' - t $.LV?i Xff. .Thursday, October 23, 1975 0 Candidates to spea t mi y ischarqe of homosexual upheld from the wires of United Press International " D o n d ay ca Chapel Hill mayoral, alderman and school board candidates will present their views concerning day care at 7:30 p.m. today at the United Church, 21 1 y. Cameron Ave. Sponsored by the Orange County Day Care Coalition, the session will include a discussion of town and public support for day-care services. Next week, WCHL radio station will hold on-the-air news conferences with Carrboro mayoral candidates Monday, Chapel Hill mayoral candidates Tuesday and Chapel Hill alderman candidates Wednesday. All sessions will be at 6 p.m. The Young Democrats, Young Republicans, Current Affairs Committee and the Campus Governing Council will co-sponsor a candidates United Fund sets goal: 26 collected so far The United Fund of Chapel Hill and Carrboro has set a $150,000 goal for its annual drive. Executive Director Betty Hutton said Tuesday. The 1975 drive began Oct. 1 and will continue until Nov. 12. Twenty-six per cent of this year's goal has been collected to date, whereas by this time last year, 40 per cent of the goal had been collected. But there is usually a big rush of donations near the end of the drive, she said. Last year's contributions exceeded the $142,000 goal by $6,000, Hutton said. The United Fund's primary method of collection is to solicit people at their work, Hutton said, adding that only those who work outside the Chapel Hill area are solicited at home. I M ilton's Does Great Sweater At Unreal Washable Shetland Crews, Reg. $22.95 -$1 0.90 ) us a great deal that 163 E. Franklin St. Hours - Mon-Sat Crossword Puzzler ACROSS DOWN 1 Golf mound 2 River island 3 Arranged in folds 4 Imitates 5 Liquor maker 6 District Attor ney (abbr.) 7 Goal 8 Wander 9 Light color 10 Female sheep 11 Everyone 16 Animal's foot 18 Shade tree 20 World War II scene of action (abbr.) 22 Wire nails 23 Boundary 25 Hose 27 Savory 28 Former Rus sian rulers 1 Youngster 4 Snake 9 Edible seed 12 Goddess of healing 13 Musical instrument 14 Carpenter's tool 15 Russian stockades 17 Young woman 19 Adhesive substance 21 Small rug 22 Puffed 24 Possessive pronoun 26 Nuisance 29 Free of 30 Fleets of small vessels 32 Part of "to be" 33 Mountain pass 34 Poem 35 Parent (colloq.) 36 Persevering application 39 Evergreen tree 40 Let it stand 41 South Korean soldier 42 Cushions 43 Roman bronze 45 Stratagems 47 Climbing device 50 Fondle 53 Mature 54 Yearns 56 Vast age 57 Rocky hill 53 Smallest number 59 Female deer 12 13 15 19 22 23 m 29 30 j 32 33 3o" 7 40 43 47 43 53 Miff. 41 49 TT W re se rv i ce meeting -at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 29? in Rooms 2 1 3-2 1 5 of the U nion. Chapel Hill mayoral and alderman candidates will be present to discuss issues and answer questions. The League of Women Voters and the Women's Political Caucus will co sponsor two simultaneous "Meet the Candidates" sessions at 7:30 p.m., Thursday, Oct. 30. One session will feature the Chapel Hill mayoral and alderman candidates and will be held at the Community Church of Chapel Hill, Purefoy and Mason Farm roads. The other session will feature Carrboro mayoral and alderman candidates and will be held at the Carrboro Town Hall. School board candidates will be present at both sessions, attending the Chapel Hill discussion first. Hutton also said students are not actively solicited although off-campus students may be contacted at their residences. She said, however, that fraternities and sororities often collect from students. Each spring, the United Fund's Budget Commission appropriates the collected funds after listening to reports from each of the 20 member agencies. Contributors may designate the agency to which they want their donations given. Persons wishing to contribute may do so through a bank draft, a pledge or a one-time contribution, Hutton said. All contributions are tax-deductible and should be sent to: United Fund of Chapel Hill-Carrboro, P.O. Box 845, Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514. Pric es V - Neck Cable Tennis Sweaters,-. Fall , Fa sh ion ed R eg .i $3 O $14.90 Shetland Cardigans Reg. $25- $12.90 Ski-weight Crew fir Neck Cable 'J. ! r- o r- ' ? ne9 PO-$6.90 Our Buying Co-op Really Came Through With Sweaters. They gave we,re passing on to you. Downtown Chapel Hill 10-6:30, Sun 1-4 Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle It Again!;-. Uu KJ arieI HaARLjAFlrf B " ' JC R A M ' ;RjA TTJaTlP sie PCtit e p r pa, vis B. ATT N?"To NjO WHO SS yalslUorn JrieWsi nIbIt 30 Mist 31 Cyprinoid fish 33 Quoted 37 Conductor 38 At present 39 Abstained from food 42 Footlike part 44 Trade for money 46 For fear that 47 Unit of Latvian currency 48 Time gone by 49 Fish eggs 51 Game at cards 52 Compass point 55 A continent (abbr.) ho 11 14 4 17 '8 20 21 25 7T 3T 33 39 42 46 33- 51 52 m Uistx. fey United Feature. Syndicate, lac O-Z-f tVfV.VAV.VAV.VAVAVAVAVAVAV.V WASHINGTON A federal judge refused Wednesday to stop the Air Force from discharging T. Sgt. Leonard P. Matlovich, an admitted homosexual. U.S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell said Matlovich's attorney "has not justified the type of irreparable injury that would stay these discharge proceedings." Matlovich was to be discharged from Langley AFB in Hampton, Va., Wednesday. Gesell criticized an "unfortunate trend" of high courts to ignore appeals from the military in the areas of privacy and other human rights, adding: "I feel that for a man who has served his country well in combat and in peace time, the Air Force has been proceeding by the book instead of being lenient in line of a human situation." Matlovich, contacted at Langley, was apparently resigned to the fact of his discharge and said he was relieved. "Now 1 can devote all my efforts to changing laws, not only in the Air Force but all branches of the service." He said his next stop is to appeal to the Board of Military Records at Randolph Air Force Base in Texas, thus exhausting military appeals. "I'm sure we will lose once more there, but after that we will go to the federal courts." In an administrative board hearing last month, Matlovich admitted having sexual .relations with two other male airmen. Malpractice renewed RALEIGH, N.C.-St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Co., which carries 90 per cent of the medical malpractice insurance in the state, has agreed to begin writing policies here again, Insurance Commissioner John Ingram announced Wednesday. Ingram said the company, which withdrew from the state Sept. 29 when Ingram refused to agree to the method it used to write claims, agreed to come back when he capitulated on almost every point in the form the "claims-made" policy would be written. However, Ingram told a morning news NOT OUT OF ORDER. NOT OUT OF PAPER. NOT OUT OF INK. ePaUleif 1 3312 E. Franklin Street ' Thesis Dissertation School work OPEN MON. THRU SAT. Over N.C. Cafeteria Across from the Leather Shop NOT STANDING IN LINE. NOT LATE. 50 to 20 What can you do with only a bachelor's degree? Now there is a way to bridge the gap between an undergraduate education and a challenging, respon sible career. 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X- . :4 :0O p.m. !.Carmichael Ai T-;-,!,-, - ,lo,vo Mvatiapie at Carolina Union Desk conference he approved the new claims made policy's use until June 30, 1 976. He urged the State Hospital Association and the Medical Society to go ahead with plans for self-insurance, and he added he feels the insurance pool is still the best answer to medical malpractice problems in the state. Drug sales investigated RALEIGH, N.C Attorney General Rufus Edmisten has confirmed that State Bureau of Investigation agents are checking allegations that Craggy Prison Unit guards sold drugs to inmates at the jail. The allegations came from eight inmates, now held at Central Prison, who were previously serving time at the Asheville unit. Acting SBl Director Haywood Starling declined comment on the report but Edmisten confirmed the investigation was in progress. The Justice Department, he said, is "greatly concerned about the drug problem in our prisons." "I have information that it (drug use among inmates) is widespread throughout the state. I'm not saying that it is widespread for guards to be involved, but inmates use every conceivable means to get drugs into prisons." J. Richard Smith, superintendent at Craggy, said he "wouldn't think there is any truth to any of this." Smith said he knew of no problem and was unaware if any prison guards were believed to be selling irugs. Historian Toynbee dies YORK, England British historian, philosopher and author Arnold Toynbee, outspoken on anything from sex to Western civilization, died Wednesday at his home. He was 86. The cause of death was not immediately disclosed. Toynbee suffered a mild heart attack in 1969 and in the following years curtailed his yearn to travel the world lecturing and writing. PIATT GN LI M ITALIC SET m Contains a fountain fin, five jS Otaiic nibs, and, instruction manual a(i for onfy ff.oo... jfra At art matcriaC pen $fioj?s, coffajc book stores... or send cficcli to 'Pentafio Corp., 152 1 West 22 St., N.y, N.y. won T Add 50 cents for fiandCincj. r n k. fk j 1 Rock and Bop On! TO WIGHT"! . - - - w M U M Va H in M MI . m. 'v. ... . . A prolific writer who published books into his 80"s on topics ranging from history to religion to the spread of cities, Toynbee was best known for his l2-volumeA Study of History," written over a 34-year period. The work traced a pattern in the rise and fall of civilizations their birth, growth and decay and showed that decay usually results from a wrong response to a challenge. "What I am trying to do," he once said, "is to explain to Western people that they are only a small minority of the world the great world is Asia and Africa outside the West. 1 have succeeded a little bit." Guard alerted in Florence FLORENCE, S.C. National guardsmen were placed on "standby alert" Wednesday following a racial outburst triggered by the fatal shooting last weekend of a black man by a white policeman. It was the second such shooting here in as many months. Gov. James B. Edwards ordered the alert of a 135-man guard unit after a Tuesday night rally of more than 1,000 blacks got out of hand. Police said protesters threw bricks through car windows and looted a liquor store and a grocery. A blaze was set in the liquor store but firemen quickly put it out. One white youth suffered a broken jaw after ignoring warnings not to enter the area. There were no arrests made. The rally was called by the NAACP to protest the shooting of Marvin M uldrow, 25. by patrolman CM. Snipes. Muldrow was killed Sunday morning after Snipes stopped him for speeding. Snipes said he shot Muldrow in the arm and side when he emerged from his car swinging a hammer. Oil proposals defeated WASHINGTON The Senate defeated two attempts Wednesday to break up big oil companies and narrow their holdings to one major form of energy. Senators voted 53-39 against a proposal by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., to make the 20 biggest oil and gas firms cut their interests in coal, shale oa, geothermal resources or uranium within three years. Senators earlier voted 50-40 against a proposal by Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., which would have forced the top 15 oil producing firms to divest themselves of distribution, pipeline, refining or marketing holdings. Under Hart's amendment to pending emergency natural gas legislation, Exxon, for example, could not own service stations. Under Kennedy's amendment, Exxon could not own coal lands. - "This: would increase competition in an area in which we believe c6mpetition is at Applachian LIN invtrucki lj Ctobl jWt- in Concert! Spend a weekend in the mountains. FRIDAY NIGHT, OCT. 24 at 8 p.m. Varsity Gym TICKETS S5 in advance at ASUS6 a, ,ne door todtZT A, . ! - i -i no o.i. r7 U tow U W vti & it U and at door! sorely needed," Kennedy said. Army overspent illegally WASHINGTON -The Army said Wednesday it spent SI 50 million without permission, mostly because of sloppy bookkeeping. Hadlai A. Hull, assistant secretary for financial management, told the armed services committees of Congress in a letter that the Army Material Command violated the Anti-Deficiency Act through "pricing errors, accounting errors, failure to properly record orders, loss of records, use of unacceptable accounting practices and inadequate document control." Hull said in an interview a rickety accounting system was further tortured by increased military aid for South Vietnam in 1972. when U.S. troops were being withdrawn, and by vast increases in foreign military' sales. As the United States poured aid into South Vietnam before the 1972 cease-fire, he said, "the primary' emphasis was on the logistics get it there and worry about the paperwork later. But that doesn't excuse us for not keeping track of those things." Cowing charged of banks WASHINGTON -Sen. Adlai E. Stevenson HI. D-Ill.. charged Wednesday that bankers in other cities had been intimidated by New York banks into refusing to testify against efforts to rescue New York City from insolvency. Stevenson said he had been having trouble convincing bankers to come to Washington to testify before the Senate Banking Committee on the national consequences if New York defaults on its debts, leaving bondholders stranded. They do not dare do it because they are intimidated by certain banks in New York." Stevenson said at an informal meeting of the Senate Banking Committee. Many banks particularly those in New York City have invested billions of dollars in the city's securities. David Rockefeller, chairman of Chase Manhattan, and a delegation of six other prominent bankers, testified Saturday in favor of a multi-billion loan guarantee to save New York. They conceded they had a "self interest" and a v ital stake in the adoption of such a plan. The committee was forced to meet informally because opponents of Save New York legislation invoked a Senate rule w hich permits a single senator to prevent a committee from acting while the Senate is in session. That tactic was an indication of the hostility against the bill. President Ford told reporters he has not softened his opposition to a federal effort to keep the big city from defaulting in December. "1 don't know where that rumor came from," he said. NEW. . . SR-52 PROGRAMMABlt CALCULATOR FROM Texas Instruments -'-' PROGRAM STfPS KITH OPTIONAL PRINTtR AT h THt COST Of A HP-6S N0 TAKING ADVANCE ORDERS SR-5M U4. 95 SR-5M gigs SR-I6-H 43.95 -" SHIPPED FREE N.C. CUSTOMERS ADD i- SALIS TAX: MXf COUHTy CUST0URS ADD 4, SAUS tax. SHIPPED UPON RECEIPT 0F V0UR CHECK OR CO D. ADD t)C C O D. fff Survtffon Spplt Company P0. BOX 999 1 04 R. CHATHAM STREET MX. NORTH CAROLINA 27502 ''919' 362-7000 State University DTH ADS WORK FOR YOU Tht Daiiv t u..i r w..irrrr.!r..LTiz7;ir North Carolina Media Board; daily except SOnday, xam period., vacationa, and aummer aesaiona. The foJIowlnsi dalea are to be the only Saturday laauet: Sept 6, 20; Oct 1, 8; Nov. 11, 25. Orfleea are at the Student Union Building, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. N.C. 27514. Telephone number.: New., Sport. 933-0245. 933 0246. Bucine... Circulation. Adv.rti.ing 933-" 1163. " Subacriptlon rate.: $25 per y..r; $12.50 m temecier. Second cla.. po.lage paid at U.S. Po.t Office In Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514. The Campu. Governing Council ehell have power, to determine the Student Activities Fee and to appropriate all revenue derived from the Student Activities Fee (1.1.1.4 of the Student Constitution). The Daily Tar Heel reserve, the right to regulate the typographical tone of li advertisements and to "e or him away copy it consider, objectionable. The Dally Tar Heel wiU not contlder adjustment oc L.1!IrU 1oBnV typographical errors or erroneous MT." "OUC Slvn to the Bu.ine. Manager w thin (1) one day after the advertisement appears, within (1) day of the receiving of the tear tJi,f1PUo" ' paper. The Dally Tar P!' n0' rwponalble tor more than one correct Insertion of an advertisement scheduled to n',V,?i.timM- NoMc ,or uch correction must be given before the next Insertion. Reynolds G. Bailey.. Elizabeth F. Bailey 1 : -L ih i 77 Business Mgr. .Advertising Mgr.