T HE DEMOCRATIC PARTY held its national convention last week to conduct party business and pick its new party leaders, but many of the 30,000 people who invaded San Francisco for the convention had their own forms of party business in mind. It was a week for meetings and marches, debates and demonstrations, rallies and rituals. Saturday the press corps, 15,000 strong, was treated to a night of free food, drink, and entertainment featuring Martha Reeves at the outdoor Embarcadero Center. The next day nearly 200,000 people marched up and down Market Street to show AFL-CIO unity and to call for lesbian/gay rights. While a lone teenage girl stood on a trash can and preached about religion, 1,000 people dressed in black carried black coffins to a mock funeral for the 50,000 killed in El Salvador. While supporters of different causes took their turns using the demonstration lot in front of Moscone Center, the delegates and alternates inside cheered and cried through a series of speeches. The end of the four-day convention seemed to come just as the press, delegates, and demonstrators were settling into the routine of press conferences in the morning, protests in the afternoon, convention business in the evening, and parties at night. For the Democrats it was time to go home and wait four years for the next one, but for the diehard conventioneers-the press and the protestors-it was the beginning of the four-week wait for the chance to do it all over again August 20-23 in Dallas at the Renublican convention. _r Ni rjl..- The Michigan Daily - Friday, July 27, 1984 - Page 11 Moscone Center. Mahon a impronatorstouruorna legisiator wiliie Drown's a5,00o party at Pier ations, many delegates could only see the podium speakers on agan at the Demonstrators listen to speeches at the National Lesbian/Gay Rights rally. H .3 One enterpreneur promotes his "collector's edition sexist buttons."