: The Daily Tar Heel Friday, February 1, 1CC0
11 rapes, assaults reported in January
Mews Don
New fighting in Iran takes 50 lives
A fresh outbreak of fighting between Kurdish rebels and government forces
has taken at least 50 lives in western Iran, a rebel spokesman said Thursday.
The new bloodshed was reported as signals grew stronger that some progress
might be possible in resolving the U.S. Embassy standoff and winning freedom
for the approximately 50 American hostages in Tehran.
Guatemalan police attack seized embassy
GUATEMALA CITY, Guatemala (AP) Police stormed the Spanish
Embassy, which had been occupied earlier Thursday by Guatemalan peasants,
and the Red Cross said more than 30 persons were killed.
The Embassy caught fire during the attack. Spanish Ambassador Maximo
Cajal y Lopez, who was wounded in the fight said, "the police action was
brutal." .
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From page 1
By JOHN ROYSTER
Stiff Writer
Eleven rapes, assaults and other offenses against
women were reported to the Chapel Hill Rape Crisis
Center and the Chapel Hill police in January.
Janet Colm. director of Rape Crisis, said six calls
made to the center in January were assault-related. She
said that at least some of the assaults were actual rapes,
but she said she could not give any numbers or details of
the cases because of the center's policy on
confidentiality.
Of the six calls to Rape Crisis, Colm said, five were
reports of incidents in January, and the sixth had
occurred earlier. Colm said she could not say whether
any of Rape Crisis calls were the same ones reported to
Chapel Hill police.
Colm said the crisis center's figures for the last quarter
of 1979 (October-December) showed 14 assault-related
calls to the center.
Chapel Hill police reported five assaults and other
incidents including females in January in the Gimghoul
Road area adjacent to UNC. The police, however,
reported no r-w
Jane Cousins, a Chapel Hill Police Department social
worker, described te five Gimghoul area incidents:
On Jan. i wi-man jogger reported that she was
attacked on tandem Drive. She said she kneed her
attacker in the pr-;:. and escaped.
Later that same week, a woman jogger reported that
she was pursued on Hayes Road, first by a man in a small
red automobile and later by the same man on foot.
She reachea a nearby house, and the man who had
chased her stopped on the front lawn and said he only
wanted to know her name, the woman reported.
On or about Jan. 16, a man reportedly exposed
himself at Greenwood Road and the N.C. 54 business
route.
On Jan. 16, two women called police about 30
minutes apart and reported a man acting suspiciously in
the Gimghoul Road-Glandon Drive area. Both said that
a man wearing a baseball cap followed them and hid
behind walls and bushes.
The callers said that the man left in a large late model
automobile. Public Safety Officer Kenny Rogers said he
chased the car from the neighborhood and down the
N.C. 54 business route east, but was unable to stop the
car.
Cousins said all of the incidents except the one
involving the small red automobile were thought to
involve the same man. She said no arrests have been
made.
Besides the 1 1 incidents in January, a woman was the
victim of a strong-arm robbery on Estes Drive on Dec.
28, said Ben Callahan, police department administrative
assistant.
The woman reported that she was walking home from
work when a young male assaulted her and stole a
knapsack containing $25 and some personal effects,
Callahan said. There are no suspects in that case.
Lt. Charles Mauer of the University Police said no
assaults had been reported to his department since
November.
Neither the Orange County Sheriffs Department nor
the Carrboro police reported any rapes or assaults on
females in Janaury.
immediately, deposit $20, and pay $29.50 each
month for 24 months, which includes sales tax,
handling and carrying charges. The total cost
is $728.
Bernholz said four students have asked her
advice on buying the products in the past week.
All four canceled their contracts before the
iree-day trial period was up. These students
had paid the non-refundable $20 deposit
before the salesman left the party, however.
If asked by one of the salesmen to arrange a
demonstration party, dorm residents should
turn down the offer, note the caller's name and
contact their residence director or the
residence life office, Harpster said.
CWP plans to attend march despite ban
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By CHUCK BURNS
Staff Writer
Despite being kicked out of the Feb. 2 Mobilization
Coalition, the Communist Workers Party still plans to
attend the march in Greensboro Saturday. Meanwhile,
student groups at UNC and other area colleges and
universities said they are more willing to attend the rally
now that the CWP is no longer part of the coalition.
The march is being held to protest the resurgence of
violent racist activities by the Ku Klux Klan and Nazi
Party, and to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the
first sit-in in Greensboro by A&T students who
requested service at a segregated Woolworth's lunch
counter on Feb. I, 1960.
The Executive Body of the Mobilization Coalition
booted the CWP from the coalition after the CWP
refused to give assurances that its members would not be
armed. The CWP is asking the National Steering
Committee of the Mobilization Coalition sponsors to
overturn the action by the executive body, said Charles
Finch, CWP spokesperson. The Committee will meet
tonight in Greensboro at 6 p.m. to discuss the issue.
Marion Yuen, CWP press officer, said the CWP still
plans to continue its activity, both nationally and
locally.
Finch said the executive body violated an agreement
made at an Atlanta conference on Dec. 15, 1979. "We
agreed that the question of arms would not be
discussed," Finch said.
Greensboro City Manager Tom Osborne has said any
permit he issues will contain specific provisions banning
members from carrying weapons.
But, Yuen said, the CWP has not said it will carry
arms. "We are not saying whether or not we will be
armed. We are just upholding the right to bear arms."
Yuen said if the CWP agrees not to carry arms they
will be at the mercy of the Klan, the Nazis, the police and
the National Guard.
Gov. Jim Hunt has ordered the National Guard and
150 highway patrol men to aid police in Greensboro.
Greensboro Mayor Jim Melvin requested the assistance.
A similar request was granted last November during a
funeral march for the five slain demonstrators.
But some students appear relieved that the CWP is no
longer part of the coalition, according to Greg Tucker,
one of the student organizers behind the march.
A lot of students seemed to feel like the CWP was a
factor in coming to it (the march)," he said. "Some
students at Guilford College (in Greensboro) that we
talked to said they would come now that the CWP was
out (of the coalition)."
About 10-15 UNC medical students plan to attend the
march on Saturday.
"We need to make more than just a vocal statement
' against racist groups like the Klan," said UNC medical
student Barbara Johnston. "And secondly, we're at a
point where we need to unify and not lose the gains we've
already made (in minority civil rights)."
Another UNC medical student, Mark Smith, said he
was at the Nov. 1 1 demonstration to show his opposition
to the murders of five anti-Klan protestors in
Greensboro Nov. 3.
"The version released by the police was not true,"
Smith said. "A copy of the special permit was given to
the Klan, and the cops were sitting around the corner
while people were getting killed. Then they started
arresting the wounded people for inciting a riot."
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University Mall, Chapel Hill
Get In thep for Hacknty't Great Rcltlgh Road Ract - Sunday, March 30.
Larimar seeks judgeship
William Larimer, a Carrboro resident who
practices law in Chapel Hill, announced
Thursday that he is seeking the Democratic
nomination to the local district court.
Larimer is challenging Stanley Peele of
Chapel Hillforadistrictjudgeshipforthe 15-B
judicial district serving Orange and Chatham
counties. Peele filed for reelection Jan. 9.
Donald Lee Paschal of Siler City is the other
For the record
. A Daily Tar Heel article listing
candidates for Campus Governing
Council seats Thursday failed to mention
candidates running for office in District
20.
Tom Lambeth, Joe Reckford and
Eddie Carlton are seeking the seat for
that district.
The DTH regrets the error and
apologizes for any inconvenience caused
to Lambeth, Reckford and Carlton.
sitting judge for the local district. No candidate
has challenged Paschal, who also is seeking
reelection.
Larimer said, "I'm running because I feel 1
could, in a very valid and important way, serve
the citizens of Orange and Chatham counties."
Larimer, 29, is a partner in the Chapel Hill
law firm of Winston, Blue, Larimer and
Rooks. He has practiced law in both Orange
and Chatham counties. He graduated from the
UNC law school in 1975.
1 have represented people from all walks of
life in district court as well as all courts.. .A
judge who understands the way people think
and why they do certain things is in a better
position to attempt to help people in their
dealings with the law," he said.
Larimer stressed that one of his main goals
as a judge would be to prevent crime.
-ANNE-MARIE DOWNEY
Guilty plea
for kidnap
A Chapel H ill man received a nine-20
year sentence Wednesday after he
pleaded guilty to charges of kidnapping
a UNC senior Sept. 8.
Curtis Parrish, 24, of E-4 Ridgeficld
in Chapel Hill pleaded guilty to
kidnapping, common law robbery and
larceny of a motor vehicle in the Sept. 8
abduction of Chris Mackie of
Carrboro. The kidnapping charge
carries a sentence of five-10 years and
the robbery and larceny charges each
carry two-five year sentences.
Parrish is the last of three Chapel Hill
persons to be convicted this month in
connection with the incident. Brenda
McCrae, 21, of Pritchard Street
Extension and Kenneth Watson, 1 5, of
60 1-B Gomains St. received 20- and 1 5
year sentences, respectively. All of the
charges were consolidated by District
Judge Coy E. Brewer Jr.
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