2 The Daily Tar Heel Monday, September 29, 1975
n n -a
from the wires
of United Press International
VIENNA The world's major oil
exporters said Sunday their decision to raise
oil prices by 10 per cent was a gesture of good
will designed to smooth the way to an
international energy conference with
consumer nations.
Leaders of the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC) rejected
criticism of the price increase, decided at a
four-lay conference here which ended
Saturday. They called the increase justified
and moderate.
The increase will raise the world oil bill by
$10 billion a year and the cost of American
oil imports by $2.5 billion. The OPEC
benchmark price of $10,46 a barrel for Saudi
Arabian light crude will riso $1 1.51.
U.S. Federal Energy Administrator
Frank Zarb called the increase outrageous.
Major
oil companies in Sweden raised
prices by 9.5 cents a gallon,
gasoline prices oy v.d cents a
although the OPEC hike does not take effect
until Oct. 1
Israel raised gasoline prices 21 per cent,
sending the cost from $ 1 .76 to $ 1 .94 a gallon.
A West German oil industry spokesman
said motorists probably would have to add
another 4 cents for a gallon of gas, which
now costs $1.28.
Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger,
who had been at the forefront of Western
efforts to prolong the 18-month freeze on oil
prices, called the rise "better than it could
have been."
House GOP Leader says maybe
more attempts on Ford's life
House Republican leader John Rhodes
said Sunday there may be more attempts to
kill President Ford, and the Secret Service
should be empowered to detain obvious
suspects when Ford is nearby.
But Rhodes said he will oppose any new
gun control legislation, including a proposal
supported by Ford, because he believes such
laws do not stop criminals from getting guns.
"It seems that when there is one attempt
on the President's life it brings lots of other
people who are mentally deranged, to say the
least, out of the woodwork, and it usually
runs in groups," Rhodes said in a televised
interv iew on ABC-TV's Issues and Answers.
Rhodes said he is pleased that Ford
apparently intends to reduce his exposure to
crowds. But he said the Secret Service should
review and strengthen its procedures for
protecting Presidents.
Rhodes said no police agency should "pick
Zoom loom
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as good will
up people just on suspicion, but he said the
Secret Service should have the authority to
temporarily restrain and put under
surveillance well known radicals in crowds
surrounding the President.
State police halt search
for Jimmy Hoffa's body
PONTIAC, Mich. State Police
searchers halted a yard-by-yard hunt near
this Detroit suburb, Sunday for a 6-foot
grave which, according to a tip given to
U.S. Senate investigators, holds the body of
missing former Teamsters boss James R.
Hoffa.
"I don't think this is the area," said
Vincent Piersante of the State Police
intelligence agency.
But he said it is possible that the source
was wrong only on the precise location and
the search continued over a broader area.
"We may find it (the grave) within six
miles of here," Piersante said.
The intensive hunt was touched off,
Attorney General Frank J. Kelley said,
because of a tip given to a U.S. Senate
committee chaired by Sen. Henry Jackson,
D-Wash.
The alleged informant, Kelley said, told
Senate investigators that Hoffa was
kidnaped and slain without the approval of
organized crime bosses who wanted the body
unearthed in an attempt to ease federal
pressure on them.
Hoffa vanished July 30 from outside a
suburban Detroit restaurant where he told
his family he planned to meet reputed Mafia
enforcer Anthony Giacalone for lunch.
Kelly said the tipster told Senate
investigators that the grave was dug one day
before Hoffa's disappearance.
Information that State Police received
from the tipster, Kelley said, was so precise
that authorities took it more seriously than
several similar reports earlier.
This time, State Police used a helicopter
and a specially trained dog in the search.
Authorities said they found no evidence of a
grave or any other signs relating to the Hoffa
case.
Piersante said state officials would seek
more details from the investigators who
passed on the tipster's information.
Two months of psychiatric
studies to be done on Moore
SAN DIEGO Sara Jane Moore,
accused of firing a gun at President Ford six
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Dot Homtiiri
Morschollins Monologue
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RED SEAL
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SET
Time Magazine
On Sale At Your
oil prices
gesture
days ago, was placed in isolation Sunday at
the Metropolitan Correctional Center where
she will be kept away from other inmates
during two months of psychiatric studies.
The 45-year-old housewife was booked
into the plush 12-story federal institution
Saturday afternoon after a nine-hour
automobile trip from the San Francisco Hall
of Justice jail.
U.S. Marshals whiskedlMoorefromthe
jail at dawn in a caravan of three unmarked
police cars that traveled the 53 1 -mile coastal
route.
The caravan eluded newsmen in
downtown San Diego by using an
underground tunnel entrance to the prison.
After her arrival, Warden John D.
Williams abruptly changed original plans
that would have allowed Mrs. Moore to
mingle freely with 47 inmates on the ninth
floor of the facility, and instead announced
she would be housed on the third floor
hospital level.
Patty registers under false name
to obtain student I.D.
SAN FRANCISCO Eight months ago,
while still a fugitive, Patricia Hearst
registered under a false name as a student at
Sacramento, Calif., City College, it was
reported Sunday.
Hearst's purpose apparently was to obtain
a student identity cards with pictures.
Neither Hearst, nor William and Emily
Harris who also registered are believed to
have attended classes.
The development suggested the three
fugitives spent many months in
Sacramento just 70 miles from the scene of
Miss Hearst's kidnaping Feb. 4, 1974. The
FBI and police were attempting to link the
trio, and its Symbionese Liberation Army
friends, tto two bank robberies in the area
during the period.
According to various sources, several
possible connections have been found
between the fugitives and their friends with a
$15,000 bank robbery April 21 in
Carmichael, near Sacramento, in which a
bystander was shot to death.
On Jan. 31, a "Sue Hendricks" registered
at the college for courses in business English,
secretarial practices and intermediate
typing. The Sacramento Bee quoted law
enforcement sources as saying Miss
Hendricks was Patricia Hearst, and that the
card was discovered in an SLA hideout.
After meeting with Hearst, F. Lee Bailey,
famed trial lawyer who joined her defense
team during the weekend, called his
newpaper heiress client cooperative and said
she could get fair trial in San Francisco.
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Staff photo by Steve Causey
Bill Bates, student body president
r
Governors approve
new NCSU chancellor
by Art Eisenstadt
Staff Writer
RALEIGH The consolidated University
of North Carolina Board of Governors
unanimously elected Dr. Joab L. Thomas as
the ninth chancellor of North Carolina State
University Friday.
Thomas, former vice-president for student
affairs at the University of Alabama, will
assume the chancellor's duties in Raleigh on
Jan. 1.
"I assume this role of leadership not so
much with a sense of pride and honor, but
with a sense of challenge," Thomas, 42, said,
addressing the board and about 200
spectators in N.C. State's Stewart Theater.
Thomas said North Carolina has a
reputation among southern states for giving
high priorities to education and added he
looks forward to getting involved in the
If
and Tapes
citss Sciys
overstepping powers
While Student Body President Bill Bates
called for a reuniting of Student
Government, Daily Tar Heel Editor Cole C.
Campbell criticized the Campus Governing
Council for recent displays of "buffoonery"
at Thursday night's Dialectic and
Philanthropic Societies meeting.
Bates said although Student Government
is an arm of government which is necessary
to attain students' goals, "unity is lacking,
and the arm has become weaker."
Despite Student Government's actions,
the individual's perception of Student
Government is largely a matter of attitude,
he said. "To those who want student
Government to lose, it will always appear
that Student Government has lost," he said.
Bates said the recent controversies
concerning Student Government weakened
student influence. But he said he is confident
that students will strive to make positive
changes in the University and added, "Let's
pray that these students will always prevail."
When asked why he requested the
resignation of Student Body Treasurer Mike
O'Neal, Bates said O'Neal was overstepping
his powers as treasurer. Although O'Neal
possesses many talents, "he has not been able
to contain his talents . to the treasurer's
UNC system.
Consolidated University President
William Friday said Thomas was one of 188
applicants for the NCSU post vacated by
John T. Caldwell who retired last spring.
A botanist, Thomas has been teaching at
Alabama since 1961, and had been an
administrator for student development since
1969. He received A.B., A.M. and Ph.D.
degrees in biology from Harvard University.
NCSU Student Body President Mary
Beth Spina said that judging from his
popularity with Alabama students, "He is
completely interested in students and
student affairs. He's got a personality that
would appeal to just about all members of
the University community, including
students. From the student standpoint, he's
the ideal candidate."
Thomas is the second high-level
University of Alabama official to leave the
school for a promotion in recent months.
Former University President David
Matthews is now secretary of Health,
Education and Welfare.
HEW has been recommending that the
university system build a planned veterinary
school at predominantly black North
Carolina A&T University, rather than at
predominantly white N.C. State. Thomas
said he is a friend of Matthews, and believes
the vet school should be built at N.C. State
rather than at A&T.
But he said he will not necessarily pressure
Matthews on the matter.
The Board of Governors was meeting in a
special session called primarily to confirm
Thomas' appointment, but it did take action
on several other affairs.
In other action the board:
Granted Chapel Hill mayoral candidate
James C. Wallace a 25 per cent leave-of-absence
from his duties as an NCSU
professor, if he wins the Nov. 4 election.
Wallace's teaching load would be reduced
from three to two classes, and his $19,503
salary would be reduced to $14,300.
Appropriated $100,000 to the North
Carolina Central University law school for
establishment of a new degree program. The
appropriation was to help the school
maintain its accreditation with the A merican
Bar Association.
Approved the sale of $1.4 million in
bonds to help finance a new gymnasium at
UNC-Wilmington. The bonds were sold to
Wachovia Investment Corp. of Winston
Salem, who will receive an 8.2 per cent
interest return from the University.
Crossword Puzzler
ACROSS
2 Unit
of Latvian
currency
3 Sham
4 Scatter
5 Babylonian
1 Mountains of
Europe
5 Actual being
9 Unit of Siamese
currency
12 Arrow
13 Genus of
maples
1 4 New Deal
diety
6 Frightens
7 Deposits
8 Before
9 Girl's name
10 Woody plant
11 Mountain lake
16 Printer's
measure
agency (init.)
15 Cubic meter
17 Studio
19 Singing
voice (pi.)
21 Solar disk
22 Again
24 Note of scale
25 Man's name
26 Lair
27 Abandon
18 Endure
20 Mountain
nymph
22 Sums up
23 Tidy
25 Macaws
27 Mend with
cotton
29 Railroad (abbr.)
31 Parent (colloq.) 28 Mistake
32 Cooled lava
33 Sun god
34 Pair
35 Saint (abbr.)
36 Commands
38 Moray
39 Man's
nickname
40 Negative
41 Thecaama
42 Thesweetsop
44 Severe
46 Smalt dining
area
48 Steps over
a fence
51 Conjunction
52 Danish island
54 River in Siberia
55 Manuscripts
(abbr.)
56 Part of church
57 Soaks
DOWN
1 Paid notices
by
O'Neal
office," Bates said.
He said the treasurer's office is becoming
too powerful in student affairs and too
influentional in Student Government policy.
He added that if O'Neal does not resign by
Tuesday, he will probably act through the
Student Supreme Court to remove O'Neal.
When questioned if the Black Student
Movement has actually broken treasury
laws. Bates said no final declaration has been
made on the guilt or innocence of the BSM,
and that the investigation of alleged BSM
violations is still being conducted.
But Bates said if the BSM checking
account was illegal, poor communications
may be to blame, since treasury laws have
not been strictly enforced in the past.
DTH Editor Campbell said Student
Government suffers from "legislative
myopia". He said CGC interferes with the
functions of its committees and boards.
As an example of legislative interference,
he cited CGC's forming a special committee
to investigate the Daily Tar Heel s finances
during the recent funding controversy,
despite the Media Board's forming a
committee fo the same function.
Campbell said there is "a tendency for
buffoonery to exist in meetings of the CGC."
Rudeness and general inconsideration is
often expressed by CGCmeniberswho ignore
parliamentary procedure and move for
adjournment before all bilJs have been
introduced, Campbell said.
Student Government must concentrate on
campus problems such as the student body's
lack of legal counsel, effective security
provisions, adequate physical education for
women and equitable sign-up systems for
parking stickers and dormitory rooms.
Campbell said.
He said Student Government must
produce effective programs, rather than
conduct disorganized meetings as CGC has
conducted this semester.
Distrust between various groups and
individuals has lessened the overall effect of
any requests made of student organizations
or the administration, Campbell added.
Cooperation rather than confrontation
should be used to solve student problems, he
said. But confrontation can be used as a last
resort, when the entire student body is
concerned about a major issue.
Wells won't run
for re-election
Carrboro Mayor Robert J. Wells has
announced he will not run for re-election this
fall because, he said, not enough people are
concerned with Carrboro's town
government.
Wells, who has served as mayor for the
past four and a half years, said a lack of
cooperation between Carrboro's permanent
and transient population and a general
apathy in the town were important factors in
his decision against running again.
. "Together we can go places, divided we'll
stand still," he said.
Wells said a number of people have asked
him to run again but he thinks it is in the best
interest for himself and Carrboro that he not
seek office again.
A person should run for office on his own
merits and not because an organization
asked him to run. Wells said.
The remark referred to a recently-formed
coalition group in Carrboro which is
backing Ruth West, the only announced
candidate for mayor of Carrboro.
During his term in office. Wells has
worked to maintain the identity of Carrboro
instead of letting it be overshadowed and
absorbed by Chapel Hill.
He has been in the center of controversy
over proposals for a mass transportation
system in Carrboro, maintaining that
Carrboro cannot afford its own independent
bus system.
As mayor., Wells also pushed to upgrade
Carrboro's police and fire departments and
improve water and sewer systems.
Answer to Saturday's Puzzle
29 Regrets 43 Containers
30 Pari in play 44 Walk
34 Predetermine 45 Exists
36 Bacteriologist's47 Chinese
wire
37 Goes in
39 Twists
41 Performer
42 Man's name
pagoda
49 Parcel of land
50 Abstract being
53 Faroe Islands
whirlwind
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