NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, April 5, 1984 Page 1 Democrats seeking Pennsylvania votes 1 By United Press International Walter Mondale, boosted by his landslide New York victory, shifted his battle for the Democratic presidential nomination to Pennsylvania yesterday — another industrial state where the labor vote should work in his favor. Gary Hart, trying to rebound from his worst primary to date, insisted that Democrats still want new ideas and won't end until California votes June 13. Jesse Jackson, who nearly knocked Hart out of second place in New York with a record black vote Tuesday, faced a more severe challenge in winning the popular black mayor of Philadelphia, has been working hard for Mondale. There are 172 delegates at stake in Pennsylvania next week, the fourth largest delegation behind California, with 106 delegates to Texas, which has its caucuses May 5. All three Democratic contenders arranged to campaign in Philadelphia yesterday. They will participate in a debate on Iowa Voters' debate in Pittsburgh today. Mondale re-established himself as the front-runner with his New York victory and grabbed more than half the 252 delegates at stake to build his lead over Hart in the battle for the 1.967 delegates needed to win the nomination. The latest tabulation by United Press International shows Mondale has 863 delegates, with the 133 he picked up in New York. Hart won 72 delegate in a race that drew 147, including 47 from Tuesday's count. Another 322 are uncommitted. Forty-eight percent of the delegates to the Democratic convention have been chosen, and Mondale appears to have edge in the remaining 52 percent. But Mondale insisted the battle is still a close one. In Washington, House Speaker Thomas O'Neill said the New York results show Mondale has reforged his win the nomination if he keeps it up. Jackson, who beat肝 by 100,000 votes in the city, jubilantly declared: "New York City politics will never be the same." In some predominantly black districts, the turnout was 100 percent higher than 180 levels. Jackson arrived in Philadelphia by train yesterday and was greeted by a crowd of about 700 people, which he led in prayer. With 99 percent of the districts reporting from New York, Mondale had 605,000 votes or 45 percent; Hart had 428,000 votes or 27 percent, and Jackson had 343,000 votes. There was solace for Hart Tuesday in Wisconsin, where he won a popularity contest in which both Democrats and Republicans could vote. LOS ANGELES — Marvin Gaye Sr. is led away from court. Gaye has been charged in the Sunday shooting of his son, Grammy Award winner Marvin Gaye Jr., in which the singer was killed. Gaye, whose attorney said was mentally incapable of standing trial, is undergoing psychiatric evaluation under orders made yesterday by Municipal Court Judge Michael Tynan. Subcommittee OKs school religious activity By United Press International WASHINGTON — A House subcommittee approved legislation yesterday that would allow religious gatherings in the nation's public schools and would cut off federal funds to secondary schools that bar such meetings. The proposal has become a priority for President Reagan and for an unusual alliance of backers and opponents of Reagan's defeated constitutional amendment that would have returned group vocal prayers to public schools. Introduced by Rep. Don Bonker, District it is now on the House Education and Law Committees. Chairman Carl Perkins, D-Ky., is expected to press for quick action. Opponents, however, said the sub-citizen's action was a "slap in the face" to minority religions that would be better off up shop in the nation's public schools." KNOWN AS THE Equal Access Act, the proposed legislation says that schools must allow student-initiated extracurricular religious activity at junior and senior high schools or lose their federal funding. The measure was approved by voice vote, with only Rep. Gary Ackerman, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee. The only recorded vote was 10,8 against an Ackerman amendment that would have prohibited schools from establishing minimum-number requirements for religious groups to meet. SEVERAL OTHER amendments proposed by Ackerman were defeated. The amendments aimed at limiting participation to students and seeking assurance that all religions would be treated equally. Rep. William Goodling, R-Pa., and other proponents of the measure — mostly Republicans — argued that Ackerman's proposal to limit meetings to students would, in effect, prohibit religious meetings in schools. The Rev Barry Lynn, legislative counsel of the American Civil Liberties Union, said the subcommittee session "conclusively demonstrated" that the legislation would allow both religious secession and religious instruction in the schools. While Ackerman was the only one to openly oppose the bill, several mem- bers of the board objected. Rep. Pat Williams, D-Mont., said he was troubled by a provision to cut off federal aid. Williams said he supported voluntary prayer, but asked for and got assurances from Bonker that the legislation would apply only to secondary schools. Williams also asked whether it would require a teacher or other school official to be present at such meetings. Bonker replied that the bill, as amended by the panel, would let an official be present but not participate. Ackerman at one point complained that the bill would "not only open the back door for school prayer" but might open the front door for the church to come in. 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SCHAUM'S OUTLINE SERIES ACCOUNTING 2 ed 57.95 ELECTRONOMATICS 57.95 MODERN PHYSICS 58.95 ACCUMULATION 12 ed 57.95 ELECTRONIC CIRCUITS 57.95 NUMERICAL ANALYSIS 58.95 AGCISTICS 58.95 ELECTRONIC 58.95 *OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT 58.95 ADVANCED COUNTING 58.95 ELECTRONIC COUNTING 58.95 OPERATIONS RESEARCH 58.95 ADVANCED ALGEBRA 58.95 ELECTRONIC TECHNOLOGY 58.95 OFFICE 58.95 ADVANCED MATHEMATICS for Engineering 58.95 PREVIEW OF NEW MATERIALS MATHEMATICS 58.95 PERSONAL FINANCE & SCIENCE 58.95 ADVANCED MATHEMATICS for Engineering & Mathematics 58.95 PREVIEW OF NEW MATERIALS MATHEMATICS 58.95 PERSONAL FINANCE & SCIENCE 58.95 STRUCTURAL ANALYSIS 58.95 INVENTION TO 58.95 PHYSICAL COMMUNICATION 58.95 ADVERTISING 58.95 INVENTION TO 58.95 PHYSICAL COMMUNICATION 58.95 STRUCTURAL ANALYSIS 58.95 INVENTION TO 58.95 PHYSICAL COMMUNICATION 58.95 APPLIED PHYSICS 58.95 FOUNDING 58.95 PHYSICAL COMMUNICATION 58.95 BASE CURRULE ANALYSIS 58.95 MECANICS 3 ed 58.95 PHYSICAL COMMUNICATION 58.95 BASE ELECTRICAL 58.95 ESSENTIAL COMPUTER 58.95 PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS 58.95 BASE ELECTRICITY 58.95 FOUNDING 58.95 PHYSICAL COMMUNICATION 58.95 BASIC EQUIVOLUTIONS OF INTEGRATED SCIENCE 58.95 FOUNDING 58.95 PROGRAMMING WITH INTEGRATION 58.95 ELECTRICITY AND ELECTRICITY FOR BUSINESS 58.95 FINITE DIFFERENCES and PROGRAMMING 58.95 BASIC MATHEMATICS with Applications 58.95 First Year 58.95 PROGRAMMING WITH PERSAL 58.95 BASIC EQUIVOLUTIONS 58.95 FLUID MECHANICS 58.95 PROGRAMMING WITH PERSAL 58.95 BASIC EQUIVOLUTIONS 58.95 FLUID MECHANICS 58.95 PROGRAMMING WITH PERSAL 58.95 BOUGEN ALGERIA 58.95 QUARTER ANALYSIS 58.95 PROJECTIVE GEOMETRY 58.95 BASIC EQUIVOLUTIONS 58.95 QUARTER ANALYSIS 58.95 PROJECTIVE GEOMETRY 58.95 BUSINESS DATA 58.95 QUARTER ANALYSIS 58.95 PROJECTIVE GEOMETRY 58.95 INVENTION TO McGrawHill MASSACHUSETTS 1420 Crescent Rd. 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