2Tho DsiJv Tar HeelWednesday. February 11, 1931 Frcm p33 1- From page 1 KM '' Wit 0 . A Wetb, Green's spokesperson, said, "What's gcir-3 to happen to it now I just don't know. The ways of it (the legislation process), if well-known, can determine the outcome cf a tin." Speaker of the House Listen Ramsey, corn meriting on the introduction of the bill by an opponent, said. "It's a very unusual thing but it's not against the ru!es." In the past, ERA has been able to get through the House but has been defeated in the Senate. Now many legislators said they doubted ERA could get House support. "ERA proponents feel they don't have a majority in the House now," Jamie Clarke, D-Fa;rview, said. Pes, m opponent, said she would like to see the bill dealt vith Thursday when the General Assembly meets ajaln. She said she saw no reason for a hearing on the bill. "I'm just envious of state control." Pczz said. "Issues that are now left up to the states would be turned over to the federal govern ment (with ERA ratification)," she said. But Holt said that this was untrue and that, "under ERA each state would keep its own statutes as long as there was equality for both sexes." The wording of the proposed ERA amend ment is: "Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex." "I think it goes along with the principle of our democracy of the freedom to choose and I think it will set the stage for women in all walks of life," Cray said. "It will be a beginning." Granville, Norbcrg sold, "better a run- Norberg supporters were quiet most of the niht zs Duckner ceptured box after box, and his people let out yells of epprovcl. However, Duckner could not reach the magic 50 percent fiure. Board to postpone the Final counting, Duckner said he and supporters would go but for a beer and wait for the results. Earlier in the evening Buckner said the results were close, but that he felt he could pull it out. He said his staff was prepared for a runoff. After Duckner took Whitehead and '"' ' 77 9 LiJJj' UCf J OT7 ' - X 71 ' 7777 77 71 (uimmiweii mm Crazy Zack's is coming to Chapel Hill. v A Carolina version of the popular Raleigh nightclub, this one with its own restaurant, is moving into Fosdick's Seafood's old home on Airport Road. "We've been looking to come to Chapel Hill for a while," general manager Jimmy Bums said. The Raleigh Zack's, on Hillsborough Street near the N.C. State University campus, has been open five years. Zack's-Chapel Hill will open Thursday. The restaurant will be modeled after Darryi's, Burns said, serving a menu that will include steak sandwiches, hamburgers and Italian dishes. Liquor by the drink and beer will be available in both bar and restaurant. Jim Gardner, president of Fosdick's (which also has a Raleigh restaurant), said Chapel Hill did not, prove to be a good seafood market. Gardner said Fosdick's was forming a partnership with Zack's in its Chapel Hill operation. The main bar area will hold about 400-500 people, Burns said. The non-membership club will run just like the Raleigh Zack's, with the same happy hours and Zoo Nights (when draft beer is sold for 5 cents a mug). Special VIP cards will be sold for $10 to cover admission to certain special events, Burns added. '.- "Crazy Zack's Fits the building better than Fosdick's," Gardner said. Burns said the club was being renovated to create a rustic atmosphere, with a balcony in the bar area and : runoff between themselves, said they off than a write-off." Smith was disappointed with his, show ing. Following the posting cf Union totals in which Smith received only 30 votes, Smith said, "I thought I would be more Firmly entrenched in third place at this point. I thought I would get more sup port than I have gotten." - Bozymski said early in the evening when he was doing poorly "if this keeps up I'm gonna need some (beer) in a minute." But there was some question about whether Jessiman would contest the re sults of the editor's election as well. A campaign spokesman said that such a move was a definite possibility. He said Hummel workers were within 50 feet of the James poll. There were also some questions about whether people voted without signing registration sheets at other polling sites. The Final results for the Carolina Ath letic Association president's race have not been tabulated yet, but with 18 of 23 precincts reporting, figures were: Jake Kelly, 1,557; Harold Cooley, 260; Chuck Gardiner, 1,364 and Steve Theriot, 1,394. Kelly and Theriot, speculating on a the traditional Zack's wood-paneled walls and a dance floor. Marshall Stuart, part-owner of the Zack's chain, said the bar would be geared toward college students, especially the under-21 crowd. Recorded beach music and Top 40 will be the club's daily entertainment fare, he said, and live bands will be featured on Thursday nights. ' FRANK ZANG . jX WW 4i ). A f J - 1 ? ajp fcsj f i TODAY 3:30 p.m. Room 209 Union All Business Students & Faculty Invited Refreshments will be served ' p. prevent irtli detects might have a party at the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity house to kick off the campaign. "It's been the best thing I've ever done in my life," Kelly said (of the campaign). "I'm going to have an ulcer by the end of this night," Theriot said as figures kept changing to show him first leading, then trailing Kelly. Editor's note: Elizabeth Daniel, Melodee A Ives, William Peschel and Katherine, Long contributed to this story. v " p p. f V ft "J i ri n!1 r "I 1L BUYING ' : GOLD. AND SILVER . Buying CLASS RINGS, GOLD JEWELRY, SILVER JEWELRY, DENTAL . GOLD , ; and-; WEDDING--BANDS, Any thins marked 10k, 14k, 18k. GOLD! We test unmarked gold and . ; PAY TOP PRICE! ' We now offer... I - -v - 1 -V m M s, f - -J. V"Lr' .-, Ml.) m m m . 0 m j 1 -v ' diOllBJ iiiniii 77) AT? Tu) A mVZ 5 Pcoj33 urs Rsirmin to tliw Rihs!:cl!er for caper Lunch . -end Dinner cpeclals Il!:e these: The Tcsscs Platter $2.99 , - Rero Roast Beef on a sizzling skillet with salad, baked potato and the vegis cf the day! ' I Steals Sandwiches Pizza Rare Roast Beef AU ABC Permits Major Credit Carcb A Chapel Hill Tradition for 32 Years! On i 3 n WHIPPETS Bongs Rolling Papers Open 7 Days A Week 510 W. FRANKLIN STREET 929-0263 m t m. i k Ml 1 f m r- s ' H,, - f ft 1 i If . .-.n n n) Nothing goes better with a great roundball gamo than a great ' roundbc'l meal from PTA! And we'll do tho travelling! 7r77 i , I , 'T 77' ' ' ' .,,." ' ti. ., ' ,s& . ."'v ! ' - ; : . " . , . - v A i -. : : --f 1 I . "A .'' . j I ; ' vt -'v ' '-A- 'VX- A .- in ! - 1 , - s ; ) f T ". ' A ATT 7""") V i 'A- ... J. " V i X ' - , . . '-: - X ; A . y - - ' X KV x- A r ' U ;jf i - h - ' f. . v " . ' X v ,."A.. 'f j ., A , s Year 'Round Service St Supplies Plus Discount Prices Make Us Your ALOULATOR . AHEADQyARTSPaS! Vo'vo ga tho beoS priceo crountl 'Complete lino of accessories DO Days Ovcr-tho-Countcr Exchango on ell calculators I 11 SI ' XV , -: : " I x V A? -v x . w . -j ; y ' ' - f - . X - - ,j u xA . ' ! i x. ' '.. U b4 Jfc w J DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) American writer Cynthia Dwyer flew out of Iran to freedom Tuesday after nine months imprisonment and a . ens-day mix-up in her deportation, leaving ens American still captive of the Iranians. The 49-year-old free-lance journalist convicted of espionage and then ordered deported, arrived in Dubai on an Iranian plane loaded with peasants. Met by U.S. Embassy officials, she was whisked away in a police car with out talking to reporters. She was due to fly on to Switzerland and then to ' New York Wednesday for a reunion with her husband and three children. Her departure left Zia Nassry, an Afghan-bom New York businessman ar rested March 8, as the last American ensnared in Iran. He was seized shortly after he went there reportedly hoping to make his way into Afghanistan to support rebels fighting the Soviets. Nassry, 34, has been charged with spying. f. X I 1 f X? 1 J 2 ? ri accociatea mclictc RALEIGH (AP) North Carolina labor leader Wilbur Hobby and two . associates were indicted by a federal grand jury Tuesday on charges of fraud in the handling of federal job-training funds. Indicted along with Hobby, president of the state AFL-CIO, were Robert L. Hughes Jr., special projects coordinator for the states Natural Resources and Community Development, and Mort Levi, program director for Preci sion Graphics Inc., a Raleigh printing company operated by Hobby. The grand jury returned the indictments after several weeks of investiga tion into the handling of federal grants frcm 'the U.S, Labor Department under the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act. Soven programs caved from.bndget on WASHINGTON (AP) President Reagan, trying to win support for deep .cuts in social spending, has decided to leave untouched seven federal pro grams for. the elderly and the poor, the White House said Tuesday. The seven programs, totaling $210 billion, being saved from the budget ax are: The basic Social Security retirement program. Medicare payments, which cover 23.6 million people. The school lunch and breakfast program for 9.5 million children whose meals are fully paid for by the government. Supplemental Security Income benefits received by 4.2 million people who are blind, disabled or considered elderly poor. Veterans Administration benefits for 2.3 million people. The Head Start program for 374,000 lower-income preschool children. . 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