PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1966 PAGE TWO TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10. 1966 Republicans Win Majority in State Senate, Gain Seats To Split House with Democrats By The Associated Press son and.Conrad have taken an ac- DEROIT -- Republicans took tive interest in higher education control of the Legislature Tues- during the two last years. day, recouping their 1964 losses in New Faces a stunning comeback that matched Even had no incumbents been their wildest expectations. defeated, there would have been They took over the Senate 20-18 at least 19 new faces in the Legis- and defeated 18 House members to lature-five in the Senate and 14 win a 55-55 stand off in that in the House. These changes were. chamber. Five Democratic sen- due to political ladder-climbing, ators went down in defeat. retirements, and one death. The Republican resurgence, at- Tusesday's election results also tributed mainly to Gov. George reflected the return of Republican Romney's landslide victory, top- vdters to their pre-1964 voting pled Democrats from a 73-37 ma- patterns. jority in the House and a 23-15 An important change in the lead in the Senate. Republican Senate ranks will be Republicans had talked hope- the resignation of Sen. Emil Lock- fully of picking up four seats in wood (R.-St. Louis) as minority the Senate and about 11 in the leader. House. Sen. Thomas Schweigert (R- It was not clear yesterday what Petoskey), now minority floor would happen to the House lead- leader, would be a leading candi- ership, but observers predicted date for Lockwood's position. that Rep. Joseph Kowalski (D- Election Victors Detroit) would not be able to keep Here are the candidates elected his job as speaker. The speaker, to the Legislature Tuesday: normally the leader of the major- Senate: 1st - Fitzgerald .(D); ity party, controls committee 2nd - Youngblood (D); 3rd - chairmenship appointments. With Rocycki, (D); 4th - Young (D); an even Republican-Democratic 5th - Cartwright (D); 6th - split, which party will be able to Basil Brown (D); 7th - Dzendzel exert control remains an epen (D); 8th - Michael O'Brien (D). question. 9th - Novak (D) ; 10th - Craig Among incumbent Democrats (D); 11th McCauley (D); 12th - defeated Tuesday are Sen. lEdwar Beebe (R); 13th - Faust (D); Robinson of Dearborn, and Reps. 14th - Guhn (R); 15th - Levin Einar Earlandsen of Escanaba, (D); 16th - Huber (R); 17th - Charles Conrad of Jackson and Lodge (R); 18th - Bursley (R); Charles Gray of Ypsilanti. Ear- 19th - Fleming (R). landsen, a House member since 20th - DeMaso (R); 21st - 1949, has been chairmen of the Stamm (A); 22nd - Zollar (R); important Ways and Means com- 23rd - Volkema (R); 24th - mittee for two years, and Robin- Hungerford (R); 25th - Rockwell Gilels' Liszt Recital Stirs Audience at Hill (R); 26th - Bowman (D); 27th - Gray (D); 28th - Beadle (R); 29th - Lane (D). 30th - Lockwood (R); 31st - VanderLaan (R) ; 32nd - Zaag- man (R); 33rd - Bouwsma (R); 34th - Hart (D); 35th - Rich- ardson (R); 36th - Toepp (R); 37th - Schweigert (R); 38th - Mack (D). Representatives House: 1st - Waldron (R); 2nd - Karoub (D) ; 3rd - Ryan (D) ; 4th - Fitzgerald (D); 5th - E. D. O'Brien (D) ; 6th - Mahoney, (D) ; 7th - Stopczynski (D) ; 8th - Bradley (D); 9th - Ferguson (D); 10th - Holmes (D); 11th - White (D); 12th - Edwards (D); 13th - Novak (D); 14th - Hood (D); 15th - Faxon (D); 16th - Hunsinger (D); 17th - Stevens (R); 18th - Walton (D); 19th - Kowalski (D); 20th - Montgom- ery (D); 21st - G. F. Montgome- ry (D). 22nd - Elliott (D); 23rd - Vaughn (D) ; 24th - Del Rio (D) ; 25th - Wierzbicki (D); 26th - McNeeley (D); 27th - Copeland (D); 28th - Anderson (D); 29th - Sheridan (D); 30th - Symons (D) ; 31st - McColough (D). 32nd - Pilch (D.) 33rd-Young (D); 34th - Bennett (D); 35th - Schmidt (R) ; 36th - Tierney (D); 37th - Petitpren (D); 38th - Mahalek (D); 39th - Kehres (D) ; 40th - Stites (R) ; 41st - Marshall (R); 42nd - Strang (R); 43rd - Pears (R); 44th - Stacey (R); 45th - Heize (R); 46th - Weber (R):; 47th - C. Root (R); 48th - Groat (R); 49th - Folks (R). 50th - Ziegler (R) ; 51st- Sharpe (R) ; 52nd - Smith (R) ; 53rd -Smit (R); 54th - E. V. Root (R); 55th - Farsnworth (R); 56th - Warner (R); 57th - Brown (R) ; 58th - Pittenger (R) ; 59th - Davis (R) ; 60th - Smart; 61st - Anderson (R) ; 62nd - Law (D); 63rd - Bishop (R); 64th - Baker (R); 65th - Hampton (R); 66th - Huffman (D). 67th - Iramer (D); 68th - Hayward (R);m69th - Cooper (D); 70th - Kensey (D); 71st - Rush (R) ; 72nd - Goemaere (D) ; CINEMA UI presents SUNDAYS. AND CYBELE (ACADEMY AWARD- BEST FOREIGN FILM OF THE YEAR, 1962) 73rd - Clark (D); 74th - Snyder (D); 75th - Nunneley (R). 76th - Jowett (R); 77th - Hoffman (R); 78th - Spencer (R) ; 79th - Smith (R) ; 80th - Suski (D); 81st - Kildee (D); 82nd -Horrigan (D); 83rd - Calahon (D); 84th - Rohlfs (R); 85th - O'Neill (D); 86th - Little (R); 87th - Woodman (R); 88th - Allen (R); 89th - Powell (R)); 90th - Buth (R); 91st - Ford (R); 92nd - S. J. Davis (D); 93rd - Kok (R) ; 94th - Kolder- man (R); 95th - De Stigter (R); 96th - Beedon (D). 97th - Geerlings (R); 98th Cawthorne (R); 99th - Holbrook (R); 100th - Strange (R); 101st - Traxler (D); 102nd - Prescott (R) ; 103rd - Tisdale (R); 104th - Engstrom (R); 105th - Swal- low (R); 106th - R. W. Davis (R); 107 - Varnum (R); 108th - Jacobetti (D); 109th - Gin- grass (D); 110th - Hellman (D). Phone 4$2-2056 OPEN 5:30 P.M. NOW SHOWING ---FREE HEATERS- NOW EVERYONE CAN SE THE MOST LOVERL MOTION PICTURE Of ALL TIMEl Winner of B 6 L. Academy Awards C including X D Best Picture. DY EN: Shown at 8 P.M. Only ALSO WALT DISNEY'S "ISLANDS OF THE SEA" COLOR CARTOON For RESULTS Read and Use Doily ClOssifieds iiJE RRY W1I LILARID Si^ IIiE classical guitarist and lutanist the program will consist of selections from lute and guitar pieces from the 12th to the 20th centuries, including Vadit, Bach, and Villa-Lobos v V 0 PTFi BURY OUSE 330 Maynard Street fri., sat., sun. 8:30 pm' $1.25 per person Held Over 2nd Week! U 20th Century-Fox Presents REX HARRISON i THE AGONY AND THE ECSTASY Co samiflg DIANE CILENTO C " "SCOP E color by [e Luxe I. WINNER 0F 6 ACADEMY AWARDS! By JOHN NOUAND To a capacity audience of en-, thusiastic music lovers the world famous pianist, Emile Gilels, gave an exciting concert performance in Hill Auditorium Tuesday night. This American concert series marks the sixth visit to the United States for the internationally hailed musical celebrity. The program lent a musical spectrum that covered selections of the greatest technical difficulty and tonal control. Beethoven's Sonata inA major, No. 28, Op. 101, the Schumann :Presto appas- sianato, and Nachtsucke Op. 23, terminated with the brilliant Liszt Sonatain B minor gavelisteners* a more than complete evening of instrumental pleasure. The Lizt Sonata was, by virtue of the standing ovation that last- ed for several minutes, the mas- terpiece everyone had come, to hear. It is probably (Liszt's) greatest work and certainly the last great piano sonata of the 19th century. The rhythmic, melodic and pianistic wealth of invention in this sonata, especially its har- monic audacity, is immeasurable. It has so much to say through the darkness of its many con- trasting moods that it challenges the giants and murders mediocrity among pianists. Gilels captured the high vaulting imagination of 'the work completely. His im- peccable phrasing and delicate handling of countless mechanical hurdles expressed the conviction that his art was the greatest of arts and the piano the greatest of instruments. Gilels played a Scriabin Etude and a selection from the Visions fugitives Op. 22, by Prokofiev for his encores. This imaginatively completed the concert-a concert skillfully arranged by the artist to include piano scores chronologic- ally ranging from the classical era through to the present. A per- formance of extreme dimention it presented the maestro at his very best. Premiere Production! COWBOY IN ABSENTIA by Dennis McIntyre University Players in Cooperation with the Dept. of English ~i~i~i~jDIAL 8-6416 HELD-OVER 2nd WEEK! "EXPLOSIVELY FUNNY. GAGS COME AT US AS IF FROM A MACHINE GUN' -N.Y. Times "Delightfully vicious fun! A case of grand and glorious larceny!" -N. Y. World Journal Tribune "Hits magnificently on all cylinders! A delight!" -N.Y.Post "Marvelously crooked fun.'Lia ne "Good, hearty laughs!"Dy "LEMMON IS THE PERFECT KNUCKLEHEAD, a guy with a wet noodle for a spine who can't help being sentimental about a girl even while she's picking his pockets."N.Y. "HE'S FRACTURED! ...the schnook caught between honesty and his love for an uIgood woman." -N.Y.World Journal Tribune "GREAT PACE SET BY JACK LEMMON"-N. Y. Post "SUPERB PERFORMANCE. Matthau makes a fine figure of a comic villain."-N.Y. Times "SUPERLATIVE!" "INCOMPARABLE!" -N.Y.World Journal Tribune -Daily News "A GREAT CASTING STROKE with Matthau luxuriating in the role of a shyster lawyer."-N.Y. Post "OVERWHELMS with a whale of a comedy performance. Maliciously funny portray3l." -Cue Magazine l~ IIC OPT~ re.e ih adfldrack iem man , BILLY WILDefi'S RON RICH C~ff OSMOD JUDI WEST WaLTRmiaUM THeeFORTUJ iea COOK e rIi elscdtfhl ,TED ARTISTS A PHALANX AEM PRODD CTg DOAL-62---Extra NO 2-6264 Ae t "Indianapolis 500" Pink Panther Cartoon, *4t METRO-G[WYN-MAYER,,-. A CARPONi PRODUC0lN DAVID LEANS FILM OF BORIS PASER S DOC0R ZHIVAGO CERAI.DNEHAP1 N-JUUECHR1SflE-1OM AUEGtNINESSJ" S B RA[PH R OMAR SHARIFIA1wsvooIROD SI TRATtUSHINGHAM ROBERT BOLT DAVID LEAN IN PANAVISION' AND METROCOLOR STARTS FRIDAY, NOV. 11th 1*11W' I'. np*mc ADDR cITY 't No. OF MFATS...........-USAT L..........MAT. 0QSIM 0 CA~gRETE AF D.. .....SJ.ERNA1C PA1M«. .... Wae thick or M ..payable ts Encils a stamped, ueff-addris~isedaopt I All Nights Except Sunday at 8 P.M. Sunday Night at 7:30 All Nights $2.25 Matinees Saturday and Sunday Only at 1:30 Saturday Matinee $1.50 Sunday Matinee $2.25 I I TONIGHT through Saturday 8 P.M. TRUEBLOOD AUDITORIUM "Exhilarating . . . a cinematic miracle!" -Crowther, N.Y. Times I FRIDAY and SATURDAY I 7 and 9 P.M. Aud. A, Angell Hall ID required 54c I HELD OVER! i I "FRANCE & DE GAULLE" Tom Jones SUNDAY-7 & 9:15 Ticket Sales Begin at 6:30 A completely informal discussion with an outstanding professor ROY PIERCE Come and enjoy the informal, relaxed atmosphere of our coffee house. A perfect opportunity to meet some very interesting people. f I U ARK COFFEE HOUSE 1421 Hill Street I r.-- 11 GU LD HOUSF 802 Monroe FRIDAY NOON LUNCHEON 25c Series: "Industrial Society- After Capitalism What?" 1# I s DIRECT FROM BROADWAY! Mon.-Tues., Nov. 14 & 15 8:30 P.M. P. r Hill Auditorium 4 11 II IIIf