Page en THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friddy, June 10, 1977 House committees reject gas tax (Oatinued from Page 1) liam Brodhead (D-Mich.), who tried to junk the whole concept. ON A 24-13 VOTE, Carter's tax was rejected. A second 24-13 vote approved the substitute drawn up overnight by commit- tee technicians and sponsored by Rep. Dan Rostenkowski (D- I1.) with the blessing of Rep. Al Ullman, the committee chair- man. Under the plan proposed by Carter. buyers of fuel-efficient cars- those getting more than 18 miles per gallton in 1978, for ex- ample--would have received a payment from the federal goy- ernment of up to $500. Buyers of less-efficient cars would have had to pay a tax of up to $2,500. The tax agreed to by the com- mittee is slightly higher than the one proposed by Cirter -- about five per cent higher in 1981 - but applies to far fewer car I,. THE CARTER plan would have added the tax to the price of all 1985 cars getting less than 27.5 mpg. but the committee would apply it only to those get- ting less than 24.5 m.p.g. Under the committee plan, the stiffest tax would be $3,856 in. 1985 on cars that get less than 12.5 m.p.g. With virtually no dissent, the committee agreed to f o r g e t about applying the gas-guzzling tax to 1978 models, many of which already have rolled off the assembly lines. THE CARTER administration had estimated that its combina- tion of automobile tax and re- bate would have saved the na- tion about 300,000 barrels of oil per day. The Ways and Means Committee action would cut that figure to about 200,000 bar- rels, a spokesperson said. In voting 12 to 10 to deregu- late natural gas prices, the Iouse energy and power sub- committee in effect rejected President Carter's plan to con- tinue price controls, though at a higher level. Administration s p o k e sman said that if Congress sustains the panel's decision, the average annual bill for the 40 million American households using nat- ural gas would increase by about $100 by 1985. THE OIL AND gas industry urged reregulation on grounds that it would encourage explora- tion for new reserves. Backers of an end to price ceilings, such as Rep. Bob Krue- ger (D-Tex.) said the deregu- lated price would probably set- tle at approximately $2.59 per thousand cubic feet. Under pres- ent federal controls, the price is $1.45. Carter wotild have set a ceil ing at $1.75 and his energy ad- viser, James Schlesinger, sai5 that price would guarantee ga. producers ample profits andi centive to drill new wells. Opponents of deregulatain . the subcommittee vote was ir- relevant and that the real test would come when the fultllowse commerce committee takes ftp the issue in approximatet, ta weeks. OPEN THURSDAY AN riN)FRIDAY cvEN5INGSN; 0 T AFCErace: Anderson nips Block J t r f i 'I (Continued from Page 1) building during the recent AFSCME strike, feels that the suspension did play a part in the election results. "There's no question it had a bad effect on my chances," he stated, "As to how much ef- feet -- there's really a com- mination of factors." Block has made a motion to quash a special search warrant handed down to him by Ann Arbor police in their investi- gation of the bomb threat. He has refused to comply with the order and is4 awaiting Judge S. J. Elden's decision in the ORCANIZATION O ARAB STUDNTS Is Sponsoring A - PROGRAM FRIDAY June 10-7:30 p.m. at the INTERNATIONAL CENTER fOmaiSolidarity Night Progrom includes two speakers Abdallah Sayadi from OAS Nihal Saed from ISA FILM: THE HOUR OF LIBERATION HAS SOUNDED case. "I PLAN to keep fighting the suspension and getting myself cleared through the courts. I'm going to stick it out," Block as- serted. He also said that he plans to remain active in the union in some capacity. Newman captured 492 votes for the union presidency beat- ing out Richard VanValkenburg who won °333. YESTERDAY, N E W M A N attributed his success in the run-off to his independent can- didacy. "I received endorse- ments from both Joel Block and Art Anderson and I think that showed the members that I'd be more qualified," he stated. "I feel I'll work for every- body, not just one group or caucus," Newman said. He too is concerned with edu- cation among the membership and said he will, "Start classes for stewards and members so they will understand the con- tract better." IN OTHER RESULTS of the PUT YOUR BUM ONA Coming June 1 election Betty Foster took 4t of the votes cast for vice-presi- dent, defeating Doug Hidetatt who received 360. Floyd Hiliard was victoritus in his bid for the Exective Board seat from the Central Campus area. Elected in contested chief steward races were: Minnie Rice (aides and attendantst, Willy Witherspoon (dietetics), John Bogi (maintenance), John Bridges (services and cleaning) and Ken Hargrove (grounds) Interesting facts Prince Albert of Saxe-Cobttr Gotha was the first cousin of Queen Victoria of England. They were married when both were 20, and they had 9 chil- dren. In 12 years of coaching bas- ketball at the University of South Carolina, Frank McGuire has a 222-95 record. lie began at St. John's University in Brooklyn in 1948 with a 12-11 mark. The Bahamas, West indian islands just forty miles off the coast of Florida, contain 3, islands, but only 25 of thetn are inhabited. right-handed rookie on the ro- ter of the New York Mets, fea- tures a fine fast ball. He uas 12-11 at Lynchburg in 1976. The wart hog is a \ild pig found in eastern and ssuthcr Africa. -It gets its name ts three great warts on each side of its long, flat face. 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