2 AThe Daily Tar HcctMonday, August 24. 19X1 Tae Attnodattfl Pre . TRIPOLI, Libya Col. Moammar Khadafy called for a shutdown of all U.S. bases in the Mediterranean in the wake of the dogfight between U.S. and Libyan jets over the Gulf of Sidra, the official Libyan news agency JANA reported Sunday. The Libyan strongman was quoted- as saying in a reference to President Ronald Reagan's career as an ac tor: "He is using international politics as if it were some theatrical play. We want to remind Reagan that perform ing in the Mediterranean is different from doing it on stage." The news agency said Khadafy made the comments in a speech Saturday in Ethiopia, where he jeered the United States three days after two Soviet-made Libyan SU-22 jets were shot down by U.S. F-14s. In the same remarks, Khadafy said Libya would de fend its claim on the Gulf of Sidra even it it leads to a third world war, and declared his nation was prepared, to "battle with America face to face." The United States says two of its F-14s shot down the Libyan SU-22s in self-defense after being attacked and that no U.S. plane was lost. . "It is a great shame for America that millions of peo ple in the world see it today with anger and indignation, spitting in its repugnant face," JANA quoted Khadafy as saying it a six-page report on his speech. ' Khadafy spoke to millions of Ethiopians in the capital of Addis Ababa, where he was on an official visit, the news agency said. He flew to the United Arab Emirates on Sunday for a two-day visit. . . "I call upon the Mediterranean people to stand against the deployment of American troops on their countries," he said. "We invite the peoples of the Mediterranean to take a position against the American military bases in their territory." Khadafy has often urged closure of foreign military bases, both U.S. and those of other countries. He said the U.S. 6th Fleet which includes the aircraft carrier that launched planes that downed the Libyans should leave the Mediterranean. "Reagan has ignored international law and is playing with fire," Khadafy said. He did not repeat earlier claims by Libya that it shot down an U.S. warplane in the air battle during 6th Fleet naval exercises in the Mediterranean about 60 miles off the North African coast. Speaking to journalists Friday, Khadafy said that, the Libyans fired first in the dogfight. He' said the two Li byan jets warned a lone F-14 that it was in Libyan air space and shot it down when it did not turn away. Then eight F-14s ambushed the Libyan planes and shot them down, according to Khadafy. There was no immediate response from the United States to Khadafy's comments. Secretary of State Alex ander M. Haig Jr. said Friday he hoped the matter of the dogfight was "behind us." Khadafy also said Libyan television filmed the wreckage of an American F-14 that Libya claims it shot down. ' ' . ' Ethiopia Radio broadcast a speech Saturday by Khadafy at a Libyan-Ethiopian "solidarity rally" in which he said the shooting of the Libyan planes showed that the United States "is a dangerous force against peace and international law." The live broadcast from Addis Adaba was monitored in Nairobi, Kenya. Official sources in the United Arab Emirates said Khadafy had postponed his visit a day and would arrive Sunday in Abu Dhabi, capital of the Per sian Gulf federation. . Earlier, JANA reported that' Libya urged the Or ganization of African Unity to denounce AmericaV'ag gression" and "international terrorism" in attacking the Libyan warplanes. ' The complaint called OAU attention to the "dan gerous situation" arising from what Libya has called American violation of Libyan air space and territorial waters. ," '. . JANA said the complaint was lodged Friday with the OAU headquarters in Addis Ababa by Libyan Foreign Minister Abdel Salam Al-Tareki, who is accompanying Khadafy on the visit to Ethiopia. Khadafy said in a speech in Addis Ababa on Friday that the United States violated Libyan territorial waters and that American planes "unscrupulously violated Libya's air space," the Yugoslav news agency Tanjug reported. .. . "The U.S. is .V. endangering world peace and the . security of free and independent states, V Tanjug t reported Khadafy as saying!. Libya claimed most of the Gulf of Sidra in 1973, although the claim is hot generally recognized. ; The United States says a country's air space extends only three miles beyond its coast. ,;; ..' :' ... ; Libya's relations with the United States have worsen-; ed since Khadafy took power in a coup Sept. 1, 1969.r The U.S. Embassy in Tripoli has been closed since December 1979, when a crowd sacked and burned it. The Reagan administration expelled Libyan diplomats from the United States in May, responding to what it called Khadafy's support of international terrorism. About 2,000 U.S. nationals live in Libya, mostly oil company employees and their families. There has been, no indication that they have been menaced since the dogfight. 'About 7 percent of all U.S. oil imports come from Libya. : ' Secretary of State Haig said Sunday the United States will no longer tolerate provocations by the Soviet Union and its client states, such as Libya's challenge to U.S. warplanes in the Mediterranean last week. Haig said in a television interview that the United States wants to improve relations with the Soviet Union, but that can happen only with restraint "in what has been sue years of unacceptable Soviet international behavior." Come one come all. Challenge ehe iailit (Tar litti L.1 4.i ,. c-2 'Vl'---" "vJli. .. i to a Softball extravaganza... Reply in the office of the editor (if you dare). appeal In advance of his . first meeting with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, to be held at the U.N. General Assembly in late September, Haig indicted the Soviet leadership for lawless acts by such countries as Cuba and Libya. I He was interviewed on ABC-TV's "Issues and An swers" program; - ' . ' Haig said exchanges of messages disclosed since the U.S.-Libyan air clash Wednesday suggest the Libyan pilots "were on a targeted mission" against American aircraft. He made clear he thought the Libyan challenge of two U.S. Navy jet fighters, which shot down two Libyan warplanes, was ordered by the government of Khadafy as the latest in a series of "testing incidents." "I don't believe it was a spur-of-the-moment, pilot's accidental action," Haig said. " .1. I'm not one that be lieves that these kinds of things, in a disciplined organi zation ... are not pretty carefully managed and controll ed." '. But he said he was confident that the U. response in the incident "will be an effective termination of similar events in the near future." Haig characterized as "unacceptable norms of inter national behavior" such activities by the Khadafy regime as its support of terrorism, subversion of governments along Libya's borders and its invasion of neighboring Chad. : He said it was in the U.S. and world community's in terest to "no longer overlook these illegal activities, ; whether they come from Libya, Cuba or the Soviet Union." ' . ; '' - He said the Soviets supply arms to the Libyans far beyond their defensive needs. "It is the Soviet Union that provides the means to permit this situation to go on he said. : " , v - '.. " "It is a situation in which the time has long since pass ed where the free world, and the United States as. a leader of the free world, must stand up and be Heard on this issue,' he said. - . 1 .; Haig said "Sovjet proxy interventionism" will be among the issues he will discuss with Gromyko next month. Other likely topics, he said, will be nuclear force reductions in Europe, trade, arms control, Afghanistan . and, Cambodia. ; "I don't anticipate we're going to have any wowing, breakthroughs in a meeting of this kind," he said, . "More likely what we'll have is some rather stiff ex changes' leading to further meetings as a prelude to a possible summit meeting between President Reagan and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev. ' Haig defended the U.S. sale of AWACS reconnais sance planes to Saudi Arabia as producing "a funda-' mental improvement of the United States' strategic posi tion in the Middle East." "It is going to be an enhancement of our ability to control events, and it is going to be a profound improve ment to our allies ability to preserve and protect the vital oil resources of that region, he said. From page 1 -S 'TrTt -if Ilultan'd OUR CLASSIC GOLF JACKET FROM BRITAIN 1 ; The return on one of ' our most treasured . traditionals, this poplin with knit collar, cuffs, waist, zipperea front, red tartan lining. A great golfer, all-around good sport, In natural or navy. (ALSO IN LEATHER SUEDE AND FINE PIMA COTTON. - ' . .. a a , ' Dcvntown Frcnkhn Street r I 1 A 5) i V federal government, which led to an ad ministrative law hearing. The hearing began in Washington, D.C., last year to determine whether UNC was complying with governmental guidelines. The government, UNC and the NAACP each presented witnesses, and the Univer sity had paid $1.8 million in legal fees be fore the consent decree was signed last . month. The decree calls for increased minority enrollment at the predominantly white schools, equal financial support per stu dent for "colleges with similar missions" and 29 new bachelor's and master's pro grams at the predominantly black univer sities. The NAACP complained that during negotiations held before the decree was signed, the Legal Defense Fund was not contacted and played no part in the agree ment. "(The settlement) was arrived at through secret negotiations between the Department of Education and' North Carolina, from which (the NAACP) was wholly excluded," the brief said. In a prepared statement after the decree was signed, Rauh said, "Twenty-seven years after the Supreme Court outlawed segregation, the Reagan administration and the government of North Carolina agreed to a segregated system of higher education. This is not only separate but unequal. "Frank Porter Graham, the great edu cator of North Carolina decades aso, must : be a whirling dervish in his grave," he -added. .' . ..;;.. I The consent decree, which expires in 1986, specifically calls for: A goal of 10.6 percent black student enrollment at traditionally white schools and . 15 percent white enrollment at the traditionally black schools by the 1986 1987 academic year. Black institutions to get an equal share of all new programs within schools of a particular academic category. "Equal financial support per student for colleges with similar missions. A student-faculty ratio at black insti tutions "at least as good" as that of the white institutions with similar missions. A proportionate share of all new cap ital spending for the black schools. Requirement of a doctorate or other final degree for new, full-time faculty members or tenure appointments at the black schools, "except in exceptional cir- . cumstances." Happy Birthday Edwina Kickbacko tied to Preoser CLEVELAND (AP) ' International Teamsters Union Vice President Jackie Presser, a former member of President Ronald Reagan's transition team, has been accused of receiving nearly $300,000 in cash kickbacks from a public rela tions firm that did business with the union, a newspaper said. . . In a copyright sfory Sunday, The Cleveland Plain Dealer said it obtained a sworn deposition and other information in a 4-vear-old civil suit accusing Presser of receiving money from Hoovcr-Gorin.& Associated Inc., a Las Vegas, Nev , advertising firm hired by the Teamsters in the early 1970s to im prove the union's image. . The suit was filed in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles by Harry Haler, a former company consultant, against Hoover-Gorin in a dispute over wages, The Plain Dealer said. - " - Haler said in the deposition that for about 1 Vi years he delivered money to Presser or arranged for associates to deliver it for him. The kickbacks, m cash and totaling $16,500 a month, were the price of doing business with the Team sters Union, the deposition said. N.C. acid opiil investigated RALEIGH (AP) State environmental teams have been investigating the accidental discharge of phosphoric acid from a Texasgulf Chemicals Co. fer tilizer plant near Aurora into the Pamlico River. But Ted Mew, ati emergency response coordinator in the state Department of Natural Resources and Community Development, said that, "based upon the incomplete information we have now, we don't expect any maj or environmen tal impacts from the discharge." - Bob Upton, public relations manager for Texasgulf, said the phosphoric acid was believed to have accidentally leaked from a transfer line about 3 a.m; Thursday. ; v ; r ..-i"-. : : " . He said it could riot be determined how much of the 54 percent acid solution leaked into containment ditches around the plant. But Jim Sheppard, an NRCD spokesman, said preUminary indications from company officials show ed that some 0 tons, or 15,000 to 20,000 gallons, were involved. "... i ILS. rcjecto plea to negotiate WASHINGTON (AP) ' - Transportation Secretary Drew Uwis flatly re-: jected on Sunday a plea by international air traffic controllers to resume talks with the striking U.S. controllers union. The International Federation of Air Traffic Controllers Associatibns, meeting Sunday in Amsterdam, urged President Ronald Reagan to reopen con tract talks with the U.S. controllers union in an attempt to end the threeweek strike by nearly 12,000 U.S. controllers. ,wt Lewis said he would meet with representatives of the international group to try to assure them that U.S. skies are safe, but said the administration's posi tion against renewed negotiations stood firm ;-"T T "We're pleased to listen to any ideas they have internationally," Lewis said on the NBC program, "Meet the Press." "But this is really a matter between our government and the traffic controllers." ..." ' .'.' .- Williams payo he won't resign WASHINGTON (AP) The attorney for Sen. Harrison A. Williams Jr. ZH $$! tvI sports that the Senate efhics committee's SDecial counsel will recommend his exnukion todav. .z!r.-w said George Koelzer, one of Williams chief lawvers. on Saturday. Williams, D-N.J., was convicted in May on bribery charges growing out of the FBI's Abscam investigation. In a telephone interview Friday with The New York Times, Williams said he was told by reliable sources that the special counsel for the Senate Select Com mittee on Ethics would recommend his expulsion. Williams, 61, said he had considered resigning, but "at this point my con science tells me to stick and fight." Sirhan appeals to Kennedy LOS ANGELES (AP) Sirhan B. Sirhan, the murderer of Robert F. Ken nedy, has appealed to Sen. Edward Kennedy in the apparent hop; it will get , him out of prison sooner, according to a spokesman for Sirhan. Sirhan is up for parole Sept. 1 , 1984 but the Los Angeles district attorney is fighting the release, claiming Sirhan has boasted he would kill the Massa chusetts senator. Sirhan wrote Kennedy denying the allegations as, "false and unfounded," said Arab advocate M.T. Mehdi in releasing Sirhan's latest letter to Kennedy on Friday. . "I pray for your health, safety and long life as well as the safety and long life of your entire family," Sirhan wrote Kennedy. "Please accept my remorse for i a t .1. , Use The Daily Tsiir ;HSe1 Glassifleds!! ' GUQOGIllillCBCi Classified cub may be placed at the DTH Offices or mailed to the DTH Carolina Union 065Af Chapel Hill, NC 27514. All ads must be prepaid. Deadline: Ad must be received by 12 (noon) one business day before publication. Retsim d and check or money order to the 0771 cCc by noon the business day before your ad i to run. Ads must be prepaid. ; Hates: 23 words or less Students $2.00 Non-students $3.00 j 5C for each addltJonel word , I1.C0 more (or boxed ad or boldface type fleas no&y the DTH oCke Immediately if there are mistakes in your ad. We will be responsible lor only the rst ad run. BACKSTREETS NEWSLETTER Featuring ' InforroaSkm on Bnicc Springsteen and the E Street . Band. News and Information on concerts, bootlegs and band members. Send S3 for one year subscription to Steve Ryan, 1S00 Cbachwood. La ; llabra. CaUf. 9C631. CELEBRATE OURSELVES: A WEEKEND HETHAT IN natural environment wtth L'Chaim. Aug. 3-33. Sponsored by U?C tl'Zsl CsS (or fcireireaaii. i24.ZZ7. FAT.S DaR'Cl CAKES IN STYLE. I l&me-bslcd kom scratch. Any occsslon, unessat. Cthsys a pecklty tat cands Included. 117. C3 the Fairs (evenfnp) i543-43SS. tSEY AXK E"0'S: FL1ST MEETING Wed. 26 Au8. t ZO rn 2:!Vt (This VV J.). ASI exec today a F'i to new room: 18-4Ve. See you then. Y ITD3. Urn. SAND ELL DANCE STUDIO - 1717 LEGION COAD. Evening claeeee in B3et mmd Tap foe adwit witk Roawle Sm MajMleL Jazz w&h Boeeauury Howard. Beaalag. iatcraMdlate md advaaccd levels. ' Begister mow, Telenhoaia 942-SS12 or 929-7304. SAFE DIET P1LL-SPIRUUNA-FOR superior health, dynamic energy, weight loss, fasting. Completely natural. Food of the Future. Distributorships also available. CaO Rex Mercer, 929-2786. CAROLINA GAY ASSOC. wQ hold its first program meeting Mon. Aug. 24 at 7:30 p.m. in ' Room 224 Student Union. AO interested persons are welcome. lost i found REWARD FOR INFORMATION OR RETURN OF BeesJy small female black Lab please! CaO 929-7257. 224 Vance St. " Volunteer lor U.S. Environmental Protection Agency research. Earn $50-165 completion of experiment which measures the effects of 2 hour level ozone exposure. Earn $50-$75 m an experiment to study the eSects of tow levels of gaseous and parbcuSate akr poQutents. Numerous other minor studies are always ongoing'. Levels of . poButents are low with no known long term adverse eSects, and aO research is approved by the Human RlghU Committee of the UNC Medical School. Pay is J5.C0 per hour. We need healthy, nonsmoking males, age 18-40 with no history of aSergies or hay fever. Call for more Information. 8-5 Mon-FrL, 966-1253. RELIEF PARKING LOT ATTENDANT TOWN OF CHAPEL HILL. PARTTIME; WORX ON AS NEEDED basis. Must be able to compute hrs. count money, give change. Apply for any or aB of shifts: 7:30 am -1:15 pm, 1.-00 - 6:45 pm, 60 pm -12:15 am; Mon-Sat. $4.14hr. Apply by August 28: Municipal BUg. 306 N. Columbia St. CH. PART.TOtE SECRETARY NEEDED for Graduate and Professional Student Federation. Typing skills required. Flexible hours. Position available immediately and continues through spring 15S2. If interested, write: GPSF: Box 25 Carolina Union. SAIL BAHAMAS DURING FALL BREAK. Experience unnecessary. $360 covers instruction, berth (13 available), food, transportation Ft Lauderdale Bahamas and return. One week. Professional crew from International Field Studies. For information caB Bob Daiand 962-3041. 317 Hamilton Hal, x . ted WILL BUY NEW AND USED LP's (Rock, Classical, Jazz. Blues. Wave, etc.) and ENTIRE COLLECTIONS. Also cassettes. 8-Tracks. Good Prices. 929-6175. Keep trying, 8 a.m.-12, after 5. . for rent PARKING SPACES FOR RENT - dose to campus. Call 942-4058. ROOMATE WANTED to share mobSe home Bve snBes from campus. $125.00 per month, a8 utilities incL New carpet, furniture, excellent condition. 933-2068. Male preferred. ' . ridco IS ANYONE INTERESTED m a CARPOOL to NCCU Law School? Please call 942-5698 after 6 p.m. We have an S-4 or S-5 sticker to trade for an N-4 ticker. CsJ David 967-8549 or Karen 942-4369. DO YOU NEED A SOUTH CAMPUS parking pcrsfiK? &2 trade my S-4 for N-4 (or S-5), csJ 933063. Keep trying! . niOTOCSATTSZSt TVS. DAILY TASt CHZL la sooTJaj foe rhetoaiaphera wt& 1st warLSstg, coase by or c3 the DTTL Ask foe Scott harp. f help tventcd for esle . Carolina Outdoor Sports needs full and part time employees. Experience In retail and with ski technology preferred. Must possess an avid Interest In skiing, back-packing or paddling. Inquiries at the store. 135 E. Franklin. EARN $250-$500 STUFFING 1 .000 ENVELOPES: Homework, Snaretlme. Details: Self-addressed, stamped envelope to: J. Jer, P.O. Box 104. Belisviiie. MD 20705. NEW RECORDS BY LOCAL ARTISTS ON safe! Mi Cross. Blazers, X-Teens, Secret Service, Contenders, John Santa, SunSre, and more. Noon to 5, Monday August 24th through Friday August 2Sth. Next to Foundation Bookstore on Rosemary Street. 1930 Pontine Sunbird 4-speed sunroof 11.500 mites excellent condition. 493-3323. CAROLINA APTS. MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED TO share apt with senior end Fharmacist. Rent $56 a month plus lA ut&aes. Starts September. Ce3 Dave 7-549. . MASTER LUKE AND LEIA. THIS IS C2PO. I need your heip. 1 am being taken hostage by a man unknown to sse. He is . A4 telcoeae bacSJ Cve at I 4 yassl Pa&!a. Uumem, liaia, & the mmm NANCE- Wei miss you! Best of luck fat law school. Your presence is requested at al Ad Dept. happy hours. Love, Paula. FREE COPY! Your right to know by Darwin Gross. Subjects ranging from the spiritual body of man to abortion, science, the sun, and the awakening of one's consciousness. Write: ECKANXAR Center, P.O. Box 4125, Chapel H3 27514. CALL WXYC REQUEST LINE 962-8989 to hear Brand New Love ASalr, Sooner or Later, Lone Survivor and other great tunes from Brice Street's debut album. BRICE STREET BAND says "Welcome back Carolina student. Go HeekT Check' out our debut aSxim, R5s Up m Ths Night, sale-priced at Record Bar. . NEED A DESK LAMP? Check DTH classifieds for great deakl NEED TO WRITE HOME? Why not say heSo In the daselSeds and send the DTH home Instead. Subscription rates are $2.50 per week 1st class, 3rd class is $1.00 per week. Come by DTH for more Info. NEED LCERAL PROFESSIONAL OR GRAD 1 smoker to share nice house near campus. Low rent and utilities. Available now. Call 929-192 now. . NON-SMOKING FEMALE TO SHAHE NEW TOWNHOUSE In Carrboro. Less than two mSes from campus. Bus route. Quiet, private. $250 per month; half utilities. Call 929-5913. Need a roommate? Advertise la the classifieds! MZXE it's al down h3 now. Thanks for a9 your hard work. I.O.U. a FhoerOx Exme P3. . LOST A FRIEND? Try the lost and found section in the dasr'iit ' ; ' TO THS GOOD LOOKING BLOND MAN m freshmen convocatkm you were wearing navy blue nSke shorts and tan shirt respond in personals! I sure would Eke to meet you. Alicia. cocn rrs coca to czs all of v" DTTI types bach asiad A3 of ta aolsa, castas Ion, saess, v'a- acreazslag, nuestloaisv J bast ef sJ3 tzsz'JZ&r, sasCng faces are m erslcoasa treii froea the cjnsiet anmsBee. U'!coe bad! eTlMEOIts good to have your red head back In town! LAC.

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