Page Six I HE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, March 2 1, 19 to CAREER SEMINAR old story, Ale atives a fight for glory.'" Paramount Pictures presents *OU Y T IC NN to Law School *A$7ME GOES SBY y HemanHupfed Copynght 41931 by Hurm. Sponsored by Underq raduate Stedesa Political Science Association 14D 'Technicolor' A Paramount PictureI WILL BE HELD SHOWTI MES F "a 3 Today at 1, 2:30, 4:00, IUS., Mar. 23 at 7:30 5:30, 7 and 9 Kuenzel Room Michigan Union DUE__ Pag Si IE MCHGANDALY undy1Marh _,..i LOOKING BACK THE WEEK IN REVIEW Campaign '76 CAMPAIGN '76 LURCHES on in most peculiar fashion. Conceived amid noble rhetoric about re-examining the nation's political assumptions and ad-i mitting new ideas and faces into the jousting arena from which party candidates are chosen, the results have been unexpectedly reversed. The- in- tense media coverage and the ever-spiraling costs of maintain- ing a national campaign have dramatically shrunken the ranks of men still in the race just a few brief weeks after the nation's first primary. Perhaps it was inevitable that the attrition rate be so fast in the case of the Democrats: there were simply too many candidates chasing too few dele- gates at the start of the year. And clearly, some men, Milton Shapp of Pennsylvania, for ex- ample, had no base nationally, and little money in the cam- paign coffers. But even candidates who have' fared respectably are being dis- missed prematurely; flatly, the press wizards say they must win big or pull out. Udall and Jack- son have done adequately in the primaries where they have campaigned, but the pressure is on each to win a primary j outright, or be subsumed by the snowballing Carter machine. On the Republican side, the unanimous opinion is that the race is already over. The Presi- dent has apparently vanquished his opponent with the politics of the Stone Age. But there's some- thing curious here, too. Because despite what the White House e press office may say, the pri- mary results have not been a1 unanimous mandate for thes President or his policies; rather, they have shown that with the SSCIENCE FICTION.] FANTASY FESTIVAL Reagan Ford Carter AN INTRODUCTION TO THE Transcendental Meditation (TM) Program as taught by MAHARISHI MAHESH YOGI Tuesday, March 23 at 7:30 p.m. Multipurpose Room UGLI ALSO Every Wed. at 12 noon and 8:00 p.m. and Every Sunday at 3:00 p.m. at the offices of the enormous advantages of incum- bency he can out-muscle a chal- lenger of the Barry Goldwater stripe. BUT IN THE LONG RUN, Reagan was his own down- fall, for his campaign betrays the same . fatal flaw that de- stroyed his precursor, Barry Goldwater. The American Right is the most dogmatic segment in the political spectrum, and being true believers they un- derstand nothing of the delicate machinery of compromise or strategy. For them, each bat- tle is Armageddon, a chance to smash the perverted tendencies of a Republican party gone in- explicably soft. Somehow the Students 1207 PACKARD International Meditation Society PHONE 761-8255 MARCH 15-28 Thousands of books' by all the greatest authors. 7 I 1 1' '1-- - - - - - - - _______--- -__-__-_mushheads gained control of the party, but they will regain stew-t ardship with a demonstration of the people's true will. THE UNIVERSITY ACTIVITIES CENTER That's simply not how the game is played. Instead of1 is seeking outstanding producers and chairpersons for the FordssingEuYtrhwin lews a following 1976-77 UAC Extravaganzas: ---Ford outright in New Hampshiet Children's Theater UAC/eclipse jazz FUTURE WORLDS presents: Musket Mediatrics (film) SUSAN BROWNMILLER Soph Show Travel!author of Minority Affairs Panel "Study on Rape-Against Our Will"' Etc. (lecture series) UAC Ticket Central -LECTURE TOPIC- Future Worlds Special Projects "SEX ROLES IN SOCIETY" Assistants to Senior officers also needed- Tuesday, March 23 - Hill Aud. President, Coordinating Vice Pres., Public Relations Admission $1.00 Vice Pres., and Chief Financial Officer. Applications available at UAC on the secondI floor of the Michigan Union FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL 763-1107 THIS W EEK AT-: DEADLINE: March 30, 1976 0 free boi ing water 0" ( and trounce him 2-1 in Florida, Reagan's strategists should have stressed the difficulty of unseat- ing an incumbent. They should have played the part of shills for their own cause, stating in- itially that a 30 per cent show- ing would be a magnificent moral victory. The Reagan people were the NLF of the campaign, yet they insisted on using ARVN tactics. A bad error, but understandable in the context of their think- ing: guerrilla warfare is no way to win a crusade, for cru- sades are holy wars to be fought until the death of the defeated. So now we're through Illinois, and the discussion of the issues, instead of being broadened, is narrowed. Jimmy Carter has made himself the focus of his campaign, as well he might, for his personality, is the most win- ning part of his effort. The President stresseshis manage- ment of an economy that re- covers at a rate which implicitly assumes the continual misery of the substantial body of unem- ployed. More than ever, the can- didates sufer from Tweedle Dee/Tweedle Dum syndrome; since they all sound alike the race is reduced to the politics of Summer Roundtrip NEW YORK- to LONDON $265 MUST RESERVE 65 DAYS IN ADVANCE Call TOLL FREE 9 to 9 (800) 847-7196 NOVA CHARTER CORP. ITHACA, NEW YORK personality. It's business as us- ual, and no surprise that this fall over SO per cent of the people are expected to stay away from the polls. Black enrollment BESIDES THE USUAL prob- lems of inflation and un- employment, a malfunctioning economy wreaks other forms of vengeance of a nation. Break- downs in the performance of the mechanism by which the people earn their livelihood does more than merely cause imme- diate suffering. It sabotages that society's attempts to better the quality of life by diverting re- sources away from sallies at reform, which are, in some short-run sense, luxuries. It seems obvious that this syndrome is largely responsible for the University's failure to achieve the goals of the Black Action Movement (BAM) for 10 perrcenthblack enrollment. It's true that the University is not a conducive environment for a new student, any student, and being outside the white, middle class cultural norms can only reinforce the isolation and alienation. Minority students have rightly complained that the University community has often been hostile to them. But beneath the question of what happens to minority stu- dents when they come here 'is the problems of simply persuad- ing them to enrollhere. As George Goodman, the director of the University's Opportunity Program succinctly put it: "What incentive is there for the student to come to the Univer- sity if there's no particular job at the end of it?" -- STEPHEN SELBST Ann Arbor's Premium Rock and Roll Night Club LIVE MUSIC AND DANCING s MSA All-Campus Elections April 6, 7, 8 I 9 3 FULL YEAR AT-LARGE HALF YEAR AT-LARGE ARE OPEN SEATS SEATS DEADLINE FOR FILING IS MARCH 23 AT 5 P.M. P Pick up Applications at Michigan Student Assembly Offices, 3909 Michigan Union. Also Student Publications Board Undergrad Seat Open. EVERY NIGHT .. w -9 SUNDAY Featuring: MASQUERADE -PLUS- PITCHER NIGHT (Special Discount Prices on Pitchers) MONDAY Featuring: MOJO BOOGIE BAND -PLUS- TEQUILA NIGHT: All Tequila Drinks 1/2 PRICE All Night TUESDAY Featuring: SHOOTER -PLUS- 50c DISCOUNT on All Drinks BETWEEN 9 & 10 P.M. WEDNESDAY STUDENT NIGHT ONLY 50c ADMISSION For Students -PLUS- SHOOTER For Your Dancing Enjoyment THURSDAY thru SATURDAY UNIVERSITY SHONCASE PRODUCTIONS presents EURIPID65 THTRJAI> I I IN" RECOC)NIiON OF ITERWATiONAL WOMEJ'S YEAR MARCH 24-2 7 voe.sY TRUE BLOOD THE:ATRE - 8,:00 PM. TIGKET5 AvAiLA5LE AT P.T.P'. oQ=FicE -7(04-0450 IN MEND2EL5ORMN LOQ.SY, MA-F 1oAM-I.PM.;2-5PMA. Featuring: SHOOTER Bring a New Friend, Meet an Old Friend, at: ' m I \\\ eP1 PBUU///