Th Dairy Tar Heel
To finance election campaigns
.Uemoerats win key vote on bill.
Friday, November 19. 1971
5
V37 (MOD
WASHINGTON -Liberal and Southern
Democrats set aside their differences
Thursday and defeated Republican
attempts to kill their plan to finance
Presidential election campaigns with
money volunteered by taxpayers.
With their party's success in financing
the effort to deny President Nixon a
second term riding on the outcome, all
the Democratic presidential hopefuls in
the Senate were on hand for the vote on
fiOP amendments that would have
. jttled the measure.
The Democrats said the initial test
.ote showed they had the strength to pass
he legislation-and attach it to a bill
Nixon could not veto without
jopardizing his economic program which
may be vital to his own re-election hopes.
Georse
M
ixon stacked' Pay Board
MIAMI BEACH -AFL-CIO President
f.eorge Meany charged Thursday that
President Nixon had "stacked" the Pay
Board in favor of management and said it
..as interesting to note the President's
new affinity" for totalitarian regimes.
The 77-year-old labor leader coupled
his broadside with the announcement
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Offer Good Today Thurs. Nov. 23, 1971
Please bring this ad and your I.D. Card.
Also register for $100 worth of
gift
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At issue was a plan to allow taxpayers
to check a box on their 1971 tax returns
and earmark $1 of their taxes, or S2 for a
joint return, to a fund which would
provide S20.4 million for each of the two
major party presidential candidates and
S6.3 million for George Wallace if he
runs.
Presidential candidates could choose
not to take the public funds and finance
their campaigns from private
contributions, the traditional method.
But if a candidate took public money,
he could not spend more than the S20.4
million. This would put President Nixon
in a bind.
If he signed the bill, he would be
guaranteeing the hard pressed Democrats,
still S9.3 million in debt from 1968, a
eany charges
that Nixon will address the labor
convention Friday. Indications were that
the chief executive would try to patch up
his differences with the giant labor
federation.
Meany said the President had chosen
public members for the Pay Board, who
were not neutral, but leaned instead
MON-WED 8-12
THURS SAT 81
SUNDAY 10-10
ON FRANKLIN ST.
Beside the
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SPECIAL CORNER
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jJoRTHGATE SHOPPING CENTER
IN DURHAM
certificates
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ONE INCH IS 25 CENTIMETERS..
ONE FOOT IS 0.304S METERS ANP
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fund with which to run against him.
If he chose to rely on private funds,
the Democrats would charge him with
"buying the election." They said he
already has budgeted $40 million for his
1972 campaign.
Nixon spent S29.5 million in 1968.
Hubert H. Humphrey, his Democrat
opponent, spent SI 2.6 million.
Angry but outnumbered Republicans
called the plan a "fraud" and "a raid on
Treasury."
"This smells!" shouted Sen. Lowell P.
Weicker (R-Conn.) pointing a finger at
the Democrats. "You're trying to legislate
yourself back into office."
Senate Democratic leader Mike
Mansfield, also speaking in a shout,
replied that "a rare bird indeed" is the
toward management. "It adds up to a
stacked deck. It adds up to playing with
loaded dice," he declared.
The labor leader said he feared even
"more stringent and repressive controls"
on the workers if the present Phase II of
the administration's economic program
fails.
"It is ironic and interesting to note the
new affinity of Mr. Nixon for totalitarian
regimes-from Peking to Moscow to
Athens," Meany said. "The authoritarian
mind in government trusts neither the
people nor the free and voluntary
institutions of the people. Its impulse is
to control, to direct and to dictate."
Meany said semi-retired Federal Judge
George H. Boldt, the chairman of the Pay
Board and one of the five public
members, "doesn't know a damn thing
about labor and management."
He said that before Nixon selected
Boldt, Secretary of Labor James D.
Hodgson, whom he also criticized, had
told the labor leader that Boldt was
"totally and completely unfit for the
job."
Later, however, Hodgson said Boldt
was selected for the post because "we
couldn't get anyone else," Meany said.
The AFL-CIO leader said another
public member, Arnold Weber, hardly
could be neutral since he came directly
from the post of executive director of
Nixon's Cost of Living Council. Meany
said Weber rather than Boldt was really
calling the shots on the Pay Board.
He said another supposed neutral
member is William Caples, president of
Kenyon College. But Meany noted that
Caples' "whole life was spent in
management" at Inland Steel before he
took the college post two years ago.
The Daily Tar Heel is published by the
University of North Carolina Student
Publications Board, daily except Sunday,
examination periods, vacations ana
summer periods.
Offices are at the Student Union
building, Univ. of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514. Telephone
numbers: News. Sports 933-1011;
933-1012; Business, Circulation,
Advertising 933-1163.
Subscription rates:
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$10.00 per year;
Second class postage paid at U.S.
Office in Chapel Hill, N.C.
Post
The Student Legislature shall have
powers 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 budgetary
appropriation for the 1970-71 academic
year is $28,292.50 for undergraduates
and $4,647.50 for graduates as the
subscription rate for the student body
($1.84 per student based on fall semester
enrollment figures).
The Daily Tar Heel reserves the right to
regulate the typographical tone of all
advertisements and to revise or turn
away copy it considers objectionable.
The Daily Tar Heel will not consider
adjustments or payments for any
advertisement involving major
typographical errors or erroneous
insertion unless notice is given to the
Business Manager within (1) one day
after the advertisement appears, or
within one day of the receiving of tear
sheets, of subscription of the paper. The
Daily Tar Heel will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect insertion of
an advertisement scheduled to run
several times. Notices for such correction
must be given before the next insertion.
I'll never measure anything
a6ain as l0n6 as i uye i
UX'LIKE
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his f-xc
elected official who is net influenced by
the people who give him big sums of
money.
If the Senate voted approval, the plan
would not have to pass the House to
become law because it is an amendment
to the House passed tax bill.
From the Senate the tax measure goes
to a House-Senate Conference
Committee, which would have to
reconcile the differences between the
Senate and the House versions of the tax
bill.
The committee will be dominated by
Chairman Wilbur D. Mills (D-Ark.) of the
House Ways and Means Committee.
Mills is not only a lor.g standing
supporter of government financed
election campaigns. He is also a
Democratic presidential hopeful for
1972.
The first crucial Senate vote came on
an amendment by Sen. Charles McC.
Mathias (R-Md.) to delete the heart of the
proposal-the SI tax checkoff. He was
defeated, 49-46.
In a rare display of party unity, 49
Democrats and no Republicans voted no.
Forty-three Republicans and only three
Democrats-Harry F. Byrd Jr. (Va.), Sam
J. Ervin (N.C.) and John L. McClellan
(Ark.)-voted yes.
Even such conservative Southerners as
Mississippians James O. Eastland and
John C. Stennis, both Democrats, voted
with their party.
The split was even more dramatic on
the second vote-on an amendment by
Sen. Howard H. Baker (R-Tenn.) to
increase a taxpayer's taxes by SI if he
checked the box on his tax form.
Baker was defeated 56-53. No
Democrats voted for his amendments,
only three Republicans deserted party
lines to vote against it.
Chinese
will give
U.N. party
UNITED NATIONS-Communist
China plans to give its first diplomatic
party here next Tuesday, it was learned
Thursday.
Informants said the delegates' dining
room, scene of most cocktail parties here,
had been reserved by the Chinese
delegation for Tuesday evening.
Howtver, :.t was understood that the
delegation asked that preparations be
made for only 150 guests. The customary
diplomatic reception here accommodates
300 to 600 guests.
It was believed the Chinese
Communist U.N. social debut would be
to honor the delegations that engineered
the Oct. 25 General Assembly vote giving
the Peking government China's U.N. seat
and expelling the Chinese nationalists.
We ain't
heavy.
But we are upstairs,
over the HUB. So
when you see the red
awning, step up the red,
white and blue stairs.
Up to the AREA'S TOPS
'N BOTTOMS CENTER FOR
HIM 'N HER. Step up
to lower prices and really
great looking clothes.
103 E. FRANKLIN ST., C.H.
China detonates
nnclear bomb
WASHINGTON -The Atomic Energy
Commission (AEC) announced Thursday
that Red China had set off another
nuclear explosion, the first this year but
the 12th since 104. at its Lop Nor
proving ground in Smkiang province.
The explosion was triggered at 1 1 a.m.
EST. Its energy yield was about that of
20.000 tons of TNT. considerably smaller
than some previous ones.
It was set off in the atmosphere. which
means that its radioactive debris
eventually will drill over Japan, the
Pacific and North America.
The AEC declined to speculate about
the purpose of the shot. But it appeared
possible that the Chinese were
Senate committee votes
to give workers back pay
WASHINGTON -The Senate Banking
Committee voted Thursday to give
workers back pay for wage increases lost
during the 90-day freeze unless President
Nixon decides they are "unreasonably
inconsistent" with his long term
economic goals.
The committee took the action in
voting to extend the President's authority
to impose economic controls for one year
beyond the scheduled April 30, 1972
expiration date. It then sent a bill
containing these and other economic
stabilization provisions to the Senate
floor.
Chairman John Sparkman (D-Ala.)
said he expected debate would begin
Monday on the bill, designed to tailor the
shape and size of the President's
authority to curb inflation.
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DTH
1969 TR-6 for sale. Excellent condition. British
racing green, overdrive, & wire wheels. $2,200.
Call 929-7441.
OVERSEAS JOBS FOR STUDENTS Australia.
Europe, S. America, Africa, etc. All professions
and occupations, $700 to $3,000 monthly.
Expenses paid, overtime, sightseeing. Free
information Write, Jobs Overseas, Dept. A9.
Box 15071, San Diego, CA. 92115.
Round Trip Ride Needed for 2 to FAIRFAX,
Va. (D.C. area) over Thanksgiving holiday.
Prefer to leave after 2 p.m. Wed., but can leave
earlier, return Sunday. 933-8131.
FOR SALE: STEREO ALBUMS and 8-track
TAPES. Price: $.50 $2.50. Where: 105B
North St., across from new NCNB Drive In
Bank. When: Tuesday Nov. 16 Sunday, Nov.
20. 37 p.m. Beatles, Stones, Airplane,
Quicksilver, Dylan, Hendrix, etc. over 400
recent albums.
UNITED FREIGHT SALES: STEREOS (3)
three brand new stereo component systems,
Garrard turntable, AM-FMFM Stereo radio,
powerful solid state amplifier, four speaker
audio system, jacks for extra speakers, tape
input and output, and dust cover. To be sold
for $119.95 each. They may be inspected at
United Freight Sales, 1005 East Whittaker Mill
Rd., Raleigh.
Canon VT rangefinder body, with Canon
135mm f3.5, Canon 35mm F2 and Komura
28mm f3.5 lenses in LeicaCanon screw mount.
All absolutely mint. A professional quality
outfit at a modest price. $170. Call 929-7441.
FOR SALE: 1964 Chevrolet Supersport
convertible. Good condition, new top, snow
tires, call Trey, 942-5362, anytime.
'69 VW Sedan Low mileage, extra clean. '6 7
Pontiac Exec. Station Wagon, Air, Full power.
919-362-6974.
BEAUTIFUL KITTENS FREE! Call
966-4091 (Ask for Rusty) or 929-6903.
WANTED: Ride to V.P.I, or Roanoke, Va. area.
Will share expenses. Call 933-1468.
20' Fiberglass Pacific Catamaran, North main,
jib, genoa, trapeae. Long trailer in excellent
condition. Very fast for experienced sailors
only! $1475. Call 933-7143.
FOR SALE: 1962 Rambler, good condition.
$125. Great buy for the price. Call Durham:
544-2717.
EXPERT TYPIST - (1971 IBM Seiectnc)
Wants to type theses, term papers, and
dissertations. Call 929-6612.
ANTIQUES AND COLLECTABLES.
Auction to be held Saturday, Nov. 20, 7:30
p.m. at the Auction House next to Allen and
Sons Barbeque, Bynum, N.C. 11 miles south of
Chapel Hill on 15-501. Among items are: oak
ice boxes, round oak table, oak bedroom set,
Victorian walnut and oak furniture, glass china.
Coca-cola and country store items, old glasses,
pocketbooks and many other items to
numerous to mention. Sale conducted by
Ramble Auction Company, Liberty. N.C.
919-622-2408.
STEREO TURNTABLE - Wart to sell a PE
model 2035 turntable. Used. Excellent
condition. Very good buy. Call 968-9062 or
968-9305.
FOR SALE: Seven $6 tickets to the Who
concert in Charlotte, Nov. 20. Please call
933-6015.
ROOMMATE NEEDED by two grad students
starting second semester. Furnished. 2
bedrooms. $55 per mo. Call 929-4057.
'68 VW with Sunroof,
condition. $1195. Call
967-1502.
AM-FM radio, great
Vern. 929-4057, or
NIKON FTN 11.4 wcase Just $325.50.
Cameras and lenses mail order from Hong
Kong, write Richard McCleery. P.O. Box 661.
Pittsburgh. Pa. 15230.
DATING SERVICE! Meet more members of
the opposite sex in Chapel Hill. For details,
write Box 77346. Dept. C, Atlanta, Ga. 30309.
SCUBA TANK and regulator for sale. $110.
Contact Steve at 933-3193.
experimenting with a compact warhead
for military planes or the ballistic missiles
they are developing.
Four of the 12 Chinese tests have been
around three megatons (three million
tons) of TNT in power. They were H
bombs.
Neither China nor France is a party to
the limited test ban treaty which
prohibits fallout producing tests m the
atmosphere. Red China has staged only
one underground experiment. That was
on Sept. 22. 1969. It was equivalent to
20.000 to 200.000 tons of TNT.
The last previous Chinese test was an
atmospheric shot on Oct. 14, 19'0.
The provision requiring retroactive pay
raises was adopted on a 14-0 vote after
Republican forces succeeded in
cushioning the language to give the
President the ultimate say on the size of
wage hikes.
The decision was similar to that several
days ago by the House Banking
Committee, which said back pay increases
should be allowed unless they were
"grossly disproportionate" to other wage
increases.
The Senate committee acted as
representatives of soft coal management
and labor appealed to the Pay Board to
permit a new contract to take effect even
though it calls for wage and benefit
increases of nearly 40 per cent over the
next three years.
SSBYiBOS
TO SELL: wanting to sell 2 $6 seats to JESUS
CHRIST SUPERSTAR, appearing in
Winston-Salem tonight. Will regretfully sell for
only $3.00 each. Call 933-8358 between 9 and 5
TODAY.
LU TODAY IS OUR DAY. B.
Female graduate student needs housing as of
January 1. Will share apartment or house or will
take over lease on unfurnished apartment or
duplex. Refer to Gary at 968-1783.
SUMMER PROGRAM, UNEFEX,
UNIVERSITY EXPERIMENTS IN FOREIGN
EXPLORATION invites students to consider
our student expedition In North Africa for the
summer of 1972. Write P.O. Box 898. Chapel
Hill.
BARGAINS! Rec 1
Furniture. Reupholst
(from $49.50). and ch
sterilized mattresses f
$6.50. TV's from $2
cases, desks, chests
ditioned and New
d sofa-beds, couches
s (from $14.50). Used
-n $5.95. Beds from
.50. Unfinished book
Delivery arranged.
GOODWILL STORE. 1121 W. Mam. Durham
across from Duke campus. 942-3141 toll free.
Daily 96; 99 Friday.
High Pay for creative person to babysit. 2
children, Monday thru Thurs. 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Own transportation, ideal for students' wife.
Call 942-8197.
GRETSCH Corvette Electric Guitar, 2 pick-up.
New. Will sell or TRADE for classical. Call
David. 425 Ehringhaus. 933-3185.
WANTED: Exp. capable drummer for soft-rock
group. Call 544-3858 in Durham after 6 p.m.
FOR SALE: Craft, rummage, baked goods.
American flags. Sat. Nov. 20, 94 Fellowship
Hall. Univ. Methodist Church.
WANTED: ride from Chapel Hill to Ourham
(Duke) at about 1 p.m. weekdays. Will pay gas.
Phone 489-5375 (Durham) after 10:30 p.m.
FOR SALE: 1969 Honda 65. 4100 miles. Call
489-5375 (Durham) after 10:30 p.m. New
Helmet included.
GHOSTWRITING finished copy. $2.50 per
page. 489-1356.
JOHN HAPPY
LOVE. KIM.
BIRTHDAY - FAR OUT -
WANTED: Riders to ALEXANDRIA. Va. for
Thanksgiving vacation. Leaving 1 p.m.
Wednesday; returning Sunday afternoon. Call
Ken Ripley. 933-1011 or 933-2635.
1971 HONDA 100SL 2300 miles, green
excellent condition. Helmet included. $375.
Call 968-0542 or 942-4824.
1965 Renault, good local transportation.
34.000 miles, extra tires, radio. Dependable.
Best offer. Call anytime 942-7553.
CUTE CLOTHES FOR SALE: CHEAP.
Complete wardrobe, nearly new. Owner gamed
weight. Sizes 10. 12, 14. 736 E. Franklin.
Saturday. Nov. 20, 95.
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED: To share
two bedroom apartment with Carolina Student.
$50mo. plus ? utilities. Located three blocks
from Duke East Campus. Call Dorene
942-4736.
SPINET PIANO BARGAIN: Wanted:
Responsible party to take over spinet piano.
Can be seen locally. Write Credit Manager, P.O.
Box 241, McClellanville, South Carolina.
29458.
AUTHENTIC AFRICAN MATERIAL - Exotic
Earrings and Masks. African Shop, upstairs over
CCB & Zoom Zoom 105 n. Columbia Street,
open Toes., Thurs., Sat., until 6 p.m.
RIDERS NEEDED to NEW YORK CITY
leaving Nov. 24, noon. Share expenses.
967-6084.
ROOMS available now for two women in South
and three women students in East. Contact
Granville Towers Business Office. 929-7143.
ROOMMATE WANTED to share Royal Park
Apartment spring semester. 929-1686.
Need someone immediately to take over private
room in fully furnished house shared by three
other students. 8 miles from campus. Can
544-1998 (Durham).
IP7!