-4 r V. 4 i i. ' ? Rc:n cf tcrrcr Monday comes true to form' with intermittent rain End 'a high in the middle 50s. Low tonight in the upper 30s. Chance or rain is DO percent. If T . "--ntf N' sq? Serving the students end the University community since 1893 Students met-at the Franklin Street post office Friday to send off mere than 1,000 petitions calling fcr a Justice Department investigation into tha Greensboro trial; Sea pag3 3. Velum? C3, lzzu3 C (0 1 . rVewv'SpvT Ajtt 933 0245 Eu$miv Advertising 9 33-1163 - ! TO (EDTHLllG o 1' A 71 o Ml M m0'mm mi i' m I I ! ! ! S e i r'-? - ." - fr ." srm r-: p long-term plans X it. s DlHcon harp a ( i 7 o Tar Meets d By DAVID POOLE Assistant Sports Editor Duke football coach Red Wilson is not a greedy man, but he couldn't help being a little bit covetous of his counterpart at North Carolina, Dick Crum, after his Blue Devils were drubbed 44-21 by the Tar Heels in Kenan Stadium Saturday. "I would like to have one back like Amos (Lawrence) or Kelvin (Bryant), let alone two," Wilson said. "We just couldn't stop them. It was their day." Indeed it was, for while the tailback tandem and their teammates were winning the Atlantic Coast Conference football title with the win over Duke, Lawrence and Bryant both had pretty good afternoons for themselves. Both Tar Heel tailbacks went over 1,000 yards rushing for the year, combining for 342 yards and four touchdowns. Lawrence had 143 yards, giving him 1,118 for the year and 4,331 for his careerthe ninth highest total in NCAA history. : "Bryant's 199 yards gave hira 1,039 for the wesson xrWead Lawrence joined the duo of Don McCauley and James Betterson as the only Tar Heel pairs to gain more than 1,000 yards in the same year. ' "Kelvin had a really good day,", Crum said. "He and Amos complement each other so well that we've been able to use. thern both and keep them both healthy." s Aside from the spotlight on Lawrence and Bryant the 57th . renewal of this match-up just might have rekindled the flames of rivalry which have flickered in recent years. At times, Saturday's game looked as much like a 22-man prize fight as a football game. : i The pugilistic activity left at least one Tar Htd player more TV than a little upset. "When they hold and hold and it's never called, things build, up and build up. You can only take so much," Donneil Thompson said. "You know you're going to get held some, but when you get held eight, nine or 10 times in a row, that's ridiculous." "Duke threw the ball 45 times and there wasn't one holding call," Crum said. uWhen you get held all the time, you get frustrated. I don't like that sort of thing (fighting), but I could certainly understand our players frustrations." "I think both teams were very intense today," said Greg Poole, who was ejected after a late hit on a Duke touchdown. "It was so intense, some feelings were going to get hurt." Had things gone throughout the game as they did in the first period, there might not have been any need for such intensity in the second half. Carolina marched make that exploded 71 yards after the opening kickoff, going up 7-0 on a 56-yard sprint by Lawrence that put him over 1,000 yards only five plays into the game. That Jbecame 14-0 wh en, the.Tar Heds converted a Steve Streater interception the firsf of his three into a nine-yard burst for a TD by Bryant. Carolina added to that when Lawrence Taylor, already a selection to two All-America teams at linebacker, tackled Mike Grayson in the end zone for a safety. After Duke kicked, Carolina waltzed 41 more yards in nine plays and led 23-0 shortly after the second quarter began. Duke, however, didn't quit. Freshman quarterback Ben Bennett (whom Thompson called "the cockiest freshman I ever met") got his passing arm loose and moved Duke down to '. 7 oj economy Ey DECOPvAH HinSCH Staff Writer Sea HEELS on page 5 Meeting marked by dissension n Kelvin Bryant holds aloft a jubilant Amos Lawrenca (right) after Lawrence scored the final touchdown in Saturday's game against Duke. Both Lawrence and Bryant passed the 1,000-yard rushing mark, becoming only the second pair of UNO backs to do so. Billy Johnson lies in the end zone. AMMAN, Jordan (AP) Most Arab leaders will gather here this week to map long-term political and economic strategy but the possibility looms of a rival summit of hard liners, sources said Sunday. Syrian Foreign Minister Abdul Halim Khaddam was reported en route to Libya and Algeria in an effort to promote a boycott of the League cf Arab States' meeting. "There is a possibility of a sorehead summit," said one source who asked not to be identified. - The split in the ranks of the 22-mcmber Arab League has been brought about by the two-month-old Iran-Iraq war and the fear of radical regimes that Iraq would win at least implicit tpproval for its position at the summit. Sources predicted between 16 and 19 kings, ruling sheiks end presidents would go to Amman fcr the summit, which Cpens Tuesday at the Royal Theater Hall on the western fringes of Jordan's capital. Syria, which announced it would not attend, and Libya, Algeria and Marxist South Yemen, may hold their own mini summit to demonstrate veto power of any strategy adopted by the moderates without their consent, sources said. A key question is which summit will attract Yasser Arafat's Palestine Liberation Organization, which in 1976 was moved from observer status to full membership and which the league recognizes as the only spokesman for the Palestinians. "The PLO is in the embarrassing position of having the choice between the sword and the gold," one Arab diplomat said. Syria, with 22,000 peacekeeping troops in Lebanon, controls the PLOs power base there, but oil-rich, conservative gulf states finance Arafat's guerrillas. The PLO planned an executive committee meeting in Damascus, Syria, to decide whether jto attend the 1 1th Arab League summit here. . With divisions rife, Arab and Western diplomats agreed the focus here was likely to be non-controversial issues such as ' increased economic cooperation. .. Iraq Las prcpsxed a decaf. M-r.g 515 billion plan to promote joint investments in ihz development of food, energy, transportation and other projects. "The current split in Arab ranks has given us an impetus to push the summit as close as possible to complete success," one Iraqi diplomat said. "The economic theme will permeate the discussions because we believe it is the one factor that can bring us inseparably together." Another topic, at least behind closed doors, is likely to be discussions on an attempt to pry the new American administration of President-elect Ronald Reagan away from See SUMMIT on page 2 Ml A v Jl, iJL w lUDMlllLDtL IULP- ii By LAURA ELLIOTT Staff Writer 4 ' ii (DOTED. lrf CdDUIIQCII The Reagan presidency will stimulate the economy, including the stock market, local stock brokers predict. "Long term, the Reagan, administration will have a very bullish effect (causing a rise in stock prices) on the market," Trey Dcak of E.F. Hutton & Co. said. "He has a basically, fundamentally sound economic viewpoint," Finlcy T. White of Smith, Barney, Harris, Upham ii Co. Inc. said. "It looks like it may not be all talk, he may do some of it." White said Reagan's r- "s to reduce taxes and government spending were necessary to stimulate the economy. "The stock market has been acting very good," he said. "Reagan is going to have some bnucr.ee." Derpite high interest rates, "the stock market his been going up sir.ee last April in anticipation that Reagan would win," Ott P.t: cf; i:.:;lc, Habey, was belni were economic the market Dczk said stimulated now because re optimistic cbout Reagan's r' '. "That cptimhm fuels buying," he s! J. "The stock rr.mket is a mearurc cf Tccp!e t'A excited cbout things that vCl h:rr3 to the future," Dak said. "Tie market ui'd go up in anticipation cf t titer timet." Rut he cauti Rcncld Reagan more breaks to business investment." White agreed that a healthy economy depended on business profits. "The bottom line is corporate earnings," he Waud said Reagan's proposed 30 percent tax cut over three years and redaction in capital gains taxes also would stimulate the economy. - "People should be able to keep more of the money they make," he said. "It should enhance prospects for greater profits." Doak said defense stocks would probably ri:e after Re-gan takes office. "According to Mr. Reagan's posture during the election, he is interested in beefirg u? d:fen;." Dcak z term, tr.r ceiense stocks legislation is 'implemented." But implementation of his proposals may be Reagan's tiggct challenge in attempting to improve the economy. :r,t the executive officer North Carolina, a state known nationally for its development of community arts councils, has a long history of local unified arts support. The arts council in Winston-Salem, formed in 1949, is the oldest arts council in the United States. There are 91 countywide councils in the state. Unlike most of its neighbors and counties with comparable arts activities, Orange County has thus far been unable to form a lasting council. All efforts have failed due to demographic, geographic and political differences between the rural north and the more heavily populated south of the county. However, negotiations have begun to have the Carrboro Art School take on the responsibilities of a county arts council by the board of the Art School and the N.C. Arts Council. "Our goals will be to promote and nurture the creative spirit of Orange County, to raise funds for everybody and to serve as an umbrella organization," said Jacques Menache, founder and director of the Art School. Earlier this month he said he perceived the Art School and council as "being one in the same." But the proposal ran into several snags in an open hearing held at the Art School Thursday night. Protests came from the northern Orange County residents and 1 "Long- go up if ii as at ja V. P T !i & (TP ' 12, Chapel Hill arts organizations not previously affiliated with the Art School. The agenda originally called for further nominations for the arts council board. The majority of the Art School board members had planned to become an integral while the opposition felt an overwhelming part of the new council. According to dissenting groups, the Art School had already changed its logo in spirit, if not in fact, to The Art School Arts Council of Orange County, and they did not like it. The meeting never progressed to nominations because local arts groups not associated with the Art School, and who had competed with them for funding, objected to the proposed structure of the council. They also complained of a lack of community input in the decision. Ron Raxtcr, a representative of the Apple Chill doggers said, "I think it would be hard for us to go to the Art School and ask them for money when we used to compete with them. I'd like to ask if the Art School can realistically divorce itself from the council and establish itself as one organization as part of the council." Anita Lcwin, chairman cf the board for the Chapel Hill Ballet Company, also voiced similar concerns about conflicts of interest. She said small, non professional local groups were "the true nurturing foundation for any eventual artist. They see ihzir rc!: models right here. We need to ensure this continues. I think smaller groups would feel swamped by. the Art School. I know we would have felt discouraged if we had had to come to the Art School which had its own dance program. I don't believe this can best serve the beginnings of new arts groups in Orange County." Lou Ann Browers from the Chapel Hill Youth Symphony Orchestra added, "It was poor communication on their part (the Art School) not to send a note announcing the meeting to other organizations. We just found out about it a few days ago." . Jack LcSueur, a community development coordinator from the N.C. Arts Council responsible fcr advhing Orange County, defended the Art School's qualifications to serve as the Orange County council and said there was en advantage to individual agencies in C''tws!in sucli sm entity "We felt the Art School had become enormously effective in doing what a community arts council would do. We thought the Art School board could be the nucleus for a council and that they could become a council as well as a school," LcSueur said. "Things had been accomplished behind the scenes because initially doing it publicly did net succeed." "ilc said that the attempt in 1976 to form in arts council in c3 ART cn pcgji 2 ii I! CJ? i ' ft II fJ TV") If 11 t sn ts j; of cc the country. Th? actual laws ui:i A :hi$adhiJ:d N J ih-t "cl.vr.s cftrr r X i a I h t c p r ; i x N. f. t: i . r 1 .1 f. .'1 ile .rd :e cut cf Ccrgrces, wl animal," Wh":.? said. "The C--re:s is it.'.l predominantly D:m vrr':. I -t r-ny ere crn-ervativc -fun. - - .. .f ask ( r .em! :r fav c; " tatty to be ; IV.:ty." he cf the Democrats v.!.o cf the J 5 p jr ." v; i r i :r!y days t re s 1 a i. V: "vs ra-t a tl . rs ! if! ii the of the Eisenhower diipj'ed to .tr. Py ANN r.MAIXV.OOIi :rf Wr.ur Chapel Hiirs Citiaens Task Tcrce to ess the Effects cf the Shearon Harris lear Pbnt decided Thursday right to the League cf Women Voters 10 sponsor a public forum in late January to discuss and evaluate the task force's October report to the Chapel Hill Town Council. Also, task force member Grrgsry Kats, a UNC senior, tnncuneed that the Carolina Union Special Projects Cemrr.i:t-ee wcvli ipcnser a campus energy lymgc-iam Tib. 9-14. The sympn-iam include ciish-ps and p:r;hes c:i nuclear r. i;!s . ..' .1 en near Apex i.i was asis cn the Shearon Harris plant. The Carciina Power and Light power plant, scheduled to open in IS 25, it a four-reactcr facility about 13 miles southeast cf Chard Hill. Wale County. The ta-.k farce Ccmm.us,on?j ry tr.e couna.1 in May IT) to study the plant's impact cn th: to-n. Twchc hearir-s were held I etAeen O.tc I er 1973 zl htay 15C3 10 air cphnl.rs I nth fcr and gn4 the riant and facts about radiation epsa are, r.u.lcar z'l: ii..:ge:a! c-.a;ua:i:n rl.r.s. Al:haa;h tie League cf Wcmen Veers I: i r. :t i : . -1 contact c J tbnut the Gr2?;UCtCAncrsrg-2 .1, c .' a 1 ( f 5 I a . f g t .3 ' : - r. :r.l t fc u.-n