The Michigan Daily -Tuesday, March 13, 1984-- Page 5 Noma" Super Tuesday Showdown Washington Contest: Caucus Delegates: 41 of 70 Selected Voters: 2.1 Million I r Nevada Contest: Caucus Delegates: 15 of 20 Selected Voters: 143,421 Massachusetts Contest: Primary Delegates: 100 of 116 Selected Voters: 2.8 Million GOP leaders meet to plan deficit reductions l - *.****,**,* ''..'' *.**. .'. ...-.. ____________________________ :-:::::::::.::: :::::. :>~: ~ . :..*.+:+- . Hawaii Oklahoma Alabama Contest: Caucus Contest: Caucus Contest: Primary Delegates: 17 of 27 Delegates: 43 of 53 Delegates: 52 of 62 Selected Selected Selected Voters: 405,000 Voters: 1,170,361 Voters : 2.1 Million Rhode Island Contest: Primary Delegates: 22 of 27 Selected Voters: 514,227 Georgia Contest: Primary Delegates: 70 of 84 Selected Voters: 2.4 Million Florida Contest: Primary Delegates: 123 of 143 Selected Voters: 4,865,636 From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - House Republican leader Robert Michel said yesterday that President Reagan understands he must accept cuts in his planned defense buildup if he is to gain GOP congressional support for deficit-reduction package. Reagan met with Michel and other House Republicans as the administration sought to fashion an all-GOP deficit- reduction plan independent of the bipartisan panel that reached a standoff after Reagan challenged it to find some way to reduce the record red ink in his budget. MICHEL (R-Ill.). said after the meeting that Reagan hasn't specifically agreed to a figure by which he would be willing to cut the growth in defense spending. But Michel added, "The president understands what we're going through up there on the Hill. And the president is a good negotiator, and he know you don't give away the ball game before you get to the table, but I think the president is realistic enough to know that every dollar he requested on defense he's not going to get." Aides said it would be easier, although by no means cer- tain, to gain GOP votes if the taxes were presented as part of a package that includes spending reductions. At the same time, House Democratic leader Jim Wright (D-Texas) said Democrats are going ahead with their own plans to cut the deficit as part of the regular budget process. Wright said they hope to pass three components - slower defense growth, tax increase and domestic spending cuts - by the time Congress begins its Easter recess in mid-April. Michel said Reagan is still willing to work with the Senate Republicans' three-year plan, which was presented to the president last week by leaders who told Reagan he is unlikely to get the entire 13 percent increase in military spending he requested. AP Democrats vie for delegates (Continued from Page 1) Lennon FBIfile remains secret Mondale, hoping for a southern revival after four straight losses to Hart, attacked the Colorado senator at stop after campaign stop through Alabama, Florida and Georgia. "DON'T be impressed by people who make an appearance on the right side at the last minute," he said. Hart cancelled a last-minute trip to Massachusetts after late polls indicated he holds a comfortable lead there. He is favored to win the Rhode Island primary, as well. If both Hart and Mondale do well today, Michigan's St. Patrick's Day caucus will become the focus of national attention. Michigan should be almost as sure a bet for Mondale as his home state of Minnesota because of the labor vote, said national Hart campaign staffer Chuck Paquette. "IF THERE'S one state that you can expect Walter Mondale to do well in it's Michigan," said Paquette, who is working here with state campaign leaders. "Nationally the campaign is not counting on a win in Michigan," he said. What the Hart camp hopes to do, Paquette said, is get at least 20 percent of the votes in most of the state's congressional districts. A candidate must receive at least 20 percent to win any of the delegates at stake. Hart plans a visit to Detroit tomorrow, and Mondale is expected to tour the state Thursday. Jackson has tentatively planned a bus tour of southern Michigan with a stop in Ann Arbor on Friday. He may stop in Lansing to testify in a hearing on the legality of Saturday's caucus. There are 511 delegates at stake on "Super Tuesday," more than one-fourth the total needed to win nomination at the Democratic National Convention next summer. In addition to the five primaries, Washington state, Oklahoma, Nevada, Hawaii, and American Samoa are holding caucuses. The results of a write-in primary for Americans living abroad also will become known today. Hart' 's campaign soars LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A professor who suspects John Lennon was the target of "dirty tricks" during the Nixon administration went to court yesterday to force the government to explain why the late Beatle's FBI file should remain classified. Jon Wiener, an associate professor of history at the University of California at Irvine, obtained documents last year that revealed agents followed Lennon for months because it was feared he would lead a demonstration against Richard Nixon at the 1972 convention. ENTIRE passages of the classified FBI and immigration documents, ob- tained under the Freedom of Infor- mation Act, were blacked out for national security reasons. Wiener said he will ask U.S. District Judge Robert Takasugi to order the government to provide more information about the censored documents. Wiener and his attorney, Mark Rosenbaum of the American Civil Liberties Union, said the FBI did not provide an adequate description of the censored documents, as required by law when documents are withheld. Wiener has said the withheld documents could contain evidence of "dirty tricks" or illegal acts carried out to disrupt Lennon's personal life. HE ALSO said the papers may reveal that top Nixon aides were informed about Lennon's activities, noting that one censored document was addressed to H. R. Haldeman. Rosenbaum said yesterday's court hearing, the first stage in Wiener's Freedom of Information Act suit, should give an indication of how strongly the FBI and Justice Depar- tment will oppose Wiener. "This case could have an affect on all freedom of information litigation throughout the country," Rosenbaum said. "There's a good chance it could SHORT OR LONG Hairstyles for Men and Women CA yearyou1 tape With you forlife Jewish Study and Jewish Living in Jerusalem for College Students and Graduates Intensive study of classical Jewish texts, also Hebrew language, Jewish philosophy and Israeli society. Equal access to learning for men and women. - Full and part-tinie programs - College credit o Housing and meal options - Educational tours The Jewish Theological Seminary of America 3080 Broadway, N.Y., N.Y. 10027 Telephone (212) 678-8832 -c(MIDRESHET 'YEkUSHALAYIM- set a precedent regarding the scope of the national security exemption in FOIA cases." THE NEARLY 26 pounds of documents obtained by Wiener revealed that Lennon came to the government's attention in February 1972 when a Senate subcommittee reported the musician was planning a concert tour to recruit young people to attend a protest at the Republican con- vention. One FBI document stated that Len- non shuld be arrested on drug charges if at all possible so he would "become more likely to be immediately depor- table." Wiener's book, "Come Together; John Lennon In His Time," which is based on about 150 documents released by the FBI, is scheduled to be published in June. Lennon was gunned down outside his Manhattan apartment Dec. 8, 1980, by Mark David Chapman, who is serving a prison term. ( Continued from Page 1) we can handle," said Hart's state coor- dinator, LSA senior Mark Blumenthal. "Just in small checks, three to five hundred dollars comes in every day. And that's just in the small checks." Michigan's Hart campaign, which began last March with about 50 people, has ballooned to nearly 2,000 volunteers since the New Hampshire primary, said LSA senior Marc Dann, who for- merly headed the state organization with Blumenthal. During the summer, members of Hart's national staff asked Dann and Blumenthal to organize the senator's scheduled campaign stop in Ann Arbor last fall. After that, the duo landed the top posts of coordinating Hart's statewide campaign. WITH DANN currently in Chicago working as the field director for Hart's Illinois campaign, Blumenthal has been left to contend with the unexpected at- tention surrounding the March 17 Michigan caucus. After the results of today's Super Tuesday voting are in, the Democratic candidates will focus on Michigan's 155 delegates. Although Hart's staff said earlier that Sen. Walter Mondale's labor-backed campaign was likely to sweep the Michigan delegates, the outlook for the Colorado senator seems to be im- proving. HART'S national office has sent several paid organizers to work with the Michigan staff that until recently has been operating in the back room of Ann Arbor attorney George Sallade's office on State Street. Now the Hart headquarters have spread throughout the state. But despite the addition of professionals, the Hart campaign's core is made up of students. "These (students)nare among the best. They really know what they're doing," said Chuck Paquette, a staff member on Hart's national campaign. STUDENT volunteers are attempting to convass every home in the city to distribute literature on Hart's positions and explain Michigan's little-publicized and confusing caucus system. "Nobody knows how to vote - or where, or when," Blumenthal said. To remedy that, Hart volunteers plan to drive students from campus dor- mitories to polling places, adds LSA senior Jill Leckta, campus coordinator for the Hart campaign. Shapiro releases policy forbidding gay discrimination DASCOLA STYLISTS USE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS Liberty off State . 668-9329 Maple Village ... 761-2733 3 - - -- - ~- - (Continued from Page 1) Residential College. Godre said although she is happy with the policy, she thinks gays should still work for a regents' bylaw prohibiting discrimination, rather than just the presidential policy statement. MEMBERS OF the group Lesbian and Gay Rights on Campus (LaGROC) were demanding a bylaw change when they first approached Shapiro in December 1982, but when Shapiro said last October he favored a statement they -stopped pushing the bylaw change. At the February regents meeting, LaGROC members criticized earlier drafts of the statement for containing ambiguous language. One draft released about six weeks ago said the University "ought not" to discriminate based on sexual preference, a weaker version of yesterday's statement. "The changes in the draft that LaGROC requested have been fulfilled and we are pleased to see that" said LaGROC spokesperson Bruce Aaron, last night. The statement, which was released in the regents agenda yesterday, reads: . . educational and employment decisions should be based on in- dividuals' abilities and qualifications and should not be based on irrelevant factors of personal characteristics which have no connection with academic abilities or job performance. Among the traditional factors which are generally 'irrelevant" are age, sex, religion and national origin. It is the policy of the University of Michigan that an individual's sexual orientation be treated in the same manner.'" L ,NDIVIDUAL THEATRES 6th Ave co Lbert 761-9700 $1.50 TUESDAY ALL DAY DAILY 1:00 P.M. SHOWS MON. THRU FRI. ACADEMY AWARD NOM. INCL. BEST PICTURE SHIRLEY DEBRA JACK MacLAINE WINGER NICHOLSON (PG) DAILY 1:00, 7:00, 9:25 "HILARIOUS" N.Y. TIMES WOODY ALLEN'S BROADWAY DANNY ROSE (PG) DAILY 1:00, 7:20, 9:35 The Age. Iof Miracles (a.k.a. Computerization) SummerSession offers a myriad of courses for the Computer Science major, including Fundamentals of Computer Organization and Fundamentals of Computer Software. For the non-majors, courses include Introduction to Programming Logic and Data Management and Information Processing. SummerSession also offers several non-credit courses in their microcomputer lab. From basic BASIC to data base management and statistics. But we're more than computers. Over 270 courses in business, the performing arts and the sciences. We're also Concentrated Study; a chance to earn a full year's credit in eight weeks. All from a university with its own beach, free concerts, tennis, sailing ... will miracles never cease! Find out. Call for registrationinformation and our free Course Bulletin. SummerSession is academic excellence in a most favorable climate. 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