The Michigan Daily Vol. XC, No. 19-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, June 4, 1980 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Carter goes over From APandUPI President Carter won enough dele- gates yesterday to claim the 1980 Democratic nomination, but Sen. Ed- ward Kennedy, seeking to embarrass him on the final day of the primary season, won in New Jersey and Rhode Island and was leading in South Dakota. New Jersey still gave Carter enough Democratic delegates to put him well over the 1,666 he needs for the nomination. Carter entered the biggest day of the primary season just 28 delegates shy of victory and bythe time the votes from all eight states were _ _ __--- - - - Kennedy sweeps two states, leads in third counted he was expected to have a sur- counts is not the quantity of delegates plus of several hundred. but the quality of their lives." WHILE CARTER was talking of a Kennedy said he will describe later drive for party unity, and vowing an in- his strategy to undo Carter's majority. tensive, active campaign against He said in advance he wasn't con- Republican Ronald Reagan, Kennedy ceding the nomination despite Carter's was declaring "I am committed to con- delegate majority. tinue this campaign." The challenger Carter led in Ohio, New Mexico, Mon- said the voters had decided "that what tana and West Virginia. top ACCORDING TO AN ABC poll of voters leaving the balloting, Kennedy "might" win the big prize of the day-California. Carter led for more than 180 delegates, which put him more than 90 nominating votes past the 1,666 majority level. Kennedy was ahead for for about 200 delegates. The precise count awaited final returns-and the apportionment of 306 delegates from California. The president told cheering suppor- ters in the courtyard of a bar called "The Buck Stops Here" he'd won the nomination and willtnow "resch out the hand of friendship" to Kennedy. "I'M NOW DEDICATED to bringing our Democratic Party back together," he said. Kennedy looked for election evidence that Democrats want him to continue what seems an impossible quest. OHIO, WITH 42 per cent of the precincts reporting, gave Carter 52 per cent of the vote to Kennedy's 43 per cent. That put Carter in the lead for 87 delegates, Kennedy for 74. NBC, ABC, and CBS all projected a Carter victory in Ohio. In New Jersey, with 59 per cent tallied, Kennedy was gaining 55 per cent of-the vote to 37 per cent for Carter. That put Kennedy ahead for 67 delegates, Carter for 46. In West Virginia, 25 per cent of the precincts made it 61 per cent and 18 delegates for Carter 39 per cent and 15 delegates for Kennedy. WITH 81 per cent counted in South Dakota, Kennedy had 48 per cent of the vote for 10 delegates, Carter 45 per cent for nine delegates. In New Mexico, with 53 per cent counted, Carter had 46.per cent and 11 delegates to 42 per cent and nine delegates for Kennedy. In Rhode Island, with all the vote counted, Kennedy was gaining 68 per cent of the vote, and 17 delegates, to 26 per cent and six delegates forCarter. IN MONTANA, with three per cent in, Carter had 50 per cent for 10 delegates to 41 per cent and nine delegates for See KENNEDY, Page 5 Amphibious raceh The first day of June brought out sailboats and speedboats on Sunday afternoon on the Potomac River near National Airport in Washington, D.C. The speedboat appears to be in a race with this landing jet plane making an approach to the airport. Israelis stop Arab shopkeeper protests HEBRON, Occupied West Bank (AP)-Israeli troops using crowbars and bolt-cutters forced Arab shopkeepers to open their stores yesterday and end a strike protesting car-bomb attacks on two West Bank mayors. Extremist Jewish settlers said the maiming of the Palestinian mayors was not revenge enough for six slain Hebron settlers. Israeli troops on roads and rooftops protected gun- carrying Israelis from Hebron's Jewish suburb, Kiryat Arba, as they gathered in the center of this Arab city for a traditional memorial service a month after Palestinian gunmen killed six settlers and wounded 16 others. THE CEREMONY TOOK place one day after unidentified terrorists placed car-bombs that crip- pled two leading West Bank mayors. The mourners were united in saying the bombings were only "half payment" for the May 2 ambush here. West Bank Arabs, shocked at Monday's bombings, joined a general strike that closed most town halls and shops until Israeli troops forced many businesses to open. At one shop, the souvenir store of Bethlehem Mayor Elias Freij, troops used a metal-cutting torch to break the locks on the shutters. ISRAELI AUTHORITIES HAVE not announced any findings in their investigation. Tel Aviv newspapers reported receiving telephoned claims of responsibility for the bombings but the groups-the Sons of Zion and the Anti-Terror Unit-had never been heard of before. Extremist settlers were the focus of most suspicions. Yossi Dayan of the rightist Kach movement stated his desire for vengeance for the Hebron ambush a month ago. "What you saw yester- day (Monday) was just the beginning," Dayan said beside the grave of American-born Eli Hazeev, one of the six dead settlers. ::: ar:". "'"; ,".,+"::::, ": ," ": ::.:,::':" "r: " ":.".:" :.::";." ::.e+".,,.;i +,:'.';; :":" "v:i :" .-"r. " , ", s " ::".r";il".. 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