V: 1 - "V. ". t Sun. Young Moon It wi!l bu sunny today with hiyb temperatures in the mid 50s; lows lomyht in the 30s with no ch.incu of rain. Eating Students express opinions on campus food service and sug gest improvements. See stories on page 3. Serving the students and the University community since 1893 Volume 89, Issue 7j $3 Tuesday, March '3, 1G01 Chaps! Hill, North Carolina News. Sports Arts 933-0245 BusinsyAdvrtiing 933-1 163 -A . j ! ! f ! t j H ! r i III I I I1 y h j I S f ; I 1 M V3 O by mgeuzis From stare and wire reports GREENSBORO Six American Nazis and Nazi supporters were arrested Monday on charges of conspiring to stage a series of bombings. The six were arrested by federal agents on charges that they planned to blow up a large petroleum storage facility, a shop ping mall, part of downtown Greensboro and a chemical fertilizer plant. The indictment charged that the group planned to carry out the attacks in the event that several Ku Klux Klansmen and Nazis were convicted of first-degree mur der in the slayings of five Communist Workers Party members. The CWP acti vists were shot to death on Nov. 3, 1979; as they staged a "Death to the Klan" ral- ' ly in Greensboro. The defendants were found not guilty of the deaths. The indictment accused the six of plan ning to put the napalm-type gelatin explo sive in 55-gallon barrels "placed in crowded areas of the city and remotely detonated by radio controlled detonators at 4 p.m. so as to maximize the destructive effect." Each of the defendants was charged in an indictment returned Monday by a federal grand jury in Asheville with one count of conspiracy. Those charged were Frank Lee Braswell, 48, of Penland and his wife, Patsy, 42, and four Winston-Salem men, Raeford Melano Caudle, 38, Joseph Gor rell Pierce, 28, Roger Allen Pierce, 25, and James Christopher Talbert, 30. Caudle, a former Klansman who has appeared at Nazi rallies, was arrested along with other Klansmen and Nazis fol lowing the Nov. 3 shooting, but he was never indicted. Gorrell and Roger Pierce, who are brothers, later announced they were join ing forces with a group of Nazis, Klans men and members of the John Birch Society to turn North Carolina and South Carolina into a "racist mccca." Gorrell Pierce identified himself as a former grand dragon of the Federated Knights of the Ku Klux Klan. Braswell has been identified by the B'nai B'rith Anti-Defamation League as head of a Nazi unit in Mitchell County. Authorities said Monday's indictments culminated a lengthy investigation by agents of the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. A courthouse source who asked not to be identified said a large gasoline tank farm on Interstate 40 west of Greensboro was one of the targets of the alleged con spiracy and that the Guilford County Courthouse in the downtown area of Greensboro was another. Harold Covington of Raleigh, leader of the National Socialist Party of America, said he was shocked by the in dictments and said that "nothing like that was going on to the best of my knowledge during the Greensboro trial." Covington, who attended much of the Klan-Nazi trial and worked to raise money for the defendants, said the federal government was trying to portray the Nazis as crazy maniacs. "The only time we ever hurt anybody is when we were attacked," he said. The trial in Guilford County Superior Court began Aug. 4 after seven weeks of jury selection and continued for days, making it the longest trial in North Carolina history. The jury deliberated seven days before returning a verdict. In November, an all-white jury of six men and six women acquitted the six Klansmen and Nazis of the shooting deaths. 7 'X ! 4- NV 4 lCSlliS id! SI r U ; .v. :w J 1 ,i mii.j DIM I.IV Miii.Hl New President Scott Norberg gets Chapel Thrill T-shirt from ex-Student Body President Bob Saunders ... he and Residence Hall Association President Robert Bianchi were inauguarted into office lastjmight. By MELODEE ALVES ; Stafr Writer Student Body President Scott Norberg was sworn in last night by Chief Justice Roy Cooper at the Inauguration ceremo nies, along with Residence Hall Associa tion President Robert Bianchi. "This is the third time that I've taken the oath last Tuesday so that I could assume my duties, last Wednesday along with the new members of the Campus Governing Council and tonight," Nor berg said opening his address. "I take this as a mandate to be Student Body President for the next three years," he said. Before Norberg was sworn in, outgoing RHA President Peggy Leight and Bianchi made remarks and outgoing Student Body President Robert Saunders gave his fare . well speech and thanks to those who worked for him this past year. "The people that work for you do all the work," he said. "By having them here, they took the load off me. They were the best qualified, most experienced to serve in Student Government in a long time." Saunders referred to Norberg, who served as one of Saunders' executive as sistants as one of his right-hand men who was difficult to lose during the cam paign. Saunders went on to thank each member of his cabinet and members of the faculty, administration and organizations with whom he worked closely in the past year. "The office was well-mixed with ex perience and new blood. That's why we got so rnucfaccomplished," he said. To help Norberg continue to achieve in Student Government, Saunders presented him with a survival kit. The kit included a harmonica, to relieve frustration; a Chapel Thrill T-shirt; presigned pass-fail and Drop Add cards; a Carolina Blue alumni suit, with optional Old Well tie; a certificate proclaiming him an honorary citizen of High Point and Skoal chewing tobacco, to help him to relax. See INAUGURATION on page 2 State Depiu increases military.. aM to El Salvador The Associated Press The State Department, declaring that leftist guer rillas in El Salvador may launch a new offensive, announced Monday a $25 million increase in military aid and a 20-man increase in U.S. military training experts for that country. Spokesman William Dyess said the aid package would include the delivery of additional helicopters, vehicles, radar and surveillance equipment and small arms. The additional training personnel would raise to 54 the number of Americans serving in military-related capacities In.H.Salyadoi pyesfsi-iaf the U.S. personnel would hot go "Beyond" the garrison area or take part in combat operations. "The insurgents are regrouping and massive quantities of arms remain in their hands, either in side El Salvador or they have reason to expect that additional arms are waiting to be smuggled in," Dyess said. He said the new military personnel being assigned to El Salvador would be divided into four five-man teams. They will train the Salvadoran military in communications, intelligence, logistics and other skills to stop infiltration and to respond to terrorist attacks, he said. The administration also is examining El Salvador's economic needs and may increase the $63 million al ready planned for the current fiscal year. The announcement on military assistance repre- sents another escalation in American military involve ment in EI Salvador. -But the administration says there are no plans to send combat forces nor to es tablish a Vietnam-type involvement there. .VnihcHouscjot: Representative$,;meinwhiIe,'.more. ,' than 40 members said Trfaf telegram to President "" Ronald Reagan that one or more advisers are likely to be killed, "forcing the United States either into another Vietnam or a humiliating withdrawal." The House members, led by Rep. Richard L. Ot tinger, D-N.Y., said Congress must be consulted under the War Powers Act since Reagan was involving U.S. military personnel in hostilities in El Salvador. Earlier in the day. Senate Democrats said after a closed briefing that President Reagan's response to El Salvador was lopsided, leaning toward military aid and advisers rather than economic assistance. Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, said new U.S. advisers being sent to El Salvador were prime targets for guerrilla rebels. He said sending such advisers might violate the War Powers Act. Glenn confirmed after the briefing that the ad ministration is sending additional advisers by saying President Reagan may be violating the War Powers Act by committing American military personnel to combat conditions. : " Who-can said, "Obviously our people go down there as "prime tar gets." - : - ' ; ;-- Glenn said he supported Reagan administration policy earlier but said he now questions a military response in light of news reports that El Salvador's government is successfully resisting rebels on its own. "The government claims it has things under con trol," Glenn said. "Are we going in after the fact of an already improved situation?" Pell said last week that rather than act on its own, the United States should seek action by the Organi zation of American States to get a peace settlement in El Salvador. But Pell quoted the administration officials as saying El Salvador could request OAS action, but the United States should not , Asked why, Pell said, "I think it would then look like a rather heavy handed Uncle Sam, perhaps." But Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C, said the adminis tration should "do whatever is necessary to keep 1 Central America and South jmcrica from being taken over by Marxists. " ' " . "There are nervous nellies saying we've got to do nothing, not even unhook the fire hose when the house is burning down," Helms said. Helms is chairman of the Senate foreign relations subcommittee on western hemisphere affairs, which was briefed by acting assistant secretary of state John A. Bushnell and three other officials for two hours on Monday. f YC airs new Humor Show weekly; scripts written and taped by student '4 DTH W Owtn UfC students tape original humor shows at VVXYC station you can hear scripts written by students at 8 p.m. Tuesday This week at the Renault Drive-In Theater, a new dimension in horror. You '11 scream, you '11 stain your Levis when you see Don't Look in the Dryer!... Is there no limit to what producers will think up next for a horror film? Tune your dial to 83.9 FM Tuesday nights at 8:00 to hear similar skits, along with a variety of others, on WXYC's new Humor Show. You can listen to original humor written en tirely by UNC students. Mario Baldessari, Randy Jones, David Von Gunten, Chuck Bennett, Jennifer Cresimore, ail undergraduates, and Elizabeth Moose, a 1980 graduate, are the writers and performers for the new show. Tom Young, assistant production director at WXYC, does most of the show's production while Jeff Eason, programs director at WXYC, assists him. Jennifer Cresimore, a sophemore Englishspeech communi cations major, explained, "e got the idea for the show from an Honors 28 course, a humor seminar, under Max Steele (professor of English). Mario, Randy, David and I all had the class. Max had an interest in reviving a humor magazine at Carolina. We were going to help with it when Stephanie asked us if we wanted to do a show on the air with the stuff we had written for Max's class. We jumped on the chance." "Max is really enthusiastic about what wc are doing. He has given us a lot of support, and he has helped with publicity," Cresimore added. Stephanie Bircher, news director of WXYC, further explained how the idea for the show emerged. "The idea was floating around the studio to do a comedy show. I thought of Jennifer who had just finished a course with Max Steele. They did a demo tape. It sounded good so we used it for the first show," Bircher said. "Mostly, the listener response is very good," Eason said. "We did have three nasty phone calls during the first how over 'Moral Majority Armchair Playhouse.' It portrayed the voice of God as a Southern preacher. It was an Adam and Eve skit. It was really funny." The show is all original humor and material, Bircher said. See WXYC on page 2 Crioio Ce: ler o ovm'otory dioproveo snytii an d ctigmco of raps Editor's note: this is the first installment of a two part scries of DTH inteniews with people who have had up-close experience wish rape. Today's tory comes from an intcniew wiih a woman who was raped by her brother-in-law. Tomorrow's in terview will be wiih the husband of a rape victim. By EDDIE MCKENS Waff Virtu r She sat on the opposite end of the sofa. Be tween us was a bowl of corn chips and two Cokes. Wc ale, perhsps to hide our nervousness, for her story was one cf fear cr.J mcnuJ sr.uLh one of rape. Kjpc docs not &tay occur tti back alleys and on dimly lit Mrecis. Nor are rsphts always unknown to their victims, five jtars c;o, Su-an (not her real name) a rsped by her brother ifvhw. Since then he hz beun work with the Chapel f f ill Rape CrhK Center to h;!p other women with simitar experiences. I Icr Mory shows trim tnuny ol the mih anJ stigmas attached to sictirns of rape, pvvu'ty rape by umwrte the ktn lnat,are inaccurate. "It was in my own home. I was in my bedroom watching the news and he just boldly walked in and locked the door behind him. I said, 'What's going on? and he said, 'Now's our chance. I've been wailing for this opportunity to be with you.' "My defenses were down because I never an ticipated anything like rape. He said, Tvc been watching your a long time and you've been coming on to me. . "I knew he had misconceptions and at this time my anxiety level was beginning to build. I thought I could talk him out of it, but I didn't want to put the word 'rare into my mtnd." Susan said she was caught off guard when her brother-in-law dived it her. "1 was trying to puh him off, but I didn't want to hurl the juy, he was my brothcr-m-taw. I remember thinkifit he seemed hkc an octopus. He had arms and c$ everywhere and he jut had nie pinned. I thought, 'I'm trying to niuu here but I'm just not moving. At this point things start to g:t very blurred. !o rise, in my iti mmd, I was uing every I it of strength I had to pmh t::n elf. ftS un believable what's flashing through your mind. I tlunii'hi, My God. Whit if I get rre:r.ar.L Susan said that as early as during the rape it self, she tried to disassociate herself from it. She remembered thinking, "Is my hair clean if I have to go to the hospital?" Regardless of how hard the fight, Susan said that "You finally hit a point wherejou realise that you aren't going to stop it no matter what you do. You start building your mental defenses to handle the aftermath. "AH of a sudden I realized 'I'd been pene trated. As far as for a woman, I had no feeling. That's another misconception: you (do not) end up enjoying it. I didn't feel anything. I was aware of his body but not of him. Once he got done, he got up and said 'That's what you needed I said, 'No. You need help Susan did not see her brother-in-law for two days after the rape. She said that her fir si reac tion was to "try to asoid having 10 make 3 de cision on what to do net She immediately took a shower, whUh she has found most women do right after a rape, and dusted and cleaned her home. She said ihc MdJ any thins to try k a! tun u Ha;. w i l ive year later, Suun iews the rape as zt ,t of violence. "I could feci some really pent-up nzt. Instead cf beating on me with his fists, he was beating on me with something else Initially, she had steep disturbances, which she ha.s UHjuJ'io iiequently in rape victims. She tried to block ii cut. "Everybody goes through a sort of denial until it hits them. People can to aJor.g and think they're really handling it terrifically and then it hits and boy, do they repress and backslide. ! separated my mind from my body. I felt that it happened to somebody the. But it's in evitable that the crah will occur sooner or later' Susan waited two weeks before tdhnf her husband of the incident. No she says thai women should definitely talk to someone irn mediately. "The sooner you uk about il the leu xter. and d.fficuU the sr-jimh will be she said, ' I he thin tack then wiv that yoa brought it cn ort;!fM If:? view loward thai shut ? -m v f "Definitely it is never the woman's fault. You have the rijht to say no and the man should respect that no, no matter at what point it corner' After the rape, Suvan said, "all of a sudden people started locking like hint. I was di justed with him. I h;sd a need eventually if I u him to beat him. "It's there. It's with me all the time, Hut I feel that somewhere there' a Imk bo in my mind that I've put it a?! into and tied it up with a ribbon," Suvan said the centra! tuue in rape is thai "u is a total violation of women', light i. "I couldn't have presented it. I d m't think I could lave done anything to stop it r hska!iy, 1 dew't think he wat ratkxul crjuh to be talked Out Of tt. "for a Ions !nie I felt hke I rud a mark on rr.e I was afraid that I would be sowied. 1 4v aloof." Sua?i now view the r-pe a simply one of the bad rfcr icnvr in 1 cf l.fe. After a wh4e yoa jm We them (the tud cspericnvnl a ay and da vn them it yiuj need Ui,"

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