Two city voters appeal Cntintd frn Pane 1) yp t uontinue from rage i i moot, as there would be no reason any- more to ask the voters to reveal choices. "The only way our case would con- tinue is if Kelley decides he needs infor- mation about that third count to make a ruling," said Edward Goldman, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) attorney representing Lazin- sky. "If he decides to void the election or to award it to Wheeler or Belcher, then that's it." A secondary controversy has recent- ly arisen over what would happen if Kelley voids the election - which is what Henry would like to see. ACCORDING to the city charter, if an election is voided, City Council elects someone to finish out the term. Since Republicans currently hold a 6-4 major- ity on Council, Belcher would almost certainly be elected mayor. The re- maining five Republicans would then still have enough votes to appoint a Re- publican to finish out Belcher's Council term, which ends in April. Belcher, however, still says he wants a whole new election. "When it's that close, you just have to take it back to the voters. I really think a new election is in order," he said. "This while thing has gone on so long now that it's become a matter of prin- ciple with me," he said. "There are constitutional rights on both sides which need to be protected. On one side you have the 20 voters, and on the other side you have the 21,000 legal voters who want the right to elect themselves a mayor. I think you have to protec them too." Greyhound drivers. still threaten strike. O,4kntae gifts for everyone at reasonable prices Wholesale-Retail Watch for Grand Opening, Monday, Nov. 28 PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) - The Amalgamated Transit Union reject- ed a Greyhound Lines contract proposal yesterday, but said it repre- sented progress in the race against a Thanksgiving strike and ordered bus drivers and mechanics to stay on the job. The union was expected to make a counter-proposal. OWEN .JONES, president of the union'sGreyhound Council, said in a telegram to union local presidents yesterday that the proposal present- ed by Greyhound at the end of Sunday's negotiations was unaccept- able. But Jones said the offer did show some movement. He told union leaders that mem- bers should remain on the job, "as long as the negotiations show some progress." Greyhound officials declined com- ment on the union rejection, nor would they disclose the contents of the offer. AN EXPIRED contract has been extended day by day, but union officials have said that if an agree- ment is not reached by midweek there will be a strike that could strand thousands of Thanksgiving travelers across the nation. In Columbus, Ohio, strikers at the local Greyhound Lines terminal went back to their jobs shortly after noon yesterday following a 12-hour walk out linked to the national contract negotiations. About 35 employes had been off their jobs since midnight in an action not authorized by the union. Meanwhile, come in and look around. In the Federal Arcade, between the Federal Building and the "Y" 331 SOUTH FOURTH convenient to buses and to parking i Debate over S. African Ever notice. ace Coq dO rrses holdings (Continued from Page1) Stanford Committee for a respon- sible Investment Policy, is no longer active on campus. Stanford is one of a number of schools developing its own set of moral guidelines which leave open the possibility for divesti- ture, according to the student news- paper. At the University of Wisconsin, protestors took over Chancellor Ed- win Young's office last May to show their anger over Wisconsin's $14 million interest in corporations in South Africa. When the Wisconsin Regents refused to adopt a policy stronger than adherence to the Sullivan Statement (see accompany- ing story) two weeks ago, 200 students gathered for a demonstra- tion. Mace was used at Wisconsin for the first time since the violent protests of seven years ago. One student was arrested, according to a Cardinal reporter. Several small colleges have man- aged to pull their money out of the corporations in question. The Univer- sity of Massachusetts at Amherst un- loaded its small holdings last month because -of a university policy that prohibits holding interest in a com- pany that is not "socially responsi- ble," according to the Associated Press. A rally at Columbia University at the end of September may have influ- enced a decision by Columbia's Board of Trustees to review all stock investments for possible divestiture. According to an editor for The Spec- tator, the student newspaper, several of the trustees have expressed inter-. est in pulling economic support out of companies that discriminate and pay low wages, but not those that adhere to Columbia's own guidelines. It finally comes down to commitment. 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