The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 24, 1984 - Page 7 Crowd baffles security officials By MOLLY MELBY Security officials for Democratic presidential candidate Walter Mon- dale's Diag rally yesterday may not have agreed on the size of the crowd, but everybody involved said the gathering ran smoothly. John Austin, a member of Walter Mondale's advance team, said that Secret Service officials numbered the. attendance figure at around 30,000. Local law enforcement officials, however, estimated the size of the crowd to be closer to 8,000-10,000 people. The Secret Service refused to make further comments about the rally. Local officials said the crowd's behavior was generally good. Deputy Chief Donald Johnson of the Ann Arbor Police described the audience as "very peaceful." Approximately 20 officers from the Ann Arbor Police Department, five of- ficers from the Michigan State Police, 10 officers from Campus Security, as it w HI F P c tl s L d v y a d F P Hart makes appeal to (Continued from Page1) Sallade's house and continued his ap- uoted from a letter written by Reagan peal to young people to vote n 1961 which compared Kennedy's Democratic. He discounted reports that olicies to those of Karl Marx. Reagan's strongest support comes "I am outraged by Ronald Reagan from the 18- to 25-year-old age group, nvoking the name of John Kennedy and said that he hoped students will vhen he doesn't deserve to do that," "react to an idealistic appeal" and vote lart said, "because it was the for Mondale. )emocratic party and a great young Hart also met with "Gary's >resident named John Kennedy who Guerillas," a group that supported him ame to this campus and called for a in the primaries, in a closed meeting at >eace Corps and appealed to the the Union. Hart reportedly thanked dealism of the American young people, them for their help, but didn't want the nd Ronald Reagan has never done press to be there because it would draw hat." attention away from the Mondale cam- HART SAID that it is in college paign. tudents' best interests to vote After the meeting, Hart continued to )emocratic and predicted that Mon- express skepticism over polls. "The dale would receive the support of young polls are a snapshot, not a portrait," he voters. said. "Ronald Reagan does not deserve HART SAID people should refrain your support; Walter Mondale does," from analyzing voters' behavior before Hart told the crowd. election day because there are many After the rally, Hart visited the home "soft" voters and independent voters >f George Sallade, Democratic can- who don't decide for whom to vote until lidate for prosecuting attorney and a few days before the election. Hart's former campaign coordinator in Before Mondale and Hart arrived, six MIichigan. speakers addressed the crowd. HART THANKED his supporters at State Attorney General Frank Kelly well as representatives from the Washtenaw County Sheriff's Depar- tment assisted Secret Service agents with security measures yesterday. None of the local agencies reported any arrests in connection with Mondale's visit. Michigan State Police, who assisted with traffic control and protection of the motorcade, also reported that there were no problems or arrests at the rally. youth vote spoke strongly against Reagan, citing the classic book, 1984. "George Orwell was truly a prophet," he said. "Already one of his prophecies is here. Big Brother is watching us, and at the same time, Big Daddy is asleep." THE RECEPTION for a number of the Democratic candidates was lukewarm at best. When Gov. James Blanchard was introduced, he was met with a smattering of applause and boos and hisses. State Sen. Lana Pollack (D- Ann Arbor) also met a cold audience. Two people who shape the nature of higher education, University Regent Thomas Roach (D-Saline) and Regent Sarah Power (D-Ann Arbor), received the coolest reception of anyone when they were introduced, and the crowd began a "no-code" chant until Kelly announced that he was referring to "the progressive wing of the regents." Other speakers yesterday included University President Harold Shapiro, Michigan Student Assembly President Scott Page, and U.S. Senator Donald Riegle. Y Walter Mondale joins Sen. Gary Hart on the podium yesterday after Hart introduces him. Mondale attacks Reag an's competence (Continued from Page 1) 'vay before him it was 'benevolent monarchy."' ' Mondale ordered Reagan to stop in- voking Kennedy's name, saying, "A >resident who cares, who leads, just "like John Kennedy did, can make and )nust make a difference in the lives of 'our country. That's not Karl Marx. 2 That's not Adolf Hitler. That's America at its best." "" PICKING UP on a popular theme of his campaign in recent weeks, Mondale .'charged that Reagan is incompetent in 'his job. "We have a president who cannot talk about a major problem without making a major mistake. Mr. Reagan ;is the most detached, the most remote, ~and the most uninformed president of modern American history," he said. Mondale referred to several com- 'ments made by Reagan during the adebate as proof that the president lacks a grasp of weapons development and at "the same time shrugs responsiblity for *4U.S. blunders abroad. Z. DURING THE debate Reagan said an investigation was underway to determine who was to blame for the C.I.A. guerilla manuals written for in- surgents in Nicaragua, who are backed by the United States. Some copies of the manual advocate not only assasination ".of Nicaragua's Sandinista leaders, but ' also the hiring of criminals to :assassinate guerillas to make martyrs K of them. "Reagan said 'I didn't do it. Someone 'else in our government did it,"' Mon- >dale said. e "But Mr. President, you ordered that war, you paid for that manual, it's your -secret war, and the American people will hold you accountable on November 6," Mondale charged. Mondale called upon Reagan to ac- cept responsibility for the 244 , American servicemen in Lebanon killed a year ago yesterday by terrorists, rather than blame a local commander. THE CHEERING quieted when Mon- Sdale said that while he believes Reagan's commitment to peace is genuine, he doesn't know what weapons the U.S. and the Soviet Union own or where they are based. Sunday night Reagan admitted that he was unaware Soviet retaliatory power lay in land- based missiles. "There is no way that the risk of nuclear war will be reduced.. . unless we have a president who knows what he's doing," Mondale contended. He added that Reagan's plans for arms control talks are not "tough or smart." Mondale pledged to work for human rights and blasted the Reagan ad- ministration for supporting dictator- ships because they are better than Communist regimes. He pointed to the Philippines, whose president Fer- Mondale desperately needs the sup- port of young voters, according to Louis Harris poll released last week. The poll showed that Mondale has earned less than a third of the votes of the nation's young adults, aged 18 to 25, while Reagan has 70 percent. Many of the students in yesterday's crowd were probably from conser- vative families in the southern part of the state, where an anti-tax sentiment 'This election is not about sending a teacher into space, it's about educating this next generation right here on earth and at The University of Michigan.' - Walter Mondale /rte i - .vt::.. } . r = .:.fi :: .:::::.:::.::::..::::: :..:.:.: .. -. : :. . .. . £ ::}:.: .. ,. ti: ::}:::..:::r::.: .. .. :}. .. .:.. : : : : :: .}: .... :. ... :::. ::. .: .. 4.":< i! ":. ti":ti iji} " : $ ti v:ii' ?:Si:=iiiiiiT; iv 'i:>Y4. v.::::::. h' ' : . a.,, .r ,:. ..:::::._.:::::: :z::' :: % ' : ". .. v ::. .: .::}:: r:: :: .:: : . .... .:;.. .. x....{...: .} r::.. : : _ _ ...:.: r. :: : .:: :: r. :.. . :: ;:: . +'}L. . ::.; ::: .:::i: ... ,' . ?> ...y .. ,......... : ..l.l" :. " ' C'v+_ " '.lh :;""" .'": }i:'..}}". 'y :; . ii:y .; {. .,. } "ry A. 1 y.. .r W. ti". iPJ .ter urr4. l xdC. . }. t[y . ..; { .t .' dinand Marcos is supported by Reagan even though he holds authoritarian powers. ON A LIGHTER note, Mondale con- trasted the Democratic and Republican campaigns. The election, he told the audience, "is not about sending a teacher into space, it's about educating this next generation right here on earth and at The University of Michigan." Students screamed and waved Mon- dale-Ferraro posters to the remark. And though they booed Gov. James Blanchard, University Regents Sarah Power (D-Ann Arbor) and Thomas Roach (D-Saline) and State Sen. Lana Pollack (D-Ann Arbor), campaign organizers say Mondale's visit cer- tainly swung votes over to the Democrat's camp. Siibwcibe to The 14iekiqaa is strong, said Pollack after the rally. "They come from conservative homes and have heard a lot of conser- vative rhetoric about taxes," Pollack said. But she added, "A stop like this and a speech like this is going to make a measurable difference." Another observer of the rally, Jim Minder, who was a graduate student here during the turbulent 1960s and is now executive director of the state's human services department, said the students were quiet during most of the rally because they were listening. "There's a difference between going to a speech and 'rah-rah-ing' and listening to what the candidates have to say," he said. 5th A(venue at liberty St. :<761.9700 <> >> $2.00 FIRST MATINEE STARTS OCT 26: "CHOOSE ME" (R) JOHN CLEESE Off the Wall! PRIVATES ON PARADE "SATIRICAL AND NOSTALGIC:' -David Denby, N Y. 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