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Page 31 text:
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Donald P. Bunka campaigning in Bessie Hall. Although londahl was a very pop- ular, liberal legislator, Bunka gave him a good fight. With President Ford defeated, the Republican , party in the county, state and nation is at its L ' lowest point. The party is going to have to attract new blood and make party reforms in order to survive. We have a new style of student on cam- pus and in the East Lansing area. Will a reformed Republican party attract their attention? Will politics be their bag? lames Vihtelic State Rep. H. Lynn jondahl at a Fisheries and Wildlife Open House. lohn Dykstra
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Page 30 text:
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Nobel Prize winner Dr. Milton Friedman appears on campus in support of Proposal C. despite massive opposition by the beverage indus- try. Throwaway beverage cans and bottles will be banned in November, 1978 tsee related story on page 341 Other proposals would have lowered the minimum age for running for the legislature from 21 to 18, set a limit on state spending and set a graduated income tax. They all failed by wide margins. Proponents of Proposal C, which advocated an 8.3 per cent limit on state spending, received a shot in the arm when Dr. Milton Friedman ap- peared on campus to support the measure. The announcement of his Nobel Prize in economics came the same day, but despite the added public- ity the proposal was defeated. On the local scene, the voters of the Sixth Dis- trict sent Congressman Bob Carr back to Wash- ington, D.C., when he whipped Republican chalh lenger Clifford W. Taylor by 16,200 votes. In 1974 Ca,rt won by 647 votes isee related story on page 28 . The residents of East Lansing defeated a second attempt to pass a city-wide rent control. The mea- sure failed by 1,800 votes. Campus voters and East Lansing residents also Mike Bissett united to send Democrat H. Lynn Jondahl back to the capital in Lansing as 59th District State Repre- sentative. Jondahl defeated Republican Donald P. Bunka, an Okemos businessman, by 6,200 votes. Although Jondahl was a very popular, liberal leg- islator, Bunka gave him a good fight. Bunka Stickers were seen all over East Lansing. There were also some dramatic changes in the Ingham County public offices. For the first time in county history a Democrat, Lingg Brewer, won the county clerk's race. Brewer defeated Republi- can John Whitmyer by capturing 54 per cent of the vote. And for the first time in 40 years the Republican party lost control of the Ingham County Prosecutor's office. Lansing City Attorney Peter Houk defeated R. David Wilson for the post vacated by Raymond Scodeller. Houk captured 53 per cent of the vote over Wilson, who was the chief assistant prosecutor and Scodeller's hand- picked successor for the post. Ingham County also saw a dramatic change in its governing body, the Board of Commissioners. In 1970, 19 of the 21 commission seats were con- trolled by Republicans. In the 1976 general elec- tion, 17 of the 21 seats went to Democrats.
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Page 32 text:
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28 Carr, Taylor clash again Two strikes and you're out? by Paul F. Charette In 1974 M. Robert Carr and Clifford W. Taylor locked horns for the first time in pursuit of the Sixth District seat in Congress. Carr won by the narrowest of margins, a slim 647 votes. This mar- gin was less than two votes per precinct in the district which includes parts of Ingham, Clinton, Jackson and Livingston Counties and all of the MSU community. In 1976 they clashed again. This time Carr had the edge as an incumbent, but the race still ap- peared to be very close. When the election results were in on election night, Carr had thrashed Tay- lor by 16,200 votes. Two factors led to the Carr victory. Carr did an outstanding job in his first congressional term and was a leader in the freshman delegation. He was known for his attacks on the seniority system of Congress. He asked two ineffective leaders, Speaker of the House Carl Albert and Armed Ser- vices Committee Chairman Edward Hebert, to re- linquish their positions of power. Carr also lived up to the promise that he would spend as much time as possible in his district. Taylor also ran into problems with his cam- paign which was based on attacking the Carr re- cord in Congress. Carr accused Taylor of distor- tion and the remainder of the campaign revolved around Charges and counter-charges. Eventually the two candidates went before a 24- hour arbitration board of the Federal Elections Commission. The arbitrators threw out the com- plaints of both candidates, but Taylor could not shake his image as a distorter. While Taylor con- tinued to fight distortion charges in the last week of the campaign, Carr focused on a positive cam- paign based on the success of his first two years. Both candidates spent hours campaigning on campus: shaking hands; lecturing and eating in dormitory cafeterias. When election day arrived, Carr Carried between 70 and 80 per cent of the vote in every student precinct. It appeared that Carr was at the beginning of a dynasty in Congress. Taylor, on the other hand, had thrown in the towel. Carr and Taylor face off a second time. Ira Strickstein Ira Strickslein
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