Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 22, 1980, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
2 The Daily Tar Heel Friday. February 22, 1980 ,.r.,,i,.r,.aw,li Students reiterate EBirnefi Jim d d for the Shah Commission refuses to stop debate WASHINGTON (AP) The Federal Election Commission refused Thursday to stop a scheduled one-on-one debate Saturday night in New Hampshire between Republican presidential candidates George Bush and Ronald Reagan. Sens. Howard Baker of Tennessee and Bob Dole of Kansas and Rep. John Anderson of Illinois had appealed to the regulatory agency to stop the debate, which is being sponsored by the Nashua Telegraph. Vance says European help lacking LONDON (AP Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance conceded today he had failed to win unanimous backing from America's European allies for President Carter's call for a boycott of the Moscow Olympics. In London at the end of a tour that also took him to Bonn, Rome and Paris, Vance told reporters he found general agreement on the nature of the threat to Western security resulting from the Soviet military move into Afghanistan and on the general objectives of Western policy. But he said, "There are differences of opinion on how to carry them out." Siamese twins now at home FOREST CITY (AP) Siamese twins Fonda Michelle and Shannon Elaine Beaver left an Asheville hospital Thursday and went to their parents home in this western North Carolina town. The infant girls had been undergoing tests since being transferred to Mission Memorial Hospital following their birth in Rutherfordton on Feb. 9. Doctors have said the girls can be separated surgically but have recommended that the operation be postponed at least until the twins have doubled their birth weight. That is expected to take at least six months. Chicago firefighters locked out by city CHICAGO (AP) Striking firefighters tried to return to work at their" regular fire houses Thursday but the city locked them out, jeopardizing a truce that had raised hopes of renewed negotiations. Frank Muscare, Chicago Firefighters Union president, ordered the 4,350 firefighters in the nation's second-largest city back to work at 11 a.m. on the eighth day of their walkout, but strikers were not allowed inside stations. Circuit Judge John F. Hechinger said the city had instituted the lockout because the union violated the back-to-work agreement. Venezuelan official sees calmer market LONDON (AP) Representatives of six OPEC members opened a strategy session Thursday, with Venezuelan Energy Minister Humberto Calderon Beti predicting calm will return to world oil markets by June. Berti spoke at a news conference at the Venezuelan Embassy before the start of a two-day meeting of the long-term strategy committee of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. The session was held behind closed doors and under tight security at a London hotel. The conference was expected to take up a recommendation by OPEC technicians for regular quarterly or semiannual price hikes pegged to currency market fluctuations, economic growth rates and inflation in the industrialized world. For the record In a recent story, The Daily Tar Heel incorrectly reported that the Franklin Street branch of PTA thrift Shop closed because of financial problems. The shop closed because it was moving its business to its new building inCarrboro. The story also incorrectly identified Frances Davis as the assistant manager of the store. Angela Howell is the assistant manager. Davis is a clerk. The DTH regrets the error. GllOQlX yonrcIiano23 of gotting lionet cancor. VP American Cancer Society .r i MAKE PLANS NOW TO ENTER alir Dai hi aar Hrrl PHOTOGRAPHY CONTEST Rules The contest is open to all amateur photographers who are 18 years old or older anoyor are undergraduate or graduate students of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Members of the staffs of any University of North Carolina Student Publications are not eligible. For the purposes of The Daily Tar Heel Photographic Contest, amateur photographers are defined as those photographers who do not support themselves or receive a large share of their personal income due to the sale of photographic services or images. 2. Any subject matter is acceptable for entry. Entries will be judged on (A) Content. (B) Technical Quality this includes croppping, contrast, sharpness and lack of flaws in developing and printing; and (C) Visual Impact. 3. Entrants may submit a maximum of five (5) entries for each of the contest's two major categories provided each entry is accompanied by the entrant's name, address and phone number.. 4. CATEGORIES BLACK AND WHITE Entries must be black and white prints at least 8 x 10 inches and no larger than 11 x 14 inches. Prizes will be awarded for first, second and third places. COLOR Entries must be color prints at least 8 x 10 inches and no larger than 11 x 14 inches. Prizes will be awarded for first, second and third places. BEST-IN-SHOW All entries which meet the above qualifications will be considered for the award as "Best-In-Show." 5. PRIZES The First Place entry in either major category will be awarded a $75 gift certificate to be redeemed at a photographic store to be named by The Daily Tar Heel The Second Place entry in either category will be awarded a $50 gift certificate. The Third Place entry in either category will be awarded a $25 gift certificate. The entry that is named "Best-In-Show" will receive a $100 gift certificate. No entry can win both "Best-In-Show" and First Place in either category. Honorable mention in both the Black and White and Color categories will be rtamed at the discretion of the judges. 6. All entries will be judged by a panel of judges selected by The Daily TarHeeL The decision of the judges will be final. 7. All winning entries must be mounted by the entrants for display after selection. Winning entries will be displayed at Foister's Camera Store and University Mall. 8. All entries must reach The Daily Tar Heel office no later than March 14, 1980. 9. Winners will be required to submit the original negatives or slides of the winning photographs before the prizes are awarded. Failure to comply with this rule may result in disqualification. 10. The Daily Tar Heel will not be responsible for any claim or complaint from models used in winning photographs. Such responsibility is deemed to be that of the entrant. If necessary The Daily Tar Heel may request the entrant concerned to submit a release statement signed by the model before the prize is awarded. Non-winning entries may be picked up at The Daily Tar Heel office during regular office hours. Winners will be notified when they may pick up their entriesT All possible care will be taken in handling all entries. The Daily Tar Heel will not assume responsibility for loss or damage of any entries. In the event an award-winning photograph is later found to have violated any contest rule, The Daily Tar Heel reserves the right to take any action it mav deem suitable, including the return of the prize or prizes awarded. Also, the winning position will be voided. Foister's Camera Store, 133 East Franklin St. and Photosynthesis, University Mall have graciously provided the gift certificates for The Daily Tar Heef Photosrephic Contest which will be awarded to winners. 11 12 .13 The Associated Press Inspired by a message of support from Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the . young militants holding the U. S. Embassy in Tehran vowed anew Thursday they will not release their American hostages until the fugitive shah is handed over to Iran. The militants' reaffirmation of their tough stand raised new questions about the prospects for an early release of the hostages. The U. N. investigative panel on Iran, whose work might be crucial to resolution of the crisis, continued to mark time in Switzerland. Iran's president and foreign minister both insisted there is no deal guaranteeing freedom for the hostages in exchange for the U. N. inquiry. And both Khomeini and President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr reiterated Iran's demand for extradition of the ousted shah. One of the co-chairman of the five member U.N. commission, Mohamed Bedjaoui, Algeria's U. N. ambassador, unexpectedly left Geneva, Switzerland, for New York on Thursday. The commission members had been scheduled to fly from Geneva to Tehran Wednesday, but U. N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim at the last minute delayed their departure until this weekend. Waldheim told reporters at the United Nations that Bedjaoui was returning because he had urgent business in his diplomatic mission in New York, but a U.N. spokesman later said Waldheim and Bedjaoui would meet Friday. Presumably they will discuss the obstacles that caused Waldheim to delay the commission's departure. Iran's foreign minister, Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, indicated Thursday they might now arrive even later than the weekend, telling the Iranian hews agency they would be coming to Tehran early next week. Well-placed cources at the United Nations who asked not to be identified said the delay was necessary' because Bani-Sadr needs more time to marshal various groups in Iran behind a settlement of the crisis. The commission is to carry out a fact finding mission hearing Iranian charges of mass murder and corruption against deposed Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and of U. S. interference in Iranian affairs, and hearing American grievances H ospital dietary workers confer with management By CHARLES HERNDON Staff Writer After several meetings and a week of negotiation, N. C. Memorial Hospital dietary workers and the dietary management apparently have resolved some of the workers' complaints, a hospital spokesman said Thursday. Spokesman Bob Wilson said meetings between a group representing the workers, the United Workers Organizing Committee, and NCMH food service director Thomas Chegash have cleared up some of the workers complaints. "We feel this would conclude the matter of the protests," Wilson said. Last week, about 35 workers presented the hospital and the dietary management with a list of varied grievances and demands. Wilson said he did not know if negotiations were complete, but he said that open meetings between Chegash and the employees would continue. "We will continue to meet with workers individually and in small group meetings if necessary," Wilson said. He also stressed that the grievance procedures previously available to workers, including weekly management employee meetings and a regular grievance forum, would remain in effect. Workers had charged that these procedures were not effective in meeting their needs. Both the hospital and the workers had compromised, Wilson said. Most of the complaints were considered and changes were being made to meet some of the demands, he said. In response to charges that the hiring practices and job opening advertisements were misleading and discriminatory, Wilson said that advertisements and job descriptions would be worded more clearly and would be more available to workers and applicants. Although he did not say that the hospital had misled job applicants or those already on the job, he did say that attempts would be made to improve the communication of the requirements. Workers complained that all supervisors were making the same wages despite seniority. But Wilson said that it was established in negotiations that workers were being paid on a state wide pay scale which could not be altered. Workers also were told that an in service training program would be initiated in March. One of the workers' demands was to re-establish a "training program leading to job advancement for dietary workers". The program was oancled last November. Hospital spokesman John Stokes had said that the program had been planned long before the workers' complaints. Wilson said that many of the workers' complaints were unjustified and not addressed at the meetings. Many of the workers simply were not aware that some of their demands were already hospital policy. Negotiations are expected to continue until all the issues are resolved, Wilson said. Some of the issues raised by dietary workers are being studied by hospital management. DONT FORGET TODAY IS THE LAST CHANCE TO EAT A CHERRY PIE & ENTER SAMUEL PEPYS' BIRTHDAY CONTEST! Prove you ate a cherry pie and be eligible for one of these great bargains ... 1-GE 19" Color TV. Solid State chassis, table model $9.99 1-Huffy 10-Speed Men's 26" Bike $59 5-GE AC-DC Portable Cassette Recorders with built-in microphones. ALC automatic tape shut off $2.99 8-National Semiconductor NS 199 LCD Super Thin Calculators ,gg 12-John Weitz "Weightless" Luggage Overnite Bags $1.99 1. You must be a UNC student. 2. You must have a valid I.D. with you to claim your prize. 3. You must be present at the time of the drawing to win. 4. Entries must be submitted in an official envelope available at the Student Store. IMPORTANT: Entries must contain proof of purchase of one cherry pie. This may be a pie wrapper or a receipt from your bakery. Contest box closes 5 minutes before the drawing. Contest box will be located in the front of the Student Store during the week of February 18-23. All campus snack bars will feature cherry pies at special prices dur ing the week of Feb. 18-23. DRAWING WILL BE HELD AT HIGH NOON IN THE PIT SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23 (Scmuel Pcpys' Birthday) 5. There's More At Your n V Y Jimmy Green Carl Stewart BI investigates phone improprieties of officials RALEIGH (AP) The State Bureau of Investigation will look into allegations that House Speaker Carl J. Stewart and Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green made long distance telephone calls at state expense for political purposes. Both Green and Stewart said on Thursday that they will reimburse the state for any calls that did not involve public business. Gov. Jim Hunt, meanwhile, said that he has a telephone billed to his re-election campaign installed in the Governor's Mansion for his use on political matters. Wake County District Attorney J. Randolph Riley said he was "treating the allegations exactly as I would any other allegations against state employees." The attorney general's office said results of the SBI investigation will be turned over to Riley for evaluation. Green said one of his staff members made a political call from a state telephone, but that the state had been reimbursed for the expense. Stewart, denying any wrongdoing, said he had requested an investigation already under u ay lor way 'by the state legislative services officer. "The entire circumstances are unfortunate," Green said. "The truth is, however, that one of my staff members did in fact make what appears to be an obvious political call on a state toll line. We have already made reparation for that call "We will, of course, cooperate with any investigation," he added. Stewart said he "asked my staff to identify any questionable calls, and we'll be glad to reimburse the state." Stewart said government officials return calls on state telephone lines without knowing whether the original call was for political or non-political purposes. , Stewart, of Gastonia, is opposing Green for the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor. . Hunt, asked about the calls at a news conference, said he uses a campaign telephone credit card for his political calls and also has a campaign WATS line installed in the mansion. From page 1 was not on tour but said that since he would not have to bring a backup group to the Chapel Thrill '80, there is a chance that he may perform. He suggested that contacting James through his agency might be difficult and gave the committee his son's New York address. "Tell him you had spoken with me, and that I'd said he would be interested," Taylor said. "And add that you understand he wouldn't be on tour, but that you'd like him to perform by himself. Also, of course, mention the money." Another problem in the way of the concert is an injury James sustained several years ago, Taylor said. "James cut his hand which severed" a nerve cutting off the feeling in a couple. coliseum fingers," he said. "This hurts his guitar playing maybe that is why he is not going on tour." Although James was born in Boston, the Taylor family later moved to Chapel Hill, where he lived for twenty years. "There is no doubt Chapel H ill has a pull on James," Taylor said. "I know he has some very positive feelings about North Carolina." However if a substitution for James must be found, his father suggested his other recording-star son, Livingston Taylor. "Liv and Jon Edwards did a show in Boston a while ago," Taylor said. "And boy was it a bang-up job." Taylor added that his other son Alec and his daughter Kate also sing, though only Kate sirfgs professionally. From page 1 The new facility also will not require as much parking as originally thought, he said, which means that University construction will be confined to a smaller area. Visitors to the center will be able to park in existing campus parking lots and other lots that will be built adjacent to the center. "The whole bottom line is that we are going to be able to keep a much more natural site than we thought originally," Rutherford said. "We don't believe the person in a house (on Mason Farm Road) will even know it's there." Rutherford said the University is preparing to present its design to the Town Council in May. The deadline for special use permit applications is April 4. If the University presents its project in May, the council will vote on the coliseum July 14. The University plans to begin construction in January 1982 and open the center for the 1984-1985 basketball season. i COUPON GOOD AT BOTH LOCATIONS 2 FOR 1 PJZZA Buy one original thin crust pizza, get another of equal value Pi I 208 W. Franklin 942-5149 Offer expires ! 15-501 Bypass 929-0289 February 29, 1980 TO mm It is unlawful for an ABC Store Employee To SELL any alcoholic beverages to any person UNDER 21 years of age. It is also unlawful for any person UNDER 21 years of age to PURCHASE or POSSESS any alcoholic beverages. Any person caught violating either of these provisions is subject to arrest and prosecution to the fullest extent of the law. Conviction of either of the above offenses is a mis demeanor and subjects the individual to possible fine or imprisonment or both, in the discretion of the court. N. C. G: S. 18A-8(1) & (4); N. C. G. S. 18A-56. Please understand that it is the intent of the N. C. Board of Alcoholic Control and the Orange County Board of Alcoholic Control toseek vigorousenforcementof thelaw where alcoholic beverages and minors are involved, and that arrests and prosecutions will be actively sought for violations of the aforementioned statues. J. T. Gobbel. Chairman Orange County Board of Alcoholic Control Marvin L. Speight. Jr. Chairman, N C. Board of Alcoholic Control
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 22, 1980, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75