2 The Daily Tor H?H Tufsday. November 2 5. 1980
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Staff Writer
The C'hap-cl Hi'.! resident were acquitted on charges
of civ il disobedience Monday in Virginia District Court
in the.altermath of a protest by the Women's Pentagon
Action group which marched on the Pentagon last
Monday.
Nana Lafcwe and Julie Kaime, both of Chapel Hill,
were among five protesters who stood trial Monday.
More than 2 .OCX) women, primarily from the
Northeast, had joined together to "oppose the military
violence in the everyday lives of all women," said the
i-roup in a pre-raily statement.
"We feel women are poorly represented in
government," Lafevre said. "But yet women carry the
barest brunt of the burden of poverty and inequality.'
The group gathered on Nov. 16 with a workshop in
Washington, D.C., in which more than i,300 women
shared political concerns, cultural experiences i and
work skills.
The march was the following day. "We began with a
silent march through Arlington Memorial Cemetery
dressed in black to express our mourning as well as our
sorrow, anger and dcHzr.ce at the Pentagon," Lafevre
said. The group then surrounded the Pentagon and
some of the women created a cemetery with imitation
tombstones. "It was a very theatrical demonstration," '
she said.
More than 1(X) demonstrators were arrested.
"Women were carried eff in leg chains with their hands
cuffed to their waists with possible imprisonment of 30
days facing them," Lafevre said.
The group feels that the world is dangerously near
From psgs 1
reasonable level won't close certain
prople from campaigning; obviously it
could be unfair if the levels went too
high"
Revisions in the campus
undergraduate districts included
transferring Cobb, Stacy and Graham
dormitories from District 13 to District
11. District 11 will now have two
representatives.
The committee approved an
additional article to the laws which
required that the election laws be
reconsidered after the general election in
February. A public hearing will be held.
The hearing must be held before the end
of the following fall semester after the
election.
The revised election laws will be
submitted as a single bill to the council
Dec. 2 for final approval.
us service cut for holiday,
Students who are staying in Chapel Hill
during Thanksgiving should be aware of
the reduced bus service effective during
1 he holidays.
The Town of Chapel Hill is
recognizing Thursday, Friday, Saturday
and Sunday as the Thanksgiving holiday
break. On Thursday, Thanksgiving Day,
there w ill be no bus service. There also
will be no shared-ride taxi service or E-Z
rider (for handicapped and older people)
public transit service. On Friday and
Saturday, the buses will be operating on
the reduced Saturday service on the F,
G, L and N routes, which primarily
serve students. There will be no shared
ride or E-Z rider service on either day.
On Sunday, there will be no shared
rider or E-Z rider service and the only
bus service wjll be on the Campus U
route. That route will go into service at
5:40 p.m. Normal bus schedules will
begin on Dec. 2 when classes resume.
What? . . ' cuaas
You haven't donated
blood yet this year?
The Carolina Union Presents
V
with
Leo Drichuys,
conductor
, -:t'; Friday, Dcc.';5: "
8 p.m.
Memorial Hall
Tickets $2.50 at
UnioiT Box Office
A Friends of
the College
Presentation
i9
world renowned
Dec. 3 CzC
0 p.m.
1ft ?f
I on the campus of NCSU
Tickets for
J UNC Students $2.09
i at Union Box Office
Year 'Round Service & Supplies Plus
Discount Prices Make Us Your
CALCULATOR ,
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Complete line of accessories
90 Days Over-the-counter Exchange
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extinction, she said.
"We have never been so endangered, so close to the
end of human time,' said the group in its statement.
"We women are gathering because life on the precipice
is intolerable."
"A small power elite control the resources of this
country," Lafevre said. "We have come to say no to.
that power because they use those resources for war
and destruction of the planet."
Among other things the group wants is equal pay for
work of equal value, freedom from violence and the
end to the arms race. '
Although many women were arrested, Lafevre said
the group would not step and that they would return.
"The federal government is trying to stop further
action at the Pentagon," she said. "They are trying to
use us as examples. Cut they will not stop us."
From page 1
struck a magnificent pose, and I
imagined him as a small John Wayne
firing upon marauding Indians. Before
he squeezed the trigger, he turned his
head and spit. Lots of turkey-shoot fans
are also chewing tobacco fanciers.
He handled the report from the gun
with ease, and I marveled at how easy it
all seemed.
The owner and several young boys
collected the targets. (The winner was
determined by the shot closest to the
center of the target.) My brother's face
quickly lit" up when number nine was
declared the winner of that round,
signaling he had. become the proud
owner of our first turkey of the season.
Now came my turn. '
When I approached- the railing, I
could only stare at the small target.
I struggled with the shotgun,, and
lifted it to my shoulder. Trying to
maintain my composure, I steadied my
arm. I could hear snickering from the
men who had gathered behind me.
Thought of a simmering turkey
sprawled on a china plate drowned in
cranberry sauce, coaxed me to squeeze
the trigger. The noise was deafening; I
felt contact with the cold, hard ground.
As dust settled on my jeans, my brother
slapped me on the back and rescued his
shotgun from the ground. A round of
laughter filled the "air; I felt a warm
blush creeping over my face.
My brother lifted me, and a round of
applause followed me as I accepted my
turkey. Lady Luck shone again on
number ni"e.
Keep your engine tuned.
Keep your engine tuned.
I To
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Meal thi Sciences
Ring Day
Juniors and Seniors
Representatives
of Herff Jones Manufacturers
of the
Official UNC Class Ring
Will Be at the Caduceus Book Store
from 9 a.m. -until 4 p.m.
Tuesday, November 25
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Riding home that night with an
aching, bruised shoulder, I held the cold
turkey on my lap. I could already smell
that roasting turkey corning out of the
oven. Another Thanksgiving dinner had
been provided for.
Oh, did we turkey. These were the
plump, . Dutterball babies. We ' had
turkey for Thanksgiving. We also had
turkey for Christmas. We had turkey pie
for New Year's and turkey for Easter.
My grandma had a Thanksgiving turkey
and my; relatives had turkey. We had
enough turkey to last until the next fall,
and the next turkey-shoot.
On my return to Chapel Hill, the girls
on the hail were amazed at my winter
hobby and my family's holiday-dinner
shopping techniques.
"Turkey shoots? You cold, cruel
person,' they shouted.
I just grinned as I munched out on my
second turkey sandwich of the day.
For the record
, A story in The Daily Tar Heel
Monday incorrectly stated that Don
McCauley and James Betterson were the
first UNC backs to gain more than 1,000
yards rushing in the same football
season, lit should have said that Mike
Voight $nd Betterson accomplished the
feat in 1974, not McCauley, whose last
season at Carolina was 1970.- The DTH
regrets the error. '
A cutline in Monday's Daily Tar Heel
incorrectly identified Robert Cox as
Richard; Rosen in a picture concerning
the mailing of petitions protesting the
verdict in the Klan-Nazi trial. The DTH
regrets the error.
Hunt to hold meeting about IOan verdicts
RALEIGH (AP) Contending that the defendants were vigorously
prosecuted, Gov. Jim Hunt promised Monday to meet next week with black
and white leaders from around the state to discuss the innocent verdicts in the
Greensboro Klan-Nazi murder trial.
"It's not proper for me to comment on the jury's verdict," Hunt said in his
first public remarks about the acquittals of six Ku Klux Klansmen and Nazi
party members since the governor returned from a week-long trip to
California.
"I think the case was vigorously prosecuted," he added. "But I want to
say very clearly now that the state of North Carolina will not tolerate
extremist violence. We will not tolerate hatred and bigotry in our state. We
will not tolerate terrorism and murder."
Hunt said he would meet with a small group of black leaders next Monday
at the Capitol.
Senate establishes tonic wastes fund
WASHINGTON (AP) The Senate voted Monday to establish a SI. 6
billion superfund to clean up abandoned chemical wastes that are seeping
into the environment but allowed for no funds to cover the losses of
individuals who have suffered damage.
Passage on voice vote returned the bill to the House, w hich earlier passed a
different version of the measure.
The vote ended, for the moment, a long and complicated debate over how
Congress should address environmental disasters resulting from the dumping
of hazardous wastes, such as that at New York's Love Canal.
The SI. 6 billion fund, to be built up over five years with 88 percent of the
money coming from new taxes on the chemical industry, would provide for
the cleanup of all releases of toxic chemicals into the environment, w hether
they are from active or inactive chemical waste dumps or from spills on land
or into waterways.
U.S. envoy leaves; fighting continues
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) Iran said it pressed counterattacks against Iraqi
positions all along the 300-mile war front, claiming hundreds of Iraqi
casualties in five cities. Both countries attacked each other's oil installations.
U.N. Special Envoy Olof Palme ended his peace efforts and left Baghdad
with no apparent expectation of a cease-fire between the two nations. He held
talks in Iran last week but was told by Prime Minister Mohammad Ali Rajai
that tho effort was a waste of time.
Iranian President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr said Iranian forces repulsed a new
Iraqi offensive on the Iranian border city of Susangerd, 30 miles northwest of
the Khuzistan provincial capital Ahwaz, according to an interview .at the
front by the news agency Pars.
Young Ronald Reagan marries
NEW YORK (AP) Ronald P. Reagan, the 22-year-old dancer son of the
president-elect, married his live-in girlfriend Monday at a small ceremony not
attended by his parents, a friend of the couple said.
Reagan and Doria Palmieri were married in a civil ceremony, said the
. friend, who asked not to be identified. The couple had lived together in
Greenwich Village since January.
The friend said President-elect Ronald Reagan and his wife, Nancy, were
not told of the marriage in advance, but Mrs. Reagan said her son had
telephoned her before the ceremony.
The friend termed the marriage an elopement. He said no honeymoon cr
celebration was planned. and Jhat "it wilj just be business as usual."
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Lunch 11:30-2
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Chapel H;!'
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RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH
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For Further Information Call 832-0535 or I&00-221-25M
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