11 Fr'day, October 30, 1970
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Page Seven
' 1 Fr$day, October 30, 1 970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven
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P eace Vigil
FRIDAY EVENING, OCT. 30
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"WAR GAME"
10:00-Liturgy for Peace
11:00-Refreshments &0 Conversation
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Dear Congressman:
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-My Lai
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Campaigns center on 'n ixonom ics, 'unrest
By The Associated Press
News Analysis
WASHINGTON - Call it law
and order, permissiveness, cam-
pus unrest or wrap it up as "The
New Barbarism." Whatever its
name, Republicans are pushing
to make it the No. 1 issue in this
year's elections.
Call it cost-push pressures,
overdue readjustment, wage-
price spiral or just plain "nixon-
omics." It's the p a i n in the
pocketbook that Democrats\ see
as the overriding issue on Nov. 3.
The Republicans talk about
lawlessness, bombings, attacks
on police. From President Nix-
on and Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew to candidates for state
legislatures, they have seized on
domestic disorder as their issue.
Democrats described the GOP
litany as "the politics of fear. - -
a calculated attempt by these
leaders to exploit the doubts and
fears, the anxieties and frustra-
tions, the emotions and mis-
trust, of the people whose trust
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and confidence they claim to
hold."
Instead, the Democrats accuse
the administration-and there-
by Republican candidates - of
being insensitive to unemploy-
ment, rising prices "to help
President Nixon balance his
books or compensate for fiscal
ineptness."
Vice President Agnew sought
'' brush off those allegations
last weex, saying "they jump at
a one-month wobble in the Con-
sumer Price Index to try to
panic the electorate."
These themes come from the
top of both parties-administra-
tion spokesmen on the Repub-
lican side, the chairman of the
national committee on the Dem-
ocrats'.
They are the nearest thing
to national issues in the cam-
Paign, echoed in varying degrees
in contests for the 35 Senate
seats, and the 435 seats in the
House. Thirty-five states also
are electing governors, and while
national issues play a part in
some of them, these races tend
to be fought out on local issues.
A few months ago, in early
summer, the Vietnam war was
widely heralded as the issue.
A cry at peace demonstrations
protesting the sending of Amer-
ican troops against Communist
installations in neutral Cam-
bodia was "wait till fall." But
the troops were pulled back on
schedule, the President has con-
tinued to withdraw them from
Vietnam, and passions have
cooled.
Now, with the exception of a
handful of races,' the war as an
issue is as dated as a 1968 auto-
mobile-running on, a little
older. but, causing little excite-
ment.
For all the bombast, the two
major concerns-law and order
and the economy-are not real-
ly being debated. No Democratic
politician is going to campaign
for crime and violence: no Re-
publican is running on a plat-
form of unemployment and
higher living costs.
Such issues as the environ-
ment, power shortages, qualify
of education, consumer protec-
tion and the like are being de-
bated hardly at all.
That the emotional issue is
HIGH SCHOOL
campaigning for
-Associated Press
STUDENTS and adults move in close to shake hands with P:esident Nixon, who is
Republican U.S. Sen. Ralph Smith (right) yesterday in the northwest Chicago
suburb of Mount Prospect. The President and Smith stood atop a car outside an area school.
,
Leo Tolstoy's FTE SRGU
Directed by Yakov Protazanov Based on the short story by Leo Tolstoy
Starring Ivan Mozhukhin. Silent, with English titles. 1917
**ONE OF THE FEW FILMS MADE BY THE RUSSIAN PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT OF 1917 STILL EXTANT**
Tolstoy's powerful story gf the officer of Czar Nicholas, the First who became a monk on the eve of his wedding,
but later became disilusioned with organized religion and left the Church * Filmed shortly after the March
revolution, under the direction of the Provisional Government to denounce the Church.
"Tolstoy examines the motives of pride and passion behind this move (to become a monk), and follows the prince,
now Father Sergius, through the multitude'of temptations he encounters as acolyte, priest, hermit, healer, and as
a wandering holy man, begging for bread. . : The film is still dramatic, and . . . (exhibits) a skill exceptional
anywhere in 1917."-Jay Leyda, KINO.
FRIDAY, OCT. 30-7 & 9 P.M.-75c
UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH-1001 E. HURON (at Huron & Fletcher)
having an effect is illustrated by
the Senate race in Utah, where
Republican Congressman Laur-
ene J. Burtin is trying to unseat
Sen. Frank Moss. a Democrat
tith a liberal record.
Burton rails against what he
calls "The New Barbarism,"-
student terrorists, pornograph-
ers and cop killers. "There's no
doubt about it," says Moss,
"that's the big issue. I'm not
sure just why. All we've had
around here was a sit-in last
spring at the University of Utah
and it was totally nonviolent."
Nowhere in the country, per-
haps, are the divisions between
opposing candidates as sharply
defined as in Tennessee's Sen-
ate race between Democratic
incumbent Albert Gore and Re-
publican congressman William
Brock.
"The people of this state know
that man has not represented
our state in the actions he has
taken with respect to Vietnam."
Brock tells Tennesseeans. "I
know your voice wasn't heard
when he voted against the first
two Southerners nominated to
the Supreme Court in a long
time. It wasn't heard when he
voted against the overwhelming
sentiment of this state to im-
pose gun controls on every de-
cent citizen in America."
Gore sticks to issues that have
worked for him before, talking
of high interest rates, high
p r i c e s and unemployment.
"These a r e bread - and - meat
questions that come down to the
problem that your wife has got
to work with in paying the bills
and keeping the family budget,"
he says.
Although once Brock was con-
sidered the likely winner, Gore's
fortunes ironically swung dra-
matically upward with the Pres-
ident's proposal for a cease-fire
in Vietnam, which Gore had ad-
vocated.
In Illinois, Sen. Ralph Tyler
Smith is convinced "the one
thing about which people are
most concerned is the problem
of violence in society." His op-
ponent, Adlai E. Stevenson III,
owner of a formidable Demo-
cratic name, says "Smith is a
big law - and - order man - and
he's also a damned hypocrite."
"He says so many absurd
things; he's called me a Com-
munist; he's called me every-
thing in the book." But Steven-
son issued strong statements
against violence, indicating that
Smith's campaign had touched
a nerve.
While the two issues, domes-
tic unrest and the economy doh-
inate most campaigns, there are
other issues.
Gun-control legislation for
example, is a secondary issue in
the Maryland Senate race be-
tween a key sponsor of restric-
tions of guns, Democratic in-
cumbent Joseph Tydings, and
his Republican challenger, Rep.
Glenn Beall Jr. It is not expect-
ed to be decisive, primarily be-
cause Tydings' strong support of
anti-crime bills has- robbed it
of appeal to all but the deer'
hunter vote.
The issue could decide the
contest in Oregon's 4th Con-
gressional District. There, in-
cumbent Republican John Del-
lenback, already is a tight race
with Democrat James Weaver
over the economy issue, also is
a target of criticism for one vote
in the House in favor of a gun-
control bill.
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