On to Kansas City Jayhawks beat OSU 75-58 Sports, p.16 The University Daily KANSAN Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas COLDER Vol. 94, No. 115 (USPS 650-640) High, 40. Low, 13. Details on p.2. Wednesday morning, March 7, 1984 Hart arising as Reagan's foe Hart buries Mondale in Vermont; third win on road to nomination By United Press International Sen. Gary Hart buried Walter Mondale in a landslide in Vermont's non-binding primary yesterday, grabbing his third straight victory in the battle for the Democratic presidential nomination. With 97 percent of the 264 precincts reporting at 11:30 p.m. CST, Hart had 49,213 votes or 71 percent, Mondale 14,273 or 20 percent and Jesse Jackson 5,465 or 8 percent. Even though Reubin Askew dropped out of the race last week, he still got 415 votes, less than 1 percent of the total. Campaigning in Florida, Hart noted that in Vermont a lot of Republicans apparently crossed over to vote for him and he said that meant he could beat Ronald Reagan in November. "I believe the result in Vermont shows this campaign does have a chance to reach out beyond the Democratic Party to expand the frontiers of our party and to expand the electoral base of our party." Hart said. "I intend to defeat Ronald Reagan." MONDALE STILL LED in the battle for delegates to the Democratic National Convention. He had 132 to 29 for Hart. Many of Mondale's delegates were House members picked earlier this year to go to the convention and they could change their pledges. Mondale dismissed the Vermont results, saying, "We were not really contesting Vermont. No delegates were being selected in the contest." HARTS STUNNING Vermont victory — his most impressive to date — gave the Colorado senator a clean sweep in northern New England over the past eight days. Hart was favored to score another victory Saturday in Wyoming, a friendly western state adjacent to his home state of Colorado. That would mean he would be building on a string of four consecutive wins going into Super Tuesday, March 13, when 11 jurisdictions hold primaries and caucuses to pick 511 delegates. There was already indication that Hart's building momentum and Mondale's failure to Reagan is ahead maintains Carter By United Press International $ ^{1} $ WASHINGTON — Jimmy Carter said yesterday that President Reagan would win if the 1984 election were held today but the Democrats "have a good chance" in November if they can overcome his charm, dramatize the issues, and unite for the first time in 20 years. "Today, I think President Reagan would win," the former president said. But, Carter said, "I think the Democrats have a good chance provided we can delineate the issues and overcome this personal attractiveness of President Reagan, and provided we have a unified Democratic Party." Among Carter's observations on other foreign and domestic issues: *He opposed sending U.S. Marines to Lebanon from the very beginning, because embracing President Amin Gemayel was "a political kiss of death" to chances for a "Lebanese Gemayela Bv United Press International BEIRUT, Lebanon — President Amine Mamely yesterday formally invited Lebanon's factional leaders to meet in Switzerland next month, highlighting a country split by nine years of civil war. But scattered clashes in Beirut and the nearby hills threatened a truce that took effect when Gemayel gave in to Syrian and rebel Muslim demands. The enemy scrapped the May 17 accord with Israel. MILITARY SOURCES TOLD Christian Phalange radio two government soldiers were Beirut radio said invitations went to leaders of Lebanon's fractured political and religious communities asking them to meet Monday in Lausanne, a Swiss resort. College OK's By JENNY BARKER Staff Reporter Staff Reporter A proposal passed yesterday by the KU College Assembly will include some KU students from some upper-level computer science courses after this semester because of new grade point average and prerequisite requirements. According to the new policy, students who enroll in courses beyond CS 210 without having established eligibility automatically lose their places in those courses. WILIAM BULGREN, acting chairman of the computer science department, said he proposed The assembly, the governing body of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, passed a proposal from the acting chairman of the computer science department that will set new standards for eligibility to take some computer sciences courses above CS 200 and CS 210. Page 8 Topeka man dies of a heart attack at Haworth Hall By the Kansan Staff One of Engle's co-workers said Engle was standing on a ladder installing aluminum door frames on the south side of the addition. Shortly before 3:30 p.m., Engle climbed down the ladder, sat on a sawhorse inside the addition and collapsed, he said. A Topeka construction worker died of a heart attack yesterday afternoon while installing door frames on the second floor of the Haworth Hall addition. Engle was employed by Forman and Ford, a Des Moines, Iowa, glass company doing some of the work on the addition. Bill Engle, 56, was pronounced dead on arrival at Lawrence Memorial Hospital at 4:45 p.m. An ambulance was called at about 3:30 p.m. When it arrived, KU police officers were administering cardiopulmonary resuscitation. paramedics and police continued CPR for about 45 minutes. They also gave him an intravenous injection and administered defibrillation. Engle's son Thomas, Lawrence senior, was walking by Haworth Hall when he saw an ambulance, a police car and a small group of people looking at the part of the building where he knew his father was working. he knew Engle said that at one point his father's honesty was revived but that it was very irregular and weak. Paramedics and police brought Engle's father out of the building on a stretcher with a machine pumping his heart at about 4:30 p.m. Banks of Lawrence Douglas County Bank First National Bank of Lawrence Lawrence National Bank University State Bank KU Recreation Services The Wheel Office of Residential Programs University Daily Kansan