Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, November 7, 1968 PQge Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY ..hur.day. November,,, 7. .,96. I EIGHT YEAR ABSENCE Nixon comes back from near political oblivion (Continued from Page 1) longest war in American hi before the election he would go the highest taxes in American to Saigon or Paris if necessary tory, the worst crime wav to get peace negotiations "off American history, the highes dead center." creases in prices in a gener Then, the man who lost to John the lowest respect for Ameri F. Kenedy by 120,000 votes in the have ever had." 1960 Presidential race-but came Nixon said he got no seep back to become the first candi- the the long night and morai date in this century to win the vote counting, and he clearly presidency on the second try- ed weary. headed for three days of rest in Although Johnson has of Key Biscayne, Fla. Nixon government office spa In his speech, Nixon pounded Washington, the Republican away at those grievanmes: "The said he will make New Yor] Returns by States, story, m his- me in st in- ation, ca we dur- ang of look- ffered ace in n has k, his POPULAR VOTE Z' ALA. 88 ALAS. 69 ARIZ. 84 ARK. 53 CAL. 96 COL. 97 CONN. 100 DEL. 100 D.C. 100 FLA. 93 GA. 87 HAW. 88, IA. 97 ILL. 95 IND. 98 IOWA 99 KAN. 91 KY. 94 LA. 97 ME. 94 MD. 100, MASS. 88 MICH. 96 MINN. 96 MISS. 97 MO. 94 MON. 74 NEB. 98 NEV. 95 N. U. 95 N. J. 99 N. M. 95 N. Y, 100 N. CAR' 100 N. DAK 79 OHIO 98 OKLA. 94 ORE. '97' PENN. 92 R.I. 100 8. CAR 93 S. DAK 94 TENN. 96 TEX. 85 UTAHU 100 VER. 95 VA. j 9 WASH. 85 W.'VA. 100 WIS. 99 WO. 86 TOTALS L-0 140,056-15 21,221-44 136,143-35 79;961-31 3,093,093-45 331,920-42 624,661-50 88,119-42' 136,452-82 569,184-30 305,457-'--27 139,784-60 83,972-31 1,929,254-442 783,321-381 464,554--41: 268,292-35 365,669-38 304,041-29 212,484-55 5a19,787-43 1,278,036-63 1,554,647-491 824,531-54 144,697-23 701,814-45 75,752-44 162,416-32' 56,164-40 125,230-44 1,245,748-451 126,838-40 3,444,812-502 462,601-29 76,075-39 1,661,813-431 278,550-32 324,758-44 2,015,359-471 239,497-65 192,348-30 108,015-41 345,259-28 3,044,722-421 155,999-36 70,792-44 437,173-33 500762--48 373,326-50 745,565-44 37,015-36 29,677,152-43 29 138,300-14 21,714-45 216,431-56 72,293-28 3,262,315-48 405,714-51. 557,830-44 -5,686-45 29,617-18 753,838-40 346,021-30 89,359-38 155,173-57 2,064,756--47 1,037,746-50 601,592--53 419,577-55 419,916-44 249,397-23 164,477-43 500,600-42 650,544-32 1,303,320-41 635,822-41 85,714-14 690,451-44 $5,204--49 297,341-59 66,035-47 147,633-52 1,299,461-46 164,350-52 2,96',987-44 626,690-39 109,078-56 1,767,421-45 405,123-47 362,986-49 1,898,388--45 115,929-31 251,370-39 136,390-51. 455,402-38 1,002,000-40 247,309-59. 84,013-53 582,818-44 463,675- 45 305,667-41 807,698-48 57,571-55 9,726,409-43 626,623-65 5,310-11 35,357- 9 106,438--41 465,129- 7 59,357- 7 76,707- 6 27,608-13 0- 0 560,236-30 491,898-43, 3,104- 1 34,411-13 361,554- 8 237,771-12 65,407- 6 77,827-10 175,425-18 512,627-48 6,307- 2 177,432-15 87,119- 4 313,718-10 70,877- 5 / 398,382-63 175,511-11 12,247- 7 41,973- 8 18,277-13 10,453- 4 253,411- 9 25,055- 8 347,786- 5 497,482-31 11,115- 6 464,319-12 175,392-20 46,697- 6 33,163- 8 14,967- 4 207,363--32 2,1,167- 8 412,534-34 470,354-19 26,977- 6 4,846- 3 318,065-24 75,277- 7 71,774-10 127,014- 8' 9,181- 9 9,291,807-14 . I ' J 7 7 l 1; .r i t L Electoral Vote a 0 0 10 0 3. 0 0 5 0 0 0 6 0 40 0 0 6 0 8 0 0 0 3 0r 3 0 0 0 14 0 0 0 12 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 26 0 0 13 0 0 9 '0 0 7 0 0 9 0 0 0 10 4 0 0 10 0 0 14 0 0 21 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 7 12 0 0 0 4 0 0 5 0 0 3 0 0 4 0 0 17 0 0 4 0 43 0 0 0 13 0 0 4 0 0 26 ,0 0 8 0 0 6 0 29 0 0 4 0 0 0 8 0 0 4 0 0 11' 0 25 0 0 0 .4 0 0 3 0 0 12 0 9 0 '0 7 0 0 0 12 0 0 3 0 03 290 45 adopted city, his pre-inaugural headquarters. With Nixon in victory were his wife Pat, their daughters Julie and Patricia, and Julie's fiance, David Eisenhower.. Besides getting a formal wire from Humphrey, Nixon received a phone call from the vice presi- dent. He said he told the vice president that he sympathized with him and knew how he must: feel - having lost a close election to John F. Kennedy in 1960. To his ballroom audience, Nixon said: "Winning is a lot. more fun." Itwasn't fun,' however, for the Democratic .candidates. Humphrey and his running mate, ;Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine, after winning the Demo- ratic nominations in a conven- tion held under armed guard be- cause of Chicago street disorders, began their campaign with polls showing them 15 percentage points behind Nixon and; Agnew. But in the final weeks they closed the gap so rapidly that professional pollsters said the race was too close to predict a win- ner. While vote-rich Illinois and Cal- ifornia put him over the top, Nixon laid the foundation for his victory by capturing crucial bord- 3r states and sweeping virtually all Midwest, Mountain and Far West 3tatesi -He carried 30 states in all and was ahead in one other. Humphrey, whose strategy was built on winning the big industrial States, carried New York, Pennsyl- vania, Michigan, Texas, and seven ather states, plus the District of Columbia. But Nixon grabbed New Jersey and Ohio - and the Demo- ,ratic hopes collapsed. In one oddity, Humphrey car- ried the home states of all four major candidates - his own Minnesota, Nixon's New York, Ag- new's Maryland and Muskie's Maine. Wallace, the first third-party candidate of the century to get his name on the ballot in all states, campaigned against the "pseudo-intellectuals," the su- preme Court, the pollsters, the news media, and the "long-haired anarchists" who heckled him from coast to coast. He had hoped to keep both Nix- :n and Humphrey from winning a majority of electoral votes. Un- less a compromise could have been worked out in the Electoral Col- lege, this would have left to choice to the House where Southerners presumably would have had a powerful bargaining position. But Wallace failed to win any state outside the South. His 45 electoral votes, collected in Ala- bama, Arkansas. Georgia, Louisi- ana and Mississippi, barely top- ped the 39 electoral votes Sen. Strom Thurmond of South Caro- lina won as a third-party candi- date 20 years ago. And his popular vote was far aff his claims and below estimates of many polls. ---- - THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN County to maintain CONCERT DANC ORGAN IZATIO ' BETIT LEADING SOLOIST "E1 PROFESSIONAL THEATER PROGRAM resents * 0 . " .y l * J II L a 0 conservative image (Continued from Page 1) I "I'm going to be fighting spec- ifically for some new social wel- fare programs geared to helping people and not geared to making them dependents," Edmonds says. But Edmonds is realistic" "I don't think we'll be able to do the things we should do. The board is very conservative." Edmonds' fellow liberal, Demo- crat William Winters, is president of a local union in Ypsilanti. The two will spend much of their tine trying to convince the board's third Democrat, Aloysius P. Mi- ick of Willis, to "groove with the times." Unfortunately, Minick is almost as old as the combined ages of Ed- monds and Winters and will not so easily find faults with the board's past performances. Minick has twice served as chairman of the county Democratic party. County citizens also returned .the three S's to the State Legis- lature: arch-conservatives T o m Sharpe (51st district), Roy Smith (52nd district) and Ray Smit (53rd district). A hard campaign FRI., NOV. 8 at the Michigan League 9-12 __ waged by present Democratic county chairman George Sallade against Smit went down in de- feat 17,890 to 13,750. The three men are another in- dication of thecounty's continu- ing conservatism. They took al- most 60 per cent of the vote cast in all three races. Not counting Harvey, conserva- tive Republicans took all of the county offices. Present chairman of the county supervisors Robert, Harrison is the new county clerk.: Harrison's election marks to end of a 30-year regime by Luella M. Smith, who retired this year. Mrs. Smith, however, could pro- bably have retained her position, for the number of years-in-office seemed to be a helpful factor in this year's county elections. Of ten incumbent supervisors, only two were not elected to office this time. And Patricia Newkirk Hardy,' 13 years the county's register of deeds, was reelected to her posi- tion by the largest margin of any Republican candidate in the county - almost 15,000 votes. YJONES WITH JOSE LIMON DANCE COMPANY in a concert-lecture ""DANCES' I DANCE"/ with FRIZ LUDIN Program inludes excerpts from "INVENTION," "MISSA BREVIS" and "THERE IS A TIME," plus "JOURNEY NO. 2: FOR AN ANGEL AND A CLOWN" FREE ENTERTAINMENT Featuring the SIX OF SPADES Come to LITTLE CLU B ..... ... ....... r DEC. 6 TRUE BLOOD THEATER 8:30 P.M. Tickets now on sale at'PI'OFESSIONAL THEATER PROGRAM TICKET OFFICE, MEN DELSSOHN THEATER' ;. I. I " NAZARIN is one of the great f 'is of B nelscareer .. . And made me remember something Bunuel once said: 'To show with a cold white eye what they have done here on earth in the name of God."' --Penelope Gilliatt, The New Yorker "STUNNING---A movie thatreally glows ... the thing for you 4 to seel " -Judith Crist, Today Show, NBC TONIGHT at ROGER CRAIG speaking on "LAW AND ORDER CLAMP-DOWN INTHE LEGISLATURE," also commentary on the , 1421 Hill St. ELECTIO... ' $:3C1 P.M. I FRIDAY-- DY SUCCOP_- SJUYtuningbyopularCO reqiuest to sing blues, ballads, and folk music accompanied by 'guitar SATURDAY- WALDEN TWO- (from East Lansing) singing folk and folk-rock music, playing bassonova guitar instrumentals. THURSDAY and FRIDAY THE THIRD MAN Directed by Carol Reedy with Graham Greene, 1949. ORSON TREVOR JOSEPH WELLES HOWARD COTTEN A Hitchcockian thriller of cold war spies, black market penicillin, and intrigue in Vienna. 7:00 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 75c AUDITORIUM, DIAL Shows at 5-6290 1, 3, 5, 7, 9:05 THIS IS THE TRUE STORY OF THE1 $ELP-CONPESSD 1 Aml AV ' ':. "An amazingly strong film with earmarks of a classic. It should endure as one of his best, most significant works. An exceptional 4' film to savor more than once." -William Wolf, Cue "More Bunuel than 'Belle de Jour' ... Bunuel is one of the most audacious, single minded and creative directors in the history of the cinema." 2 EXCITING NEW PLAYS! A -powerfWlandprophetic An imaginative and ply by the dazing young provocative new play by hliberaleader.the author of {19' Prague success -- "Blackboard Jungle. THE WORLD PREMIERE OF byy IVAN KLIMA b Adapted by RUTH WILLARDEVAN HUNTER TUES., DEC. 3 SU., DEC. 8 MON., FEB. 3 -SAT., FEB. 8 Directed by -N.Y. Times: "The enormous power of NAZARIN will leave you limp .... it shouldn't be missed by any lover of fine cinema art." -Frances Taylor, Long Island Press "No one interested in cinema today, can afford to miss it . . . a starkly, simple, beautiful parable, which is visually, a Goya etching." -Bernard L. Drew, Hartford Times LUIS BUNUELUS UAZI trring francisc b i sGRAND PP.IX CANNES ~I l. ift 1j(AL - t FILM r , . F 1 ,k' IA k.- +:: Yl vi to macedo " marga lopez I' l ILA~lm -I FIFTH AVE, plus: r ' . CLASSIC F EATU RETTE THUR. & FR.-7, 9 SAT rClM R -7 0C I I PL..~.I*...s....~A... iUAfelI A fticLIEv r I I I I