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June 05, 1984 - Image 4

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1984-06-05

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4

Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, June 5, 1984
Hart, Mondale raee
for final delegates

IN BRIEF
Compiled from Associated Press and
United Press International reports

(Continuedfrom Page3)
Mondale's count has crept up as he
continues to court and win uncommit-
ted delegates in an all-out drive to fulfill
his prediction that he will go over the
top by noon Wednesday when all the
votes are counted.
The key to Mondale's hopes of wrap-
ping up the nomination are the 486
delegates at stake in the final primaries
today in California, New Jersey, West
Virginia, South Dakota, and New
Mexico.
Mondale needs not only to win enough
delegates to go over the top but must
carry New Jersey and preferably'
California as well so he looks like a big
winner as he clinches the nomination.
MONDALE moved through his long;
day with about 1,700 delegates, com-
pared with more than 980 for Hart and
more than 330 for Jackson.
The former vice president has predic-
ted repeatedly that he will defeat Hart
in California and New Jersey, and pick
up enough delegates to claim the
nomination in the process.
Hart is hoping for twin victories in
New Jersey and California to slow
Mondale's drive for the nomination, but
said, "This contest goes to the conven-
tion, no matter what happens."

v

Hart
... has high hopes for Calif.
If he does win enough delegates to
claim the nomination, Mondale is ex-
pected to make a unity pitch to Hart
and Jackson in what many party
leaders hope will result in a burying of
differences in the uphill effort to upseat
Ronald Reagan in November.

Bomb found in Chicago
CHICAGO - A pipe bomb was
found near the lakefront yesterday
afternoon, and police said was
similar to 18 homemade bombs
discovered in three states since
Memorial Day weekend.
The explosive device found about 1
p.m. at the Daley Bicentennial Plaza
was the third discovered in Chicago
since Thursday. It was deactivated
safely and no injuries were reported.
Three bombs also have been found
in Milwaukee - the latest on Friday.
Fugitives remain at
large near N.C.
PASCHALL, N.C. - Frustrated
officers seeking four death row
fugitives searched a lakeside cam-
pground in vain yesterday as the
latest in a series of suspected
sightings failed to pan out.
Linwood and James Briley, con-
victed of the murders of 10 people,
were among four fugitives still at
large, subjects of a massive
manhunt along the North Carolina-
Virginia border.
Sakharov reported alive
MOSCOW - The Soviet Union in-
sisted yesterday that dissident An-
drei Sakharov is in good health and
charged that anyone who said
otherwise was "burying him alive"
and trying to smear the Kremlin.
Tass scoffed at reports in London
and Rome during the weekend that
Sakharov had died following a
hunger strike he began May 2 to
pressure authorities to allow his
wife, Yelena Bonner, to travel to the
West for medical treatment.
Aquino hearings begin
LOS ANGELES - An in-
vestigation board opened U.S.
hearings into the assassination of
Philippine opposition leader
Benigno Aquino yesterday.
The five-member inquiry panel,
chaired by Corazon Agrava, began
hearings at a Los Angeles hotel to
take testimony from possible
American witnesses to the Aug. 21
assassination of Aquino at Manila
Airport. The hearings are expected
to last 10 days.
Duarte begins
investigations
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador -
President Jose Napoleon Duarte's

new government has begun in-
vestigating the killing of a popular
archbishop in the first step of a
crackdown on death squads, a
government official said yesterday.
Julio Adolfo Rey Prendes, Duar-
te's chief of staff, said the March 24,
1980 assassination of Archbishop
Oscar Arnulfo Romero was the first
of "two or three big cases" the
government was starting to in-
vestigate.
Agent Orange suit
dismissed
NEW YORK - A federal judge
dismissed a lawsuit yesterday
against the government by thousan-
ds of Vietnam veterans who sought
"complete medical care" for in-
juries they say were caused by the
herbicide Agent Orange.
The suit parallels a case that was
thrown out in 1982 and was never ap-
pealed, U.S. District Judge Jack
Weinstein said, adding that he saw
no grounds for reviewing the
decision. Attorney Victor Yan-
nacone said he would appeal to get
his case reinstated.
Gunbattle fought in India
NEW DELHI, India - Gover- -
nment forces and Sikh militants
fought a five-hour gunbattle at the
sacred Golden Temple of Amritsar
yesterday and reliable sources said
36 of the Sikhs inside the shrine were
slain.
The army, police and
paramilitary forces closed in on the
fortress-like temple complex in Pun-
jab state early in the morning and
ordered the Sikh agitators there to
come out and surrender, the sources
said.
U.N. diplomat begins tour
UNITED NATIONS - U.N.
Secretary-General Javier Perez de
Cuellar flies today into what he calls
the diplomatic vacuum left in the
Middle East since the scuttling of
recent peace initiatives, including
one by President Reagan.
The former Peruvian diplomat,
who is at the halfway mark of his
five-year term, begins his first Mid-
dle East tour in Cairo, the Egyptian
capital, today. He will visit four
other countries that have been in the
frontline of the Arab-Israeli conflict
-Syria, Lebanon, Jordan and Israel
- for talks with their leaders.

a

a

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Reagan delivers address
to Irish parliment
From United Press International
DUBLIN, Ireland - President European concerns about U.S. foreign
Reagan, declaring the West "dare not policy and, as Reagan said, to "reach
rest" in its quest for peace, yesterday out to our adversaries."
offered to begin negotiations with In his address to the Irish
Moscow on banning the use of military Parliament, Reagan also reiterated an
force to settle conflictsin Europe. offer "to halt and even reverse"
With thousands of protesters a half deployment of new U.S. nuclear
block away, Reagan delivered the main missiles in Europe - a source of
policy address of his 10-day European political discord in several NATO coun-
tour to a joint session of the Irish tries - if "a verifiable and equitable
parliament. agreement" can be reached with
ITS TONE seemed designed to ease See PROTESTORS, Page 7

i

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