Reagan gains independent, Dem support The Michigan Daily-Friday, March 27, 1980-Page 7 r- t m. The most distinguished film of the year! (Continued from Page 1) At Serb Hall, a combination beer hall and bowling alley on Milwaukee's in- dustrial south side, Reagan was cheered wildly when he listed what he said should be the issues in the 1980 election campaign: "Family, home, eighborhood, work, peace, and reedom." ONE VETERAN political reporter covering the event noted that the last time he ever remembered a beer drinking, working class crowd that fer- vent over a political candidate was in that same Milwaukee beer hall eight years ago - when the candidate was George Wallace. Louis Scrip of Milwaukee was seated in the front row of Serb Hall for the Reagan rally, and with his beer in hand, was among the most vocal cheerleaders. "I was a Democrat all my life, but I'm a Republican now," Scrip said after the rally. "I voted for Carter last election. I won't vote for him again. I'm a Reagan man now." Marion Royten of Milwaukee's south side is perhaps even more indicative of the new Reagan supporters. Like Scrip, she too is a Democrat. "It used to be if you're a Democrat, you voted for the Democratic candidate. But not any more," she said. Royten said, "I've never voted Republican in my life, so in 1976 I voted for Jimmy Carter. I don't mind voting Republican now. I'm voting for Reagan." DAN RADOVICH, a beer hall em- ployee who listened to Reagan's speech said he hadn't made up his mind whom to vote for. But he came away from Reagan's speech impressed. "I like Reagan," he said. "My wife's a Democrat, and she's voting for Reagan."i And Reagan's appeal is not limited to older voters. Jay Grassell, a student at the Medical College of Wisconsin, is in his "mid-twenties," and is an adamant Reagan supporters. Grassel said that when he was an undergraduate, he was a liberal Democrat. "But once you get out of college, you realize that that stuff doesn't work." Grassell typifies the scope of Reagan's appeal among traditional Democratic voters. Like his wife Ann, Grassell is a second generation eastern European - he is Polish - and a Catholic, the voters who formed the core of the Democratic party during Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal coalition. "REAGAN IS going to get a lot more support among the ethnics and white Catholics than people expect," Grassell said. "My parents, all of our parents, grew up in Catholic households. Most of us believe in a strong family unit, most of us are against abortion. We believe in a strong defense. Reagan is more in line with our views." WANT TO PRACTICE A FOREIGN LANGUAGE? We speak Arabic, Chinese. English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portugese, Romanian, & Spanish at the FRIEND'S INTERNA- TIONAL CO-OP. See our classified ad. ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE Best Foreign Film Franco Brusati's bFo et -enice Fri --6:10, 8:05, 10:00 Sat, Sun'2:10, 4:05, 6:10, 8:05, 10:00 Fri -$1.50 til 6:30. Sat. Sun-$1.50 til 2:30 : i c 5th Avenue at Liberty St. 761-9700 Formerly Fifth Forum Theater £ _ WRCN Late Show! Fri & Sat at 12:00 mid. Suspect declared incompetent for trial in roessor's murder (Continued from Page1) BRAUER'S WIFE, Katherine, a Lowell Chapman, head of the Depar- under a desk." secretary to the director of office ad- tment of Accountancy, said Brauer Two male students grabbed Kakonis ministration, was at work on the floor "was very popular and related well to and held him until police arrived. He above the classroom at the time of the his students. Brauer came to Ferris in as taken to the county jail but tran- shooting. The couple had no children. 1976 from his native Baltimore. lferred about three hours later to the hospital under police guard. Gargoyle Films Police said Kakonis, son of Associate present M IDNIGHT Dean Tom Kakonis of the School of General Education, offered no CB resistance to arrest and was "uncom- municative" under questioning. He was to undergo physical and psychological TONIGHT examinations prior to arraignment. HANS SAID Kakonis "didn't seem abnormal in any way, he was just your Room 100 average person in class, your average Hutchins person in the street." Hall Jeff Musser, anotherstudent, said "I a l) just thought it was all fake until the gun (Law School) went off and everybody started jum- ping aound. I just lay down on the floor under the table trying to hide." 7:07 9:19 Patricia Coyle, the college's director of public relations, said some students Admission $1.50 told her they saw Kakonis carrying a weapon in a sack into the Business Education Building about half an hour oefore the shooting. Tehran may THE CRITICS AND PUBISC AGREE... hold captives There's nothin funnier than Peter Sellers i in g There." 4th u n til M ay "An absolutely remarkable comedy...a delight." M ASH Contnued from Pae 1 -RONA BARRETT, Good Morning America ABC-TV Ministry. "A brilliant film, provocative and different, W EEK! Revolutionary leader Ayatollah and howlingly funny... certainly the best thing Ruhollah Khomeini has said the new Peter Sellers has ever done..:' Iranian Parliament ruast decide the -REX REED, Syndicated Columnist hostages' fate. But new delays MON TUE disclosed Wednesday indicated that the TUFR election of the Parliament or Majlis, THUR, FRI probably will not be completed until 7:0.0 sometime in May. 9:30 IN AN INTERVIEW published SAT-SUN-WE[ yesterday in a Lebanese newspaper, : Syrian lawyer Adib Daoudi, a member of the U.N. commission on Iran, ruled > 4:00 out the likelihood that the Iranians 7:00 would try a new, quicker approach to 9:30 resolve the crisis. 9 Daoudi was quoted as saying he ex- pects the Iranians to do nothing about REDUCED the issue until after the Majlis con- PRICE *venes. Although it may convene in May, Iranian leaders have said it will take --.- DAYS some weeks for it to organize itself and LORIMAR PRESENTS MONDAY NITE deal with pressing domestic matters AN ANDREW BRAUNSBERGPRODUCTION 2 PEOPLE before turning to the hostage issue. PETER SELLERS SHIRLEY MadlAINE ADMITTED Daoudi and the four other com- "BEING THERE" FOR $3.00 mission members left Tehran March 11 SAR JACK WARDEN MELVYN DOUGLAS WEDNESDAY after two weeks of meetings with RICARDEA M-LMADOGEAS W ANEE Iranian officials in an effort to ease the RICHARD DY SART RICHARD BASEHART KAT SCREENPLAY BY JERZY KOSINSKI " BASED ON THE NOVEL BY JERZY KOINSKIMA I E crisis. MUSIC BY JOHNNY MANDEL* EXECUTIVE PRODUCER .AO(SCHWARTZMAN ALL SEATS PRODUCED BY ANDREW BRAUNSBERG " DIRECTED BY HAL ASHBY $1.50 o LORIMRDISTRIBUTION INTERNATIONAL 1%0 FOOISTWIBUTION4BY $ -.5 The Syrian commissioner also told A NORTHSTAR INTERNATIONAL _- _ PICTURE VtdAItSUNTIL 5:30 the Beirut newspaper Al Sharq that the PP A rMEA GUIoADESUGGESTED s READ THE BANTAM BOOK T j* SO.~I~TC11iAlN1U NN1. T..ov I O ATransm,.ca Cony shah's move to Egypt "will doubtless have adverse effects on the case of the American hostages." He suggested that the Iranians may now fear tht the United States is con- spiring with the shah and his followers to overthrow Khomeini's regime in an Egypt-based plot. The first man to come to bat. in a G World Series game was Ginger ""'SM ASHIN G GEN Beaumont of Pittsburgh in the 1903 classic against the Boston Red Sox. 2THMN NN In Concert And Beyond.. RESIDENTIAL COLLEGE SUMMER PLAYERS ANNOUNCE OPEN AUDITIONS For Actors and Informational Meeting for (all tech crews) for BERTOLT BRECHT'S