Tfca Dally Tar Ht I Friday, Octsbtr 11. 1S74 H ..-.-.. v.-.-,-.-j FM G by Art EhtntlziX end John 7oestand!sk Staff Vrlferi PIRG is going to get another chance. For the third time in three years, the Campus Governing Council (CGC) has authorized a campus-wide referendum to determine whether to establish a Public Interest Research Group (PIRG) chapter on campus. Helms gets by John VVosstsncSlck Staff Writer A recent study of the U.S. Senate has shown that Sen. Jesse Helms(R-N.C) is one of four U.S. Senators whose voting records have .been most detrimental to the environment. The study, conducted by the League of Conservation Voters in cooperation with the Environmental Policy Center in Washington, rated Helms as three on a scale of 100. Using a cross-section of environmental bills voted on in the 1973-74 Senate session, the league rated Senators according to the percentage of votes cast that were considered beneficial to the environment. Sen. Sam Am in mam v&t&w pen S3oon Sunday 208 W. Franklin Only Serving LUNCHEON SPECIAL 'til 2 p.m. Small Pizza w one topping, serve-yourself all the salad you want, coffee or tea. eppte $1 OFF Sale prices ATALA (Manufacturer's Sugg. Retail $165 Normally $155 NOW $145 CCM MISTRAL (Manufacturer's Sugg. Retail $190) Normally j mm yW: v. w (2ai?IiHa The Daily Tar Heel is published by the University of North Carolina Student Publications Board, daily except Sunday, exam periods, vacation, and summer periods. No Sunday issue. The following dales are to be the only Saturday issues: September ' 14. October 5 A 19, and November 2, 16 A 23. 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 rstes: $20.00 per year; $10.00 per semester. Second class postage paid at U.S. Post Office in Chapel Hill, N.C The Campus Governing Council shall have powers to determine the Student Activities Fee and to appropriate' all revenue derived from the Student Activities Fee (1.1.14 of the Student Constitution). The Dally 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 typographical errors or erroneous . Insertion unless notice is give to the Business Manager within (1) one day after the advertisement. : appears, or within one day of the receiving of tear' sheets or 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. Notice for such correction must be given before the next Insertion. j Murray Pool. . Business Mgr.j FJiFini The referendum will be held Nov. 6. Members of the Durham chapter of the N.C. PIRC net last night with the Student Consumer Action Union (SCAU) to discuss the future of a possible P1RG-SCAU organization at UNC. A P1RG-SCAU merger would allow SCAU to continue its work in consumer protection with the benefit of additional funding and state backing, PIRG laywer Peter Brown said. low rating Ervin (D-N.C.) received a 23 rating. A similar survey in Congress gave Rep. Richardson Preyer, D-District 1, a 54 rating, the- highest of all North Carolina congressmen. Other state congressmen and their respective ratings were: v Rep. James G. Martin. R-District 9. 32; Rep. Ike F. Andrews, D-District 4. 26; Rep. Roy A. Taylor, D-District 11. 22; Rep. James T. Broyhill, R-District 10. 21; Rep. Wilmer D. Mizell, R-District 5. 19; Rep. Charles Rose. D-District 7, 16; Rep. Walter B. Jones. D-District I, 16; Rep. David N. Henderson. D-District 3, 15; Rep. L.H. Fountain, D-District 2. 1 1; and Rep. Earl B. Ruth. D-District 8. 0. . ' Nationwide results of the survey will be posted in the ECOS office in the Union. vmm wm $H 49 u plus tax any LARGE PIZZA with coupon October '74 only Limit 1 per coupon 208 W. Franklin 942-5149 ICYCLE CLEARANCE SALE good through Sat. Oct. 12 JEUNET Women's (Mixte) Frame (Manufacturers Sugg. Retail $152) Normally $142 NOVV$135 Men's & Mixte Frames NOW $175 $185 Open 10-6 Daily 106 N. Graham St. 942-4480 Chapel Hill, N.C. HELLO... K i uunt to another Piano... aw first onh was ckewep lp 6y a kite-eatin6 tree ...this last one uja THROWN 00m A SEWER... "ACE" PIANO M wsii r-v e o o o m CD i 50 WATS NATURAL MARIJUANA, ..ANDHWOWlTHEfZe $ TUB COMMUNE MAR- JUANA PLANT. IT YIELPS TH6 BEST BRASS N NEW ZN61ANP! If the PIRG bill passes in November, the organization could receive as much as $30,000 from student fees. This money will go to the state PIRG board. The local chapter will then have to petition the state board since it needs money for individual projects. While the last two attempts at establishing a UNC chapter of PIRG have failed. Brown feels it will go through this time. I think we're on the brink of something very good." Brown said. PIRG would require $3 a year per student, the money coming from student activities fees. Added to the current fees level of $18 yearly, the PIRG increment would raise that total to $21. However, a 1957 Student Government statute prohibits student fees from being raised above $20 per year without a campus wide referendum. Last spring. CGC authorized such a referendum. But it was never held due to a Student Supreme Court injunction, resulting from a request from CGC Finance Committee Chairman Carl Fox. The 1957 law would have required that at least half of the students on campus vote in the referendum. However, elections at UNC rarely draw more than 20 per cent of the electorate. A campus-wide election held earlier this month drew fewer than 1.200 voters out of 19,500. If half the students on campus had voted, about 10,000 votes would have been cast. "They don't even have enough ballots for this kind of vote to be taken," Fox said last spring. Late in the semester, the CGC Rules Committee amended the 1957 bill which dropped any requirement on the number of students voting but . required that the proposal be approved by a two-to-one margin. . Although the amendment was approved by CGC, there was not enough time remaining in the semester for the referendum to be held. A 1971 referendum on PIRG won the students' approval but was vetoed by the On the Print Table Nicely Colored FLORAL PRINTS A delight to Milady of long ago, these colorful prints will please you, too. $2.00 Each The Old Book Corner 1 37 A East Rosemary Street Opposite NCNB Plaza Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514 BTH Classifieds FOR SALE For Sale: Motorcycle trailer; motorcycle helmet; gold oval rug 6 9. Call 929-7762. For sale SAT games. Cheap. Call 929-3220. BMW 72 2002. 16,000 miles, Green, Air, Sunroof, AM-FM, Mlchelin XAS Radiate, never used spare, other extras. Top condition. 28 miles per gallon. $3950. 704-527-3184. Marantz Imperial 7 Speaker Retail for $360 Will sell for $260 AR Turntable with Pickering Cartridge $80. Only six months use on both. Mclntoch C-26 Pre-amp. Mint condition. $250. Single bed, mattress, box springs, frame $30. Call 929-5851 after 5 p.m. 1974 350 Kawasaki Dirt A Roed Bike. Under 300 miles. Damn good buy. Also 1973 4-dr. Valiant AC, AT, PS 38,000 miles. Perfect condition. Must sell immediately. Call 933-3309. 1969 Mercury Cyclone CJ. Automatic, AC, Power Steering, Disc Brakes. Call Jerry at 933-1074 10-12, 929-3768 after 5. HELP WANTED WANTED: Salespersons for Instant sales Items. Ideal f of all occasion gifts, especially for Christmas. Make et least $100 weekly m your spare time. Write SEECO P.O. Box 932, Sanford, N.C. 27330. FOR RENT ROOM MATE WANTED (FEMALE) to share bedroom and bath at Towne House. $59mo. 13 utilities and deposit. Beautifully furnished. Available immediately. Keep calling. 967-3527. . C V J Two Stacy Housing Contracts for sale for Spring semester. an nil i " t -T ; ; . e-fo Urgent! Must sell housing contract in North Campus girls' dorm. Available for occupancy Oct 18. Contact Susan 933- Motor Home Rentals Widest Selection in Carolina. Low rates. Best for football weekends or long nips. Sleeps 6-8. Seats to 12. Family Motorhome Rentals, Asheboro, 1-625-1600. - H5. I UANTTHE SAME WCIND AS &EF0RE. ... m -z HUH? BETTER 6BT SOMB SHOTS OF THAT.. IBMMB SBB.. F3 AT-to OF A SBCONP... cock! CUCKl. O UNC Board of Trustees when they discovered the 1957 statute. The board was also reluctant to raise fees above $20, Clark said. The bill introduced Tuesday night by CGC representative Dan Besse would allow each student to decide whether he wants to allocate money to PIRG, assuming the organization is approved in the referendum Each student would pay an additional $1.50 in activities fees regardless of whether he wanted the money to go to PIRG. If a student indicates he did not want to support the organization, the money would be applied to the CGC general revenues. If the referendum is approved, the Student Government constitution would be amended so as to free the funds increase from a provision requiring that a minimum of one third of activities fees be appropriated to the Carolina Union. Otherwise, fees would have had to be raised an additional $ 1 .50 per year on top of the PIRG increase. The trustees would have to approve the organization if the referendum is approved. The fee increase would not take effect until the fall 1975 semester. For six months after that, the organization will be known as North Carolina PIRG-SCAU. If, at any time in the future, more than 50 per cent of the student body decided not to allocate their fees to PIRG, another referendum would have to be held on its existence. If more than 65 per cent of the students refused to support the organization, it would automatically dissolve. Utilities Continued from page 1 If approved, it will then go to a five-man negotiations board appointed from the study commission at their Sept. 27 meeting. The board will discuss sale terms with the two successful bidders. The results of the negotiations will be submitted to the trustees for approval, then to the Council' of State and Gov. James Holshouser. Employees of the utilities are dismayed over the recommendation. An employee poll conducted earlier this year showed CUC to be the favorite of most of the workers. They believe CUC was never given a fair chance, and possibly stand to lose employee benefits under Duke Power and Southern Bell. Many are seeking new jobs with the University or the state rather than transfer to the two new companies. The Orange County Citizens for Alternative Power (OCCAP). a group concerned with consumer and employee rights, has charged the University with interfering with the - study commission. QCCAP; also charged "two commission j members' and one" trustee with conflict of interest stemming from past connections with Duke Power. The members have angrily denied all such charges. Undergraduate (Grimes) Housing Contract available. See housing contract office, Bynum Hall. Apartment for rent $130 per month. One bedroom 2 miles from campus. Yum-Yum Apartments, Carrboro. Call 942 8316. MISCELLANEOUS PRO-LIFE PREGNANCY COUNSELING. Call BIRTHCHOICE 7 p.m.-10 p.m. MONDAY THRU FRIDAY. 942-3030. Want to see the Georgia Tech game? Be back same day? Fly down and back on Saturday. 1 0 seats available. $115 per seat. Phone 782-3313 or 882-4096. Yard-Garage Sale. Saturday, Oct 12. 11 sjn-3 pjn. 419 W. Cameron. Great bargains In books, records, household items, gift Items, comerey and aloe vera plants. t need a date ticket for the state football game. Will pay scalpers price. Call 967-5441 and leave name and phone number. BEADWORKS Beautiful beads from ell over the world. Come in end make -your own earrings (for under $1.00) or necklaces (you can make a beautiful necklace for under $5.00!) In with Harmony Foods, 456 W. Franklin Street ' Wanted: ride to NYCPhiladelphia area weekend of October 18. Will share expenses. Call 489-2121. , : Abortion, Birth Control info A Referral. No FEE. Up to 24 weeks. General anesthesia. Vasectomy, tubal ligation also , available. Free pregnancy test.' Call PCS, Non-profit, 202-298-7995. STEREOS: AS ALWAYS GET GREAT SOUND AT THE -RIGHT PRICE FROM ANN SHACHTMAN. VISIT STEREO SOUND. 175 E. FRANKLIN ST. (UPSTAIRS ABOVE P.J.s) '942-8546. , "WORLD WIDE TRAVEL ON FOREIGN SKIPS. Summer or ,ytar around employment- Good pay, no experience, man women. Eest Coast departures. Stamped self-addressed . envelope. Mecedon Intl., Box 664, St. Joseph, Mo. 64502." Need tickets to STATE game. WIH consider any offers, but take best. Call collect Richard Williams 1-919-292-9850, after five o'clock. - TAKE YOUR TIME ON DELIVERY.'! X DIDN'T KNOW ft HAD PURPLE AND IVHITE FLOWERS.. SPECIAL. KIND. Today's Ac&dSs Tne CareSna Gey AsaodeSoa) wB sponsor a eetSe taM, 7:30 pjm. todcry. SOS E- ffmry SI Everyone to I CGA. PXX Boa 33. tor tw Yft bmw wS leaee tt Athey XaS 1 1 at SrtS pj. today. Bring yewr vmm parentis, warn MR cMwara Young Oiiiwuuats who heee mwii el Nt due i not yet fweortetf peese cafl Susan Dehor. S29-7ST1, Unity. Anyone MareeM in ettemfirtg Vswco Aycoc Crew contact Pater Gamer. t33-OTS. AttaaSeei AI teat eofcg to Afianta tor e GeorsSa Tac IMC tootbaa same era requested to Met 12 mi&&. tonight. Msd Hatter's to fee AKanta Undergveund. The YW-Y1ICA sponsors a potfcick dinner group every second1 Friday. The Brat dinner this year will b p-jn. today. The cftscussion wH locus on pertpyerolsy- AJi faculty and students are Invited. Sign up and tofonealton to tvt Y. Noted Mormon htstorian and phBoaoohar Truman G Median aril apeak on The Ciaance of Moratonianr 7 pun today. 130 Soctatogy -Psychology BuOdlng. Duke. Olacusa ttta Maalar to Buatnese Administration Program with an admissions reprwmtav from th Harvard BusineM Blake, Jenne appointed 9 by Helen Ross Staff Writer Two assistant town manager appointees were approved in an executive session of the Chapel Hill Board of Aldermen Monday night. William D. Blake, Chapel Hill police chief for 1 6 years and a 33-year veteran of the force, will become assistant town manager for public safety. The new assistant town manager for development and community services will be Kurt Jenne, formerly the town director of urban development. The men will assume their new jobs as Commission member Ned Huffman said, "What I want is for everyone to get off my back and the backs of all these other fine men. Tve worked for two years without pay on this commission. I'm just weary of these people who don't know what they're talking about questioning the integrity of the other 24 fine men who work on this commission." The other bidders said they would start anti-trust litigation against Southern Bell if Bell was a successful bidder. OCCAP and the employees are considering taking the issue to the state legislature next session. OCCAP on Tuesday asked the attorney general's office to conduct a full investigation of the matter through its consumer protection division. The request was filed and word is forthcoming. NEED COMPONENT SERVICE? K GET HELP FR TUES.-SAT. OCT. 8-12! "There is a lot of good equipment sold today, but none of it is perfect . . John Poythress, Manager of Soundhaus Customer Service Division, will be in the Chapel Hill Haus at 113 N. Columbia this week, with a complete array of Soundhaus test equipment. Quality control checks, which are routine at Soundhaus, will be performed on a variety of components from amplifiers to tape decks to determine their level of performance. There is a lot of good equipment sold today, but none of it is perfect; and John believes that your receiver, when you buy it, should meet or exceed the specifications quoted by the factory. If you have a component which you feel is not performing properly come in and talk with John. He will be at the test bench daily from 10:30 until 5:30. We think your time will be well invested. . Franchisa for Pioneer Sales & Service ' Scfwet. today, GVtem of Career Fall en&s Co2 Art and Sctoneea aheuW fSe en eppfeaSow tor toeir degree fey today. 23 South BtfEdtng. Ksatt cf lr. '.crest Tne UNC Lattor-Oey Sotot Stodent is acta Wow ta epeneortog Oo you net to fee reeaoa to fee good? a Uomm M9iar t son. UtotCsj. PacUty Lounge. Day HeB. The Wesley FeundaSon t nave tteir inonMy i eanrtoa 11 eja. Sunday. The nee. Lwcy A. Auatto e Banean. Corlee end demits ere laaHiiiii betore tne aerrice. A3 are welcoina. Sepest Student Unton's Sunday night forum wt be a ana ocodarrfrecr8Son.SprBiaiBlor$lloeow fey a bne of teSevanto et 7 fun. The Reaesrch Trtanjie art Sierra CUA w hoW pot h dinner neettog p-m. Synday. Durham YMCAs Camp KanstaLodge. AH men totarestod to audlSoning tor the Ebony Reader, ptoses attend the try-out session S;30 pm. Sunday, Upende Lounge. SocUSs! Cuba Today, slides and reflections of a recent visit. 730 p-m. Sunday. 283 Union. soon as successor for their old positions have been chosen, which will be about Dec. I. town manager Chester Kcnd.ior said. The new jobs are part of the reorganization of the administrative agencies of town government which has been under consideration by the Aldermen for over a year. With the addition of new town government departments, the rapid growth of the community, an increasingly complex administration, and more Board of Aldermen requests, the job of town manager has become too large for just one man. Mayor Howard Lee said. Blake will act as a link between the town, courts and law enforcement agencies, will review grant applications which fall within his jurisdiction and will be the town's representative in law-related matters. He will also head planning efforts for the police department and emergency services. Jenne's old position of urban development director will be discontinued, and the planning and inspection departments which have been under his guidance since December 1974 will be divided. In his new position Jenne will oversee the planning, building inspection, human services, recreation, library and transportation departments. This reorganization will leave the finance director, fire chief, director of public works and assistant to the manager for employee services reporting directly to Kendzior. Lee said Jenne was chosen by virtue of the many administrative duties he has performed organizing the department of urban development. J 1