The Michigan Daily-Sunday, December 5, 1982-Page 3 Dems look to Glenn to replace Kennedy in '84 ., ; #1 , , } 4 !! t. i u' k P M i b i Although it is 14 months before the, WASHINGTON (AP)- With Sen. Iowa party caucuses begin the process Edward Kennedy out of the picture, of choosing delegates to the 1984 many Democrats are taking a close and Democratic National Convention, for- hopeful look at John Glenn as a mer Vice President Walter Mondale presidential prospect in 1984. But poten- has a strong organization and Sens. tial supporters are described as ap- Gary Hart of Colorado and Alan Cran- prehensive and frustrated by Glenn's ston of California are moving rapidly to slowness to build a campaign build campaign staffs. organization. By contrast, the Glenn organization is "The right thing for John Glenn to do lagging. right now is get a campaign BUT GLENN, a former astronaut, is organization put together," says Bob a genuine hero, the man whom Keefe, a veteran political consultant Democrats like to compare to Dwight working part-time for the Democratic Eisenhower in terms of his appeal. senator from Ohio. Many party officials believe the former KEEFE WAS asked how Glenn's Marine officer has the potential to be potential backers are feeling about the the Democrats' strongest candidate in leisurely pace at which the Glenn 1984 organization is developing. "Antsy is a That view often comes from good word, frustrated is another good politicians who also admit privately word," he responded. they don't know where Glenn stands on HAPPENINGS Sunday most issues. "It's a suspension of judgment," said one party official who insisted on anonymity. "I've seen a lot of presiden- tial honeymoons. This is the first time I've seen a candidate get a honeymoon." A STATE Democratic Party leader, describing Glenn's appeal, said that during an appearance in her state he was sharply critical of Reagan ad- ministration budget cuts for education and scientific research. "The crowd loved it," she said. "If it had been any of the candidates viewed as a liberal, people would have said it's just more Democratic big spending. But from Glenn they accepted it." Glenn needs to overcome a widely held impression that he is a dull speaker. The problem not only is style but his use of material that often reads like an engineering manual. Drinker's dream AP Photo Workmen load a tank car containing Canadian whiskey onto a barge after it was recovered from the bottom of San Francisco Bay Friday. High winds from a Pacific storm blew several railroad cars off a barge last Tuesday. Transplantpatient undergoes surgery Highlight Alois Fleishmann, Irish composer and director of the Cork International Choral and Folk Dance Festival, will speak on "The New School of Irish Composers" today at 4 p.m. in Rackham Assembly Hall, under the joint sponsorship of the School of Music and Eastern Michigan University's music department. Films Hill St.-Love Bug, 1, 3:30 p.m.; Zorba the Greek, 7, 9:30 p.m., 1450 Hill St. Cinema Guild-The Seventh Seal, 7, 9 p.m., Lorch. Cinema II-Traffic, 7 p.m.; Alexander, 8:40 p.m., Angell Aud. A. Performances Musical Society-Handel's "Messiah," 2:30 p.m., Hill Aud. School of Music-Student Chamber Music Recital, 2 p.m., Recital Hall; Piano Students Recital; 4 p.m., Recital Hall; Piano Recital, Wendy Stofer, 6 p.m., Recital Hall. Theatre & Drama-"The Tempest," 2 p.m., Power Center. Hebrew Day School-Concert by Louis Nagel, 7:30 p.m., Beth Israel Congregation social hall. Miscellaneous Eclipse-Workshop, Eyges, Lancaster & Murray, 2 p.m., Trotter House. Aikido Club-Meeting, 6 p.m., 606 Hoover St. Racquetball Club-Practice, 9 a.m.-2 p.m., NCRB Courts 1-5. Kelsey Museum-Gallery Talk, Jim Higginbotham, "Roman Glass," 2 p.m., Kelsey. Student Wood and Crafts Shop-Safety class, hand tools, 6-8 p.m., 537 SAB. Wesley Fellowship-Dinner and devotion, drama performance from Covenant Players, 5:30 p.m., State & Huron. Monda Highlight The Performance Network concludes this fall's Works in Progress series today with "Jason," a play by poet/playwright Newt Barenose. The perfor- mance is at 7 p.m. at 408 W. Washington. Performances Guild House-Poetry Readings, Alexander Blain, Corky Bunch, Polly Castor, 8 p.m., 802 Monroe. A School of Music-Piano Students Rectial, 8 p.m., Rackham Hall. Speakers Women's Research Club-Martha Krieg, "Computer-Assisted Edition of the Middle English Primer," 7:45 p.m., W. Conf. Rm., Rackham. Near Eastern and North African Studies-Brown Bag, Birol Yeshilda, "Failure of Consociational Democracy in Cyprus: 1960-1963," noon, Lane Hall Commons Rm. Chemistry-Inorganic Sem., Robert Taylor, "Multinuclear NMR Studies of Cis Platin-DNA Base Interactions," 4 p.m., 1200 Chem. Computing Ctr.-Forrest Hartman, "Microcomputers & MTS," 2 p.m., 171 BSAD. Markley-Joshua Peck, "The Media's Treatment of the Middle East," 8 p.m., Markley Concourse Lounge. Torah Ctr. of Metro Detroit-Rabbi Avraham Jacobowitz, "Jewish Christmas: Everything You Wanted to Know About Chanukah But Were Afraid to Ask," 5 p.m., 1429 Hill St. * Meetings Christian Science-7:15 p.m., League Rm. D. LSA-Faculty Mtg., 4:10 p.m., Angell Aud. A. Women's Network-noon, League Rms. 4& 5. SACUA-1:15 p.m., 4025 Fleming Admin. Bldg. Renaissance Universal Club-"Neo-Humanism: Beyond Internationalism to World Peace," 7 p.m., Union Welker Rm. Miscellaneous Tae Kwon Do Club-Practice, 6 p.m., CCRB Martial Arts Rm. Eclipse Jazz-Workshop series on jazz improvisation by David Swain, 8 p.m., Trotter House. Delta Sigma Theta Sorority-Benefit Skating Party, 9 p.m., Ann Arbor Skate Co., 2275 Platt Rd. Turner Geriatric Clinic-New Learning Program, "Developing Inter- dependence: Attitudes toward Caring for One Another," 1 p.m., Child and Family Services, 2301 Platt Rd. Michigan Union-Exhibit and sale of foil etchings and Austrian Strass Crystal pendants and prisms, 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Union first floor. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI. 48109. (Continued from Page 1) could be serious. PETERSON emphasized the ar- tificial heart, first permanent blood pump implanted in a human, was working normally., le said the air also could be coming from the lung tissue itself. If that were the case, surgeons would put in another tube to suck up the air and keep it from diffusing into the tissue. "I'm not terribly concerned," said Dr. Robert Jarvik, inventor of the Jar- vik-7 artificial heart. Clark had been listed in serious but stable condition before yesterday's operation, and his surgeon, Dr. William DeVries, had planned to start him eating normal food and walking. "I JUST want to thank everybody who has had anything to do with this," Clark's wife, Una Loy, told reporters earlier Saturday. "I'm very grateful." She recalled what her 61-year-old husband told her before the operation to implant the artificial heart. "He said, 'Just in case I don't see you again, I want you to know you've been a. darned good wife.' " Later, after the surgery, she told him that she loved him. "HE PUT his hand on his chest," she said. "I said, 'You're trying to tell us you love us,' and he nodded. "I said, 'I'm so grateful. I thought maybe since you have an artificial heart, you might not still love us.' " Clark's son, Dr. Stephen Clark, said his father was "beginning to act himself this mor- ning." "We're all beginning to see that light in his eye and that will sustain him," said the younger Clark, a surgeon. "We're certainly more hopeful, now than a few days ago." On Monday, Clark and his wife - who have been married for 39 years - boar- ded a commercial flight from Seattle to Salt Lake City, his heart rapidly drawing life from his fatigued body. He received a polyurethane heart in a seven-hour operation that began ahead of schedule late Wednesday as his con- dition worsened. -New U of M Course Offering- INTRODUCTION TO JEWISH LAW taught by Rabbi Rod Glogower THREE CREDITS IN JUDAIC STUDIES DEPT. Tues., 9-11 am; Thurs. 10-11 am FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL 663-3336 ° ° y l, i' v Reagan completes visit to Latin American countries (Continued from-Page1 ) administration counts on those- four Central American nations tohelp coun- ter what it considers a communist-led effort to win control of the region. Nicaragua's Sandanista leadership was excluded from Reagan's agenda. REAGAN ALSO said in a radio ad- dress to the American people yesterday that Congress must approve his Carib- bean aid program or face "an exodus of desperate people" to the United States. Reagan, giving the weekly address from the Costa Rican presidential palace as he wrapped up the five-day Latin American trip, called his Carib- bean Basin Initiative a "top priority" of the lame-duck Congress that adjourns later this month. "Our Caribbean Basin Initiative, designed to provde economic oppor- tunity by stimulating investment and trade offers the hope of economic progress which anchors democracy and freedom," the president said. "Final passage this year is top priority." HE SAID the program was essential to addressing the poverty of the region, which the United States is very much affected by. "Prolonged social and economic disruption would cause an exodus of desperate people seeking refuge where who many others have already found it, in the United States," Reagan said. "Trade is the path for new progress for everyone," he said. One of the first highly successful Gothic novels was "The Monk" by Mat- thew Gregory Lewis. It was first published in 1976. The Non Profit Student Bookstore 341 East Liberty at Division Open 7 days a week Phone: 769-7940 I RESIDENCE HALL HOUSING AVAILABLE WINTER TERM GRADUATE OR UNDERGRADUATE; WITH MEALS OR NOT STOP IN ROOM 1011 S.A.B., TELEPHONE 763-3164 8 A.M. to Noon; 12:30 to 4:30 Weekdays ARIOR $2.00 SAT AND SUN $2.00 2 INDIVIDUAL THEATRES SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM SAve al Liberty 77015700 -- - -Richard Freedman, ewhouse Newspapers "'DON'S PARTY' IS VERY FUNNY INDEED! BRUCE BEOESFORD MAY BE THE BEST THING THAT'S HAPPENED TO MOVIES SINCE WILLIAM WYLER, DAVID LEAN AND FRED ZINNEMANN." Lewis Archibald. Aquarian "BAWDY, FASCINATING, COMPELLING STUFF!" -Rex ReedN.Y. Daily News DON'S PART An Outrageous Comedy Directed by BRUCE BERESFORD ("Breaker Mor.nt":: FRI, MON-6:40, 8:30, 10:20 r %WWW HOLID6Y OPEN HOUSE For All Students to Visit and Tour 'he INUw A lumni Cpn*Du