the lottery. "We had a few more
female losers this year than last year,
but the proportion for men was about
the same," said South Quad Building
Director Mary Bewley.
In West Quad 19 women and men ap-
plied but did not win the lottery.
No space is available in Bursley.
Finn said the only difference .in this
year's procedure from previous years
is that leases are signed on the same
day the lottery takes place. Last year,
the lottery was held before spring
break, and students had to wait several
weeks to sign their leases.
FINN SAID suggestions have been
made in previous years to hold the an-
nual lottery earlier, so that lottery
losers would have more time to find off
campus housing for the next year.
"But," Finn said, "If we have the lot-
tery too early, in November or Decem-
ber for example, they (the reapplying
students) haven't even begun to look at
other options."
Finn also said there is always "plen-
ty" of off-campus housing available af-
ter the lottery, contrary to fears of
many dorm residents.
** *************** *
Daily Official Bulletin
WEDNESDAYMARCH 12, 1980
Daily Calendar:
Center for AfroAmerican and African Studies:
Niara Sudarkasa, "A Decade of Black Studies at the
University of Michigan," Whitney, SEB, noon.
Computing Center: "PL/I and PL/C Debugging
for Beginners," 1011 NUBS, 12:10 p.m.
Nuclear Engineering: Forrest B. Brown,
"Neutronic Analysis of Low Enrichment Fuels for
Research Reactors," Bear, Cooley, 4p.m.
Mechanical Engineering & Applied Mechanics:
Kenneth Coeling, "Research Challenges in Paint
Application Equipment," 2042 GGBrown, 4 p.m.
Physics: Roy Clarke, "Graphite Intercalation
Compounds," 296 Dennison, 4 p.m.
Chemistry: Tom Blackburn, "Laser Detection of
Pollution," 1200 Chem.; James Romine, "The
Chemical Structure of Coal Liquefaction Residues,"
1300 Chem.,4 p.m.
Industrial and Operating Engineering: Michael
Taffe, "Use of SDurrogate Distribution in Ap-
proximating Queueing Delays," 229 W. Eng., 4 p.m.
Kelsey Museum: William Coulson, "Pharaoh and
the Greeks: Archaeology in the Western Delta of
Egypt," 203 Tappan, 4 p.m.
After a succession of primaries and
caucuses waged for position and
momentum, yesterday's contests
began the marathon phase of
competition for nominating delegates
at the two national conventions next
summer.
But Democrat Kennedy and
Republican Bush were still in need of
evidence that they could turn the
campaign momentum and overtake the
leaders. They'll try in earnest next
Tuesday in Illinois.
An AP-NBC News poll of Georgia nd
An AP-NBC News poll of Georgia and
Florida voters showed that
conservative Republicans had vaulted
Reagan far past the field. It also
showed that many Democratic voters
had lined up against Kennedy because
of the fatal, tardily-reported accident at
aChappaquiddick a decade ago.
KENNEDY DID well in Florida
among Jewish voters angered by a
United Nations vote critical of Israel,
cast and then repudiated by the Carter
adminsitration.
Along with yesterday's primaries,
there were caucuses to launch the
delegate selection system in
Washington for both parties, and in
Oklahoma, Alaska, and Hawaii for the
Democrats.
The Carter camp said the president
expected to do well in the Democratic
caucuses, where 130 delegates are at
stake-58 in Washington, 42 in
Oklahoma, 19 in Hawaii and 11 in
Alaska.
In Washington, where Republicans
began selecting 37 convention
delegates, the caususes tested
sentiment toward the candidates but
did not bind their nominating votes.
ALABAMA AND Georigia were, in
effect, open primaries, since neither
state registered voters by party. That
meant a Democrat could take a GOP
ballot, and it raised the prospect that
Reagan might gain support from
conservatives who saw the Democratic
race as open and shut for Carter.
Florida rules kept voters in their bwn
party primaries.
A conservative crossover would be a
turnabout on the pattern in New
England a weeka go, where Anderson
gained independent andDemocratic
votes to boost his strong second place
showings. Anderson said he'd haveno
chance in the conservative South, and
skipped the region to work on upcoming
primaries in home-state Ilipois and in
Wisconsin.
THE SOUTHERN contests set the
stage for crucial tests in both parties in
the Illinois primary next Tuesday.
Illinois will have 179 votes at the
Democratic convention, 102 at the
Republican.
Kennedy has described Illinois as a
major test on neutral graound. He
concentrated his campaigning there
after winning for the first time in
Massachusetts.
But a poll published yesterday by the
Chicago Tribune showed Carter was
preferred by 64 per cent of the potential
voters, Kennedy by 23 per cent.
BUSH ALSO HASA labeled Illinois a
big one, and the liberal Anderson is
waiting there, too.
Former President Gerald Ford still
hasn't said whether he'll enter the
presidential race. A spokesman said
Ford wants to assess the outcome in the
South and in Illinois before deciding
whether to bid again for the nomination
he won narrowly over Reagan in 1976.
Ford says Reagan is too conservative to
win next fall's general election.
Bush and Anderson are trying to
convicne Ford he doesn't have to enter
the race to stop Reagan. Both believe
they can do it themselves.
Bush, the former United Nations
ambassador, started strong upsetting
Reagan in Iowa, winning the Puerto
Rico primary, and edging Anderson in
Massachusetts. But Reagan won New
Hampshire in a landslide, barely beat
Anderson in Vermont, and ran a close
third in Massachusetts. Last Saturday,
he swept Connally and Bush in the
South Carolina primary.
CARTER HAS defeated Kennedy in
five primaries and caucuses, Kennedy
winning only in Massachusetts where
he got 65 per cent of the vote.
At the outset, the Democratic
primary calendar had pointed to a set
of home-and-home showings for
Kennedy, then for Carter. But Kennedy
fared poorly in New England, losing
Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont to
the president.
He blamed it on the emphasis on
foreign crises, and said the trend would
turn when voters began to concentrate
on home front problems like inflation.
Kennedy said that would happen in the
big industrial states like Illinois and
New York, which chooses 282
Democratic delegates in a March 25
primary.
I '
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1
Shah to be hospitalized
NEW YORK - The deposed shah of Iran's personal physician said
yesterday the former ruler requires a "hazardous" operation to remove his
spleen. Robert Armao, spokesman for the shah, who is in exile in Panama,
declined to discuss where the operation would be performed.
The New York Daily News reported yesterday that friends of the shah
were pushing for his admittance either to a U.S. military hospital in Panama
or to a hospital in the States.
Meanwhile, in Tehran, Iranian President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr said the
American hostages would not be released until May. The announcement
comes a day after the departure of an unsuccessful U.N. commission that
visited Tehran to speed up negotiations toward release of the hostages.
Israel expropriates land
JERUSALEM - Israel yesterday expropriated a large tract of private
land in the predominantly Arab sector of Jerusalem. The annexation comes
nine days after the United Nations Security Council unanimously passed a
resolution condemning Israeli settlements on occupied Arab land.
The U.S. had supported the U.N. resolution, but two days later President
Carter called the U.S. vote a mistake.
Israel rejected the U.N. resolution and said Jerusalem would remain
united under Jewish sovereignty.
Reds stike at rebels
PESHWAR, Pakistan - Pakistani sources said yesterday that Soviet
troops in helicopters and tanks destroyed several Afghan villages and
secured a key wilderness road, but that hundreds of square miles of the
eastern Afghan countryside remain firmly under rebel contol. The Soviets
are attempting to drive rebels out of the Kunar Province region which bor-
ders Pakistan.
Meanwhile, the Soviet army newspaper, striking out at what it called
"mountains of lies" in the West about the troops in Afghanistan, carried a
lengthy report which said that the Afghans are greeting the presence of the
Red army with joy.
Guerrillas lighten demands
BOGOTA, Colombia - Guerrillas holding U.S. Ambassador Diego
Asencio and diplomats from 17 other countries at the Dominican Republic
embassy have reduced the number of alleged political prisoners they
demand freed. The original demand was for 311, and the new figure has not
been mentioned.
The guerrillas have practically abandoned their first demand of $50
million in ransom and worldwide publication of a manifesto condemning
human rights violations in Colombia. Reportedly, the military is ready to
step in and take the embassy by force, but the Colombian Interior Minister
said no force would be used while the lives of the hostages are not in im-
minent danger.
Compiled from Associated Press and
United Press International reports
rmpioyers responsible for
sexual harassment controls
4
WASHINGTON - The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
(EEOC) issued guidelines yesterday under which employers would be held
responsible for eliminating sexual harrassment on the job. The EEOC
defined sexual harrassment as sex-related advances or intimidation if their
nature is to be a condition of employment, if it affects the nature of em-
ployment, or if it interferes with the employee's work performance or at-
mosphere.
The EEOC said employers would be held responsible for actions of
supervisors or agents and, in some cases, for the acts of others when the em-
ployer or supervisor knows of the behavior.
w 1
State GOP files for Ford
LANSING - Michigan Republicans yesterday filed to add Gerald
Ford's name to the ballot for the state's May 20 presidential primary. The
state party also filed with the Secretary of State to, include California
millionaire Benjamin Fernandez and perennial campaigner Harold Stassen
in the list.
State GOP chairman Mel Larsen stressed that the action was not an en-
dorsement of Ford, but rather a response to recent national publicity given
to a possible Ford candidacy.
Ford's name will not appear on the May ballot, however, unless he files
an affidavit of candidacy with the state by March 21.
CBS libel suit renewed
LANSING - A MIchigan conservation group moved yesterday to ap-
peal dismissal of its controversial suit against CBS. The Michigan United
Conservation Clubs charged in voting for the appeal that U.S. District Judge
Noel Fox in Cincinnati, who dismissed the suit last month, is prejudiced
against the group.
The club's suit maintained that CBS consciously portrayed Michigan
hunters as "cruel, selfish, and unfeeling" in two 1975 documentaries entitled
"The Guns of Autumn" and "Echoes of the Guns of Autumn."
4
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I
a
(USPS 344-900)
Volume XC, No. 126
Wednesday, March 12, 1980
I
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