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February 01, 1976 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1976-02-01

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Page Six

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Sunday, February 1, 1975

Court ruling

sets stage Cream of

J

for funding law fight

WASHINGTON (IP) - House foes may mount
an offensive to junk major portions of the year-
old campaign reform act in th* wake of Friday's
Supreme Court ruling voiding sections of the
law creating spending limits for federal cam-
paigns, according to political observers.
On Friday the court struck down compulsory
limits on spending in presidential and con-
gressional caampaigns, voided limits on spending
from a candidate's personal funds and over-
turned limits on what individuals or groups
may spend independently to urge election or
defeat of a candidate.
IT LEFT IN place the $1,000 limit on dona-
tions individuals may give directly to a cam-
paign, and the $5,000 limit on what political
groups may give directly.
It upheld the constitutionality of federal sub-
sidies for presidential candidates, and said
spending limits may be imposed on those who
accept the public money.
And it assured an election-year fight in
Congress by ruling that the Federal Election
Commission will lose it, major enforcement
power within 30 days - I.ss reconstituted.
REP. WAYNE HAYS (D-Ohio), powerful
chairman of the House Committee on Adminis-
tration, already has vowed to fight for outright
abolition of the commission, which he says has
been too vigorous in making regulations affect-
ing congressmen.
Senate friends of the riddled election law-

including Democrats Edward Kennedy and
Richard Clark and Republicans Hugh Scott and
Richard Schweiker-promise to introduce a bill
on Monday to restore the commission's powers.
But aides say their strategy hasn't yet been'
decided.
Observers believe any efforts to save the
powers of the election commission before they

GOP rubs
elbows
(Continued from Page 1)
and splashy banners that said
"Michigan for Ford" distributed
slick leaflets from the baskets
they carried.
An accordionist, electric gui-

lord seeks lower
federal spending
(Continued from Page 1) ALSO AT the conference was
margin. Dearborn Mayor Orville Hub-
"Hubert is preparing so much aard, who has been confined to
for the presidency that people a wheelchair since he suffered
are beginning to call him pre- a stroke last year.
paration H," quipped Butz, Hubbard, mayor of the De-
whose humor has occasionally troit suburb for more than 30
gotten him into hot water. years, has fought off several
At this point, Humphrey has recent challenges to end his
not declared his candidacy but machine-style reign in Dear-
could be a compromise nominee born.
if none of the active Democratic
hopefuls gain significant back-
ing. i t b

expire at the end of February are doomed. tar player and woman singer
set the musical mood. The Wol-
"I DON'T THINK public financing stands a verine fight song, "Hail to the
prayer in the House," said election commis- Victors", was toned down and
sioner Thomas Harris. mellowed to blend with the Hy-
The House defeated public financing of con- att's elegance.
gressional races in 1974, and mostamembers ! The President had clearly re-
still are believed to be opposed, mainly out of turned to the hub of the nation's
a distaste for giving federal aid to their election auto manufacturing industry.
oodntste gThe conference room walls were
E"sxoends.ghung with portraits of Model
Extending public financing now 'going T's. One hastily lettered poster
be hard to do in the circumstances of an un- board read, "Ford has better
balanced budget," said Herbert Alexander, ideas." And Ford himself said
director of the Citizens Research Foundation that the cure for unemployment
and a noted authority on campaign finance laws. was not in building federal fac-

AP Photo

Bare bottoms

ALEXANDER SAID Congress now will be
under pressure to loosen limits on private cam-'
paign donations. "The ruling opens the question
of the millionaire candidate, who can spend as
much money as he wants on his campaign. His
opponent will be stuck with $1,000 contribu-'
tions."
"What this decision does in effect is reopen
the whole question of reforms for Congress,"
said Alexander.

tories but in building federal
cars.

A group of young boys romp along a beach near Santa
Barbara, Calif., as an unusually warm and dry winter con-
tinues in southern California. Temperatures along the shore
have been in the 70's most of the month.

WROTE CONGRESSMAN,
GOT RESULTS
BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (R)
Seven-year-old Laurie Ver-
MlUNiON 763-2 "on recently wrote a letter'
L MICH. Uto the congressman of her dis-
trict. Rep. Bill Ketchum, ask-
ing the 18th district congres-
sional representative for an'
American flag that had flown
SPRING BREAK FLIGHTS over the U. S. Capitol in Wash-3
ington.
And she got results. Not only
New York-$81 .73 Boston-$90.73 did she get the flag, but it was
delivered in person by Ket-
- ' chum. Now it flies over the
Newark-$81.73 California-$210.73 Frank West Grade School in
Bakersfield.
DEADLINE FEB. 4
WILDERNESS
o- - Discount BACK

JOBS HAD to come from the-
private sector, Ford told the
partisan group of wealthy, pro-
business people. "I doubt that f ort say S oviet-
the United States government
could make Model T's for less
than $50,000," he joked.
While Ford talked about cur- crew staged m uuin
ing unemployment inside one of
Michigan's most lavish hotels,
a caravan of station wagons LONDON (P)-Soviet sailors, The Telegraph said the muti-
drove past the hotel entrance in led by their political officer, neers locked the captain and
protest of Detroit's court-or- mutinied aboard an antisubma- five other ship's officers in their
deredbusing of students. An- rine patrol vessel in November cabins and apparently turned
other band of people waved ban- and headed for the West before the ship, identified only by the
ners asking for increased veter- being stopped by Russian war-; number 628, toward the West.
ans' benefits. planes and a submarine the Soviet radar apparently spotted
Afe heis mornDaily Telegraph reported yes- the ship going off course, and'
After his morning speech, terday. it was quickly intercepted by
Ford breezed through the ball- Authorities in Moscow de- warplanes and a submarine.
room, grasping the hands of clined any comment on the re- THE TELEGFAPH quoted its
delegates in quick handshakes.!portI sources as saying the mutineers
Michigan's First Lady Helen THE REPORTED m u t i n y were warned by radio they
Milliken shook his hand and told would be the first known such would be sunk if they did not
the President of the United case in Soviet history since the surrender.
States, "Thanks for coming.' 1921 Kronstadt uprising in the The paper said the ship then
early years of the Soviet state. returned to Riga and was seen
THEN HE WAS whisked Men of the Kronstadt naval to have been damaged by gun-
through a side door and gone. base, who had supported the fire, possibly from strafing
- -- Bolshevik Revolution, mutinied I runs by the warplanes.
TTin favor of workers and peasants The Telegraph said the patrol
0UTFUTTERS demanding political and eco- ship mutiny was believed to
(PACK ING a d.nomic freedoms. have occurred about Nov. 9.
G and The Daily Telegraph quoted The Stockholm newspaper Daily
G EQ U I P MEN T normally well-informed sources Expressen, which recently re-
ORDER SPECIAL !! in Stockholm as saying the 1975 ported "Latvian fishermen" giv-
R SPECA mutiny occurred while the Kot- ing a similar version of what
18 Muir Sleeper Twin tin-class vesel was sailing from was believed to be the same
the Soviet naval base at Riga incident, said the mutiny occur.
to Leningrad. red on Nov. 7.

ON FRIDAY night, Rockefel-
ler attacked Reagan and his
proposed plan to cut federal
spending by some $90 billion.
Reagan was invited to address
the convention but declined, al-
though his campaign manager
John Sears appeared jointly
with Howard "Bo" Calloway,
who heads Ford's election drive.
Among others at the gather-
ing were Senators Robert Grif-
fin (R-Mich.) and John Towers
(R-Texas), Gov. William Milli-
ken and Presidential advisor
Rogers Morton.
Ford changes
N.H. strategy
By The Associated Press
Plans for a door-to-door voter
canvass throughout New Hamp-
shire before its Feb. 24 pri-
mary have been dropped by
President Ford's campaign or-
ganization, state campaign man-
ager John Michels said yester-
day.
Michels denied that the switch'
to a telephone canvass was
prompted by fears that the Ford
campaign was losing ground to
former California Gov. Ronald
Reagan, the President's lone
challenger in the primary.
"WE DECIDED it would just'
take too long to prepare the
amount of supervision and con-
trol you need for a door-to-door
effort," he said.
An informal poll taken at the
Midwest Republican Conference
in Dearborn, Mich., meanwhile,
indicated that Ford has a solid
or moderate lead over Reagan1
in fice of 12 Midwestern states.
The poll, taken during the
first day of the conference,
showed Ford ahead in Michigan
his home state-Illinois, North
Dakota, Nebraska and Missouri.
Reagan was shown either
running even with Ford or just
slightly behind in Ohio, Indiana,
Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa,
South Dakota and West Vir-
ginia.

gets new
eatery
(Continued from Page D
State and Hill has been cleaned
and renamed the State St. Deli.
The new proprietor is Lee Vli-
sides, who owns the building in
which the deli is located.
ONE OF the new managers
had an encouraging word for
those who require a daily fix
of roast beef on rye. "Prices
haven't gone any higher," said
manager Ron Pienta. "In fact,
on a lot of the sandwiches,
we've lowered them."
Some of Dennison's old em-
ployes are now taking orders
and slicing corned beef in the
new deli. But the State St. Deli
claims to be free of Dennison's
influence. One State St. employe
said that Dennison now runs "a
place" out at Westgate Mall.
A few selections have been
cut from the Vaudeville's old
menu. "We're going to add
some new things, though." said
Pienta.
Pientanpromises homemade
soups and chili on the menu
soon. "It takes a little time to
get all these things together,
and we've just opened. But I
think business is going to be
good," he said.
SUPERFLUOUS SPHERE
MAPLEWOOD, N. J. () --
ysses S. Grant to take up golf
as a good form of exercise.
Grant consented to be an ob-
server. Arriving at the course,
the first thing they saw was a
tyro swinging his driver vigor-
ously but vainly. "That does
look like very good' exercise,"
agreed Grant. "What is the
little white ball for?"

r

0

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I
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SPRING BREAK
MARCH 6-13, 1976 $285
DEADLINE: FEB. 4
AIRFARE AVAILABLE SEPARATELY

Band plays its heart
out for new record

(Continued from Page 1)
The sponsors of the musical
extravaganza are the Tau Beta
Sigma sorority and the Kappa
Kappa Psi fraternity. According
to Val Franklin, advisor of Tau
Beta Sigma, "The attempt is
promoting a lot of spirit. People
from all over the community
have been pledging money to-
wards band scholarships for
music and non-music school ma-
jors. Besides, the kids are giv-
ing the university exposure as
well."
THE STUDENTS are playing
together for the first time under
the direction of music school
Profs. Thomas Tyra and Maxi

Planck. Many alumni are also
giving a helping hand.
The students playing are in-
volved in the marching, jazz,
symphonic, or basketball bands.
The music they are playing is
mostly contemporary, including
such tunes as Burt Bacharach's
"Raindrops Keep Falling on My
Head."
With only 14 hours to go be-
fore breaking the old record,
Franklin exclaimed, "the kids
are really holding up well. Not
only have people been pledging
money for scholarships, but
restaurants like Arby's and Mc-
Donald's a r e donating food,
too."

I

-

_

I1

PIRGIM thanks those who have supported its
public interest work.
For those who wish not to fund, PIRGIM announces a
PIRGIM FEE REFUND

Look Into Co-ops!
FOR NEXT FALL
WE ARE .. .
" member-owned

. 1. Your tuition bill shows the $1.50 PIRGIM fee.
2. To eliminate the fee
a. simply fill out the enclosed cord (or any piece of
paper).
b. with your name, i.d. number, signature,
c. and send or take the card.,.
d. to the Student Accounts Office (2nd floor SAB) or j
the Cashier (lobby, L.S. & A. bldq.),
e. ANY time this term.I
(We hope, of course, you will want to support our activities
as set out elsewhere in this paper.)

* member-controlled
" open & democratic
COME TO THE

MONDAYS-12 noon
Rackham-East Conf.
DNA Recombinant Research:
Key Issues
FEB. 2: Susan Wright, Don Michael
"Community involvement in
decisions"
FEB. 9: Research panelists and
continued discussion
FEB. 16: Further discussion

I

1

I

CO-OP MASS MEETIN
SUNDAY, FEB. 8th--1:00 P.M.
MICHIGAN UNION BALLROOM
Learn about student-owned housing on
campus. All co-ops will hold open houses
for those interested in visiting them after
the Mass Meeting.
: 14 Houses on Central Campus
9 Houses on North Campus
Inter-Cooperative Council
AI9.AA1A Rm A007 Michinun Ilninn

UNITE!
JOIN THE
MOVE FOR A

a

VEGETARIANS

11

CO-OPERATIVE
VEGETARIAN HOUSE
for FALL '76
CONTRACTS AVAILABLE
NOW!
The Deadline Is Feb. 13th
so come on in to the

FREE DINNER!
SUNDAY NIGHT-6 P.M.
For Those Interested in
FRATERNITY LIVING
Have a Meal-Meet Some People
' -T

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