Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, April 13, 19 { 5 -I I 1'; Preferential voting gives Wheeler narrow victory .(Continued from Page 1) H1P. defeat of door-to-door registra- FOR THE Republicans, there tion. Most of the new voters were some wins and some registered under this plan would losses. They picked up expected be students, and students have city council seats in wards shown no inclination to vote Three and Five, and added a GOP. surprise to their collection in So a strong vote against the Four. All the hated charter measure can easily be inter- amendments went down to de- preted as an attempt to feat convincingly, but they lost strengthen Republican power the mayor's office. relative to the Democrats and Unless the Republicans can I safely pull a flat majority on the first ballot for mayor, they face the prospect of continually losing the position. For the Democrats, only the loss of the Fourth Ward marred an otherwise successful cam- paign. They demolished HRP opponents in Wards One and Two by surprisingly big mar- gins. STILL, the Fourth Ward was a uzler* Havin cet the cliision.I The Republicans ran an EMU English prof, Ronald Trow- bridge, who claimed to be a civil libertarian a la Ayn Rand, and spent most of his campaign walking door to door showing off his decaying letter jacket. In response, the Democrats were less organized, and more complacent. Their candidate, William Bronson, was a likable guy who took moderate, reason- able positions on the issues, and seemed flexible in his thinking. CIRCUMSTANCE might have been operating against Bronson I -i I w A Kids find (Continued from Page 1) they would have to do a project first. Only twelve of them stuck it out." THE ENERGETIC minds set to work on such masterpieces as paste-ups of the famous docu- ments'of our forefathers and a reconstruction of a lectern seen during a previous visit to Green- field Village. Nathaniel, age 7, was quite intrigued by the story of the Boston Tea Party and wrote to i the present day tea companies n hopesof tracking down the name of the original tea ship- pers. Chandra, age 10, utilized her sewing skills to sew a costume similar to the one she had seen on her favorite woman of the era, Dolly Madison. "I WOULDN'T fight for the English," piped in young Jippy, puzir . GOP's fair-hair t Colburn lasty thought this y playing with a toy cannon. more a forma "Spike told us that they only got to shoot five practice shots " during the year." IIa i F After an initial investment N for food and supplies for the two weeks, Holmes estimates ther cost for the entire period to be o f $5.00 per person per day. Bed-0 ding will be packed and the urges protest issinger talk dVIg upse U red boy, William year, the Dems year's race was lity than a con- Jacobson's Open Thursday and Friday Evenings Until 9:00 P.M. Saturday Until 5:30 P.M. ;. whole Clonlara lot will stay at various schools and churches along the way. Still, the thought of the goodies which might be collected seems inviting.! "I'm bringing along six whole dollars for souvenirs," bubbled Jippy, still clutching the can- non. The small assembly, students and adults alike, are counting the minutes until their Wednes- day departure, ready to lose themselves in America's past. (Continued from Page 1) offering the excuse "you are probably bleeding from previous battles." She finished the point in her ascerbic style adding, "but you all are bleeding by proxy." With this, Kennedy advised he students to mount opposition that is both procedural and orderly and include a demand for an equivalent budget for an alternaitve commencement speaker. Kennedy circulated petitions to the predominantly studentj L , " .._ . r, - , t ..4 .w ((f i f. 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SHE THEN asked that "full blame and responsibility" for the petition be put on her be- cause "I am missing three feet of intestine, have a fused spine, I'm 59 years old and don't have long on this earth, and hope I die in a way to get into an AP (Associated Press) wire story." sContinuing with her sexual allusions and parallels, Ken- nedy voiced the hope that "Kis- singer w ill withdraw (from speaking at the 'U') and not come at all." She added, T'Few men with the playboy image like his can get it up anyway." Donald Freed has for the past five years been investigating the alleged coverup of the assassi- nation of President John Ken- nedy by an anti-democratic ele- ment of the government/mili- tary-industrial complex and fi- cused his presentation on the lessons that can be learned from the experience. HE BASED his allegation of intra-governmental plot on the famous "Zapruder film" which supposedly shows Kennedy was shot from the front while CB; commentator Dan Rather tells his radio audience the president was thrown forward by thie blast. The plethora of CIA con- nections to the events surround- ing the assassination supports the theory, he claimed. Freed played a tape of an in- terview with Oswald in which he is asked how he supp)rted himself in Russia. His answer is "I was under the protection, er, rather I was not under the pro- tection of the U.S. government. That is to say I was an Ameri- can citizen." Freed is convinced Oswald was a dope of the CIA, ( OrldAirways LUXURIOUS BOEING 747 JUMBOJETS TO FRANKFU RT Trovel Group Charter Airfare Only $329.99 min $395.98 max. tnY o .=m.S.. r , o . no«.n though. Last year, RAP-3, a citizens group comprised mostly of Republicans got angry with Colburn for Republican duplicity on the Packard-Platt issue, and worked hard for Democrat Jamie Kenworthy. RAP-3 and anti-Colburn senti- ment weren't factors this year, thogh. In all likelihood the Re- Publicans who crossed over and voted for Kenworthy went back and opted for Trowbridge. While the Democrats and the GOP slit the election spoils, the HRP took another cross to the jaw. It was another tough election for the Hippos, and they knew it. Reports described their misnamed victory celebration as a wake. IT WASN'T just a fluke. In November, HRP took a beating too. But Monday the shift away from the HRP was dramatic. Two years ago, HRP took 16.3 ner cent of the mayoral vote. This year it was down to less than eleven. Worsethan the dismal city- wide totals were the drops in Wards One and Two. Two years ago, Frank Shoichet lost a squeaker to Democrat Carol Jones in the Second Ward, the HRP stronghold, getting edged 2018-1853. This year he lost better than 2-1, polling only 1184 votes to2the Democrat's 2450. In the First Ward last year HRP candidate Beth Brunton closed fast and nearly upset Democrat Colleen McGee falling short by about 100 votes. This year David Goodman lost by nearly 600 votes. HRP largely writes off the other threetwards. If they lse touch with their constituency in One and Two, they'll be hard pressed to find any significant support. The only hope for the HRP may be that they will hold a swing vote on council. But that won't win elections. And the track record-only one council- person elected since 1972-is poor. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXV, No. 155 Sunday, April 13, 1975 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. New phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published d a i I y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); 91i local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Sumer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier (carnpus area); $6.00 local mail (Michigan and Ohio): $6.50 non- local mail (other states and foreign). GESTALT THERAPY CONTRIBUTION THEORY WEEK-LONG WORKSHOP MAY 1-7 $125 fee PETER FLEMING Dir. of Pellin Institute Montecorice, Italy Call PETER or CLEA for info and registration 769-3806 -I SHERRY HOUR LONDON SUMMER PROGRAM April 17 at 5:00 p.m. MARC Lounge (Law Quad N-Cook Room) For information on the Michigan-Sarah Lawrence Summer Program in London, July 4 to August 15. Courses on theatre, novel, and history for Michigan credit. Anyone interested in meeting with faculty members and past students in this program is invited to attend. If you cannot attend and are in- terested,, stop by the: Jacob sors PLEASE PARK IN THE ADJOINING ENCLOSED MAYNARD STREET AUTO RAMP. JACOBSON'S WILL GLADLY VALIDATE YOUR PARKING TICKET. OFFICE OF STUDY ABROAD 1413 Mason Hall Phone: 763-2053 OR contact: Prof. N. Steneck Phone: 769-1760 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 May26 June 11 June 16 June 30 July 21 July 28 Aug. 11 -t- June 19 July 3 July 24 July 31 Sept. 4 Aug. 28 Sept. 2 March26 April 7 April 12 April 27 May 17 May 24 June 7 I ism -----. -- -- ---- - * - DETACH ANJD MAIL. 10: 1 Trauel Charter,Inc. S8 m e haSt--' o'l.el.221 ,2-1512 Send me derailed informetlon. MDL N IAME, I -Ia ADDRESS .nn...Cue..r .d -, sow, I Protest Oppression Under Arab Rule of Minorities SOLIDARITY DAY WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16 Noon on the Diag SPONSORED BY: Committee for Oppressed Minorities Under Arab Rule American Kurdish Society Committee for Oppressed Jewry at Hillel I rMan w . ... .. We're having a all yarns including: wooIs, synthtics, jute will b~ TAPES-$3.99e. Seach OR: 2fer$5 S3 er'7 RUNS Z WEEKS inn c STATE .d . mm ^A- - - VV J" J 1 M 1 16 1 _ u