Tuesday, April 6, 19765 I HE MIC;HIbAN DAILY Page Seven Tuesday, April fi, 1916 I-it MICi-1I(~AN DAILY Rage Seven CARTER IN LEAD: Udall needs Wisconsin victory MILWAUKEE (/P) - Wiscon- sin has the reputation of a springboard for presidential as-t pirants, but several of the can- didates in today's primary are hoping it will at least toss them' a lifesaver. Thomas Dewey toward a Re- publican presidential nomina- tion. And a loss in 1948 crushed Douglas MacArthur's presiden- tial intentions. JOHN KENNEDY beat Hu- went on to win the Democratic nomination. Facing a loss to Eugene McCarthy here in 1968, President Lyndon Johnson with- drew his re-election bid two days before the Wisconsin pri- mary. The real tension, however, is in the rest of the dwindling field, which will be watching to- night's returns for a clue as to whether they can keep going. Rep. Morris Udall of Arizona, a self-described last hope of the Democratic party's "progres- sive" wing, takes issue with predictions that he must win here to survive, but concedes; he must do well. Although Carter has demon- strated he has a large following in Wisconsin, his aides con- cede much of it is "soft" and perhaps less likely to actual- ly get out and vote. And Car- ter has not built any large vot- er turnout apparatus here. WORKING FOR Carter is a weather forecast which predicts sunny skies for election day. Both sides agree that rain, which had been forecast earlier, A win here in 1944 catapulted bert Humphrey here in 1960 and I Four years ago George Mc- Govern won in Wisconsin and' :":?:.......... :.:::.,.::::<::<;.;:;>:::::;::;:::::::::::::.,::.:: broke clear of the pack seeking DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN the Democratic nomination. M M M M ~ s a isa t ir m s s sts m g e~ s s m i s s a ~ s s m i si m s a a s s s sa sl s : T i s h y e a a ll th e r p u l s e The Daily Official Bulletin is an lies: Francis L. Carsten, U. London, ing the Democratic field and official publication of the Uni- "TherFascist Movement in Austria," President Ford ahead of his Re- versity of Michigan. Notices Lec. rm. 1, MLB, 4 p.m. should be sent in TYPEWRIT- Public Health: Marcolino Candau, publican challenger, Ronald TEN FORM to 409 E. Jefferson. Dir Gen. Emeritus, W.H O., "world Reagan. before 2 p.m. of the day pre-? Health Day 1976," Aud.,. SPIT I, WHILE FO1RD, winner of five ceding publication and by 2 4 p.m. p.m. Friday for Saturday and Kelsey Museum: Elizabeth Geb- of six primaries, does not think Sunday. Items appear only once. hard, Prof. U. -Ill., Chicago Circle Wisconsin alone will make or Student organization notices are 'Greek and Roman Theatres, Aud break him, he hopes a victory not accepted for publication. A, Angell, 4 p.m.,im vs For more information, phone 1975-76 Zwerdling Lectures: Na- here could clear the way to 164-927. hum M. Sarna, Brandeis U., "Tal- nomination. Carter, also win-: mudic Statements on the Order of eofivofsxhabenp- Tuesday, April 6 Biblical Books in Light of Mesopo- ner of five of six, has been pre- DAY CALENDAR tamian and Alexandrian Library dicting a first ballot victory at WUOM: Roy Rappaport, Prof/' Science," Aud. B, Angell, 4:10 p.m. the Democratic national con- chairman, Anthropology. "The English - Poetry reading: Robert vention and said last week that Structure of Ritual," 10 am, Francis. Pendleton rm., Union, 4:10 aenfirstnacefainilstinwiscoth- Ctr. Continuing Education of p m a first-place finish in Wiscon- Women: Victoria Binion, "Role and tCtr. Study of Higher Education: sin and a second-place finish Status of Black Women in the Kay Henry, Ken Mines, U.S. Office in New York will make him Black Family," 328 Thompson, noon.1 of Education, Region V, "Affirma- ( Future Worlds: Julian ond, sen- iveAction," 1309 SEB, 7:30 p.m- unbeatable." ator-Ga, "Future Role of Blacks in Music School: Concert, Varsity-- the Political System," Hill Aud., Bands, George Cavendar, Hill Aud., 3-5 p.m. 8 p.m. Engineering: Michael Athans, Prof.: Musical Society: Sitara, Northern electrical eng,, MIT, "What You Al- Indian, Katak Dancer, Rackham ways Wanted to Know About Mod- Aud , 8:30 pm. em ControlkTheory and Were Af- raid to Ask," 1042 E. Eng., 3:30 - Ctr Near Eastern/N. African Stud- Fodor Travel Guides _ 1--- C1-- 77U lW1r1AMC xtRAAC" 'I Y11,10", nJiJJ iAmerkwn ,:nce r cc' :- ATTENTION SENIORS: I UDALL HAS predicted a Wis- would help Udall. ~ consin victory, based on a re- Wisconsin, home state of cent poll conducted by his cam- turn - of - the - century pro- paign organization and a mo-# gressive R o b e r t "Fight- mentum which he says is goingigess"ve Rolbet Figted h mng Bob" LaFollette, is noted his way. for the support it gives liberal But even the Udall poll, de-: candidate. Earlier in the cam- signed by professional pollster paign Udall had based much Peter Hart of Washington and of his strategy on a boost here. conducted by Udall field per- A bad loss here might take sonnel shows Carter leading by Udall out of the contest, leav- 4 percentage points. Both candi- ing only Carter and Sen. Henry dates acknowledge that Udall's Jackson of Washington as ma- organization here is stronger jor Democratic candidates. than Carter's and if the fig-f ures are reliable, the race could Detroit was founded as Fort be a toss-up. Pontchartrain in 1701. I GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS are available for purchase at the Recep- tion Desk, L.S.A. building lobby. 5 '$1.00 ROBERTO ROSSELINI'S 1945 OPEN CITY (AT 7) This Italian film shot during the last days of Nazi rule in Rome is a powerful human drama that spawned the neo-realistic movement in post-war cinema. JOHN GARFIELD in 1948 FORCE OF EVIL (AT 9:05) Garfield plays a slum-kid who makes it big as a gangster's lawyer but most question his suc- cess when it starts to destroy the lives of people around him. CINEMA GUILD BOTH $2.00 OLD ARCH. EACH $1.25 AUD. I ' I f CONTRIBUTED BY THE PrI ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER RENTAL $8/wk $20/mo de$ U-CELLAR 769-7940 1976-77 EDITIONS 25% off AT Centicore Bookshops 1229 S. Universitv & 336 Maynard L 1-STOP SHOPPING SAVES MONEY, TIME, ENERGY A1' I'm' I [ ci. tPhismek] APRIL 16, 17 MEDIATRICS presents START THE REVOLUTION WITHOUT ME (Bud Yorkin, 1967) j acres PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY APRIL 10, 1976. MEIJER RES RIGHT TO LIMIT SALES ACCORDING TO SPECIFIED LIMITS. Ni DEALERS, INSTITUTIONS OR DISTRIBUTORS. II - .j ""' nse NEW! BRECK CLEAN RINSE * 16 fl.oz.- * Three fresh scents OUR REG. $1.88 $j37 .. .-..- -- -,r-- --lam-^ -, .., ., . " . ' . . t ._ r ," ' 5 . . . ', - "r ,." " l ., r J I _ ) - 4T '. ll.1Yf.:A GER I SERVES THE 0 SALES TO c rDES' I i DIES' A 1 If Donald Sutherland, Gene Wilder 7:00, 8:45, 10:30 ($1.00) UAC Future Worlds PRESENTS JULIAN BOND Georgia State Governor "Future Role of Minorities in the Political System" Hill Auditorium from 3:00-5:00 p.m. Admission fee $1 UAC TRAVEL SUMMER FLIGHTS to LONDON, 14 to 119 days-from $259 ALSO: Frankfurt, Amsterdam, Zaareb. For more infora- tion CALL 763-2147, or come by our new office on the second floor of the Michigan Union. PLUS! Reduced rates to NEW YORK and BOSTON, April 26, 27. 28 AND: HAWAII (after finals) $329--limited spaces available UAC ECLIPSE JAZZ presents CECIL TAYLOR In Concert POSTA RUG Hang it! Walk on it! Wash it! It's a wall poster, it won t tear it needs no frame. It s a rug, it s machine washable. 100% Dacron Polyester pile. 17 x 23 size. FUJICA GEr COMPACT 35 MM CAMERA Foolproof, automatic exposure with programmed electronic shut- ter coupled to wide range CdS cell. Compact automatic flash photography, warning signal to in- dicate necessity of tripod or flash. LAC 2I$ 5 OUR REG. $89.97 RAIN SLICKER Duck Bill hood with snap front and patch pockets. Assorted colors. Sizes S-M-L. OUR REG. $6.97 I Health & Beauty Aids Dept. Domestics Dept.'I4 Photo Dept.I Ladies' Dept MEIJER FINEST U.S.D.A. CHOICE -(REGULAR OR THIN SLICED) FINEST SAVE USDA CHOICE 80C 1b lb. (DUE TO THIS LOW PRICE SOLD AS STEAK ONLY) k F Thursday, April 15 POWER CENTER, 8 p.m. TICKETS ON SALE at Ticket Central in Hill Auditorium. ALL SEATS $4.50 (reserved) UAC MUSKET and SOPH SHOW NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS FOR FALL MUSICAL . ~ ' J t tr k. t f 't " tt .' t ,wt ya' ' ar°.w ys i t K i- yccu/ 1% LOW FAT SGv aon k CALIFORNIA SEEDLESS NAVEL ORANGES 72IO6 II I F CENTRAL COMMITTEE POSITIONS DIRECTORS CHOREOGRAPH ERS GAYLORD SOLID PACK 1MA GARINE _ f'St. S2eu MUSICAL DIRECTORS SET DESIGNERS PUBLICITY HEADS, ETC. It's a great way to meet people and gain experience! Applications due Wednesday, April 14 at UAC office, 2nd floor, Michigan Union UAC Poster Shop TIRED OF HAND-LETTERED OR EXPENSIVE PRINTED POSTERS ? The UAC Poster Shoo offers an inexpensive and speedy pos- ter service to all campus-related groups. We can produce one to three hundred posters, our prices-are the CHEAPEST, check us out today. CALL 763-1107 for more info. F BANQUET FROZEN DINNERS (ALL EXCEPT HAM) &-3/4 to S6 ox. wt. pkg 33$ OPF UAC Ticket Central in Hill Auditorium, 11:00-5:30 M-F CECIL TAYLOR: April 15 University A a a a . I l tf1E11ER 59c0 COUPON V GENERAL MILLS CH EERIOS 291 .... e...lort g s n Nt at .elt mEt1ER DUTCH TREAT SUGAR WAFERS 12 oz. l i wt. be 3 wANVII Af.im 30 COUPON IjR PREMIUM BROOM TOPCREST ECONOY OR IS a. wt. 1a COUPON 5OF OFF ".lt 1 tl -a.t . Irl. W%- - _ I