One dollar won't even buy you a cheap bottle of wine, ! a single rose, or a small box of candy. But now 1 will buy a message straight from the heart PQII rinted in the MICHIGAN DAILY SWEETEST DAY SPECIAL, Saturday, October 21. Fill out the form and mail it to: SWEETEST DAY AD 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI, 48109 Or come in personally to the Daily, located next to the Student Activities Building and behind Betsy Barbour Hall (we're on the sec- ond floor) by 3 p.m. Thursday, October 19. Make checks payable to the Michigan Daily. The cost is $1 for 2 lines (14 words). Each addi- tional line is 504. LAT D AY! r-------------------------------------------I__________ I Mail to: SWEETEST DAY ADI I 420 Maynard St.I Ann Arbor, M1, 48109I II 1 I - - - - - - - - - 2 l I ___ I 3I I_ 4 e Your name I I, II Address I City State Zip I Phone No. _ $1 for 2 lines, 50C for each additional line. Make checks payable to the I Michigan Doily. ----------------------------------------------------- All ads MUST be pre-paid! Page 6-Thursdaiy, October 19, 1978--The Michigan Daily Camp David success threatens Republican Nov. election hopes WASHINGTON (UPI)-Republican dreams of a November election comeback are threatened by President Carter's Camp David triumph and the power of incumbency by Democrats who now hold two out of three seats in Congress and three out of four governorships. The GOP's best hope now is that a tax-weary electorate will continue the revolt triggered by Proposition 13 and upset incumbent Democrats who do not now appear in serious trouble. This trend appeared only moderately in this year's 40 state primaries-with Democratic Gov. Michael Dukakis of Massachusetts the main victim. THE BEST predictions now give Republicans no gain, or even a loss in the Senate, slight gains in the House and a fairly good chance of picking up some governorships. It is in the races for governor that the GOP has its best shot. They now hold only a dozen of the 50 governorships, and are favored to pick up between three to eight by conservative guesses, and as many as a dozen if all falls their 'way. There are 36 governorships on the ballot. Of the nine now held by Republicans, Democrats will reclaim the open seat in South Carolina and are threatening to topple the venerable James Rhodes of Ohio. Otherwise GOP seats appear safe-with upsets possible for Republican Govs. Robert Bennett of Kansas, Jay Hammond of Alaska and Meldrim Thomson of New Hampshire. In Michigan, recent polls have shown Governor William Milliken leading his Democratic challenger William Fitzgerald by . only 4 points. ONCE THE GOP had high hopes of adding both California and New York to their state house list. But their lead in California has disappeared as Gov. Edmund Brown plays his unique game of campaign magic and in New York Gov. Hugh Carey is closing in on Assembly Minority Leader Perry Duryea. With chances at capturing the big plums fading, Republicans are zeroing in on smaller states. While they have a shot against Gov. Ella Grasso in Con- necticut and the open seats in Massa- chusetts, Florida and Pennsylvania, their better chances are in Idaho, Nebraska, Nevada, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, and Wyoming. Wyoming. Republicans, will call it a victory if they break even in the Senate on election day. Thernumbers give them trouble--there are 35 seats up, 17 Republicans and 18 Democrats. TO HOLD their own in the Senate, Republicans will have to defeat some incumbent Democrats, and they have picked two young congressmen to do it-Rep. William Cohen leads Sen. William Hathaway in Maine and Rep. William Armstrong is in a tight battle with Sen. Floyd Haskell in Colorado, New Right Republicans are now underdogs in two races. Jeffrey Bell, who upset Sen. Clifford Case in the primary is behind basketball great Bill Bradley in New Jersey and in Iowa Democratic Sen. Dick Clark seems to be winning his fight with Roger Jepsen. All 435 House seats are on the ballot this year, with bpth partie concentrating on the 02 open an marginal seats: Margital seats ar those in which the victorwon with les. than 55 percent of the vte two year ago. The Republicans are aiming at 34 marginal Democratic seas and 37 oper Democratic seats. Both parties say the GOP will havt mdest gains of around a lozen House seats this year-less a than th( percentage gains normallymade by th party out of power in i mid-terr election. sU' engine dept.aids space shuttle program By TIMOTHY YAGLE and JULIE BROWN Faculty and students are looking towards the stars as several University departments get involved in the National Aeronautics and Space Ad- ministration's (NASA) space shuttle program. The Areospace Engineering depar- tment will offer a space systems design class starting winter term. According to Professor Harm Buning, 20 students will assist in the design of a payload to be used in a 1982 shuttle program. Buning said he is a little concerned that students might not become in- terested in the project because many of them will have graduated before the 1982 launching date. PRESENTLY, AEROSPACE Professor William Powers is designing the shuttle's re-entry guidance system, a crucial aspect of the mission. NASA has opened the sale of cargo bay space to the private sector making it possible for the University to become involved in the program. The University bought five cubic feet of space in the shuttle's cargo bay for $10,000. The cost of the cargo space is proportional to volume. THE DEPARTMENT has yet to decide what it will place in the space. NASA must establish a criterion for determining what kind of experiments are installed in the 60 by 15 foot cargo area. "They must be self-contained, safety wise experiments, in good taste," said Buning. TheUniversity Space Physics Research Lab currently has payloads on various spacecrafts in obit righ now. "WE HAVE the expertise cf puttin payloads into space," said Aerospac Department Chairman Robe't How "We have a leg up on othe univer sities." One of the 45 experiments eurrentl5 being prepatedds a mass spectrometei to be launches in 1981. The experiment package, designec and built by Dr. Marcia Torr of th Space PhysicsLab, will fly on Spacelal I "IT CONTAINS an array of five spec trometers, eachone covering a portio of the spectrumfrom the ultra-violett the infrared," stid Torr. "It will b used for studies yf constituents of th upper atmosphere and their emission. into space," she sad. Torr said that she sent her ex perimental proposd, which was amon two to three hundrd others asking fo payload space, to NkSA when the agen cy first announced jayload openings ii the spring of 1976. "THE SPACE SHITTLE program is underfunded compared to Apollo," Howe said. He citel public apathy along with congressiial awareness ; the public's indiffeences, as beh primarily responsibk for the lack < funds. NASA must compte With a number of federal program for funding, said Howe. And the fat that the space program is unable o furnish the "im- mediate pay-off" flat the public ex- pects has had a diect effect on fund allocation. Treat yourself y~ 1 Y - K 1:ooyi - k _ .toan award -winning* 6 -pack Quench your thirst for news from campus to international, happenings from sports to cultural, plus our regular features, editorials, TV guide, and Sunday magazine. Subscribe to the Michigan Daily-Delivered before 8 a.m. to your dorm or door Tuesday- Sunday I LEAVE BLANK Yes, I would like to s u b s c r i b e to THE LEAVE eLANK I MICHIGAN DAILY. 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