2 The Daily Tar Heel Tuesday, November 18, 1975
.J a,
l
!x
is
f o
SANE Director Sanford Gottlieb
From the wires of
United Press International
SAN FRANCISCO The trial of Patricia
Hearst on armed bank robbery charges was
delayed Monday until Jan. 26.
The action was taken by U.S. District
J udge Oliver J . Carter following a meeting in
chambers with defense and prosecution
attorneys.
A defense motion to delay the trial to
allow more time to prepare the defense of the
21 -year-old newspaper heiress was approved
by Carter ruled on the basis of an appellate
court ruling that time spent in psychiatric
examination of a defendant could be
excluded from a federal requirement that
trial begin within 90 days of arrest.
Pretrial motions in the case were set for
Dec. 1 1. A hearing previously scheduled for
this Thursday was cancelled.
Miss Hearst was not present for the
closed-door hearing, but remained in her cell
at the San Mateo County Jail.
CIA report to be released
WASHINGTON-U.S. District Judge
Gerhard A. Gesell Monday refused to block
publication of the Senate Intelligence
committee report on CIA assassination
plots.
The decision was immediately appealed to
The Duke University Graduate School
Round Table on Science and Public Affairs
presents
Dr. Jeremy Stone
Government in Washington:
Reflections of a
Public Interest Lobbyist'
Dr. Stone is Director of the Federaionof American Scientists. A
research mathematician, turned arms control expert, turned public
interest advocate, Dr. Stone is a lively presence on the Washington
scene. Prior to taking his present post Dr. Stone has held
appointments at Pomona College, Standford Research Institute,
The Hudson Institute and The Harvard Center for International
Affairs. He is the author of Controlling the Arms Race and Strategic
Persuasion.
Wednesday, November 19
8:15 P.M. Gross Chemical Auditorium
Informal coffee, Psych.-Soc. commons room, 3rd floor Psych-Soc.
10 a.m. -12 p.m. Thursday, November 20
EVERYONE INVITED
nn n3
UlAE
j Liu Un
Hi
Ifentueky Fried dlibkeu
Chapel Hill: 319 East Main Street in CarrboroDurham: 609 Broad Street
t 814 Ninth Street910 Miami Boulevard2005 Roxboro RoadRaleigh: 1831 North
Boulevard700 Peace Street1314 New Bern Avenue3600 Hillsborough Street
SANE director decries sense
of nuclear
by Vernon Mays
Staff Writer
"We have long been at the stage where it
makes no military sense to keep
manufacturing nuclear bombs," Sandford
Gottlieb, who was included on the 1973
White House Enemies List, said Monday in
a speech in the Student Union.
Gottlieb is the executive director of
SANE, a Washington-based lobbying group
which works actively for reductions in
military spending, disarmament agreements
and the negotiated settlements of
international disputes. SANE was formerly
known as the National Committee for a Sane
Nuclear Policy.
The United States presently has nuclear
weapons stockpiles which include a total of
8,500 hydrogen bombs, enough to destroy
every major Soviet city 39 times, he said, The
Russians have the capacity to demolish each
major U.S. city 13 times.
Hearst trial
the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals which
arranged an early evening session to hear the
case.
The request for a temporary restraining
order came from an anonymous plaintiff
who said if his name is published in a report,
his life will be in danger from unnamed
people seeking revenge.
Gesell, in a decision read from the. bench,
said he was powerless to prevent Congress
from publishing the report even though there
is "a real possibility of physical harm to the
plaintiff if his name is reported physical
violence against himself, or physical
retribution against his family."
"The court has no power of any kind to
edit or censor congressional reports," Gesell
said.
Quinlan case appealed
TRENTON, N.J.-The New Jersey
Supreme Court, bypassing an appeals panel,
said Monday it will decide "on an
accelerated basis" whether Karen Ann
Quinlan can be removed from a respirator
which has kept her alive for seven months.
The court decided to hear the case just a
few hours after Paul Armstrong, the lawyer
iff
bomb manufacture
Speaking for a defensive point of view,
Gottlieb said he sees no reason for either
country to have the potential for such
tremendous overkill. "The ideal would be to
get rid of these weapons altogether," he said.
Gottlieb also discussed the Vladivostok
'Agreement between the United States and
the Soviet Union, which established ceilings
for nuclear weapon production by both
countries.
Although Henry Kissinger said a
proposed treaty between the United States
and the U.S.S.R. based on the Vladivostok
Agreement has been 90 per cent agreed
upon, Gottlieb said, "There will be no treaty
developing from the agreement."
He attributed this to the fact that
President Ford and Communist Party head
Leonid Brezhnev are both pressured by their
countries' right-wing elements to not sign
such a treaty. He predicts the leaders will not
compromise on the treaty to save face with
their constituents.
delayed until Jan. 26
for Joseph and Julia Quinlan, asked the
Appellate Division of Superior Court to
overturn a lower court ruling which refused
permission to allow their daughter to die.
While announcing it will take over the
case, the high court did not set a date for oral
arguments.
. Armstrong went to the Appellate Div ision
after the parents decided during a week of
family-circle talks to appeal the ruling of
Judge Robert Muir Jr., who said Karen does
not have a constitutional right to die.
Lawyers in the case, including Morris
County Prosecutor Donald G. Collester,
who claimed that granting the parents
request would amount to homicide, agreed
that the state Supreme Court would
eventually decide the case.
N. Y. bill debate postponed
WASHINGTON Faced with a
prospective defeat in Congress or a veto at
the White House, House Democratic leaders
abruptly postponed debate Monday on a bill
to keep New York City out of bankruptcy
w ith $3 billion in federally guaranteed loans.
Rep. Thomas Ludlow Ashley, D-Ohio, a
supporter of the bill, said a count Friday
showed the bill heading for defeat, with only
130 of the House's 289 Democrats ready to
support it. Only a handful of the 145
IV ' JiiSfl'i'wil-
M M
Down
Served 1 1 :30 a.m.
Fried Fish with tartar sauce $1 .90
Country Style Steak with gravy $1 .90
Baked Chicken wstuffing & gravy $ .90
Dinners served with
Fried Squash Cofe$te$f
Mashed Potatoes Green Peas
All Beef Hamburger
A -
Mcross Trom uranvme lowers
f
PATRONIZE
DAILY TAR HEEL
ADVERTISERS.
Crossword
ACROSS 57
Puzzler
Break sud
denly DOWN
Female (col
loq.) Arabian gar
ment Missives
Wideawake
1 Festive
5 Region
9 Intellect
1 2 Son of Adam
13 Tissue
14 Garden tool
15 Anon
17 Colorful
birds
19 Surgical
S3 W
2 1 Word of sor
row 22 Barracuda
24 Chinese
distance
measure
25 Expire
26 Equality
27 Punctuation
mark
29 Hebrew let
ter 31 Abstract
being
32 Babylonian
deity
33 Note of
scale
34 Pronoun
35 Symbol for
tellurium
36 Reply ;
38 Organ of
hearing
39 In music,
high
40 Exclamation
41 Singing
voice
42 Italian
seaport
44 Bank
employe
46 Renovate
48 Diner
51 Spanish for
"gold"
52 Pellet
54 Nerve net
work 55 Emerged
victorious
56 Part of
church
1
2
3
4
5
Near
Mend
Verve
Swiss river
Complete
6
7
8
9
10
1 1
16
18
20
22
23
25
27
28
Greek letter
Girls
nickname
Note of
scale
Foray
Entreaties
Barracuda
Sheet of
glass
Entrance
Shut up
Standard of
perfection
I 23 45 6 7 8 V 9 JO 11
I13" i
m .X
MM1 I21
gsp Ww
w
42 43 44 45 yT
w
51 53 gg54
H I iH rgs
Diatr. by United
Political games are being played in the
SALT talks, he said. "These are political
decisions, made by political men for political
reasons."
Pointing out the danger of helping smaller
countries join the "nuclear club," Gottlieb
said such countries could use the bomb as a
threat to gain international power.
The spread of nuclear weapons also
increases the chances of a country using the
bomb since more fingers are on the nuclear
trigger, he said.
"It will, make disarmament tougher if
smaller countries get the bomb," Gottlieb
added.
To reverse the dilemma of the arms race,
Gottlieb suggested that the major nuclear
powers channel their defense money to more
useful sources, such as improvement of
social and economic conditions in the
respective countries.
"We need to slowly change direction and
ask the Soviets to follow us," he said.
Republicans was believed to favor the
measure as long as President Ford opposed
it.
The House Banking Committee, trying to
get Ford to drop his opposition and to pick
up Republican votes in Congress, voted to
offer amendments in debate to cut the size
and duration of the federally backed loans.
The original measure called for making up
to $7 billion in federally guaranteed loans
available to New York State for up to 19
years. The modification would make $3
billion in loans available for seven years.
The compromise was drafted to the
specifications of House Republican Leader
John J. Rhodes of Arizona.
SCAU price
by Dwight Ferguson
Staff Writer
A Chapel Hill or Carrboro shopper could
have his lowest possible grocery bill if he
bought produce at Big Star, meat at Byrd's,
dairy products at Kroger, staples at the
Airport Road A & P and frozen food at the
Eastgate A & P.
Such information can be obtained fromt
he first Student Consumer Action Union
r dffc presents
Home" Special
-2 p.m. and 5 p.m. -8:30 p.m.
Buttered Rolls and 2 vegetables
French Fries
Lima Beans
Tossed Salad
Candied Yams
"all the way" 650
qoq.hk
Answer to Monday's Puzzle
ISOAL
29 Edible land
seeds 44Journev
30 Transgresses45 French arti
34 Encourage
cle
36 Landed
37 Parts of
wagon
39 Malicious
burning
4 1 Ursine
animals
42 Forehead
43 Danish is-
47 New Deal
agency
(init.)
49 Greek letter
50 Corded
cloth
53 French arti
cle n
feature Syndicate Inc a
OIPlSOAlAj -PjAlUjSjEf
P K OjFTl Tl , JAjSlT UTT E
TOnAbTERl lAWAlL
Lea ilt Sill
M ATjL 0TivAPLiE T
A Tj JaF a rlTeTa sib
art i shr' milpjrpta
181 1IISILIEISI.JEIR1.10IN1EI
r4 . -
.-..; v .-. V ; A. . - ' ': - ' . . '.
; - . ; . r.V'
.-. . -y W-k. Tt ' s. ''3
: . . ? - - x
- - . i - i
v t - i
,: I s ' v '.'?. i
: i : T t . v ' i 2
' I , -s JJT
1 ' x f ' I
Carrboro
A Carrboro town budget amendment caused by the town's failure to budget for a
$53,000 water tower may only involve cuts in the water and sewer budget. Town
Manager Jesse L. Greeson said Monday.
Greeson said he will propose to the town Law and Finance Committee today a
series of budget cuts within the town's Enterprise Fund to make up for the cost of the
tank. The Enterprise Fund finances water and sewer expenditures.
Although action on funding the water tower was to have been taken at the town's
last Board of Aldermen meeting, the issue was deferred until the board's next
meeting so the Law and Finance Committee could analyze it more thoroughly.
The board asked Greeson to consult the local Government Commission about the
possibility of funding the tank through the sale of revenue bonds.
But Greeson said he was advised that it would be impractical for Carrboro to
finance the tank with bonds because of legal and printing expenses involved and
because much of the future water and sewer revenues have already been committed.
Committing more funds might create the impression that the town is not
financially competent, Greeson said.
With that advice, Greeson said, he began to reanalyze the town budget. After his
analysis is discussed by the Law and Finance Committee today, committee members
will decide on a payment plan to recommend to the Board of Aldermen at its next
meeting, Nov. 25.
comparisons
(SCAU) "Comparison Shopper
Supermarket Survey," a comparison of
grocery prices at nine local supermarkets.
The survey determined that Kroger has
the cheapest name brand items while Byrd's
the cheapest house brands. The Airport
Road A & P is the most expensive overall for
name brands and Colonial charges the most
for house brands.
The survey, results compiled by
comparing prices of representative products,
are posted on the Union's main floor
bulleting board, next to the Rides
Coordination Map.
Prices for specific products are compared,
with the median the lowest and highest
prices given. Total prices for each of eight
major foot categories and for the entire
survey are listed.
The stores are ranked against each other
for their prices on major brands and house
brands, which are usually cheaper than name
brands.
For produce, such as oranges, celery and
potatoes. Big Star has the lowest prices on
both name and house brands. Both are most
expensive at the Eastgate A & P.
According to the survey, meat, fish and
poultry products, including canned hams,
are most expensive at the Carrboro A & P
Varley's
Men's Shop
4jt For
Quality, Value
and Fair Prices
Try Varley's For All
Your Wearing Apparel
144 E. Franklin-Downtown
CHAPEL HILL 942-3673
-r
1
Advent
Calendars!
Be sure to make your
selection before
December 1, so that
favorite youngster can get
in on all the fun!
From 60 0 to $2.50, supply
good but limited.
The
intimate
ookshop
University Mall and
Downtown, Chapel Hill
Open til 10
WHEN THE TIME
Vjr
2
P
ll
ilk
C--,','.'ift'"11" "
Staff photo by Howard Shepherd
water tower
available
for house brands; Winn Dixie has the most
expensive name brands. Cheapest prices in
this category can be found at Byrd's for
house brands and Kroger for name brands.
For dairy items such as milk, eggs, butter,
and yogurt, Kroger has the best prices on
both name and house brands. The most
expensive store for both types of dairy
products is Fowler's.
Sugar, flour, rice, and' other staples are
cheapest in both categories at the Airport
Road A & P. Fowler's has the highest prices
in both kinds of brands.
Cheapest prices for processed and canned
foods are at Big Star for name brands and
.Kroger, for house brands.rJN'ame brands are
highest at Colonial, and house brands cost
the most at Big Star.
Frozen foods such as corn and peas, are
cheapest for name brands at Big Star, but
house brands in this category cost the least at
the Eastgate A & P. Fowler's has the most
expensive house brands, with Kroger
carrying the highest priced name brands.
Baked goods such as bread and breakfast
cereals are least expensive for both name and
house brands at the Eastgate A & P. House
brands cost the most at Big Star, while name
brands are highest at Colonial.
Miscellaneous items, including
mayonaise, soup, tuna, cola and gelatin are
cheapest for name brands at Kroger. Least
expensive house brands in this category are
at Byrd's. The highest prices for name brands
can be found at the Airport Road A & P.
The Supermarket Survey will be updated
on alternate Saturdays, by SCAU personnel.
The new surveys should be posted by the
following Monday.
FREE KEG O' BEER
TONIGHT (Tues. Nov. 18)
All you can drink (until the keg's
empty) with purchase of any
sandwich
LA
51 E. Rosemary .,2,m,7d,s
TAKE OUT! CALL 967-4696 j
ANNOUNCEMENT
TO STUDENTS
The GRADUATE SCHOOL OF
EDUCATION. University of
Pennsylvania, will be visiting the
Chapel Hill campus on NOVEMBER
19.1 975. We would like to meet with
students interested in Master's
degrees (M.S.) and Doctoral degrees
(Ed.D. & Ph. D.) in the following areas:
SOCIOLOGY & PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION
EDUCATIONAL ADMINISTRATION
CURRICULUM & INSTRUCTION
READING
SECONDARY TEACHING: Math, Scianc, Social
Studiat, English. Foreign Language
ELEMENTARY EDUCATION
GUIDANCE & COUNSELING
EDUCATIONAL MEASUREMENTS
Students interested in seeing our
representative should contact the Career
Planning & Placement Office. 211 HanesHail.
IS TEN TIL LATE.
Researched. Written. Typed.
Now you need it copied. Collated.
Fast.
1 The name that says it all is
Copyquick. Copies. Quick.
COPYQUICK, 929-4028
On Franklin St.
I V4UIV
Over NC Cafeteria
Open Mon.-Sat.
8
saws