Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November i O, 1974 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DliLY Sunday, November l., I '1 1- "A New Concept in Education" Maharishi International University A PRESENTATION BY: R. KEITH WALLACE, PhD. President and Professor of Physiolocv, M.I.U., who did the pioneering research at Harvard Medical School on the beneficial physiological effects of Transcendental Medi- tation, will be talking about M.I.U. as a new concept in education. TUESDAY, NOV. 12-8:00 p.m. Auditorium 170, Physics & Astronomy LOOKING BACK THE WEEK IN REVIEWI Students International Meditation Room 4111, Mich. Union Society 761-8255 Losers, winners LAST TUESDAY, the people of Ann Arbor went to great lengths to preserve the town's nonconformist image. When the whole nation wreaked vengeance for Watergate and inflation by voting Democratic, this peculiar city managed to buck the trend by electing Republicans. It was a difficult outcome to explain, but candidate images and voter apathy may provide1 some of the answers. The big loser was Second District Con- gressional hopeful John Reuther, the temporary darling of the Democratic National Commit- tee, the boyish nephew of labor king Walter Reuther. Party strategists at first saw in Reu- VICTOR: GOP Congressman Marvin Esch speaks to his supporters at an election night party. Esch defeated Demo- crat John Reuther. PRESENTS Greek Night Every Mon. & Tues. " No cover charge " Pitcher Beer 1 price * Discount on mixed drinks Sororities and WELCOME! ther the magical catalyst for -a student-worker constituency, but when the ballots were counted early Wednesday morn- ing, incumbent Mary Esch kept his seat with about five per- centage points to spare. Long before Election Day, Reuther's Ann Arbor staffers were grumbling about lack of funds and recognition from the Ypsilanti headquarters; the can- didate, they said, must doff his slickly charismatized image in favor of idealism to capture the campus constituency. The advice was not far wrong: lack of solid support in student wards created the crucial gap in Reuther's vote totals. T E OTHER BIG GOP win here was the re-election of State Sen. Gil Bursley, a mod- erate Republican with an im- pressive record as chairman of the senate's education commit- tee. Unlike many incumbents, °There Sa : difference"J!a * PREPARE FOR: " MCAT over35 years : M ~aDI of experience T and success " S LDAT Small classes 0 Voluminous home S GRE study .ater'als' ° f courses that are " . ATconstantly updated S Tapefacilitiesfor reviews of class ® CPAT essons and for use °" Make-ups for " 0 ECFMG missed lessons i NAT'L MED BDS " THOUSANDS HAVE e -RAISED THEIR SCORES * * 313) 354-0085 21711 W. Ten Mile Rd. " Southfield, Mi. 48015 " " ° " " a i VAAN e . CMI T/AA ^ATOr Bursley is untainted: other than a last-minute charge by Democratic challenger Peter Eckstein of abusing state mail privileges, the senator has cul- tivated an image of wisdom and skill. Eckstein, an economics professor, won enough student, votes to give Bursley a close race. State Rep. Perry Bullard had to settle for a squeaker re- election over Republican Rae Weaver, whose main political experience consists of working as Mayor James Stephenson's secretary. Bullard was prob- ably correct in attributing his problems to a relatively low student turnout. It may also be that Bullard's shenanigans - smoking mari- juana in the Diag, letting his supporters show pornographic films, getting arrested for hitch- hiking, to name a few-finally got the non-liberals of the 53rd district to get out and vote against him. For the Human Rights Party, it was another rough election night. The radicals' "best" vic- tory hope-county commissioner candidate Marty Wegbreit-got soundly thrashed by Cathy Mc- Clary, a relatively unknown Democrat. BENEATH THE visible fig- ures, Tuesday's voting con- tained a time bomb: with the passage of preferential ballot- ing for mayor, you can bet your last $5 dope ticket that the GOP will get blown out of city hall next April. The preferential voting sys- tem, to use the most relevant example, allows HRP lovers to1 vote for their mayoral can- didate, but let their second choice-likely the Democrat- count as a vote if the HRP hopeful comes in third. As HRP and most Democrats are quick to point out, the new voting system would have spell- DECEMBER GRADUTE? If you are graduating in December you must order your CAP & GOWN no later than I \NOV 19 at E C TRAVEL MICH. UNION 763-214 1AC"ATION FLIGHT t DOMESTIC FLIGHTS SPECIAL FARES SAVE 20% CHRISTMAS-Deadline Nov. 19 F NEW YORK LOS ANGELES SAN FRANCISCO DALLAS All flights on scheduled American Airlines-non stop jets FOR FURTHER DETAILS-CONTACT rTRAVEL International Student ID cards now availablej Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS VICTORY KISS: Local Democrats Perry Bullard and Kathy Fojtik greet each other with a winners' smooch as returns showed Bullard barely retaining his state house seat and Fojtik easily winning re-election as county commissioner. Fraternities, Dormitories 341 S. Main 769-5960 ANN ARBOR : ' t< '' s ' , }; , ;:::> ,'' : ART 1 CINEMA ""Fantasy Girls" PLUS Alex De Renzy's 'Sweet Agony" ed a narrow 1973 victory for Democrat Franz Mogdis if HRP,, voters had marked him second. For most Republicans in the nation, the tragedy of 1974 is probably a one-shot deal. But in nonconformist Ann Arbor,' preferential voting will make the GOP's agony linger into 1975. And 1976, and 1977 . . * * * GEO rebuffed Back at the a', it was business - as - usual, and this year, the phrase can only mean one thing: money troubles. This time it was the Graduate Em- ployes' Organization presenting economic contract demands to the University bargainers and,' year of the two-year pact, and that leaves a lot of room for negotiation. At Friday's bargaining ses- sion, the gap did not even begin to close. Both sides repeated their familiar arguments: GEO dema-ded "a living wage" and cited the 11 per cent inflation rate; the University insisted that part-time teachers don't deserve fell-time salaries. But )-e new element appeared: Uni- "!ersity negotiator Charles All- mand injected the "limited pie" factor. "We've gone to the limit of what we can offer," Allmand said after the meeting. "We just don't know where these funds will come from." ART 11 CINEMA-An hilarious spoof of those television game shows. "THE FILTHIEST SHOW IN TOWN" plus-"HOT PARTS" PERSONS UNDER 18 CANNOT BE ADMITTED 31 N. Washington, Ypsilanti-Phone 482-3300 I EDUCATIONAL CENTER v . naturally enough, tie University " SPEPARAT IN138throwing it back in their face. Termr aspoal SPEOALISTSSINCE193 UNIVERSITY CELLAR caref'illy calculated one. The 769-7940GE IS seeking a whopping adinistration is aware that ~Branch~es -n Major U0S Ctes and' E( and other campus unions 25 per cent pay bike and greatly value student support in free tuition for all the 1600 strikes and lesser work actions, teaching fellows, researchers and Allmand's words suggest and staff assistants represented the old ghost of a tuition hike- by the infant union. With GEO a move that would surely tend preparing to set a "contract to dampen any student support LRA E MICH. UNION 763-214 deadline" the University's posi- for the union. tion is an eight per cent hike and free tuition in the second -DAN BIDDLE ONLY 3 WEEKS LEFT TO SIGN UP London at Christmas AC TRAVEL MICH. UNION 763-214 Dec. 24, 1974-Jan. 6, 1975 Only $358.61* ( SPECIAL WINTER SKI WEEK Flight on Scheduled Airline Jets I DEC. 24-31, 1914 for further details contact 1282.00 ) triple occupancy ~jfTO TRAVEL $291.00 double occupancy SIGN UP DEADLINE NOV. 20 INCLUDES: International Student I.D.s Now Available " round-trip air transportation from Detroit on American *Subiect toGovernment ApovlAirlines. to GApproval 0accommodations at the Temple Square Hotel in Salt L______________ _________________ake City. -_round-trip transfer from airport to hotel. " daily lift passes at 6 resort oreas-Alta, Briqhton, Park City, Park West, Snowbird, and Solitude. For Further Details Contact U.A.C. Travel Center FOUND through CIlossifieds For prompt service l;r 1 " r . 1 /I ff _ ". J 1 , - / I / r r ' i i I i J Graduate Scholarships in Community Organization Program Available College Seniors and Graduate Students are invited to apply for a specialized program of graduate education and training in: i I I Community Organization, Social Agency Management, Administra- tion, Community Planning, Fund Raising, and Budgeting. I 11 i 11 I I I 1 I.;n , rrwrl®+inn of nrneli rota +rnininn nrn_ I