Newspapers / The daily Tar Heel. / Sept. 14, 1981, edition 1 / Page 2
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2The Daily Tar HeelMonday, September 14, 1981 '. - UNC scores ;pe viewed ;B!w!i parking From page 1 nn iuvir.uw Liu u By KATIIERINE LONG DTH Stan Writer The University of North Carolina Board of Governors met Friday in Chapel Hill to discuss the most recent nursing and law exam scores of UNC students. . Board member David J. Whichard reported that the number of nursing students who passed the state nursing test this year was up slightly at most UNC schools. Scores were down, however, at UNC-CH, and scores at three predominantly black schools did not meet the requirement that 66.6 percent of students pass outlined by the board last year. But the number of UNC students passing the state bar exam On bomb plot charges was up from last year's 86 percent to 95 percent this year, Whichard said. Scores at North Carolina Central University were also bet ter; 70 percent passed this year, as compared to 32 percent last year. Also at the meeting, UNC President William C. Friday accepted the resignation of East Carolina University Chancellor Thomas B. Brewer. Brewer, who has been under consideration recently for the presidency of West Virginia University in Morgantown, W.Va., had come under fire by school officials at ECU for ne glecting his job at the school. The resignation, announced Wednesday, will be effective July 30, 1982: ;: : . v . ' " - ' : Influential publisher dies MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) William Loeb, pubUsher of the Manchester Union Leader and New Hampshire Sunday news, died of cancer Sunday, the newspapers announced. He was 75. ' Loeb died at the Leahy Clinic in Burlington, Mass., shortly after noon, said Paul Tracy, editor-in-chief of the Loeb newspapers. Loeb, well-known for conservative views often delivered in stinging prose, in recent months had stopped writing the fr.ont-page editorials for which he had become famous. - A friend and enemy of public officials, Loebs influence was felt in state and national politics during New Hampshire's quadrennial first-in-the-nation pre sidential primaries. . : Tracy said a memorial service would be held in Manchester. . ;; She Nni i t fdE c e :: &t outd t rml The Associated Press ASHEVILLE Six American Nazis who claim an undercover federal agent tried to entice them to break the law go on trial a second time today on charges that they plotted to blow up much of Greensboro. Their first trial in U.S. District Court ended July 1 8 with a hung jury voting 10-2 in favor of conviction. The defendants are charged with plan ning to set off explosives at a shopping mall, a gasoline tank farm, the federal courthouse and random targets in the downtown area if six Klux Klansmen and Nazis charged with murdering five com munists at a "Death, to the Klan Rally," had been convicted in a trial last year. The murder defendants were" acquitted last November, and there were no bomb ings. In the first bombing conspiracy trial, defendants Frank Braswell, 48, and his wife, Patsy, 32, testified that they played along with an agent who identified himself 'News in Brief" capsulizes the The Daily Tar Heef. fir ura &ifJ J,1Y L .11.... ill Be on the lookout for Barnes & Noble Outlines, charged by leading educators throughout the country with giving aid and comfort to more than 150 million stu dents (when they needed it most). Art drama music -law English economics business education history political science mathema tics languages engineering philosophy psychology science an thropology sociology For 50 years Barnes & Noble has of fered students clear, concise, and up-to-date summaries of their chosen courses, each written by a respected au thority in the field. Look for us at the bookstore after' all, 150 million students can't be wrong. - -rif y A division of Harper & Row 10 East 53d Street New York. NY 10022 csfl Return ad and check or money order to the DTH office by noon the business day, before, your ad Is to run. Ads must be prepaid. - ' Rates: 25 words or less Students $2.00 Non-students $3.00 5 for each additional word $1.00 more for boxed ad or boldface type Please notify the DTH oSce immediately if there are mistakes in your ad. We will be responsible for only the first ad run. . ' announcements THE FEIST INTEREST MEETING for & Curapus Y Tutorial Program b llon&xy, Sept. ; 14 at 7x30 la S Pmtbody. A3 iatrtd praoat nut attmd! VISIT A CO-ED SOCIAL AND LITERARY fraterni ty St. Anthony Hall 7:00-10.-00 pm, Septem ber 13, 14, and 16, located at 207 Piitsboro Street, behind the Carolina Inn. FREE SPIRUUNA MEETING.' This new food supplement suppresses appetite and Increases energy naturally. To karn more about SpiruMna, and to find out where to purchase it or how to become a distributor, attend free meeting Tuesday, September 15. 8:00 pm, at 115 Ete Drive Ext.. Carrboro. For more information or directions. ca3 Rex Mercer, 929-2786. HEAR MICHAEL HOWARD DISCUSS "ARMS RACES AND THE CAUSES OF WAR", Tuesday, September 15, at 4:00 p.m., in Person Hail. Sponsored by Department of History and Curriculum in Peace, War, and Defense. as Maj . Mike Swain because he threatened to blow up their house., . Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms agent Michael Sweat testified he posed as a mer cenary to gain the Braswells' confidence and to investigate possible firearms viola tions. The other defendants are Joseph Gor rell Pierce, 28, and his brother, Roger Allen Pierce, 25, both of Belews Creek, and Raeford Milano Caudle, 38, and James Christopher Talbert, 30, both of Winston-Salem. ' They contend they knew Sweat was some kind of agent and told him of wild plans they never intended to carry out. ' ' "There was never any plans to do any act of violence or terrorism," Braswell said. "I said if he wants to talk about blowing little green men off Mars, tell him we had nuclear weapons and could do it."- Prosecutors argue that the charges of entrapment and harassment were con cocted only after charges were filed. They have introduced into evidence tapes re latest news. Read it every day in UNC FALL INFORMAL SORORITY RUSH STARTS Wednesday, Sept 16. Sign up at Union, Monday-Wednesday from 10:00 until 5:00. ... HABAKKUK - ORIGINAL SCORE, 25 PROJECTORS. AN inquiry into the meaning of history, God's role in a world of violence and hope In an age of uncertainty. At 7:30 tonight. Great HaO.. $2 donation suggested. ffesi Ci 'found DID YOU FIND MY POCKET WATCH in Wilson Library on September 2? If s gold Elgin that has been fai my family for S3 years. If you found it, or know who did, caS 9S7-1739. Please. LOST: TWO ID'S. One for Alice ASain Prove ty. Other for David Strickland. Please return if found. Need desperately. Call 929-6504. Lost near CannSchad Gym. LOST: A HANDMADE GREY SWEATER with a black stripe on sleeves. I am very sentimental about it. Please call 967-1233 or leave in the Botany Dept. REWARD FOR RETURN OF LADIES GOLD . Seiko watch lost 911 behind or in Fine Room or on way to Dey Ha3. Call Kim 933-1431, a&ernoons. LOST: SET OF KEYS ON LIGHT blue rectangular i Tar Heel plaque. Near Carolina Inn bus stop. If found PLEASE contact Cheryl at 957-6239 to keep me from going crazyS PART-TIME TYPIST DAILY. Flexible hours. Approximately 15 hours per week. Must be accurate, good spcSkr, type 60 wpm $3.35 starting. Romeo 92M1C3 !"""""" F"1' .l""! .1 corded with a tiny microphone concealed on Sweat's body when he visited the Bras- i wells' home and met with other defendants. The government also has tapes obtained with a wiretap on the Braswells' telephone. Mrs. Braswell testified that when Sweat asked her husband to obtain some guns for him and Braswell said he couldn't, the agent "became very emotional." She said Sweat mentioned he had blown up a house in Madison County and added, "If you're leading me on, I may have to do yours the same way." "I didn't want my house to get blowed up at midnight as he stated it could be," Mrs. Braswell testified. Before jury selection can begin, Judge Woodrow W. Jones must rule on a motion by Braswell that he be given a court appointed lawyer. Braswell and his wife fired their court-appointed lawyers before the first trial began. Mrs. Braswell main tains she does not want a lawyer. The defendants face up to five years in prison and $10,000 in fines if found guilty. fire Vertical ventilation, the form used in about 95 percent of fires, pulls fire to a certain point and provides a natural chimney for smoke. Horizontal ventilation pulls air throughout the structure and carries the risk of fire spreading. A difficult decision for a fire chief is whether to send men into a burning structure. But fire men are instructed to observe certain conditions that signal a weakened structure. Beams pulling away from walls, movement of the building, cracked walls, and a sagging roof are all indi cators that a structure may be unsafe to enter. Trainees in the Chapel Hill Fire Department SAVE BIG B y '. z. mm if A r . , , , .,,...,.fl, l , . 78 ITEM SALAD) EJIPHESS All yio can QBt9 iniSs Special Expires Sept. 17,1901 STEAK HOUSE Classified ads may be placed at the DTH Offices or mailed to the DTH Carolina Union 065A, Chapel HUl, NC 27514. Volunteer for U.S. Environmental Protection Agency research. Earn $50-$65 upon completion of experiment which measures the effects of 2 hour low level ozone exposure Earn $50-575 in an experi ment to study the effects of low levels of gaseous and .. particulate air pollutants. Numerous other minor studies are always ongoing. Lew!, of pollutants are low with no known long term adverse effects, and all research is approved by the Human Rights Committee of the UNC Medical School. Pay is S5.C0 per hour. We need healthy, non-smoking ' males, age 18-40 with no history of allergies or hay fever. CaS for more information, 8-5 Mon-FrL, . 966- 1253. SALESPERSONS WANTED must be neat and courteous and have own transportation. High earnings available for both men and women. Call ' 967- 3025. .. ... . LOOK GOOD IN SHORTS, JEANS? Women needed for photographic modeling for advertising -promotion. Minimum 52". Excellent pay, flexible . hours. Impact Services 214692-1440 9:30 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. NEED SOMEONE FOR GENERAL OFFICE duties 10 ara-2 pm or llam-3pm, Monday through Friday. Hours sfightly flexible. Call 933-1990 or 942-7949 between 1-6. f or czl: FOR SALE: ONKYO 2040 CASSETTE tape deck. One year old. Excellent condition. Active warantee. CaS 933-2576. YAMAHA TX-500 WINDSHIELD. OTHER EXTRAS. Buying auto, must sell. $650 negotiable 439-2565 evenings. FOR SALE: 3X3 TABLE and 4 chairs. Price highly negotiable. 942-8674. Excellent for quarters tourneys. . . special request through the Office of Student Affairs," he said. Handicapped students who come into con tact With DeWalt have told him they have found one way to fight the problem of not being able to park close to classes. "They tell me the best way to deal with the parking situa tion is to utilize the park-and-ride lots," he said. "The bus routes actually pet them cIom' " DeWalt said the bus on the park-and-ride route was equipped to handle wheelchairs, which are used by 70 to 75 paraplegics on campus. '. Another problem is posed by the student who is temporarily handicapped, DeWalt said. Typi cal cases, are those of students who break a leg or tear ligaments in a knee and are forced to wear a long-leg walking cast for 10 to 12 weeks. They have to find some way to get around, he ; said , "' -v-. v - DeWalt mentioned the policy implemented ;' last year by the campus police, who previously gave such students transportation. "They couldn't keep doing it," he said. The office was receiving up to 41 requests per day, DeWalt said. , Riggsbee said the police would make excep tions in providing transportation, however, if notified by the infirmary. ; "We will haul a student from a dorm or Granville Towers if the infirmary calls us," Riggsbee. said. The other exception made, In extreme circumstances only, is through the Handicapped Student Service office, he said. DeWalt siad some doctors complicated the the problem by a lack of standardization. Cer tain doctors give the temporarily handicapped person a parking sticker and some do not, he said. "It's difficult to legislate as to what really " is a handicap," DeWalt said. Thomas , said doctors were being more dis criminating. "I'm pleased to see that physicians are being more careful in signing the authoriza tion for one," he said. . from page.1 spend 200 hours in the classroom and at the training tower. They are evaluated on their per formances on exams, practical experience, par ticipation and attitude toward training. Train ees must achieve at least an 80-percent grade to pass the course. " " After completing firefighting training, public safety officers enter the EMT and law-enforce-, ment learning curriculum, ' A period of in-service training follows the completion of the three-phase public safety curriculum. 1 1 q.iti. - 4 p.rn V- . . 5 . p.m. Closlh UCKS fern Slzzlfn' - rJESTEEiM SlZZLi N F Mo Tclteouts Please - - ' 324 Rosemary Street Chapel Hill 1714 East Hoi loway Street Durham 11 a.m, 10 p.m. Sun.-Thurs. ' 11-11 Fh.&Sat. FOR SALE: SMITH CORONA ; GALAXJE XII portable manual typewriter. Like new condition. Includes case. Call 933-5763. . , OUT OF TOWN FOLKS CANT COME. So I have 10 tickets available for the Miami of Ohio game. S section. CaD BUI at 929-1834. ; NEEfj MUSIC 41 records? Please buy mine for $15.00. Brand new, never even opened. Call 967-8667 and ask for Margaret . ' cervices CAKE FAIRIES DELIVER CAXES IN STYLE. . Delicious, home-baked from scratch. Any occasion. ' : message, ' Birthdays a specialty song, candle mciuded. $17. Ca3 the Fairies (evenings) 5&3-4306. CELEBRATING? BIRTHDAYS ANNIVERSARIES WHATEVER - "We deliver bouquets of heilum filled balloons, personalized cookie cakes and a tune -to ofSces, homes, dorms, to Durham, Chapel HIU. RTF. CaS Cookie Factory (2S6-262S) or Balloons and Tunes (967-3433). MR. ICS MUSIC SHOW features a Eve disc jockey pbyirsg rock, disco, pop, and new wave for any size -party. Call 942-5293 for reasonable prices. . JAPANESE GER! IAN AUTOS. Repaired "by Precision Malntainence, 2tX West Street, Carrboro. 929-1976. "Caring about people and the cars they drive." - WANTED CHEAP BICYCLE. CaS Beverly at 933-5122 WILL BUY NEW AND USED LPS. cassettes, 8-tracks (rock, jazz, blues, classical, wave, etc.) and ENTIRE COLLECTIONS. Good prices. Call 929-6175. keep trying 8-noon. after 5. Soviets warn Polish union WARSAW, Poland (AP) Echoing a charge that preceded Soviet interven tion in Hungary and Czechoslovakia years ago, the Communist Party is ac cusing Poland's independent labor federation, Solidarity, of "counterrevo lution." : , ; The party attack came Friday after a radical member of Solidarity suggested that the 9.5-milIion member union now has people capable of running the Polish government. - Meanwhile, about 100,000 Soviet army, navy and air force troops were to end nine days of war games one of the largest Soviet military maneuvers since World War II - near the. Polish border today. The U.S. government said the current Soviet exercises may have been staged at this time to intimidate the Solidarity congress. Similar NATO exercises are under way, with land operations to begin next week. In Moscow, state television escalated the propaganda xmpaign against the Polish workers movement Friday night, showing rallies of Soviet workers de nouncing Solidarity, and troops in Baltic coast war games near Poland. Nuclear plant springs new leak HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) A new leak from the cooling system at the crippled Three Mile Island nuclear reactor was located and stopped Saturday, officials said. v Spokesman Davicl Delzingaro said that at 4:30 a.m. technicians found water coming from a valve on a sampling system within the reactor containment building. . -: , ' The leakage had jumped from a rate of 150 gallons a day to about 1 ,000 gal lons a day by Friday. There was no evidence of any release of radioactivity to the environment, plant officials said. The coolant system, which bathes the mangled reactor in water, has leaked steadUy since a Marcfr 1979 accident. After technicians found the problem at the valve and used remote control methods to shut it down, the leak rate returned to the former 150-gallon-a-day rate. ' : . ; , '. t Plant officials had said Friday that a manned entry might be needed to solve the problem. But Delzingaro said today that an entry was unlikely. 0 7TT--T1 ; CENTER I S YO UR STUDENT STO R PER PHOTOCOPY m mm m mm omnifl mm IP .5ttr-CHVlwc LETTER OR LEGAL SIZE Rams Hours All ads must be prepaid. Deadline: Ad must be received by 12 (nooh) one-busjoess day before publication. roo: MALE ROOMMATE WANTED. Rural area apart ment, 2.5 miles from campus. $137.50 month lh utilities. 2 bdrms. living rm, kitchen, 1 bath; furniture available. No smoking: no drugs. Call Paul at 968-1035. TWO PROFESSIONAL STUDENTS to share 3-bdr house. Air, carpet, quiet neighborhood, on busline. No pets. $150 plus utilities. Furnish except bed room. Call after 5 929-8744. ROOMMATE NEEDED RESPONSIBLE, dependable, liberal, and at least Vi way studious. Old We!l Apts. $135mo V: utilities. Call 929-6242. HOUSEMATES NEEDED! One to share upstairs at $110month, two to live downstairs at $122. 50 month. Located in Dogwood Acres. AC WD, hardwood floors, large yard. 929-4180. FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED GRADProf. student, non-smoker. Stratford Hills Apts. Walking distance to campus "G" Sne. $103 Vi utilities 967-6017 ir 4a' 'mm9 TOM COBINSON'S SEAFOOD AND PSODUC2. Seafood TSiurs-Sat, Prockfce Mon Sat. 300 W. Rosemary behSnd Chutney's. VA blocks from campus. Customer parking 10 off all produce and esss 9-noon Saturdays. We feature the area's freshest seafood and local produce. 942-1221. . E! I OFFSET PRINTING also available GArKXmCjOPfCENTER ANDOmCESUPPlYINC Head Plaza Chapel Hill M-F 8:30-5:30 967-2585' PROGRAMMING CLASSES. Learn how to program microcomputers. A class fai Basic requires no knowledge of microcomputers. A class In Assembly Language assumes ownership of, or access to a microcomputer. Classes will begin the week of September 21 and run for 8 weeks with one class and one lab per week. CaO 942-7949 between 10 am and 6 pm Mon.-Sat. to register or for more information. personals TO CB FROM CB: LAST WEEX was good but sooner or later well get our schedules together. Let me know when you've free. HAPPY EUTTHDAY CflRISTOPHERI I'm giad you've finally caught up with this old woman. 1 hope we keep getting old together for long time. 1 Love You more than ever, and remember, you can root up my garden any time! SQUEAL! L. K. AMERICAN WEREWOLVES UNITE! BAD MOON'S RISIN Tuesday night. Support your local werewoS stray from the road and keep on the moors. Interested werewolves? Lorl 942-6111. HABAKKUK: That's easy for you to say! HAPPY 20TH BIRTHDAY YOU OLD HAG! Yes you Judy. I hope you have a great day. Watch out for past, present,and future. Love, Bedra. BROTHERS OF PHI DELTA CHI: Our best withes during rush. Love, your tittle Sisters. t , - ; ' : I
Sept. 14, 1981, edition 1
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