I Page 6-Tuesday, May 22, 1979-The Michigan Daily Canada's TORONTO (AP)-As Canada's election campaign drew to a quiet close yesterday, Prime Minister Elliott Trudeau's Liberals anxiously awaited the outcome of today's balloting. The polls said the race was too close to call, but Joe Clark was predicting victory for his Progressive Conservatives. The 39-year-old Clark made his final appearance of the two-month campaign in Alberta, his home province in Canada's West. Trudeau, prime minister for the past 11 years, spent his day in Ottawa. As many as 75 per cent of the coun- try's 14.5 million eligible voters are ex- pected to cast ballots for represen- tatives in the House of Commons, which has been expanded to 282 members. The party winning the most seats generally forms the new governmet, and its leader becomes prime minister. THE OPINION polls, which show each major party favored by an even 37.5 per cent of the voters, indicated a positive turn for the Conservatives because Trudeau's party has fallen from a 43 per cent favorable ranking since early April. The Liberal stranglehold on Quebec distorts the even-slit picture painted by the polls. The Liberals may expand close to half their popular vote easily winning their 60 or so seats in Quebec, while the Conservative vote is spread more evenly across some 200 other races nationwide, giving the Conser- vatives a better shot at overall victory. But many Canadian analysts, min- dful that the tough, resourceful Trudeau has been counted out before, see a chance for the Liberals. NEITHER PARTY is likely to win a majority, and a Liberal minority could cling to power with backing of 43-year- old Ed Broadbent's New Democrats, the third-strongest group. Trudeau has said that if the Conser- vatives win just a few seats more than his Liberals, he may try to hold on to power with the backing of the New Democrats, expected to win 20 or so seats. A Conservative victory would make it only the second time in 44 years that they have taken power from the Liberals, and their leader would be the youngest prime minister in Canadian history. MANY CANADIANS, however, have election campaign draws to close been noticeably dismayed by the of his final jibes, the 59-year-old, acid- bureaucracy. prospect of Clark, the untested tongued Trudeau said Clark "doesn't Clark promised business incentiv politician from High River, Alberta, know his razzmatazz from a hole in the and hefty tax breaks, including U. leading their country. The Liberals ground." style deductions for home-mortage hope many-including the 10 per cent to BUT THE Conservative theme-"It's terest payments. 20 per cent still undecided-will find in time for a change"-may have struck Trudeau sought to make nation the polling booth that they cannot vote an even more responsive chord. unity, meaning French-speakir for a Conservative Party led by Clark. The opposition attack was basically Quebec province's threatens The Liberals have zeroed in on that a decade of Trudeau's strong "one- .secession, the central issue. He conte Clark's vagueness, vacillation and ap- man rule" has worn down the Canadian ded that only he, as a French-Canadi parent lack of preparation on some economy-inflation stands at 10 per and' champion of a powerful centr issues. cent annually based on March figures government, could keep Quebec in ti "This is no time on the job training," and unemployment is at 8 per fold. But the complicated question d their campaign ads trumpeted. In one cent-through big spending and bloated not stir the voters. es S.- in- al ng red en- ian ral he id Elton John LENINGRAD, U.S.S.R. (AP) - Flamboyant British rock star Elton John drove his Russian audience to a frenzy of dancing, screaming and handclapping yesterday, reminiscent of the wave of Beatle mania that swept Western capitals in the early 1960s. At the first strains of the old Beatle hit, "Back in the U.S.S.R." teen-agers in the audience pushed past ushers - a rare show of defian- ce - and headed for the stage in the Oktyabrsky Hall. They stood before the stage dancing and clapping their hands in the air. A crowd estimated at 4,000 jammed the 3,500-seat auditorium. After the show, John sat sweating in his dressing room and assessed the performance as his "biggest achievement." He said the audien- ce, which responded slowly at first, came alive when two young girls ran to the stage and gave him white car- nations. "THE FLOWERS were the tur- ning point," he told reporters. "I think I began to win them over." After the concert, more than 1,000 young Russians at first refused to leave the auditorium and then clustered outside shouting "El-ton, El-ton." One hundred security police were unable to keep the crowd back as it mobbed the singer's departing limousine. BEFORE THE concert yesterday, Russian teen-agers, some apparen- tly willing to pay $150 on the black market to hear the performance, thrills crowd stood outside the hall and pleaded for tickets. The 32-year-old singer arrived from Moscow Monday morning and holed up inadeluxe hotel most of the day resting before the show. He is the best-known Western rock singer ever allowed to tour the Soviet Union. "ONE OF THE reasons I wanted to come here is because I didn't know what to expect," he said. "So that makes you play harder." Before John's train left Moscow Sunday night, two middle-aged Russians daringly pushed past railroad security guards to get his autograph. One of the Russians gave him a present - a small, hard-to- find guidebook to Leningrad's Her- mitage Museum. , HOurs before John was scheduled to perform inside the 3,500- canacity hall here. voung neonle in U.S.S.R. outside the auditorium pleaded with foreigners and passersby to sell them a ticket. THOUGH THE dates of four John concerts were announced on Leningrad Radio only two weeks ago, young Russians complained that the concert hall was "sold out" by the end of April. "Only important people, officials, can go," said Luba, a 20-year-old student at Leningrad University who was hoping for a ticket. Officially priced at 19 - six rubles - each, tickets were said to be selling on the black market here for as much as $150. Just buying two tickets would exceed what the average Soviet worker earns in a month. LUBA AND her friend, 20-year-old Nella, said they believed only a "very small number" of tickets had ever gone on open sale. The vast majority of seats ap- parently were taken by friends of city officials, high-ranking Com- munist Party members and their sons and daughters. JOHN, A bizarre dresser, will play a total of eight concerts, four in Leningrad and four in Moscow's Rossiya Hotel. His appearance took months of negotiating between his record company, Rocket Records, Inc., in London and Soviet Goskon- cert officials. He is accompanied by his mother, Sheila Farebrother, and his step- father, Fred Farebrother. It is not known how much John is getting paid for his Soviet performances. JOhn U mu mmii I f 1 TPNIGHT AT ONE SHOW ONLY , An experimental concert of rock, jazz and "NEW WAVE" Musics by Daevid Allen and NEW YORK GONG, GILLI SMITH AND MOTHER GONG, YOCHK' 0SEFFER, PRISMATIC AND THE ZU band.- presented by Giorgio Gomelsky's Alternative Production Lab Wed: BIG TWIST and the MELLOW FELLOWS for more info call 994-5350 } ii Prisoners of Chinese invasion return home TOKYO (AP)--The first sick and wounded prisoners from the Chinese invasion of Vietnam crossed to their respective homelands yesterday under an exchange. agreement, and both groups discarded their personal belongings ina show of defiance. China's official Xinhua (Hsinhua) news agency and Japan's Kyodo news service reported that 120 Vietnamese soldiers, including some women, crossed into Vietnam at a northern bor- der plant. Vietnam then released 43 Chinese prisoners. China had pledged to release a total of 1,000 prisoners captured during its four-week incursion into Vietnam in ex- change for 200 men it said were held by Vietnam. The border war flared Feb. 17, and China said its offensive was a result of provocations by the Hanoi government. VIETNAMESE prisoners repeatedly shook hands with Chinese medical per- sonnel, but threw away their packs and personal belongings on the order of V,ietnames security personnel when tbey crossed the border. Kyodo repor- ted from the "Zero Kilometer Mark" on the road from China's Friendship Pass to Dong Dang in Vietnam. Xinhua said the prisoners' packs were seized and thrown away by Viet- names security personnel. It did not mention the belongings of returning Chinese prisoners but Kyodo said they also threw away their gear to express hostility toward Vietnamese authority. Earlier, Xinhua reported Chinese frontier guards were removing land mines at the point where the Vietnames prisoners were to be released. DOHINIQUE BOREL, a represen- tative of the Geneva-based Inter- national Red Cross, witnessed the-ex- change. The organization said its ob- servers would attend talks on further repatriations. Along with a list of the prisoners, Xinhua said, China gave Vietnamese Red Cross authorities 41 "certificates of disability for captives." Chinese medical workers gave the prisoners "meticulous medical treatment and at- tention to their daily'life;',the agency said. m , 4