WEPW Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, November 6, 1974 } TRAVEL MICH. UNION 763-21 DOMESTIC FLIGHTS SPECIAL FARES SAVE 20% CHRISTMAS-Deadline Nov. 19 NEW YORK LOS ANGELES SAN FRANCISCO DALLAS All flights on scheduled American Airlines-non stop jets 1 FOR FURTHER DETAILS-CONTACT { tTRAVEL International Student ID cards now available ) _i T he nally OFFICE HOURS Circulation Dept. . 9 a.m.-3 p.m. 764-0554 Classified Dept.. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. 764-0558 Display Dept... I11 a.mA- p.m. 764-0557 Please try to call our offices during these hours. Dems win in landslide (Continued from Page 1) SEN. THOMAS Eagleton of Missouri, the vice-presidentia running mate McGovern dump ed in 1972, was re-elected in Missouri. For the Republicans, Sen. Ja cob Javits was re-elected over former Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark in New York. Sens. Rich ard Schweiker of Pennsylvania and Charles Mathias of Mary land won new terms. Republi- the campaign. "The mandate ofI can Rep. Louis Wyman was the electorate places upon the f elected to the Senate in New next Congress a full measure of l Hampshire, succeeding the re- responsibility for resolving this - tiring Sen. Norris Cotton. problem," he said at the White z Ford said the economy was House. "I will work with them the dominant issue. Others said wholeheartedly in this urgent - Watergate. Most politicians said task, which is certainly beyond it was both. partisanship." About 145 million Americans - BUT THE President said were eligible to vote but off- there could be no argument that year turnouts are traditionally - inflation was the No. 1 issue in low. Forty-three per cent of the GEO and 'U' sign dues pact DAILY CLASSIF IEDS BRING QUICK RESULTS By JEFF DAYj The Graduate Employes Or- ganization (GEO) s i g n e d a tentative agreement with the University last night providing for automatic deduction of union dues from paychecks. The two sides have been in agreement on the issue for some time, but various technical de- tails have delayed final ap- proval. DURING most of the meeting however, GEO began re-intro- ducing demands which the Uni- versity had dropped from con- sideration. Most of these pro- posals were concerned with working conditions and union facilities and had been rejected because of cost considerations. The demands which drew the most University fire were de- mands for free office space for the union, access to University centrex phones, space for meet- ings and parking permits to be used on conducting official union business. The University objected to the demands again on the basis of cost and the fear that other unions would have to be granted the same thing. "WE'RE NOT in the business of supporting any labor union with facilities. We are in the! IN REPRESENTING the de- mands, the GEO dropped back from their earlier positions somewhat, in an attempt to make the positions more agree- able to the University. The proposals presented in- cluded demands that: -all graduate student em- ployes be given desk space, where possible, a retreat fi om eligible voters cast ballots in the last off-year elections, in 1970. This time, apathy and politi- cal disenchantment spawned by Watergate, and even some rainy weather in the East and Mid- west, seemed likely to hold the turnout even lower. The level of participation will not be known for several days, but as President Ford noted, some surveys indicate a turn- out of only 40 per cent of the electorate. iIf that is the case, Ford said inan election-eve statement, the 94th Congress which will have to deal with major eco- nomic woes could be chosen by only 21 per cent of the voters. F o r d' s personal campaign spanned nearly 17,000 miles, covering 20 states, and he made inflation his theme. Watergate, the scandal that brought the appointed President to office, was always in the background as he warned against election decisions that could undermine the two-party system. He raised the spectre of run- away, inflation-fueling spending by a "veto-proof Congress" with Democratic margins that could overrule him by the required two-thirds votes. Pollsters and candidates were virtually unanimous: r i s i n g prices in a slumping economy comprised The Issue of 1974. -county l business of education," person- the earlier demand they be nel director William Neff told given an entire desk to them- the union. selves; and The union however, argued -input into final grades given that principle had been estab- to students by teaching fellows lished at otheruideentestabd be standardized and agreed on thtshedtteauniversities, and in advance. The proposal met that the demands would facili- considerable University objec- tate cooperation between the tion despite the fact that the ey CEO power granted was not as broad In another area, the GEO as originally demanded. reintroduced demands for guar- - anteed working standards con- cerning office space, textbooks D * . and course input. SSOPH SHOW PRESENTS: one hell of a musical commission race (Continued from Page 1) der agreed, saying "Being a woman helped McClary to vic- DEMOCRATIC Party worker tory." Tom Wieder cited Fojtik's in- cumbency and major party status as advantages in her success. "And despite the stuff dumped on her by the HRP she came across," he added. Wieder also asserted that the relatively large voter turnout probably helped Foitik, "since the small core HRP vote was overcome." In the 15th district McClary won handily in an area thought to be strongest in favor of HRP. In that race, City Council- woman Kathy Kozachenko cited a tendency of voters to vote for a woman over a man. Wie- Was7;s BOTH WIEDER and Koza- chenko agreed that the turnout generally helped the Demo- crats. "The HRP always finds it difficult to educate people as to who we are. Two months is not sufficient and in the end we are always the underdog." Wegbreit said, "The only thing that could have beat me was straight Democratic voting - and it did. The system is rigged for two parties and its really hard to win as a third party candidate. In other county commissioner races, Republicans appeared to have won districts two, three, four, ten, eleven and twelve. Democrats appeared to have sewed up districts five, six, seven, eight and nine, and 13. The first district, usually a strongly Republican area, ap- pears to have a democrat lead. 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