The Michigan Daily-Friday, May 4, 1979-Page 15 General elections slated across Europe LONDON (AP) - The British general election yesterday was the first of several key parliamentary votes in Europe over the next few weeks. General elections are set in Austria Sunday and in Italy June 3-4. And about 180 million eligible electors in the nine-nation European Common Market will vote for the first time June 10 to elect a 410-member European Assembly for the community's 260 million citizens. _ HERE ARE thumbnail sketches of the elections, based on reports from Associated Press bureaus in European capitals: At Austria The basic question before Austria's 5.1 million eligible voters Sunday will be whether Socialist Chancellor Bruno Kreisky - who has led the country sin- ce 1970 - will stay at the helm. "Kreisky. Austria Needs Him," say his campaign posters around the country. Kreisky, 68, is defending the Socialist Party's 93 seats, which give it an ab- solute majority in Parliament. The main opposition comes from the People's Party, led by Josef Taus, who until 1975 ran the country's second- largest bank, Girozentrale, The People's Party has 80 deputies in Parliament and the smaller Freedom Party has 10. POLITICAL observers expect a close race, with the Socialists just main- taining or just losing their absolute majority. Kreisky's supporters contend his nine-year tenure has brought prosperity and little inflation, com- bined with labor peace and inter- national recognition for the small cen- tral European country. The opposition contends an annual growth rate of almost four per cent from 1970 to 1978 has been paid for with huge budget deficits and a jump in the federal debt. Italy ITALY'S GENERAL elections June 3-4 were called two years ahead of schedule after the Communists pulled out of a five-party agreement that had supported Premier Giulio Andreotti's Christian Democrat minority gover- nment, forcing Andreotti to resign Jan. 31. Attempts to form a coalition failed. The election is viewed as a referen- dum on whether the Communist Party,- which ran only four percentage points behind the Christian Democrats in 1976, should be given a place in the gover- nment. Andreotti's Christian Democrats have refused. Politicians don't expect any iajor shifts. The polls indicate the Christian Democrats may make small gains, while the Communists may lose a few points. Common Market CITIZENS OF the nine member- nations of the European Common Market will vote June 10 for 41 mem- bers of a European Assembly which will sit in Strasbourg, France. Britain, France, West Germany and Italy will each have 81 seats. The Netherlands will have 25, Belgium 24, Denmark 16, Ireland 15, and Luxem- bourg 6. Rome terrorist bomb rips campaign office ROME (AP)-In a daring daylight attack a month before elections, terrorists raided the Rome headquar- ters of the dominant Christian Democrat party yesterday, exploded bombs in the building and escaped, af- ter killing one police officer and critically wounding two others. They fled into the narrow, cob- blestone streets of downtown Rome af- ter the midmorning attack on the building six blocks from Piazza Navona, a popular tourist spot. The gang, which may have numbered as many as 15, scrawled the five- pointed star of the Red Brigades, Italy's most feared terrorist gang, on the walls of the building and sprayed in red letters: "We will transform the electoral fraud into a class war." IN MARCH 1978 the Red Brigades kidnapped Christian Democrat leader Aldo Moro and left his bullet-riddled body in downtown Rome May 9. Yesterday's attack came two weeks after a powerful bomb destroyed the portal of Rome's Michelangelo- designed city hall on the Capitoline Hill. There were conflicting claims -of responsibility, both from the right and left extremes, for that incident. The attacks heightened fears of widespread violence during the policital campaign leading up to general elections June 3-4. The vote is viewed as a referendum on whether the strong Communist Party should get a place in government. The Christian Democrats in this NATO country have refused the Communists a Cabinet spot up to now. FORMER PRESIDENT Giuseppe Saragat called yesterday's attack "civil war" and the Communist Party denounced it as an attempt to disrupt the election campaign and create a ENERGY. I V C afford to waste it. "guerrilla climate." Eyewitness accounts said the terrorists, armed with sub-machine guns and silencer-equipped pistols, struck around 9:45 a.m. They first disarmed and handcuffed two policemen on security detail out- side the building near the Tiber River, then went up to the first-floor campaign offices of the party. CHRISTIAN DEMOCRAT official Bruno Lazzaro told reporters the gang declared "This is a proletarian incur- sion" and ordered the seven officials and party workers present to stand against the wall with their hands up. Af- ter taking their wallets, the terrorists bound them one to another with black plastic handcuffs and said "Get out of the building, bombs are about to go off." As the terrorists stepped out into a small square, they spotted three policemen and fired. The officers sought shelter behind their car but were hit by sub-machine gun fire from one or two other terrorists, including a woman, who had been standing guard outside. The three offices fell in a pool of blood, one on top of another, while the blast of bombs inside the building roared in the air. The terrorists fled into side streets, some speeding away on high-powered motorcycles and others in waiting cars. Witnesses said all wore wigs and false mustaches. Now in paperbac CARLOS CATANEOKS great bestseller THE SECOND RING A new and startling chapter in one of the great journeys of enlightenment of our time- and a vision of the world of the full-fledged sor- cerer. "Moves with vivid, eerie force." -San Francisco Chronicle $3.95 i """""" A TOUCHSTONE PAPERBACK" FROM SIMON AND SCH UST ER SELF-DEVELOPMENT THROUGH TH EARTS Art classes at Rudolf Steiner House 1923 Geddes Avenue, Ann Arbor, STARTING MA Y 8, 1979 EuythMy-wednesday evenings with LAURA JOHNSON-662-8377 Portrait Pointing witiWhter Color-wednesday evenings and !11 ,Vsteiy of Color-Tuesday evenings with ROBERT LOGSDON-971 -8 Sponsored by the Rudolf Steiner Institute of the Great Lakes Area