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o 2 The Daily Tar Hoe! Tuesday. October 28. 1980 "7" 1 . 6 .0 ft GKIiLNSBORO (AP) A prosecutor charged Monday that hatred, bigotry and prejudice motivated six Ku Klux Klansmen and American Nazis to fire at Communist demonstrators during a ra!ly last fa!!. But a defense attorney portrayed the Klansmen and Nazis as loyal, hard-working Americans who joined the organizations because they were enchanted with their uniforms and ceremonies. District Attorney Michael Schlosser began final arguments in the murder trial of the six Klansmen and Nazis by urging an all-white jury of six men and six women to find the defendants guilty of first-degree murder. "If you find the defendants guilty of anything less than first-degree murder, you're playing right into the hands of the communists,' said Schlosser, who used videotapes of the bloody confrontation between extremist groups to illustrate his statements. Five CVVP members were fatally shot last Nov. 3 as they took part in a "Death to the iKlan" rally in Greensboro. Since then, CWP members have repeatedly said the murder trial, which entered its 20th Rise in Cesarean births cioxh week Monday, is a sham and that state and federal officials were responsible for the slayings. After Schlosser opened final arguments, attorneys for each of the six defendants began presenting their closing statements. Schlosser will then have an opportunity to address the jury a final time before Superior Court Judge James M. Long instructs the jury. Long told jurors that in capital cases there was no limit to the length or number of arguments defense lawyers may make. He cautioned jurors that while they listen to the arguments, which could take much of this week, they must themselves decide the facts and receive instructions on the law from the judge. Schlosser said it would be an indictment of the nation's judicial system "if you let these six killers walk out of here free." Using slow-motion videotapes made by. a photographer for WTVD-TV in Durham, he repeatedly pointed out what each defendant was doing, adding, "Does that look like self-defense?" The defense has relied heavily on testimony that the six defendants acted in self-defense. Schlosser was followed by defense lawyer Robert Cahoon, who represents Roland Wayne Wood, 36, of Winston-Salem. He spent about 15 minutes thanking jurors, the judge and prosecutors for their attention and preparation in the trial. "The defendants have sat over there and have listened to themselves described as murderers and bad people through it all, and they have been under a lot of pressure. They have shown nothing in the world but respect for the police, the courts and the prosecuting attorneys," said Cahoon. "They are essentially loyal, hard-working Americans who love their country and its flag." Cahoon said the defendants joined the Klan and Nazi organizations without fully understanding the implications of their membership and because they liked the uniforms and the ceremonies of both groups. . From page 1 joIIowg nution Cy KATIIY PITMAN Staff Writer Women are receiving unnecessary Cesarean sections because of a national belief that their babies will have fewer chances of birth defects, a doctor at the UNC School of Medicine said recently. "Doctors are following a national and international trend of performing Cesareans in many abnormal labor situations, when a normal birth might be possible," said Dr. Robert Cefalo, director of maternal and fetal medicine at the medical school. Cefalo is a member of a task force sponsored by the National Institute of Health. The group found that doctors performed 92 percent of the Cesareans for one of four reasons: failure to progress in labor, a repeat Cesarean, breech birth or fetal complications, Cefalo said. ' From 1970-1979 the task force found a threefold increase in the number of Cesareans performed, from 5.5 percent of all births to 17.9 percent this year. The'rale isabout 17 percent at N.C. al trend Memorial Hospital, he said. The number of operations performed does not vary with age groups or socioeconomic groups, he added. "We looked at a lot of deliveries and it's very consistent," he said. Cefalo also said hospitals should review the number of Cesareans their doctors are performing and decide if all of them are necessary. "If you give the mother a good reason that it's safer for the baby (to perform a Cesarean) she usually wants what's best for the baby," he said. He said a repeat Cesarean is often performed because a patient requests the operation, regardless of the individual situation. Cefalo said the task force concluded that "the trend could be reversed while tending to make improvements in fatal outcomes." The task force also reported that Cesareans are a higher risk for mothers and cost more than normal deliveries and recommended that doctors consider all other available options before resorting to the operation. Backpacking Alpine Siding Nordic Skiing Climbing I ( Caroling I I ijv Outdoor I I X Sporti I 133 E. Franklin St. Chapd HiU-Upatain above Small World Travel Hour: M-F 10-8. Sat 10-6 942-6663 CAftOUMA OUTDOOR M.Nt sppwrs PontMOil w i i tJ W V Rounder Records recording crtist3 n.r3 Lt Lid Ccy (currently cppccfifivj ct tho Cat's Crcdio) will bo mcctin , grcctln', end signing cutogrcphs ct tho Record Bar on Franklin Street cn Wzdnzzdzy, October 29 ct 4:C0 pm. Step by for the excitement end net the nev Riders in the Sky LP, V:rzo cn 'tin Tsz'l cn e:.!e now through November 5 (""' PiH frr I f fy" frf'Hj fff will come back, only interpreted differently." Press said she bought her inventory for students whose tastes lent themselves to classic or even daring styles, and those more mature buyers who appreciated the attention to detail in traditional clothes. "What these people are getting is the stuff that's been hand-picked by me as the best from the past," she said. Press said her three-year-old business has nothing priced higher than $48,. and that the price for most dresses and coats was from $25 to $35. She said she was now stocking up on '50s clothing so she could rent the clothes to people who were having '50s parties. Two area PTA Thrift Shops also sell a wide variety of bargain clothes. Located on Jones Ferry Road in Carrboro and in splaiiits Kroger Plaza, the shops are operated by the local Parent Teacher's Association to raise money for nine area schools. Clothes and appliances are donated to the stores. "We've found out that a lot of people can't afford to go to other stores to buy clothes when their children grow out of them so fast," Angie Howell, an employee at the Kroger Plaza store, said. PTA Thrift Shop clerks said the stores prices are among the lowest from a dollar for dresses and sweaters to 75 cents for slacks. The shops have been operating for 26 years. "We're not out here to make money (for ourselves), but ve want to help the schools," Howell said. From page 1 sometimes received different information from different staff members. "I think more than once in dealine with student affairs, 1 have heard one thing from one person and one thing from another," he said. "And more than once I have heard two (things) from the same person." For instance, during the1 debate over control of the newly established IM-Rec ntramural fee last year, Norberg said he spoke with Boulton several times to construct a plan suitable to both Student Government and the administration. He said they had decided to create a board made up of students, faculty and administration members so that all three parties would have some control in the fee distribution. But when administrators met to approve the plan, they decided to create an IM-Rec council that would only advise the intramural office on fee distribution instead of control it. " . Both Saunders and Norberg agreed that the solution to the problems with the Office of Student Affairs lay in better communication between the two organizations. RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH ORGANIZATION ABORTIONS UP TO 12 WEEKS S176.CD FROM 13-14 WEEKS $303.00 15-16 WEEKS $350X3 (All Inclusive) Pregnancy Tests Birth Control Problem Pregnancy Counseling For Further Information Call 832-0535 or 1800-221-2568 917 West Morgan St. Raleigh, N.C. 27605 Tfo)f n ZZ3 OR haiUtfMNlMMtti lgr vtttiMiP lUS in 1 . Carolina Football players are encouraged to eat reg ularly at Western Sizzlin! 2. Carolina Football cheerleaders are encouraged to eat regularly at Western Sizzlin! 3. Carolina Football fans are encouraged to eat regu larly at Western Sizzlin! All of the above are encouraged to tako advantage of our luncheon specials and our 37 item salad bar Wo'ro open 1 1 am- 1 1 pm daily and j You are encouraged to com o in today. 942-1816 3nUJL" VZ'l :SNV WESTERN JiJ JL A 1 . l - . ) 324 W. Rosemary St. JirecJh behind FowVr Caotro releaoeo 30 U.S. prioonero MIAMI (AP) Thirty American prisoners pardoned by Fidel Castro on charges that included hijacking and drug-smuggling left Cuba Monday and were flown to the United States, where they were greeted by tearful and jubilant friends and relatives. About 200 people waved U.S. flags and cheered as the chartered Air Florida Boeing 737 arrived from Havana at Miami International Airport. The Americans had been jailed for terms ranging from months up to 11 years. The Cuban government announced Oct. 13 that all U.S. prisoners would be released in response to appeals from congressmen, social organizations and relatives of the prisoners. Diplomatic sources speculated the move was another in a series of conciliatory gestures by Cuba. Fire deotrojs Brooklyn census data NEW YORK (AP) A fire possibly caused by arson destroyed some records at a U.S. Census Bureau office in Brooklyn Monday, forcing the bureau to order a rapid recount that city officials believe will show preliminary census returns were wrong. New York City, like several other urban areas, has complained publicly and in a federal court suit that the .1980 census, with its reliance on a mail survey, unintentionally skipped thousands of residents. Most of the 19S0 official working papers .and population reports for the Bedford-Stuyvesant area were destroyed by the fast-spreading fire. Word came quickly from census headquarters that the area, with an estimated 225,000 residents, would be counted again. speaker From paga 1 "At the outset, I thought Anderson might throw the election into the House (of Representatives), and there are still two states where he could get a plurality of the vote Massachusetts and Connecticut. Anderson will have no electoral impact, however," he said. He also said Anderson was drawing votes from both Reagan and Carter but more Carter supporters were in the Anderson camp and could tip several key states to Reagan on Election Day. "In a close election, it could mean the difference," he said. Questioned about the Carter Administration, Leuchtenburg said historians' would judge the president's record in foreign policy as admirable and his domestic policy, especially in the area of the economy, as questionable. "Historians will say Jimmy Carter's record is not so bad. I am less persuaded this is so with Reagan, however," he said. Both candidates are not among their party's stronger candidates, Leuchtenburg said, perhaps accounting for their unpopularity among the public. He also said the 1934 election was shaping up to be a fight between Vice President Walter Mondale and Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., who callenged Carter for the Democratic nomination this year. Leuchtenburg said to watch the state of New Jersey and the early-reporting precincts of Bridgeport, Conn., and Evansville, IU., as indicators of election results. "If Carter takes New Jersey, I would think it wiU be all over," he said, implying the election would go to Carter. Leuchtenburg compared Carter and Reagan to past presidents Jimmy Carter to Harry Truman and Ronald Reagan to Woodrow Wilson after his stroke. Reagan is like Wilson after his stroke in that "both look at various political issues rigidly, believe in simple answers and have a lack of awareness of complexity," Leuchtenberg said. "Carter identifies with Truman and would like to think history is repeating itself this year and he will be the Harry Truman of 1980." hOStagGS From pago 1 resisting the enemy," Tehran radio said in a dispatch that detailed fighting on and around the strategic bridge that links Khorramshahr with the road to Abadan, 10 miles to the south. The span is located immediately south of Khorramshahr, which the Iraqis claimed they seized Friday. Iran denied the city had fallen, but late Sunday Iran's Prime Minister Mohammad Ali Rajai said the situation at the port city was critical. r,$$EiyMG0fcL.RESTAURAMT. -4 Dine amid the art of China Gourmet food from all four (.f Peking, Szechuan, Canton, Shanghai - I " -V .-!:... a- o J ' J . Private party rooms available .... .40 ' TAKE-OUT SERVICE AND SPECIALS AT LLM II All lunch served with fried ce 99 foil, choice of entree orvd toup l At SO Utvf KGvAA AUNU AT IUCM KC4 EAST HtAiNKUN ST., CHAPEL HILL 9421613 PEKING GARDEN II SOUTH SQUARE MALL. DURHAM 43-3119 lunch: Weekday 1 1 cm-2 pm Sat. Sun. 12-2.0 pm Dinner: 5-10 pm dally i'-m t wt SB f'm tm f.w I m ? m I m f;m f m i m i m J m I'm m ) m f - s ai 1T D MONEY WE ARE BUYING GOLD AND SILVER! NAVAJO TRADING POST 510 VV. FRANKLIN STREET 929-0263 WE ARE BUYING DIAMONDS Q jWe arc now buying CLASS RINGS, DENTAL GOLD, tYED 1 0 O n'.DING BANDS, GOLD COINS, GOLD lEViELRY, SILVi:.' JEVEUIY, anything MARKED 1CK, 14IC 1CK GOLD cr p- 3 We test unmarked gold Dr. Henry A. Greene, Optometrist Is Pleased To Announce The Opening Of An Office For Eye Health and Vision Examinations And Contact Leris Care October 1, 1980 3115 Academy Road (Lower Level) Durham, North Carolina 27707 919)493-7456 Special Services Are Available For: Children, The Aged, and The Visually Handicapped V1 r. V J 'vE PAY TO? DOLLAR FOR STERLING SILVER OR , SILVER COINS V 0 WE MIE NOW SELL! KG JEWELUY! COME SHE Oim niFPLAYS l i I j" I t Is. i I ' - ft I ; X 14 l l4 ' ! mw'' J .aSiimt mS Thz I li-.tcr cf Ir.tcrr.-ticrl Dus!r.r:s Stud.n (M35) Vtczrm r- I (p---,f?t - e t9 m v wi w . V.m mwI 4m4 V i , ,, , . w w w - t::i i.vj . i:.:s i:za. fls. it n.A.. rh. d. i.i dj.. m.a. in Irrr: r: J t!.? Ph. D. In Ecc: Err f.::' r l-'.r: '.-. r'' t- w" '' ft f t Iff- 'r rrr L- - s Astc-dtisn T2A Sc::;!r.:ir cn Octctr? 23 ct 7;:3p.r.i., 11, ? ; !'e;r.:nt Ccr.?:r. I!:.'! tf v.il!3 to: i - , 21 Cuart St. 7UK.nth St, 513 Frit.n St. i l ' I. v.'' .5 "v., , III HiJi . O fmc mJ fm' f fm? f ! C ' I - nil Ill I E - - S
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 28, 1980, edition 1
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