Page 2--Wednesday, October 4, 1978-The Michigan Daily * * Levin combines substance with casual (Continued from Page 1) lecture halls, at plant gates, and in kollege cafeterias. With the sleevestof 'his wrinkled blue shirt rolled up to the :'elbows and the unruly hair whipping around a balding head, the paunchy 44- year-old Levin introduces himself as "the Democrat who's gonna beat Grif- In short, Levin - a former taxi driver "~and Harvard law grad - seems more 'like a cabbie than a legal scholar, equally at. home slouching charac- SAteristically over a Lite beer in a bar as listening to his favorite classical music album and sipping fine wine. Levin is hoping his casual, laid-back style and his unpretentious manner will translate into enough votes for him to upset Republican incumbent Robert Griffin, a two-term Senate veteran with 22 years of experience in Congress, The Levin campaign strategy is "a one-two punch," the candidate explained, "to point out the weaknesses in Sen. Grif- fin's record and also point out where I can make a unique contribution to the United States Senate." THE "SOMETHING special" that Levin talks of bringing to the Senate is "experience with federal programs at the local level - at our end." He cites his eight years of experience on the Detroit City Council and his ongoing battle with HUD over abandoned homes in Detroit for examples. "I think (the administrative agen- cies) have gone absolutely hog wild," Levin told interviewers at the Midland Daily News during a typical campaign grilling. 'And too often, their regulations run contrary to the wishes of Congress. "It's simply essential that Congress. take hold of the bureaucracy," Levin says, and to that end he advocates: " Use of the legislative veto, to give Congress 60 days in which to overturn any federal regulation, and " Congressional oversight of ad- ministrative agencies, to act as a "check" on the executive branch. LEVIN SAYS IT is that pitch that precludes him from inviting President Carter into the state to stump for his candidacy. "It doesn't fit the theme to have the President in the campaign," he explained to one reporter. "The theme of my campaign is that Congress has given up too much of its power to the executive branch. It should be more of a check." "Congress has to roll up its shir- tsleeves and take 'em on," Levin says. "It's called legislative oversight." But the main thrust of Levin's two- pronged campaign so far was con- veniently provided by Griffin himself. In announcing his premature retirement decision in April of 1977, Griffin said "Twenty-two years in Congress is long enough," and that the state needed a Senator "with fresh blood." AND, AS LEVIN will remind an audience at every opportunity, Griffin then proceeded to skip 216 out of 635 roll call votes in the next two months, "the second worst attendance record of any Senator who didn't die in office," Levin says. With that preface, Levin will then rat- tle off a list of important bills that Grif- fin was not present to vote on, and then rail into the Senator for the way he voted when he was present and accoun- ted for. So far, Levin's tactic appears to be working. Griffin is now on the defen- sive, trying to explain his missed votes at every turn. Levin, meanwhile, has taken a one-point lead over Griffin in a recent poll, the first time a senate or gubernatorial challenger in the state has led an incumbent since 1962. "ONE OF MY poblems is I don't want to talk about his absenteeism all the time because he's even worse when he is there," Levin says only half-jokingly. In painting Griffin as an ineffective Senator out of touch with the people of Michigan, Levin is also chiding the incumbent for playing, election year politics. Griffin's major campaign' thrust has been to champion tax reform. But Levin will tell you that Griffin voted against tax reduction back in 1974, before it was popular. "HE'S AN ELECTION year Senator," levin says. "He wakes up every six years." Levin himself favors tax limitation, which is blunting some of his opponen- ts' efforts to turn tax revolt fervor into-a Republican backlash. Both Griffin and Levin favor the Headlee tax reform plan on the Michigan ballot as a "reasonable" proposal to stunt gover- nment growth. Griffin, seeing his main campaign platform pulled out from under him, is, reduced to saying that he supports tax reform "more enthusiastically" than Levin. LEVIN HAS ALSO proved par- ticularly skillful at stealing possible campaign issues away from Griffin, pointing out his own weaknesses as a candidate and turning them into advan- tages. For example, Levin is from Detroit which could hurt him politically in the rural areas upstate. Levin tells audien- ces, however, "I'm going to represent this entire state fairly and with all my might, the same way when I was in Detroit I represented my constituency there and the same way Don Riegle represents the entire state." Also, Levin counters charges that Griffin has more seniority and he would be a young freshman Senator with no clout; "His seniority hasn't produced anything for the state of Michigan," Levin told a news conference in Saginaw. "Seniority by itself doesn't mean anything. And you have more clout if you're in the party that controls the Senate. "EVEN A NEW Senator in the majority party has more clout than a seniority Senator in the minority par- ty," Levin said. He adds in charac- teristic humor "the 'young' part of it I like, though." ART OF NORWAY MADISON, Wis. (AP)-"Art of Nor- way: 1750-1914," an exhibition of works from Norway's leading museums, is scheduled to be on display at the Elvehjem Museum of Art from Nov. 5 through Jan. 7, 1979. The more than 260 works in the show "highlight the unique contributions made by Norwegian artists and illustrate three areas of Norwegian art druing its most prolific and creative period since the Viking Age." image Levin is "optimistically" targe one million dollars in his bid to uns Griffin, and if he reaches that goal will be the most a Democrat in t state has ever spent on a U.S. Sen campaign, he says. Also, Levin is lining up an impress' cast of political figures to come in pump his cause - Mondale, and S4 Edward Kennedy, for example, b due into the state in late October. IF LEVIN'S campaign has taken the big money and big names unchar; teristic of a local politician trying to set a well-entrenched incumbent 1' Griffin, the answei is that Griffin - the latest Market Opinion Resear polls - is now seen as vulnerable. fact, the latest poll published in I Detroit News actually shows two-ter veteran Griffin one point behind Lev the challenger with no statewide off to his credit. MEN .dl ___ m _ Can't start 'I day without the it? Levin So the closeness of the contest, the enticing thought of knocking off Senate's minority whip, has whet' the appetite of the national Democra party, and Levin is hoping that the n interest in the Senate race here v translate into needed funds, if he is ex to reach that million-dollar mark. Levin f and Griffin are about dissimilar as their politic philosophies. Levin, the former Detr( 'city councilman, is an urban liber while Griffin is campaigning as t fiscal conservative from Traverse Ci in northern Michigan. Levin himself summed up the contf best: "We've differed on basic issu throughout the years," he said. "T contrast is between how he voted ai how I would have voted." ..0 This is the second of two artic on the race for United States Sena WOW if fl l tittftit /fff* r = lrs .. ,.r t 1;t / f lilt I 1 AW 0 1 b if l 1i " r !: 7 I; i THIS WEEK /- VIEWPOINT LECTURES presents: October 3: WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY, author and editor-founder of the National Review, syndicated columnist and host of "Firing Line" on PBS. Hill Auditorium, 8 p.m. Tickets $1.50 and can be purchased at Ticket Central or at the door. UM ARTISTS AND CRAFTSMEN GUILD presents: THIS WEEK-Classes begin-14 art and craft classes. 6 special weekend workshops taught by active professionals in the Ann Arbor area. Open to students and non-students; introductory and advanced. Register on 2nd floor of Michigan Union. $24.00 for 8 weeks and supplies. MEDIATRICS presents: October 5: "THE LOVED ONE." Something to offend everyone. Evelyn Waugh's satire on the mores and morals of Hollywood and the funeral business isscripted for an outrageous ribald treatment directed with exuberant high jinx by Richardson. Also featuring Liberace, Jona- othon Winters and Ro Steiger. 7:00 and 9:00,in the Union. October 6: "THE GOODBYE GIRL." Right out of first run in the theatres. Neil Simon's hit starring Richard Dreyfuss ard .Marsha Mason. A delightful story about love in New York City. 7:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m., Natural Science Auditorium. NJ October 7: "LADY SINGS THE BLUES." Based on Billie Holi- day's biography. "In this film, the face, the figure and the sound of Diana Ross have become Billie Holiday."-Ralph Gleason, Rolling Stone. 7:00 and9:30, Natural Science Auditorium. UNION PROGRAMMING presents: October 7: CIDER AND DONUTS. Reception in front of the Union before/after the football game. October 8: FLEA MARKET-students and others can buy, sell, and swap goods by renting a table in the Union. 8:00 noon-8 p.m., Union Ballroom. Student rental $1.00, others $5.00. UAC SPECIAL EVENTS presents: October 8: CHINESE CULTURAL FAIR-Exhibition of Chinese Arts/ special Chinese food, preparation and testing. Michign Union Conference room 3, 4, 5, 6. Free. 1" wM "'"" III s .-AL As 1 0 0