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April 05, 1984 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1984-04-05

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Mondale front-runner as
Dems hit Pennsylvania

The Michigan Daily - Thursday, April 5, 1984 - Page 3

From United Press International Senator Gary Hart (D-Colo.) in the bat-
Walter Mondale, boosted by his lan- tle for the 1,967 needed for the
dslide New York victory moved his bat- nomination.
tle for the Democratic presidential The Democrats now are about
nomination to Pennsylvania yesterday halfway through the maze of primaries
- another northeastern industrial state and caucuses that will provide most of
where a big labor vote should work in the 3,933 delegates who will decide the
his favor party's 1984 presidential nomination in
The formrer vice president re- San Francisco.
established his reputation as the front- Hart, trying to rebound from his wor-
runner with his lopsided New York vic- st primary loss of the year, insisted the
tory and grabbed more than half the 252 Democrats still want a new face and
delegates at stake to build his lead over new ideas and declared the fight for the
Highlight
Tonight at 7 p.m., the University administration is holding the first official
public hearing on the proposed code of non-academic conduct for students.
Students will be able to get information on the code as well as voicing their
opinions on it.
Films
Mediatrics - Take the Money and Run, 7:30 p.m., Play it Again Sam, 9
p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud.
CFT - Fahrenheit 451, 7 p.m., Slaughterhouse-five, 9:15 p.m., Michigan
Theater.
Cinema Guild - Experimental films, 7 p.m. and 9 p.m., Lorch Hall.
Performances
The Ark - David Mallett, 8 p.m., the Ark.
Guild House - Poetry Reading, Ted Lardner and Diane Young, 8 p.m.,
Guild House.
School of Music - Conducting recital, Sergio Bernal/Eric Ruple, 8 p.m.,
Rackham Assembly Hall.
UAC/Soundstage - Band concert, 8:30 p.m., U-Club.
Union Arts - Clarinet, viola, and piano trio, 12:15 p.m., Pendleton Room,
Union.
Speakers
Japanese Studies - Nancy Morrison, "Female Aging in Japan: The
Problem of Ki and Menopause," noon, Lane Hall.
HRD - Colleen Dolan-Green, Joyce Morgan, "Long Range Planning,"
8:30 p.m., Room 4051, LSA Building.
Labor Studies Center - Jean King, "Women and the Law," 7 p.m., UAW
Local 38.
Rackham/LSA/Western European Studies - Lee Davidoff, "Confronting
Patriarchy: The Formation of the Middle-Class Family," 4 p.m., West Con-
ference Room, Rackham.
Friends of Mattaei Botanical Gardens - Bill Collins, Parennial Lecture,
7:30 p.m., 1800 Dixboro Rd.
English department - Donna Landry, "Beat me! Beat me! Feminist Ap-
1 xpropriations of Sade," 7:30 p.m., East Conference Room, Rackham.
Museum of Anthropology - Polygyny, Totemism, Ideology: Some Im-
plications from Pitjantjatjara Ethno-Zoology," noon, Room 2009, Museums.
Near East and N. African Studies - Paul Dresch, "The Significance of the
Course Events Taken Within a Segmentary Structure," 4 p.m., East Con-
ference Room, Rackham.
Computing'Center - Chitra Ramanjan, "Intro to Pascal, IV," 3:30 p.m.,
165 Business Administration Building.
Museum of Art - Lisa Vihos, "Trends and Traditions in Japanese Art,"
12:10p.m., Museum of Art.
Hispanic Law Student Association - Luis DeGraffe on issues that concern
Puerto Ricans, 7 p.m., Hutchens Hall.
Chemistry department - Michael Wixom, "Photochemical Spectroscopy
and Calorimetry of Their Surface Films," 4 p.m., Room 1200, Chemistry.
Building.
Meetings
Fencing Club -8 p.m., Coliseum.
Ann Arbor supprt group for Farm Labor Organizing committees - 7
p.m., room 4318, Union.
Anxiety Disorders Support Group -7:30 p.m., Children't psych. Hospital.
GEO - Membership meeting; 7:30 p.m., West Conference Room,
Rackham.
Undergraduate English Association - Social Committee, 5 p.m., Literary
Committee, 7 p.m., 7th floor, Haven Hall Lounge.
Eating Disorders self-help group -7 p.m., First United Methodist Church.
Latin American Solidarity Committee -8 p.m., Union.
Take Back the Night planning meeting -8 p.m., Union.
Campus Weight Watchers - 5:30 p.m., League.
Cooperative Outdoor Adventures - 7:30 p.m., Room 1402, Mason Hall.
Nuclear Free Zone Petition Circulators - 1 p.m., First Methodist Church.
Miscellaneous
Scottish Country Dancers - Beginners class, 7 p.m., Forest Hills Com-
munity Center.
Medical Center Bible Study - 12:30 p.m., Chapel.
Tau Beta Pi - Tutoring in low level science, math, and engineering
classes, 7p.m., UGLi, 8 p.m., Bursley.
PSN - Forum on status of arrests, 7:30 p.m., West Quad, Main Lounge.
Michigan Rugby - practice, 7 p.m., Tartan Turf.
Career Planning and Placement - Panel discussion on communications
field, 6 p.m., Henderson Room, League.

To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of
Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109
Malicious Intent

nomination will not be over until
California votes June 5.
"The difference between myself and
Mr. Mondale is who wants to go for-
ward and who wants to go backward,"
the Colorado senator told an audience
at St. Anne's Senior Center in
Philadelphia.
JESSE JACKSON, who came within
one point of knocking Hart out of second 7
place in New York with a record black (
vote Tuesday, jubilantly declared:
"New York City politics will never the
same."In some predominantly black
districts, the turnout was 100 percent
higher than 1980 levels.
Even Mondale's chief supporter,
Gov. Mario Cuomo, was impressed with
Jackson's strong second-place finish in
New York City and his near upset of
Hart statewide.
"When they write the history of this
one, the longest chapter will be on
Jackson," Cuomo said. "The man
didn't have two cents. He didn't have
one television or radio ad, as far as I
could see, and look what he did."
With the New York primary behind LOSt u AP Photo
them, the candidates have contested for Marvin Gaye Sr., father of the late soul singer, looks passively as a Los Angeles judge orders his psychiatric evalutaon
48 percent of the delegates. Former during his arraignment on murder charges yesterday. The judge said that Gaye is "clearly incapable of understanding
o have the edge for the remaining 52 these proceedings" and will be held without bond until the report is completed. Marvin Gaye Jr. died of two gunshot
percent. wounds Sunday.
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