Ninety-four Years of Editorial Freedom C, be Mitvi4a iEtai1 Indulge Sunny skies with high near 50.. Vol. XdIV-No. 145 Copy House OKs '85 budget for state V colleges LANSING, Mich. ( UPI?-The House, in a rare Saturday session, approved budgets funding state colleges and universities next year-and awaited a fight over lowering statejncome taxes. The House Taxation Committee late Friday gutted a tax reduction measure Papproved earlier by the Senate and substituted for it a much smaller rollback advocated by Gov. James Blanchard. UNDER the Blanchard plan, the in- come tax rate would go down to 5.35 percent from its current 6.1 percent on Oct. 1. The Senate version had taxes dropping in two phases to 4.6 percent by July 1, 1985. The higher education budget, ap- proved 96-4, provides $834.5 million for colleges and universities next year, up $34million from this year. S The proposed itemized budget in- cludes: *Central Michigan University, $36.9 million 'Eastern Michigan University, $43 See BUDGET, Page 5 yright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, April 1, 1984 Fiteen Cents Eight pages M ondale sweeps. a Kentucky caucuses From AP and UPI Walter Mondale ran far ahead of his two Democratic presidential rivals yesterday in Kentucky caucuses but the largest chunk of the delegates picked went to an uncommitted slate supported by Gov. Martha Layne Collins. With 77 of the state's 120 counties reporting' from local caucuses, about 53 percent of the delegates to congressional district conventions were uncommitted. MONDALE had about 25 percent of the delegates, Hart and Jackson about 10 percent each. The party's three presidential candidates, meanwhile, remained preoccupied with New York - ranging from Manhattan to Niagara Falls in search of the votes in the upcoming primary there. Jackson moved up and down Manhattan to attract homosexuals, Chinese, Hispanic and black voters to his ''rainbow coalition,'' while Mondale and Hart ventured MONALE. criticized Hart for his comments about European governments calling it another case of Hart not being "sure- footed and solid." The former vice-president also said it ill-behooved Hart to be making "sanctimonious" criticism of some activists working on Mondale's behalf who took money from political action committees, when Hart took PAC money himself in his last Senate race. Hart reportedly said Friday there is a growing. cynicism and distrust of government in this country similar to that in Europe. HART also said the U.S. tax system is so complex it risks ''encouraging people to have disrespect for the government~ and in the process I think Europeanizing this country." Yesterday, Hart won praise in Rochester from astronomer Carl Sagan for his record on nuclear arms control - "His dedication to the issue has not changed, it has only strengthened" .- and, in Syracuse, explained his stand on federal gun control laws. The Colorado senator says he opposes federal laws banning guns because he does not believe such legislation could be enforced. NEW YORK'S' Tuesday primary, with 252 of its 285 delegates at stake, is another must win for former 'Vice President Walter Mondale if he is to keep his comfortable lead in the race for the 1,967 delegates needed for nomination. For Sen. Gary Hart, it is another chance to score a big breakthrough and turn the tide in the Democratic battle. And for civil rights activist Jesse Jackson it is another chan- ce to prove he can draw a huge vote that includes thousands of blacks wh1o have never voted before. NBC and the Washington post, whose tracking polls first predicted Hart's win In New Hampshire and showed !him slipping two weeks ago in Illinois, shows Mondale just seven, points ahead of Hart. The poll, taken Wednesday night through Friday night, showed Mondale at 39 percent, Hart 32 percent and Jackson, 20 percent, the margin of error is 6 percent. In the Virgin Islands, Mondale picked up 21/4 delegate votes and Jackson 11/ in caucuses yesterday. A real man Daily Photo by DAVID FRANKEL Sophomore John Taube does his best to look like a "Rebel Without a Cause" during the James Dean look-alike contest at the Michigan Theatre Friday night. Taube placed second in the competition, behind Clayton Cowan, a Michigan Tech Institute student. Fifth Fifth Ward By ERIC MATTSOP Last in a three-part sei Ward candidates cool party estrangement N ries The Fifth Ward race between Demo- crat Doris Preston. and Republican Sally Pennington promises to be a crucial contest which may tip the party balance on City-Council. With no incumbent in the Fifth Ward this year, some Councilmembers say the race could go either way and is likely to be close. Although both Pennington and Preston are competent and articulate, their backgrounds differ sharply. PENNINGTON, 51; a real estate saleswoman, has been less active in city politics than Preston, but has worked as a volunteer for the Republican party for several years. She has participated in community projects such as school parent-teacher committees and the Neighborhood Watch program. Preston, 40, a University librarian, has been the only Democrat on the City's Planning Commission for the past three years. Preston has also served on the Mayor's Energy Advisory Commission. .Preston, an Ann Arbor resident since 1967, considers her experience in Ann Arbor politics as her main advantage over Pennington. See CANDIDATES, Page 3 Ward S Pcts 3, 4, 12 Word E Pcts 1,11 Word 5 ptv 3 Word i I Pcts S. 6, 7, t, 10 Word 2 Pas 6, 10 Gla