Weedneseday, July 26, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine > GOP seeks youth, women's aid WASHINGTON U') -- Republi- cans are hoping to increase the participation of women and youth in the upcoming election by in- eluding mere women delegates to the convention and by regis- tering more 18- to 24-year olds to vote in November. President Nixon's campaign strategists figure most of the anti-Nixon youths have register- ed already, so the GOP is going to go after the rest of the new potential voters to even the bal- ance. "We need mfor e of themi regis- teed, campaign manager Clark MacGregor said in a news con- ference Tuesday, "and we're go- mg to get them registered." MacGregor said the Commit- tee for the Re-election of t h e President already has youth or- anizations set ip in 35 states > with 125,000 young volunteers < orking to recruit young Nixon voters. He said all 50 states will be organized shortly. Pointing to a recent Gallup Poll, MacGregor said most of the remaining unregistered 18- to 24- AP Photo year-olds favor Nioxn over the Democratic nominee George McGovern. orleave a What MacGregor didn't men- y sterday tion was that the poll also found that unregistered young people favor McGovern by an even greater margin. The GOP, on the other hand, either soft-pedaled or has con- centrated its efforts in ar e as ' ~ where it believed young pen- p'etould tend to vote Repib- lican once registered. Bat Gallup's survey. w h i ch McGregor said,. "mirrors our own findings," seems to indi- cate that the potentially Deno- .uded the cratic young people were also is to hold the more activistic and have re- gistered, while the young silent majority hasn't. Concerning women's participa- tion in the upcoming national convention, the Republicans ex- pect to increase the number of women delegates. However, fe- male representation is expected to fall far short of the 50-50 sex ratio sought by many women. "If present trends continue, there is a chance that we will almost double women's partici- pation over the 1968 convention, which was 16 per cent," said Mrs. Anne Armstrong, co-chairman of the Republican National Commit- tee. The party has suggested in vol- untary guidelines that each state delegation have an equal num- ber of men and women, b u t official slates from 37 states and the District of Columbia h a v e disclosed that only 275 women have been certified. The big states of California, Florida, New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, have not yet been certified and are expected to boost the total number of wo- men, A r m s t r o n g said. All delegates have to be certified by Aug. 1. Mrs. Armstrong said she ex- pects women to have an effec- tive voice in the convention and TV & Stereo Rentals $10.00 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY, PICK UP AND SERVICE CALL; NEJAC TV RENTALS ' 662-5671 Booting out Eernidette An angry trade unionist, right with arm raised, asks B( Devlin, member of parliament for mid-Ulster at left, t demonstration outside Pentonville prison in London while police look on. ARGENTINA CONFERENCE: Leftist atists me to discuss stateg among the key events of the three-day convention w i 1 be a "Republican Women's Political Caucus" to discuss issues of con- cern to women such as abortion. The Republicans also will vote on new rules and guidelines for their 1976 convention that sug- gest each state be encouraged to have equal representation of men and women. The rules now call for one man and one woman from each state on its four ma- jor committees. If a state doesn't have enough women, it loses re- presentation. ' t 00 $1.50 FRI. and SAT. SIRE Recording Artist ROSAUIE SORRELS By ALFRED S. HOPKINS Currently on his second tour of Latin America, Mr. Hop- kins is a regular Dispatch correspondent from Chile. In this story, he reports from Argentina, which he recently visited. BUENOS AIRES -- (DNSI- A group of revolutionary ar- tists from every area of Argen- tina met here recently in an "underground" conference to exchange ideas and strategy for a cultural battle against "imperialist culture" and the military regime of President Alejandro Lanusse. The four-day meeting of ar- tists, musicians, poets, actors, and motion picture producers included numerous works criti- cizing U.S. policies in Argen- tina, the torture of political prisoners, militarism, poverty, social injustice, and Lanusse's "Great National Agreement". The latter refers to the mili- tary regime's hope to hold elec- tions in 1973. As the first conference of Argentina's Leftist artists, the event was described as the initial step in a long-term struggle to place artists on the side of workers and all those supporting the overthrow of the present system. The artists conl conference with plan another one later this year, af- ter extended debate on a "Dec- laration of the First Confer- ence of Revolutionary Artists." Key points in the statement in- cluded the following: -'-"Our experience struggltng alongside the people shows us that the material of artistic works serving the revolution comes from the confrontation against the system's culture. and from the working class and people' struggles. -We want to transform the present relation between artist and public in order to promote the active participation of the popular classes in artistic pro- duction. We want a new art, of the people, which synthesizes the experience of struggle, di- recting it towards the masses swith their criticism. 'We are opposed to art which in the name of popular t' is not critical of wrong ideas ... --"Art for us is collective cre- ation. It is born by life itself and is a work of constant syn- thesis and criticism .. -"We understand art to be a form of political expression, of the class struggle TOMORROWS SHOCKER TO END, THEM ALL Are we headedt O 80 ultra-violent society where sex and terror pangs rule the streets, and whea law-and-order becomes th0 most important political issue? Stanley Kuhrick's amazing film "A Clockwork Orange" which rocked the world, and was voted best film of the year by the NewYork ilm Criti s, deals with this question, At Stat so d Lib t.p A be NOW N SHOWS AT 30- 4:00 - 6:30 Prga nformation 662-6264 Box office opens1 :15 p m ° ? ' s ,. Ace. by Hoyle Osborme ".. . the best damn cowgii singer I ever heard--- -Mich. Daily ... more exciting thcn the Mexican Road Races ...' Utah Phillips 3' ., caisfacton BefSad ih $1.0 30:r 3C'', ' Wa g sh tw across fromlee O/dsmi / . r ;- r , h. FFE 3 k V