Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 7, 1976 Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 7, 1976 ' U Dial 163-5100 November 13 -: beginning at 6 p.m. November 14 ending at 11 p.m. for 29 hours of fund raising over i"" WUOM 91.1 FM :'", Live performances r Special Guests Premiums of: autographed books, records, pictures Gourmet dinners flying lessons tickets G ,oal $30,000 :x1to support the Program Guide _ .,to purchase new records and tapes * to fund coverage of special concerts and news events Don't forget v' 103-51 00 F-- .. 4-- / a - - C 1- .. SUNDAY MAGAZINE LOOKING THE WEEK IN REVIEW' Prez-dent Cottuh "F CAME ALL THE way through 22 months," the weary candidate told his home- town admirers at dawn in Plains, "and I didn't get chok-l ed up until I . . ." He stopped, turned and embraced his wife, Rosalyn, and for once, the great big patented Jimmy Carter smile was joined by tears of joy. The election was finally over, and he had won. It was a narrow victory, to be sure, but Carter's sdefeat of President Ford was, in a word, remarkable. The week began with the polls showing the race for the White House in a dead heat and the former Georgia governor trying to dodge an embarras- sing political incident at his Baptist church. A black pastor who was not a Baptist, not a resident of Plains, and who had previously sought office as a Republican, attempted to join the church despite its archaic, segregationist rule barring black membership. Instead, the church cancelled its Sunday services. While there was no evidence, the affair had been coordinated by Ford's backers, it was widely viewed as politically motivated and the President Ford Committee lost no time in exploiting the contro- ed calls for Carter to resign to the Minnesotan's popularityI from the church, but his deep that the enthusiastic crowd! Baptist faith meant too much to booed the mention of his Repub--I him, and he argued that he lican counterpart's name -I could best fight such racism Robert Dole - louder than they from within the church. did Nixon's and Ford's. Both candidates wound up Election night tabulations their campaigns with last hur- gave Carter a slim but steady rahs in Michigan, rated by lead over Ford. Reports of an some pollsters as a toss-up unusually heavy voter turnout state and carrying a 21-elec- went sour, and it was clear toral vote payoff. At a rally in neither candidate was headed a Livonia shopping center, Ford for a quick, decisive victory. talked basketball with Johnny ! But as the sun and vote-count- Orr and appealed to home state i ing moved west, the Southern pride for votes. "We're going to and some big East and Midwest win it in Michigan," he told a states began falling into the, chilled throng of some 15,000 Carter column, and Mississippi'sI fans. seven electoral voints finallv versy with telegrams to bl clergymen. There were scat JR. WALKER AND the Alistars special guest masquerade SUNDAY, NOV. 1- "P.M. ack Later, in Flint, Carter ham- te t- mered away at the condition of' the economy, trust in govern- ment and national unity. He hurried through his standard "I see a nation . . ." speech and emphasized the need for a heavy voter turnout. Again and again, he told the solidly Demo- cratic auditorium of supporters: "I think it's time for a change, in Washington." Sidekick Walter Mondale pre- ceeded Carter, emphasizing the plight of the jobless in Michi. gan. "Hoover said you couldn't "put people to work - but Roosevelt did. Eisenhower said you couldn't put people to work - but Kennedy did. Nixon and Ford said you couldn't put peo- ple to woi'k - but Carter and Mondale will." It was a tribute put the peanut farmer over the top. The vote showed that Ameri-C cans, indeed, were hurting for a change. Unemployment, in- flation, a shoulder - high stack of vetoes, the Nixon pardon, an unfortunate choice for a run- ning mate, and a generally me- diocre performance in office all took their toll on President Ford. It also showed a willing- ness on the part of voters to take risks: All the way up to Election Day, Americans con- sidered the Democrat an "un-j known" whose course in the Oval Office was, at best, a mat-I ter of guesswork. And so, a born-again Demo-I cratic Party was back in the White House, after an eight- year absence, fresh with fat ma- $3.50 (Dancing) 994-5350 I THE CENTER FOR COORDINATION OF ANCIENT & MODERN STUDIES PRESENTS A PUBLIC INTERDISCIPLINARY U OF M COLLOQUIUM ON HAS DEMOCRACY- SURVIVED? PERSPECTIVES ANCIENT & MODERN SESSION III: THE PERILS OF DEMOCRACY FEATURED SPEAKER PROFESSOR RAM JETHMALANI Currently visiting professor of law at Wayne State Uni- versity, Indian political exile, former Senior Advocate of the Supreme Court of India, and Chairman of the Bar Council of India. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 7:30-9:30 p.m. in the KUENZEL ROOM, MICHIGAN UNION ANN A 0CI FILM CE-0CI @000000 @0 * @0000 00 000 00 00 000 TONIGHT in MLB TWO FEATURE FILMS FROM CANADA GOIN' DOWN THE ROAD (Donald Shebid, 1970) 7,ONLY A beautiful, simply told story of two friends with more ambition than talent who head for the big city to seek their fortune. The perfect example of a low budget film with grace and dignity, GOIN' DOWN THE ROAD is one of the best films to cross the Canadian border in either direction in a long time. MON ONCLE ANTOINE (Claude Jutra, 1972) 9 ONLY Desire and death and the coming of age are the themes of this fresh picturesque film from Quebec. The story centers around Benoit, a young man who works in a store owned by his uncle- who is also the town undertaker. We follow his amours with Carmen, the-girl-next-door. A moving film not often seen in the States. Grand prize winner at the 1970 Chicago Film Festival. French with subtitles. $1.25, DOUBLE FEATURE $2.00 jorities in the House, the Sen- ate, and the nation's state- houses. Surely, priorities will change. Some of the poor can, reasonably expect their lot to improve somewhat. The major- ity party in Congress will have an easier time with legislation. At week's end, the Ford and Carter staffs were preparing for the transition and the January 20 inauguration - when the! changes will begin. ** * So long Esch MARVIN ESCH, Ann Arbor's ten - year veteran of the House of Representatives, found himself out of a job after Tues- day's election. "The people of Michigan have elected me to serve as a private citizen," he observed wryly after his loss to Democrat Donald Riegle. Given a few more days of campaigning - and media cov- erage - the results may very well have been otherwise. Rie- gle was smarting from a double dose of character assassination in The Detroit News and mud- slinging from the Esch cam- paign team, and his wide lead in the polls was eroding. But if The News was out to elect Esch, it had forgotten (or risk- ed) the possibility of a sympa- thetic backlash - whichaalmost certainly accounted for at least a handful of the Flint Demo- crat's 1.8 million votes. "If there ever was a time when the people won a cam- paign, it was tonight," Riegle told his workers Tuesday, pro- mising to fight for the people of Michigan whenthe assumes the retiring Philip Hart's seat in January. See-saw jT MAY BE SEVERAL days- or even weeks - before Michigan's Second Congres- BACK sional District learns who its new representative -will be in the U. S. House of Representa- tives. It was a classic dead- lock; in fact, it was the closest congressional race in the na- tion, and at week's end, Repub- lican Carl Pursell clung to a bare 347-vote lead over chal- lenger Edward Pierce, the Dem- ocratic physician from Ann Ar- bor. The vote tally fluctuated all day Wednesday, giving the ma- jority first to Pierce, then to Pursell. But the Wayne and Washtenaw county returns were strewn with errors, mix-ups and inconsistent addition. Recounts and county canvasses would be necessary before the winner could be determined, but Pursell pronounced himself "sort of cautiously jubiliant", a n d Pierce felt as though he were at the bottom of a roller coast- er ride. Still, Pursell's thin margin left plenty of room for the Democrat to slip ahead when county canvassing is com- pleted, possibly as soon as to- morrow. Other winners ITHER LOCAL votes were, . for the most part, kind to incumlients - with one notable exception. Republican Thomas Minick pummelled Washtenaw. County Sheriff Frederick Pos- till in the Democrat's bid for re-election, thus taking the county back on a conservative road of law enforcement that will almost surely lead to more frequent (and more trivial) drug arrests in the area and the un- ionization of sheriff's deputies with the scandal - ridden Inter- national Brotherhood of Team- sters. Liberal Democrat Perry Bul- lard beat his Republican op- ponent, John Dietrich, by a better than two-to-one margin for his third term in the state legislature;dDemocratsGerald Dunn and Robert Nederlander won easy re-election to the Uni- versity Board of Regents; and conservative County Prosecutor William Delhey survived a scare from his young, relatively inexperienced Democratic op- ponent, George Steeh. Michigan voters also approved th controversial ban on throw- away beverage containers, de- spite a heavy media blitz by bottlemakers. They rejected - to the surprise of many pessi- mistic onlookers - a shoddy and potentially damaging "tax- payers' bill", Proposal C, and turned down, for the third time, a referendum to institute a state graduated income tax. * * * GEO THE IMPOTENCE of the graduate student assistants' union last week must have sur- prised even the University. . GEO had been bargaining fruitlessly for a grab bag of economic, class size and "prin- ciple" clauses to be included in its contract with the Univer- sity, but the big 'U', character- istically, was intransigent. GEO's last hope-if it ever hd one - was to cripple the Uni- versity with a rerun of its Feb- ruary, 1975, walkout. But the results of the .union's three-day referendum, released Monday, demonstrated that the teaching assistants were in no mood for a strike. On the con- trary, the union membership elected to seek as quick a set- tlement as possible. The fight- ing instinct of the fledgling la- bor group was gone, and its contract will almost certainly suffe'r for it. "It appears that many people have to be greatly abused be- fore they are willing to take the strong action needed to pro- tect themselves," said a dis- heartened GEO President Doug Moran after the 498-214 vote was tabulated. "Without a strike threat it's going to be very hard to win issues . .. that are sacred." A W I a ... w.. TOMORROW, Monday in MLB JULES DASSIN'S 1962 - I" TO ALL STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS (Fraternities, Sororities, Clubs, Dorm Houses, Student Gov'ts, Etc.) To include your house or organization in the 1977 MICHIGANENSIAN YEARBOOK, you must con- tact Gordon Weider at 764-0561. You may include whatever you want on your page, including group picture, candjds, and a story. The ENSIAN will'take your group picture for you. PHAEDRA 7 ONLY Director Jules Dassin turns to ancient Greek legend and Euripi- dean drama to create a modern version of the tragic story of the queen who falls in love with her stepson. A poignant, exquisitely designed drama. Melina Mercouri, Afthony Perkins and Raf Valione. JACQUES DERAY'S 1970 BORSALINO 9 ONLY A loving tribute to American gangster films that prompted normally understated, reserved Stanley K a u f f m a n to write, "BREATHLESS was about the effect of the Bogart persona . . . BORSALINO is the thing itself . . . a gorgeous ballet danced to the memory of ANGELS WITH DIRTY FACES and THE ROAR- ING TWENTIES. The whole feeling is as if this were a lost film suddenly turned up in the vaults of Warners.. ...Two of the most tired words in film discourse are 'homage' and camp.' I wish .at this moment, that the terms were less tired. BORSALINO takes its hat off to a popular art form that was once done non- camp, and so becomes a formal tribute, amidst the gore to what the cat begat." zmiuelc by Claude Bolling. With Jean-Paul Bel- mondo and Alain Delon. French with subtitles. DEADLINE IS NOV. 19th MICHIGANEISIAN GROUP PICTURES ... CALL NOW FOR YOURS I 3411 WASHTENAW - - rn PRIME RIB DINNER e BARBECUE Q $ LASAGNA $ 4.99 RI 4.75 4.20 BS t \, screenplay by WILLIAM GOLDMAN from his novel produced by and ROBERT EVANS SIDNEY BECKERMAN .' s 1rySHOWTIMES Friday: 7:00 and 9:05 Sat.-Sun.: 1, 3:05, 5:10, T kPn66297:15, 9:25 1214 s. university R H W I M S SHOWTIMES PC A M US,. Friday: 7:00 and 9:00 Sat. and Sun.: 1,3, 5,7 and9 231 south state S T AT E4 CLetre Phle 62A664 - 4 STUDENT SPECIAL ' 12 CHICKEN Belfrys & Cole Saw 2.95' Sunday Monday 5:30 p.m.-9:00 p.m. All You Can Eat Salad Bar Only a Buck Extra. included with these dinners: salad bar choice of potato' bread basket 1 1 I Il 1i 1 i This was Risttine, The edf tor. ADVERTISING IN THE IMICHIGAN DAILY DOESN'T COST ... IT PAYS pre pared by Jeff Daily~'s managin~g 3 44:11 4m % ALASKAN KING CRAB LEGO l 4F - - w !p- A wwal m i RFF -FdPPF !.U fl