2The Daily Tar HeelMonday, February 10, 1986 o n o n Mqfcos victory claim . disputed ll (CdDDTKDJCBOTfQOll o o Dy KEITH DRADSHER Staff Writer Socialists should lead the United States in ending support for right-wing Third World governments while intro ducing radical economic changes at home, said author Michael Harrington Friday during a speech in Hamilton Hall. "Why do we so often back reaction aries in the name of democracy and drive people into communist move ments in the name of anti communism?" he asked his audience of about 250. "The American welfare state is the cheapest welfare state in the world," he added. Split up your training in the Army Reserve into two summers. You can do it if you're a high school junior and 17. Take your BasicTraining between your junior and senior years, then your Special Army Skill Training the next summer. You miss little or no school, and you get a big edge on the future competition for jobs, experience and opportunities. You also get paid. You earn at least $1,100 for each summer, plus over $1,225 a year for serving one weekend a month, normally, and two weeks annual training. Before you think about splitting for summer, think about splitting summers, and talk it over with us. :Tf ;, jji SSG Jacobs 683-S071 nnCDcDDEKJLlDcrjs 'N r- JsLS FITNESS CENTER INC 0 Nautilus Abdominal Machine Call today for FREE Trial Workout 409-2668 DAYTONA BEACH SPIHIDN . BKEACCi s V Enjoy our D.J. at OixCIKEKS CAEHE 5 219 S. ATLANTIC DAYTONA BEACH, FLORIDA 32018 CALL TOLL FREE 1-000-074-1022 8)(fi) Harrington is co-chairman of the Democratic Socialists of America party and is a professor of sociology at the City University of New York. He delivered the opening address of the two-day DSA Southeastern Regional Organizing Conference. He said the Democratic Party is incapable of reforming U.S. domestic and foreign policy because it is still concentrating on New Deal liberalism. Socialists now have the ideas for liberal and radical change, he said. "The Democratic Party right now is ideologically bankrupt," he said. The United States has forced oppo sition groups to turn to communism by aiding right-wing governments in China, Indochina, Nicaragua, Iran and other countries, he said. "The United States has been one of the most effective recruiting forces for the Communists," he said. U.S. national security would be improved not by increased arms spend ing but by a foreign policy based on tolerance for change in the Third World, he said. toyDtomi ft responu'dl to feasibnliifty off JBGC proposal odd By DENISE MOULTRIE Staff Writer Donald Boulton, vice chancellor and dean of student affairs, told the Black Cultural Center steering committee Friday that he would give them a PREPARATION FOR: MCAT GRE DAT 2634 Chapel Hill Blvd. Suite 112 Durham, NC 27704 919489-8720 489-2348 fa yn LaaJ ESUCATtONAL CENTER LTD. test McmuanoN specuustssmcc mm " w o A XT ThoSmrt -7 SPRING FITNESS SPECIAL $7Q00 From February f through May 15, 1986 Facilities Include: 26 Nautilus Machines Free Weight Room Finnish Sauna Aerobic Classes Lifecycle Wolff Suntanning Bed Whirlpool UNC NAUTILUS e.: a"-ES DURHAM CHAPEL HILL BLVD. -!$e McDuthe On Chapel Hill Blvd. at Straw Valley less than 10 minutes from UNC campus 1 DAYTONA CLASS PORTRAITS Feb. 10-14, 17 Mar. 3-6 Freshmen, FREE NO SITTING FEE Call 962-3912 or 962-1259 or come by Carolina Union Room 106 9-4 PM for appointment A democratic, capitalist revolution is impossible in the Third World because the current world economic order makes those countries ever poorer, he said. Products sold by rich countries have become more and more expensive compared to the prices fetched by Third World exports, he said. Harrington said poor countries should strictly regulate multinational corporations and limit their repayment of foreign loans to a fraction of export earnings. American workers should realize that Third World workers are not the enemy, he said. - . ' , "What they don't understand is that their enemies are the multinational corporations which play American workers off against Third World workers," he said. No American or foreign company, should be allowed to close a factory without consulting its workers and local residents, he said. "I think every corporation in the United States should have representa tives on its board of its unions and of response to their proposal within four or six weeks. Boulton said he had not known the potential of a cultural, center until he received the proposal last Monday. As indicated in the committee's proposal, "I can see how it (a center) can become a major recruiting tool," he said. "There are many questions I have to ask. As I read and digested the proposal, I saw that this cultural center encompasses more than University affairs." The most pressing questions are those NATIONALLY ACCLAIMEDC The BEST since 1959 DDAElWdDdDlID TOOTS .o TOP QUALITY FUN CO-ED GROUPS GREAT TOUR LEADERS NO REGIMENTATION 15-34 DAYS 4-10 COUNTRIES from $1195 plus Air CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-972-7665 or write HARWOOD TOURS for brochure 2428 GUADALUPE, AUSTIN, TX 78705 An? Ar VTV If) Kin p; ?:mo::s7i,.h . February 12 8:00 pm V Memorial Hall . Tickets $12.00 X. at Union Box Office J 5T This Valentine's Day, I K VALbNllNb b WtLK - 21 Seniors Ooly Sophomores & Juniors it the communities in which it operates," he said. Harrington advocated a series of changes in work practices and tax law to help the working man and to reduce unemployment. The United States should introduce a national health care system because the present practice of including medical insurance payments as an employment benefit makes it more expensive for employers to hire extra workers, he said. The working week should be reduced to 30 or 35 hours and the very wealthy should be taxed to expand programs for the poor. President Reagan is mistaken to think that the federal budget can be balanced by cutting the poor's benefits, he said. "Government spending goes over whelmingly to the middle class," he said. "The poor get about 12 percent of social spending." Socialists can have an extra impact in the poor South, Harrington said. "The white poor South against the black poor South that has been the tragedy of the South. We can play a catalytic role (here)," he said. involving the actual costs of some projects discussed in the proposal, he said. As a result, other department and faculty members will have input in his decision. During their meeting with Boulton Friday, some members of the committee expressed concern about Boulton's full support of the proposal. He said he guaranteed them his support if they were willing to support him in his effort to convince others of the necessity of a center. After the meeting, committee members were optimistic about the future of the proposal. Camille Roddy, STV to hold public meeting Tuesday The board of directors of Student Television will be holding a meeting on Tuesday, Feb. 1 1 at 5 p.m. to formulate and adopt a new organizational constitution. A copy of the current constitution is posted in STV's office, room 207 in the Union. Attendance is open to the general public; questions and comments are welcome. Check at the front desk of the Union for an exact room number. go all out. EJ I 1 Go ahead, show that special someone how much you care by sending the FTD Hearts 'n' Flowers Bouquet. beautiful arrangement in an impressive eepsake caddy. It's so easy. Just call . your FTD Florist. Go ahead. Do something really exciting! lb tLDKUii y-J. PRAGUE H Student: $12.00 " A From Associated Press reports MANILA, Philippines Thirty computer operators marched out of the government's election commis sion Sunday, claiming the ballot counting that showed President Ferdinand E. Marcos defeating Corazon Aquino was falsified. An international observer group, meanwhile, accused Marcos' parti sans on Sunday of vote-buying, intimidation, snatching ballot boxes and tampering with election returns in Friday's special presidential election. A computer operator, who refused to give her name, told the Associated Press that workers spotted the problem Saturday night, when Aquino was leading in the commis sion's count by 100,000 votes. By midday Sunday, Marcos had taken over the lead. Mandela to be released JOHANNESBURG, South Africa Winnie Mandela said Sunday her imprisoned husband Nelson Mandela, inspirational a student representative on the commit tee, said: "I'm interested to see how things will develop from this point, since other people will have to have input into the feasibility of this project." Patricia Wallace, student body pres ident, said: "I think the important r Campus Calendar The DTH Campus Calendar will appear daily. Announcements to be run must be placed in the box outside the Da7y Tar Heel office, Room 104 of the Student Union, by noon one day before the event weekend announcements by noon Wednesday. Only announce ments from University-recognized and campus organizations will be printed. Monday 4:00 p.m. Y Outreach Committee organ izational meeting, Y Lounge, for those interested in working with Habitat for Humanity. University Career Planning and Placement Services holding an "Orientation Resume Writing Workshop for Business Majors," T-l Carroll. 5:00 p.m. Student Television Campus Profile staff meeting, 226 Union. Student Development and Counseling Center hosting a recruitment meeting for the. Ohio College of Podiatric Med icine, 211 Union. 6:00 p.m. International Association for , Business Communicators mcet- in'20JH6wfcil.Jim SHegog of Burroughs Welcome will speak Avoid the lottery blues. Apply now! All apartments on the bus line to UNC. Fantastic Social Program. Call today for full information. 967-223 1 or 967-2234. In North Carolina call toll-free 1-800-672-1678. Nationwide, call toll-free 1-800-334-1656. The Apartment People INTERNS ArtArchitecture BusinessEconomics JournalismMass Communications Politics Semester programs include 16 credits, 9-week internship, apartments, British faculty. All programs offered Fall and Spring; Politics and JournalismMass Communications also offered Summer. BOSTON NAME ADDRESS. CITY ArtArchitecture BusinessEconomics Summer '86 Return To: London Internships. 143 Bay State CHAMBER ORCHESTRA Tuesday, February 11 SiOO'pm MEMORIAL HALM " Tickets on sale at Union Box Office x"Zyxry news in brie? leader of South African blacks, would be released, but she did not know when. Mrs. Mandela, who has emerged in recent months as an anti-apartheid leader in her own right, was besieged by journalists at Johannesburg's Jan Smuts Airport after she flew in from visiting her husband at Cape Town. Hdil violence cools down PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti After two nights of wild rejoicing and mob retaliation against the hated secret police of the ousted Duvalier regime, life began returning to normal Sunday for the city's 1 million inhabitants. Their celebration turned to vio lence, which killed at least 100 people and damaged businesses associated with 28 years of Duvalier rule. Jean-Claude Duvalier became Haiti's "president-for-life" in 1971 at the age of 19 on the death of his father. ' 4 to '6 weeks message I'm receiving is that in four to six weeks, after . . . (Boulton) looks into the finances of the proposal, he will decide where his commitment lies. I think he's fully supportive of the idea, but has to check out the practicality of it." nn resumes and interviewing. Student Television This Is It! staff meeting, 226 Union. 630 p.m. Order of the Bell Tower general membership meeting, 208 Union. 730 p.m. UNC Riding Club meeting in Frank Porter Graham Lounge, Union. SAMS mandatory meeting for all interested in Rock Alike contest, SAMS office, Suite C, Union. Senior Class "86 make-up train ing session for phonathon callers, 203 Union. Items of Interest UNC Computation Center, Microcom puting Support Center and Institute for Research in Social Science offer non-credit short courses free to UNC students, faculty and staff. Course descriptions and spring calendar appear in UNCCC Memo 11, available from the Computation Center office in Phillips Hall. Additionally, lunchtime colloquia will be held . each Wednesday in February, on a variety of software, 12:30 p.m., Toy Lounge, Dey Hall. 1986 Yackety Yack portrait appoint ments for Seniors - Feb. 10-14, 17-21 and atrwh-drS? March Cajl 962-09 f2trr 962 'I259,oT'"Cotne by 106 Union for informa-- - tionrAH"t)rganitat iotM -need rto- sign -contracts for coverage. Group photos will be taken Feb. 28. Call Frank at 933-2632 for information. Free Income Tax Help! Let VITA help you fill out your tax return form. Feb. 7 and 10 from 11:00-1:00 p.m. and 3:30 5:30 p.m., 213 Union. Open to the public. What's cheaper than, a dozen roses? A Daily Tar Heel personal. Deadline .February 12 noon HIP UNIVERSITY PHONE ( ) ZIP STATE. JournalismMass Communications 02 Politics Fall '86 Spring '87 Summer '87 Rd.. Boston, MA 02215 (617) 353-9883.