Ninety-five Years of Editorial Freedom C I bt Sit46 IE~aIIQ Lapse Morning clouds will give way to afternoon sun and a high of 60. Vol. XCV, No. 42 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-- Wednesday, October 24, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages . .. -a Mondale draws thousands toDiag Reagan backers present, ,but polite By KERY MURAKAMI Lost withing the crowd gathered on the Diag yesterday for the Mondale rally, the Reagan supporters were like Michigan State University fans at Michigan Stadium; vocal but sadly outnumbered. Despite fears among campus suppor- 0 ter's of the Democratic presidential candidate that Republican groups at the Uniersity would heckle Mondale, the rally took place with little harassment from Reagan backers. RUMORS surfaced over the weekend that the College Republicans might stage a counter demonstration at the rally. Both camps had accused the other of tearing down their campaign signs. But when Mondale stepped up to the podium the Reagan supporters were quiet, just as College Republican president and engineering senior Mark Leachman had pledged last Friday. He said that "once Mondale begins to speak, the heckling stops." Other members of the group shared. Leachman's views. "WE'RE HERE to show our support for President Reagan," said Terry Peters, LSA senior and chairman of Students for Reagan/Bush. "As a group position, we are not going to heckle. If we can't outnumber them, we're ging to outclass them," she said. But she added that she couldn't con- trol everybody. "We've told our people not to do it. But Mondale brings out these things in people. We can't control all of it." ALTHOUGH the Reagan supporters - opted for a more subtle role at yester- day's rally, Leachman was pleased with the outcome of the event. "I think it went pretty well," said Leachman, as he helped pack up a plethora of Reagan buttons, signs and bumper stickers. "It got a little out of hand once in a See GOP, Page 5 Mondale calls Reagan 'remote' By LAURIE DELATER "The way I look at it, anybody who wants to be president should come to The University of Michigan and ask for your votes." That's what Walter Mondale said - and did - yesterday at a rally on the Diag that drew an estimated 10,000 students and area residents. THE DEMOCRATIC presidential candidate brought his campaign to Ann Arbor yesterday in an attempt to cap- ture the crucial votes of students and Michigan people in order to close what pollsters say is only a 10 point gap bet- ween him and President Reagan. "This election is wide open. Today the voters of Michigan and the nation have a choice," Mondale told the crowd as he stood on a flag-draped stage beneath a rainbow made of balloons, flanked by Colorado Sen. Gary Hart and numerous state and local Democrats. Mondale hammered at parts of Sun- day night's debate over foreign affairs with President Reagan, but steered clear of mentioning his domestic policies, particularly his plan for general tax increases, which have driven a wedge between him and the tax opponents of southeastern Michigan. AGAINST a backdrop of campaign banners and trees blazing in autumn's colors, Mondale addressed a crowd that cheered his call for renewed idealism toward world issues but remained silent when he spoke of the threat of nuclear war. Mondale said the nation needs the, "kind of practical idealism" heralded by President John Kennedy. The audience roared with applause and whistling when he recalled Kennedy's announcement of the Peace Corps during a campus visit in 1960. "(The Peace Corps) was a classic example of idealism, of tapping our best and it worked," shouted the can- didate, looking confident and rested. IN AN EFFORT to stop Reagan and Vice President George Bush from using Kennedy and other Democratic heroes as role models, Mondale read a hand- written letter signed "Ronnie Reagan" and sent to Richard Nixon during the 1960 Nixon-Kennedy campaign. Reagan at that time headed "Democrats for Nixon." The letter gave advice on campaign tactics. In part, it said: "One last thought - shouldn't some one tag Mr. Kennedy's old new imaginative program with its proper age? Under the tousled boyish haircut it is still old Karl Marx - first launched a century ago. There is nothing new in the idea of a government being Big Brother to us all. Hitler called his 'state socialism' and See MONDALE, Page 7 Hart appeals to former supporters By ERIC MATTSON Before Fritz, there was Frank. And Lana. And Harold and Scott and Don and Jim and, of course, Gary. Seven speakers in all preceded presidential candidate Walter Mondale in his apperance on the Diag yesterday. Some of,-them wanted to increase their name recognition, and some of them merely made a token appearance. Nearly all of them condemned President Reagan's policies in one way or another. THE MOST popular speaker who preceded Mondale was clearly Mon- 'dale's former rival, Sen. Gary Hart (D-Colo. ). Hart, who received widespread support from college students in the Democratic primaries, gave an enthusiastic endorsement of the Mondale-Ferraro ticket and blasted Reagan's policies on education, Central America, and the environment. Hart also joined Mondale in condem- ning Reagan -for quoting the late President John Kennedy. Mondale See HART, Page 7 Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER A smiling Walter Mondale greets supportive University students in theDiag where he spoke yesterday. More stories and photos from the rally appear on pages 5 and 7. MSA to support C. America Day By STEPH ANIE DEGROOTE The Michigan Student Assembly voted last night to join the list of sponsors for Central America Day, an event organized by the Latin American Solidarity Committee (LASC) that seeks to promote "educated reflection" on the situation in Central America through discussions, workshops, films, panels, and a rally being held today on campus. Although MSA had been on LASC's list of sponsors, the assembly's support was not official until the vote last night. THE BUDGET Priority Committee of MSA recommended a $400 allocation to LASC of the $2,092 the committee asked for. A majority vote by the members of MSA confirmed their endorsement in support of the Central American Day, noting in their summary of hearings that LASC "is preparing a very worthwhile extensive cultural and educational event." As part of the day's activities, LASC called on professors to either release students from class to attend the events or to discuss the situation in Central America in class. While most professors will not cancel class for the event, LASC does not see this as reflecting the success or failure of the event. "MANY SEE the situation as not urgent enough for full student strike," said Thea Lee, who is in charge of LASC's promotions committee. 'The whole idea was not to cancel classes but to talk about Central America." The educational aspect of the day has brought on a list of 25 sponsors, six of which are giving monetary support. "We're trying to raise money for speakers and help with education aimed at the situation in Central America today," said Perry Bullard, Michigan State Representative on his support of the day, "We need some education and to share with students the history of American involvement in Central America and the rest of the world. The history of American See C. AMERICA, Page 2 Harvard ,clubs vote to exclude women CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) - Nine males-only social clubs at Harvard College, one of them almost 200 years old, have voted not to admit women, a decision that could result in their being cut off from the university, officials said. "The future is uncertain," Dean of Students Archie Epps III said Monday after announcing the vote results. "But the college feels it must resolve the in- consistency between full acceptance of women in the Harvard community and the discrimination of the clubs. The situation is now unfair to women." THE COMMITTEE on College Life in a May resolution asked the clubs to consider admitting women, and said that if women members were rejected it would consider urging the university to sever all ties with them. Wolf said the commission could fine the clubs or bring an anti- discrimination suit against them if they fall under its jurisdiction as educational institutions or public accommodations. About 200 of Harvards College's 3,800 See HARVARD, Page 3 Associated Press In remembrance Two year old Elizabeth Reiger of Alexandria, Va., along with several other children, place flowers on graves at Arlington National Cemetary yesterday to honor victims of worldwide terrorism. Yesterday marked the one year an- niversary of the deaths of Marine Corporal James Knipple and 240 other marines in a terrorist bombing in Beirut. TODAY- from the audience. The bi-weekly interview series is spon- sored by Canterbury House friends and the Daily. Hood ornament FENDER-BENDERS are one thing, but Utley Larkins went outside to find a 10-foot-3-inch alligator with a times." He called the Charlotte County Sheriff's Office, but when Deputy William Andreu got a good look at the gator, "he didn't dare leave his vehicle," said department spokesman Byron Snowden. It took four more deputies and a professional gator trapper to handle the beast. Super Shucker St. Mary's County, Md., shucked her batch in 3:38:01. Schimke noted only that Chesapeake Bay oysters were tougher to crack than the Washington State oysters he's used to. On the inside ... The Onininn Papyeexamin e the nPat-l fnrmaan+ri I I i I