Fridy, Nvembr 34 191
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
rage Seven
Fria--Novmbe.30...3.TE.MCHIAN.AIL--ae-Sve
House rejects measure
on, campaign spending
in -- .-----------.-------- _____
I!U
(Coptinued from Page i)
automatically falls to its perma-
vent $400~ billion level, with actual
debt figured At roughly $467 bil-
I. lion'.
ASST. ATTY. Gen. Henry Peter-
sen condemned what he called a
' "hypocritical" Congress for re-
sisting tough penalties on poli-
tici~n who receive illegal cam-
paign contributions.
He urged legislation to impose
rfines triple the amount of the il-
legal contribution and to make the
penalty apply to the contributor
and recipient alike.
"If Politician A has to cough up
three times what somebody gave
hint because it was unlawful, he's
going to be damin certa~in -- rather
than be a Pontius Pilate -- that he
knows where that came from,"
said Petersen', head of the Justice
Department's Criminal division
which is responsible for enforcing
campaign finance laws.
HEWAS LIKENING the politi-
cian to the D~oman governor de-
scribed. in 'the Bible as allowing
Christ to be crucified after maki ig
a public show of washing his hand
of the decision.
Petersen expressed skepticism
of politicians who claim no know-
ledge of illegal funds because their
contributions are handled by a fi-
nance chairman.
"The absence of evidence doesn't
indicate that the recipient doesn't
know; it simply means we can't
prove it in a very large majority of
cases," Petersen said in an inter-
view.
SENATE FINANCE Committee
Chairman Russell Long (D-La.),
said he figured the House would
at leAst be willing to negotiate on
key features of the package once'
the congressional portions are
dronned.
Under a 1971 law, presidential
nominees can get federal financ-
ing of about $21 million but may
elect to use private gifts instead.
The Senate - passed provisions
xvo'uld wipe out the private option
and requ'ire major narty nominees
to use public funds.
TIRED OF
EFOREVER THINK ABOUT
RENTING FURNITURE
rr
NOON LUNCHEON
Soup & Sandwich-40c
FRIDAY , NOV. 30
"What Is the Learning Exchange?"
A PANEL DISCUSSION
FRIDAY EVENING-6 P.M.
INDIAN DINNER
$1.25 for reservations, 662-5189 I
GUILD HOUSE--802 Monroe
Paintings, Prints, Ceramics,
I Sculpture, Photography
ON SALE
AT THE
IUNIONGA LLERJDY ' it
COME OUT
AND SEE
4
t
WHAT WE
HAVE FOR YOU
1st Floor, Michigan Union
GALLERY HOURS: 10-5 Tues.-Sat.
closed Sunday & Monday
GLOBE INTERIOR RENTALS
3426 WASHTENAW. 971-9220
^:c'+ : Y" .'"'.2a. - - -.t" m iM' _' ! ?q _'"' __ ^^a - ^i. F -vrs- Na.^ - A^"'y1I"
F,
1
SWEATERS
$8-$35
I ;.
POTTERS GUILD :
.: CHRISTMAS SALE .
t DECEMBER 2
9 A.M.-3 P.M.
( 201 Hill St.
Ann Arbor
.~
w
~76-70
They had the Per fe&t love jj c
Long Cardigans, Vests, Turtlenecks,
Sweaters, Shawl Collar and Wropao
Ski
ound
DAILY.OFFICIAL BLEI
Fidiay, Novemiber 30
DlAY CALENDAR~
1Hosplta! Comm. for Wome~n: F1199
Mot Roar'.noon.
Neuroscience: A. Britten, 103 Neuro-
set. Lab. Bldg.. noon.
TSMRRD: W. Rhodes. Sabin Head,
lrntnple investigator.' "Conceptual
M'odels of Child Vriance--Interven-
tton." Rh .100, 136 S. First St., I:15 pm.
Philosophy: C.' Hooker, Western On-
tario V. "Systematic Structure of En-
vironMental rPobleznis & their Rela-
*~tion to Phtilosophi&Il Issues," 1025 An-
gell Hall, 4 pm.
Astren~ny: S. van den Bergh, David
biunlap Ohs., Toronto., "Recent Optical
* Observ'Ations of Subornova Remnants,"
P-A Bldg. Colloq. Rm,. 4 pmn.
University Dancers: Power Ctr., 4, 8
~mt
Iitt'l Ctr.: Int'l Travel Fair, "Trants-
t ortttoli * Travel Overseas," Union
Station, 7 pmi.
ilibert '& Sullivan Society: "The
Grand tbUke," Mendelssohn, 8 pm.
University Players: Zindel'a "And
Mf1s. R~tdon D!inkra A Little," Arena
Theatre, Priere Bldg., 8 pm.
Union O6alery: lonesco's "T'he Bald
Soprano," thiiohl Gelery, 1st fl., Union,
a pm.
U-M Folk Dance : Barbour, 8 pm.
Musical eociety: University Choral
Union, Handel's Messiah, 8:30 pm.
Collegturn Musicum:t Music from the
-Ars Autiqus, TI. Tayl~or, dir.; S. Kiereit,
asst. dir., includes liturgical drama,
"Fiis Ottron," St. Mary's Chapel.
331 Thomapson, $, pm.
GNEAL NO TICE~lS
Ten Ctr. for Continuing Educ. of
Womn Evening Program Credit Cour-
es: scheduled for 1974 Winter ternm;
couras are for credit & admission to
UVvtt' is requir d. Center Oan help
with, a**g*uMents. Winter term stuff
Jan. 3; *ft it the time to fthtact (hr.
abouit *Admii6n & class Ouzoilment;
address. 330 Thompson St.. open week-
days, 8:30 to 5 pm.; phone. 764-6555.
All Students who wish to take Miller
Analogies Test during month of De-
cemnber should be aware that the test
will be given Mondays-FPridays at 1:30.
2:30 & 3:30 pm. only; must be there at
least 15 min. in advance of test. Coun-
seling Ctr.. 1007 E. Huron (764-9466) will
be closed Dec. 24-Jan. 1.
SUMMER PLACEMENT
3200 SAB, 763-4117
State of Mich., Competitive Exam for
Engineering Aide ( 03), deadline, Dec.
3. Applications available.
City of Portland, Maine. Summer Ur-
ban Planning Prof. for seniors, grad
students in urban planning, law, po1.
sci., pub. Mgt., related fields.
Sweal
I
te rs.
By Nik-Nik, Kingston, Baltic and Spider
~ 1314 S. University
(next to theYV. Bell)
761-7384_
_ _ _ ___ t _
I
I
W:
7r.
I,
I
.0*OMM UNITYI''l
GAY(
I
I
DANCE
TRY DAILY CLASSIFIEDS
Graduationt
Announcements
for
GRADUATING
04A
loo. ARE NOW ON SALE
Information Desk, Main Lobby L.S.A. Bldg.4
SATURDAY, Dec.
I1st
A Joseph E. levine vi &,But Productions Pisni~
George Segal Glenda Jackson
AMein Ftnk H+A l T i uc Oif Cla~is
Q in Soujndtrack avala.l &St tRecords An Avc6 Emb"ac1~ Terl~mcnr' Puvaionm'E
7 & 9P.M.
SPECIAL LATE SHOW Fri. &' Sat. Note at I1I p.m.
SEP. ADM. Due to horrifying nature of this film,
No One will be odmitted to the theatre!!!
MIGHTIER than KING KONG }4"
GREATER thar,.GODZILLA k
LARGER than THE
INCREDIBLE SHRINKING MAN ;r
I~J COLOR
9 p.m.-1 a. m.
Womens Athletic Building
OLD FOREST AT GEDDES
$1.00
Gay Hotl ine 761-2044
24 hours
i
a
1
f
I
sponsored by Ann Arbor G.L.F.
- i
WARNING! NO NURSES IN ATTENDANCE!
SPECIAL KIDDIE MAT. Sat., Sun. 1 & 2:30'
SANTA CLAUS CARTOONS
Kids 50c Adults $1 .00
_ _ .__
- - --- - -- a -
S .H la I nfcK IuI money order,~I.