" The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 10, 1984 - Page 5 Bush lashes out against Democratic candidates r: From AP and UPI As Walter Mondale, Gary Hart and the Rev. Jesse Jackson crisscrossed Pennsylvania yesterday in last-minute appeals for support in today's primary, Vice President George Bush said all three failed to take strong stands against the "disgusting disease" of an- ti-Semitism. Bush gave the Democratic presiden- tial hopefuls a preview of the upcoming general election campaign by condem- ning them for not speaking out more forcefully against comments made by one of Jackson's key supporters - Louis Farrakhan, a Black Muslim leader. IN WASHINGTON, Bush told a Jewish lobbying group - the American Israel Public Affairs Committee - that all of the Democrats have fallen down in opposing anti-Semitism. He said Farrakhan has "threatened all Jews" and injected a spector of violence into the campaign "when he threatened a reporter." "Anti-Semitism, wherever it ap- pears, is a disgusting disease - but particularly when it appears in our country, where its presence defiles our most sacred traditions and in- stitutions," Bush said. In late February, Farrakhan said, in 'Anti-Semitism, wherever it appears, is a dis- gusting disease . . . itspresence defiles'our most sacred traditions and institutions. -Vice President, George Bush AP Photo Gory A member of a Portuguese team of "Forcados," or amateur bull-wrestlers, jumps on a bull's head Sunday in a Madrid bullring. This is not as dangerous as it looks, since the bull's horns are padded. In the Portuguese tradition, the bull is first tired by a rider on horseback, then subdued by the "Forcados," but is not killed. an apparent reference to Jews, "If you harm this brother, I warn you in the name of Allah, this will be the last one you do harm." MORE RECENTLY he threatened Washington Post reporter Milton Coleman for reporting that Jackson referred to Jews as "Hymies." In a radio broadcast, Farrakhan said of Coleman, "one day soon we will punish you with death." Jackson said on Sunday that he would not "muzzle a surrogate who wants to make a contribution." Mondale responded that Bush "ought to pick up the morning paper" because the former vice president said he had strongly condemned Farrakhan's statements. And Hart said he spoke out on the issue last week, and called Bush's speech "a continuation of the politics of distraction." THE DEMOCRATIC candidates em- phasized jobs as they searched for votes in the final hours before the Keystone State primary, which will divide 172 pledged delegates - the third-largest state delegate bloc. Polls indicate a close race between Hart and Mondale, but Mondale is heavily favored to fare better in the D ~ Stimulating career-oriented BS.. MS., secondan W andi jr high school or summer expedlition degree A M E R IC A r oram -ewfunt landtoC alir-n-ia. P'ractm~ica, ross-cultinral. I- to i-years. ISgroup cmping. Field studies and IS OIJR conters with deep ecological prob- CAMPUS Ims. society and self. Fnancial aid and postgraduate grants available. NXIIONAL AX DUBON SOCIETY EXPEDITION INSITITF Sharon. (t. 06009)( *03)3 delegate count, since his early organization paid off with full delegate slates in the complicated, two-step primary in Pennsylvania. Hart has candidates in fewer than half the delegate slots. On a five-city tour of the state, Mon- dale cited his record of fighting for jobs - from his support for federal aid to Chrysler to his backing of a plan to save the Wheeling-Pittsburgh steel plant: "I fought for Chrysler . . . I fought for Wheeling-Pittsburgh . . . It's time to fight for basic industry again, and I'll help put and I will put Pennsylvania back to work again" if elected president. Hart disputed Mondale's claim that the Chrysler bailout saved thousands of autoworkers' jobs. "The same number of people work at Chrysler today as would have worked at Chrysler if the government hadn't bailed it out," Hart told dockworkers. "The argument that he (Mondale) makes that he saved people's jobs, in my judgement, is just wrong." SHORT OR LONG Hairstyles for Men and Women DASCOLA STYLISTS Liberty off State . 668-9329 Maple Village ... 761 -2733 Chicago no longer second city CHICAGO (AP) - The hubbub over Chicago's slip from America's second- largest city to its third "reminds me of 'the taunt my father can lick your father,"' says author Studs Terkel. But city officials are wondering if the new numbers will mean less money from (Uncle Sam. "Obviously, some people like to live there," said Terkel, 71, author of such books as "Working" and a Chicago radio host for nearly 30 years. "But I like to know when it's spring and when it's autumn, when it's winter and sum- ;mer. Besides, I don't drive a car, so I'd ,probably die out there in Los Angeles." CHICAGO'S official status as the nation's No. 2 city lasted from 1890 until Saturday, when the Census Bureau released new population estimates as of July 1, 1982. Chicago was still No. 2 ac- cording to the last official census in 1980, with 3.005 million people to Los Angeles' 1.967 million. The new Census Bureau estimates, extrapolated from the 1980 figures, sh- owed Chicago losing 0.2 percent of its population to total 2.997 million, while the number of Los Angelenos rose 1.8 percent to 3.022 million. NEW YORK lost 0.2 percent, but remained far ahead in the top spot with 7.071 million people. Chicago Tribune columnist Mike Royko treated the news yesterday with some irreverence. In a column detailing a phone conversation with a friend from Los Angeles, he contended, "Everybody knows that Southern California attracts those who are strange. This can only mean that if our population went down, and yours went up, people have moved from here to there. And, chances are, they are the kind of people who believe men in outer space are sending them messages through their dental fillings or bed springs... "All this means," Royko wrote, "is that with more people in your city, there is more weight. And it is just a matter of time until the San Andreas fault cracks - the way Lex Luthor, Superman's nemesis, bless him, inten- ded - and you will slide into the ocean." FOR ALL the fun pundits were having with the numbers yesterday, city officials were less amused because their figures had dollar signs in front of them. John Taaffe, an'aide to City Planning Commissioner Elizabeth Hollander said: "We're not ready to say if we'll fight this. It doesn't necessarily mean we'll get fewer dollars. "What the Census Bureau does to get these estimates is apply theories on how they believe a population has changed since the last count. Since they used the same analysis for each city, the burden of proof would fall on us to show why that analysis wasn't valid. "Besides," he added, "no one really knows for sure until the next head count in 1990." Other Chicagoans weren't about to relinquish their standing yet. Keith Cooper, said it has no plans to change its name. "I don't see why not," rejoined Terkel. "Think what happens as we keep slipping. They've (the theater) got to be more flexible." Fewer profs, bigger classes for art school (Continued from Page 1) professors, on par with instructors in other schools at the University. Yet, some professors say it will only force them to exhibit and perform research when they would rather be teaching. "It's kind of a punishment to take away that teaching time and be forced to do research to get stellar reputations," says graphic design Prof. Bruce Meader. "If (professors) wanted to practice art or design, they would be off doing that. Teaching comes first." STUDENTS SAY it is certainly a 'punishment for undergraduates who 1 were attracted to the school by its '%trong teaching tradition. "The ambience of the art school is that professors are so accessible," said obne art student. "One of the things that ttracted me to this school was that I Anew I'd be at the big 'U,'-but that I'd still get that personal attention." But perhaps the most controversial part of the plan among students is the 'expected jump in class size resulting - from an increase in the number of non- art school students enrolled in art classes. The average class size is ex- pected to rise from about 15 students to 25. BAYLISS said he would like to see non-art students make up 25 percent of the school's enrollment, an increase of 12 percent over the current level. To do that the school would en- courage students from other schools to enroll in introductory art courses. It would also design new courses to help non-art students develop drawing and visualization skills in disciplines such as archeology, art history, and engineering. But some students say introductory 'I feel a little humiliated and insulted by the way we have been treated. In a sense (University leaders) have told us we really are an expendable part of the University.' -Phil Davis, photography professor "I feel a little humiliated and insulted by the way we have been treated," says Davis, a photography professor. "In a sense (University leaders), have told us we really are an expendable part of the University." Although he is 62, only a few years from retirement age, Davis says he had never considered retiring until the budget cut was announced. The impact of the review made him consider it for the first time. "It's just not the happy place it once was," he says. -SPECS HOWARD- SCHOOL OF BROADCAST ARTS Training in Radio, Television & Broadcast Electronics CALL NOW590 1 SPECS HOWARD SCHOOL OF BROADCAST ARTS, INC. 16900 W.8 Mile Rd. 1 Northland Drive Building, Southfield, Michigan 48075 " Accredited by National Association of Trade and Technical Schools listed by U.S. Office of Education .Licensed By State of Michigan, Department of Education -01 courses are already crowded. In be- ginning figure drawing and painting courses, where the average class size is currently 20, students say they struggle to squeeze their easels into small studios and fight for personal attention from the instructor. "IN SOME introductory classes, students are too embarrassed to ask for the prof's help, but in others ... where there are 20 students, getting consulting time is difficult," says Lisa Campeau, an LSA student who has taken several introductory courses in the school and plans to transfer there. School officials are currently meeting with campus planning officials to find space on central campus for additional art classes, Bayliss said. But any expansion of art programs depends on the willingness of Univer- I NDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5th A., aorLbb"r?5 701"!70 DAILY 1 P.M. SHOWS MON. THRU FRI. $1.50 TUESDAY ALL DAY ENDS THURS. ! ""VI BRANIT EROTICISM" -Molly Haskell, Vogue Magazine A FILM BY CARLOS5AURA CA RMEN (R) DAILY 1:00,7:10, 9:10 "GEN ULY STARTLING! The right audiences are bound to appreciate the originali, the color. rage, nonchalance, sly humor, and ferocious fashion sense." % - -Janet Maslin, N.Y. Times v sity administrators to pour more money into the school, he added. BILLY FRYE, University vice president for academic affairs and provost, said he reviewed the plan last week and sent it back to Bayliss with some recommendations, but declined to comment further. Despite its drawbacks, Bayliss and the professors who designed the changes say the plan can work if the faculty supports it and is willing to spend the time supervising and instruc- ting more graduate students. The long review, however, has perhaps endangered even that possibility. Phone 764.-0558 The University of Michigan Gilbert and Sullivan Society presents - -,---- t( Gilbert U, )ullivan S Jolanthe- or The Peer and the Pen April 1-14 00p m. April 14 matinee 200 p~m Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Ann Arbor. Mic.higan THINKING ABOUT "SUMMER... COLLEGE? THIjNjKABOUT L.I.U. L.I.U.-C.W. POST L.I.U.-BRENTWOOD L.I.U.-SOUTHAMPTON More than 1200 undergraduate and graduate courses, intensive institutes and workshops, Festival of the Arts, (workshops, master classes, performances). The Ark Presents Holl Near, with Janet Cuniberti & Susan Freundlich IN CONCERT Tues., April 10 The Michiaan Theater I Week1 une 25, July30 be 1rd July7,8$ geasse~s bg wf, For a copy of the COMBINED BULLETIN 1} r listing offerings at all 3 Campuses telephone L.U.-...XPOST......... (516)299-2431 For information regarding the Campuses listed below, telephone L.l.U.-BRENTWOOD ...................(516) 273-5112 L.I.U.-SOUTHAMPTON .................(516)283-4000 i t 4 8 d i '- ) r 7Z- Q (4 _ 1 5"1 AIM, OR MAIL COUPON - ummmmmmmmmmm=mmm SUMMER SESSIONS OFFICE C ... . mTJ I .-. 1-_-- I I