Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Trudeau expected to win easy re-election OPEN 12:45 "FIDDLER" AT TORONTO (A) - Prime Minister ants. All provincial premiers a r e I P.M.-4:30-8 P.M. Eliott Trudeau and his Liberal younger. CHILDREN $1.00 party are expected to gain easy Another element is the rising ADULTS: victory tomorrow in Canada's 29th strength of the New Democrats, MON.-SAT. MAT.-$2.00 general election. notably in the West. Except for a EVE. & ALL DAY SUN.-$2.50 As the campaign ended, the Lib- small left wing, they are less soc- erals were confident of victory by ialist than they sound. The 63-year- a wide margin, but Prime Minister old NDP leader, David Lewis, has gidd * Trudeau's chief rivals, the Con- had considerable clout with his or- seryatives, still hoped for the up- atorical assault on "corporate wel- s set. fare bums," the companies he ac- Tory campaigners, their own par- cuses of benefiting from special ty leader Robert Stanfield admit- tax and othe privileges. tedly lacking in crowd-pleasing The issues in this election cen- color, waged an uphill struggle tered about the economy. Trudeau against the Kennedy-like appeal of was attacked because of rising pric- Trudeau that produced a stunning es and unemployment, now at the- Liberal victory four years ago. highest rate in 10 years. He also At best, the Tories could hope was attacked on grounds that he Forest fires bre for national victory only by the had a weak posture toward inde-r narrowest of margins. Failing pendence of Canadian b u s i n e s s that, they could hope to deprive from the United States. Trudeau of the luxury he enjoyed Counterattacking, Trudeau ac- this past term: a substantial ma- cused his critics of spreading jority in the House that w o u 1 d "gloom and doom" and raised his respond to his programs. party's rallying cry: "the landI Some disaffection and disillusion- is strong." It seems strong. De- ment withkTrudeau was detectabl spite the problem, the economy in the ranks of his own party. The I sietepolm h cnm criticism was that, with the major- is regarded as sound and thriving. ity he commanded, he could have accomplished more. Four y e a r s ago heran mostly on his personal Scale new heights of ity, but this time he had also to run on his record. excitement this Halloween Also, for the first time in a fed- eral election, youths of 18 will vote. The change from 21 was made two years ago. Trudeau is supposed to appeal to youth, but at 53 he is, in fact, among the oldest of Can- The Residential ada's high-ranking p ublic sere- Sunday, October 29, 1972 r R CIEMA SUNDAY: Time Change: 7 & 9:30 JULIET OF THE SPIRITS Dir. FEDERICO FELLINI 1965 With JULIETTA MASINA N a i v e wide-eyed w i f e encounters imaginative, p I a y f u l decadence.. A feast for the eyes! MONDAY: MARX BROTHERS DUCK SOUP Do you Want to Know How to Get into LAW SCHOOL? We can't promise anything except some help- fulihints .. . JANE WATERSON (The director of Admissions for the Univ. of Michigan Law School) will talk about admission policies at the U of M Law School Auditorium B-Angell Hall Wednesday, Nov. 1, 7:30 p.m. Sponsored by the Undergraduate Political Science Association I j I Practical Alternative I ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 5c AP Photo Pennants for peace? A South Vietnamese civil servant carries some of the 7% million paper pennants to be used to mark areas under government control in the event of a cease-fire. The pennants are to be distributed by the end of the month. VIOLENCE FLARES: Allende stops strike talks 7&9p.m. 7 L tii r '""t - College Players SANTIAGO ('P) - A rapid solu- antees for the liberty of small and The Michigan Daily, edited and man- tion to Chile's crippling strikes ap- medium industry in Chile and an aged by students at the University of peared doomed yesterday after end to the "paper curtain" of regu- Michigan. News phone: 764-0562, Second pearedClass postage paid at, Ann Arbor, Mich- President Salvadore Allende cut off lations limiting travel by Chileans igan 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, talks with strike leaders because to other countries. Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- their demands, he said, contained The strikes began almost three day through Sunday morning Univer- << , sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by "political overtones I won't ac- weeks ago when truck owners carrier (campus area); $11 local mail cept." broke off discussions with Allen- (in Mich. or Ohio); $13 non-local mail de's leftist government over high- (other states and foreign). Allende announced an nationwide'se eso unihaTedy er crgo atesandthe roteted Summer Session published Tuesday radio and television about midnight er cargo rates and the protested through Saturday morning. Subscrip- Friday that negotiations had col- formation of a state-owned truck- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus lapsed. His announcement follow-ing firm in southern Chile. area); $6.50 local mail (in Mich. or Smal-busnessmen nd sh o Ohio); $7.50 non-local mail (other ed a day of street violence in thep Smallbusiness men and s h 0 p states and foreign). capital in which 142 persons were keepers called a sympathy strike arrested. and other groups, including, doc- tors, dentists, engineers, lawyers Strike leaders scheduled meetings Iand private schoolteachers, s o o n . to analyze the latest move by Al- joined in. lende but the strikes are expect-' From a relatively isolated labor ed to continue indefinitely. dispute, the strikes have taken on-: The demands include, in addi- broader anti-government overtones tion to strike problems such as re-|with the establishment of a "Uni- 1 turn of requisitioned trucks guar- fied Command" of striking groups. MONDAY a paid political advertisement'OKRA 2OLS 2 PM-2AM presents: The House of Bernarda Alba by: FREDRICO GARCIA LORCA 8:00 p.m. EAST QUAD AUDITORIUM November 2, 3,4, 1972 Ann Arbor voters face a perplex- ing variety of, alternatives in choosing a State Representative from the 53rd Legislative Dis- trict. Two of t1ie candidates- one a Democrat, the other run- ning on the HRP ticket-advo- cate wholesale s o c i a l change. T he Republican candidate is Mike Renner, a young man with considerable experience in gov- ernment and politics, whose mod- erate, pragmatic views occupy neither extreme of the political spectrum. Renner is 25 years old, and if elected he'll be one of the youngestumembers of the State House. But he brings more ex- perience, and more first-hand understanding of politics and government, to this challenge than most candidates twice his age. He will graduate. from Universityof Michigan Law School ir December. Ann Arbor has been his h o m e since 1965, and he haF been involved in local. political activities for s e v e.r a l years. He's been a member of Con- gressman Mary Esch's staff, and an advisor to State Representative Ray Smit. If elected, Mike Renner will be a full-time leg- islator, providing prac- tical, responsive repre- sentation for all the people of the 53rd dis- trict. "A State Repre- sentative has to speak his own mind and vote his o w n conscience," Renner believes, "but t h e responsibility goe! beyond that. He has to under- stand the needs and hopes and expectations of constituents-all of them, not just a select few. Then, having listened and 'un- derstood, he must act." Pie in the sky is easy to come by during an election campaign.,But practical understanding and hard work are precious commodities. Remember that when you choose your new State Representative. And choose Renner, the Practical Alternative. Republicans for Renner Ward Kuhn, Chairman I I W Homecoming '12 next TUESDAY, Oct. 31 KING KONG -and- DRACU LA Together'! On Screen! IN PERSON! POWER CENTER for the Performing Arts Classic Films-Live Stage Skit complete shows 6:30 & 8:30 $1.50 cont, Friends of Newsreel TICKETS--Salvation Records & New Morning Books Business Staff I f TODAY ! FRISBEE CONTEST Palmer Field-i :30 p.m. --DON'T MISS IT!- Ff i ' ESE I Paid Political Advertisement REPUBLICAN 53RD DISTRICT NONPARTISAN BALLOT- * TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7 Join the Daily 'U - A 1- Fact: The AP Almanac is more than 900 pages. Fact: It's available through this news- nn .pr en - inal law n.rib af * AP ALMANAC 1 'The Michigan Daily (Ann Arbor, Mich,) I P.O. Box G22 1 Teaneck, New Jersey 07666 / F I