V'i
4The Daily Tar HeelMonday, March 14, 1988
Sdopeir Toesdl.ay marrows Itlhe field
From staff and wire reports
As candidates beat a path to
Illinois, Republicans were left with
one clear leader while Democrats had
three leaders and one definite loser
after the March 8 Super Tuesday
contests.
Gov. Michael Dukakis of Massa
chusetts, Tennessee Sen. Albert Gore
Jr. and the Rev. Jesse Jackson split
the lead for the Democrats, leaving
Rep. Richard Gephardt of Missouri
far behind in the race for delegates.
Gephardt, who was expected to be
among the winners Tuesday, vowed
to be among the top winners in
Illinois this Tuesday, but former
Colorado Sen. Gary Hart dropped
out of the race, saying his zero
delegates showed that "the people
have decided."
For the Republicans, Vice Presi
dent George Bush took a command
ing lead in the race as he swept all
16 states holding Republican
contests.
After expecting a better showing
than his 7 percent high. New York
Rep. Jack Kemp also dropped out
of the race but did not rule out
running again, noting that President
Reagan had tried three times before
winning the nomination.
In North Carolina, Gore took first
place with a majority of traditional
white votes while Jackson captured
the black vote and took 6 percent of
the state's white voters.
But Dole, who was expected to be
strong in his wife's home state, lost
in North Carolina with 40 percent of
the vote to Bush's 45 percent. Rev.
Pat Robertson took 10 percent of the
vote to Kemp's 4 percent, with about
1 percent voting "uncommitted."
As the candidates entered the last
days of Illinois campaigning, a new
Chicago Tribune poll said favorite
sons Paul Simon and Jackson were
leading in the Democratic race with
Dukakis challenging them, while
Bush has a 34-point lead over Dole.
As Dole struggled to revive his
campaign, he insisted he would fight
on "full bore" after Illinois though
he said he had no obligation "to look
ridiculous."
On the CBS show, "Face the
Nation," Dole said he received a
telegram from former President
Richard Nixon who urged him to
Delegate Commitments
As the dust settled from Super Tuesday, Democrats were
left with three leaders in the candidates' race for delegates:
Mass. Gov. Michael Dukakis: 384 won Tuesday, 460 total
Mo. Rep. Richard Gephardt 94 won Tuesday, 143 total
Tenn. Sen. Albert Gore Jr.: 326 won Tuesday, 352 total
Jesse Jackson: 366 won Tuesday, 423 total
III. Sen. Paul Simon: zero won Tuesday, 36 total
Others, uncommitted: eight won Tuesday, 260 total
Needed to nominate: 2,082
But the national totals for the Republican candidates
showed one clear leader after March 8:
Vice President George Bush: 577 won Tuesday, 705 total
Kan. Sen. Robert Dole: 98 won Tuesday, 165 total
Pat Robertson: nine won Tuesday, 17 total
Others, uncommitted: 24 won Tuesday, 35 total
Needed to nominate: 1,139
"hang in there, dont give up, make
Illinois your finest hour."
Bush attended a Polish-language
Mass sX St. Hyacinth Church in
Chicago and described his trip to
Poland last year and his meeting with
Solidarity leader Lech Wlesa.
Gore, who hopes to demonstrate
some Northern support in Illinois,
said Sunday he would almost cer
tainly turn down his party's vice
presidential nomination.
Martini a! for reversal of bos drover decision
By LAURA FRANCIS
Staff Writer
N.C. Gov. Jim Martin is protesting
the ban against employing 1 7-year-old
school bus drivers by requesting
a reverse decision from U.S. Depart
ment of Labor Secretary Ann
McLaughlin, said Nancy Temple,
Martin's deputy chief of staff.
Until this year. North Carolina has
?? CANCER-
' at
H SOCliTY
received an exemption for bus drivers
to the Fair Labor Standards Act of
1967, which forbids employment of
anyone under 18 for a hazardous
occupation.
Norfleet Gardner, director of the
N.C. Division of Education, said he
"finds no apparent reason for the
Department of Labor's sudden
change of heart."
North Carolina has consistently
requested an exemption from the act
because of a school bus driver
shortage, he said.
The labor department will enforce
its decision by eliminating 17-year-old
bus drivers on April 1 before the end
of the school year. Both Martin and
Rep. Charlie Rose, D-N.C, are
pushing for an extension of this act
until summer vacation.
Keith Pitts, Martin's legislative
director, said the projected date is
June 15.
Rose's office compiled legislation
to postpone the labor department's
April 1 date to June 15 for North
Carolina and South Carolina. The
legislation was approved by the
House last week and will go to the
Senate early this week where it may
go to the Labor and Human Resour
ces Committee chaired by Sen.
Edward Kennedy, D-Mass.
Karen Rotterman, Martin's direc
tor of communications, said "the
governor is supporting Rep. Rose's
involvement and encourages other
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congressmen to as well."
Temple said the labor department's
decision may be based on an accident
that occurred in South Carolina last
winter where a 17-year-old bus driver
ran over a 4-year-old child.
Over 2000 N.C. bus drivers are 17
years old, and they would be difficult
to replace before the end of the school
year, Temple said. "What most
people don't realize is that drivers
experience a minimum training
period of four days two days in
the classroom and at least two on the
road," she said.
Martin's office recently completed
a comprehensive study comparing the
driving abilities 01 17-year-olds to
older bus drivers, which found that
17-year-olds had an overall equal or
better driving record than other bus
drivers, Temple said.
Assistant math professor gets
two-year research fellowship
From staff report
Mark Williams, an assistant
professor of mathematics, has
been awarded a $25,000 Alfred P.
Sloan Research Fellowship, a two
year award designed to stimulate
fundamental research among
young scholars.
Williams is the first member of
the Department of Mathematics
to receive the award while teaching
at UNC.
Williams, a specialist in partial
differential equations and wave
boundary studies, will use the
money in his research in non-linear
waves and wave propagation.
The Chicago native received his
bachelor's degree from Knox
College and his doctoral degree
from the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology. He is a member
of the American Mathematical
Society.
Sloan fellowships are awarded
annually to young faculty
members at colleges and univer
sities in the United States and
Canada. Scholars must be
younger than 32 and hold a
doctoral degree in chemistry,
physics, mathematics, economics
or neuroscience.
Seminar to begin Friday
"The American Physician: Past,
Present and Future," a four-part
seminar series exploring the his-
University Briefe
tory and future of American '
physicians, will kick off Friday
with a seminar on the shifting ;
demographics of the U.S. physi
cian population.
The seminar series, co-
sponsored by the Health Services
Research Center and the Depart-
ment of Social and Administrative
Medicine in the School of Med
icine, is free and open to the public.
The series features UNC faculty ;
members. Speakers are Conrad
Seipp, professor of city and
regional planning; Dr. John Frey,
professor of family medicine; Dr. -Gordon
DeFriese, professor of '
social and administrative medi
cine; Dr. Donald Madison, pro
fessor of social and administrative 1
medicine; and Michael Powell,
assistant profesor of sociology.
The series will continue on '
March 25 with a discussion of the '
roles of social and cultural factors
in family medicine. Other seminar
topics include physician employ-
ment in large medical practices
and a comparison of the medical
and legal professions.
All seminars will be held in the
conference room of the Health
Services Research Center in Chase
Hall at 3:30 p.m.
County rape crisis center
sponsors funding drive
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By KARI BARLOW
Staff Writer
In order to eliminate a budget
deficit of $20,000, the Orange County
Rape Crisis Center (OCRCC) is
sponsoring a "Keep the Center Alive
Drive" from March 14-16 as part of
the center's annual membership drive.
"We requested certain amounts of
money from all our funding sources
(last year)," OCRCC director Mary
Ann Chap said. "We didn't get all
of it."
The "Keep the Center Alive Drive"
is a unique element of this year's
membership drive, she said.
"I do not anticipate this being more
than a one-time thing," Chap said.
"Our board of directors is trying
really hard to prevent this from
happening again."
But the membership drive will not
be the OCRCC's only fund-raising
effort, she said. . . . .
"We feel that setting a $20,000 goal
just for the membership drive is
setting it too high," Chap said. The
center has already started raising
money through other methods and
will hold other events throughout the
year, she said.
Fund raising is not the sole purpose
of the drive, she said. The OCRCC
also hopes to raise public awareness
of the center and its services. "A lot
of what we accomplish with this is
publicity and outreach in the com:
munity," Chap said.
The OCRCC has been operating
since 1974 and its main purpose is
to assist victims of sexual assault.
"We work with the people who are
related to the victims and survivors,"
Chap said. "We provide medical
information, legal information and
accompaniment through the system."
The center also runs support
groups, for rape victims at various
times during the year, Chap said.
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