2The Daily Tar HeelMonday, October 22, 1984 eagan called more confident in debate The Associated Press State Republican Party Chairman David Flaherty said President Reagan was "super" in yesterday's debate, while N.C. Democratic Party David Price said Walter Mondale "built on his performance in the first debate." "I thought Reagan came across as very confident," Flaherty said in a telephone interview from his Raleigh home following the debate between Reagan and his Democratic opponent. Flaherty said he thought Reagan did better during last night's debate than in the first debate between the two candidates. I thr"ht Mondale was stiff and not as relaxed as he was at the first debate," Flaherty said. "I thought President Reagan did super. I thought he was very positive and upbeat." Asked if he thought Reagan won, Flaherty said: "Who knows who wins these things? I don't think there was a clear winner." Price said he thought Mondale did just as well in both debates and "was very, very impressive." "He showed he was equally articulate and knowledgable and balanced in questions on foreign policy," Price said in a telephone interview from his Chapel I45ii home. The first debate centered on domestic issues while the second debate was on foreign policy matters. "Reagan didn't appear quite as confused" in yesterday's debate as he was in the first debate, Price said. "But I thought he really still seemed less than in command. "For example, the whole discussion of the (so-called) "star-wars" technol ogy. He simply didn't seem to have the knowledge to discuss that intelligently. It seemed to be sort of a pipe dream," Price said. But Flaherty said that he was sur prised Mondale opposed the "star- wars" defense system. "I cant believe he wouldn't support that," he said. Price said "on the surface, Reagan was less confused and disoriented" than in the first debate. But, he added, "if one listens to the answers, if anything, he was even less in command." "As president, he hasnt really mas tered what he needs to know to handle these terribly complex issues . . . matters of life and death," he said. "I don't know anyone (who) could watch the debate and be assured . . . that the country was in good hands." Hinckley: insanity plea was faked to pro tect others The Associated Press DURHAM In six pages of doc uments in his own handwriting, John Hinckley constructed a "fantasy life story" that was "complete with very clever cover-ups" to support his plea pf insanity in the shooting of President Reagan, The Durham Morning Herald reported yesterday. The Herald reported the contents of the papers seized from Hinckley's cell while he was under psychiatric evalua tion at the Federal Correctional Insti tute at Butner. But a federal judge ruled that the papers, dubbed the Butner papers, could not be used as evidence because they were seized in violation of Hinckley's right to privacy under the 367-2887 JJ- S Haircuts Formulated lor the HU's Ctli LUIS - $10.50 Reg. $15.50 li-Ughting & Perms J U HAS THE RIGHT SHAMPOO FOR YOU! ASSURE SHAMPOO - lot Soim.il to I H.IM THERAPK SHAMPOO - loi l)rv. Kiitfli Hdif EXOH SHAMPOO - I in OiU H.nt V .ilp VITA-TRESS IIOTIN SHAMPOO " I in I inr. IHm H.m $10.00 Off Hi Good Thru Oct 31, 1984 pieaae Bring Coupon (rtNiim' M l S Mtmltu l jrr Mtltl mtK m tutc4iuul lun l hmj viiitm BOTANOIl SHAMPOO " fin ( hmm.illv IrtMh-iJ m I iivtitif i nth M.nr EUROPEAN POLITICS FROM A SWISS PERSPECTIVE May 27 -June 15, 1985 Switzerland, with its four linguistic groups, two major religions and strong regional and cultural differences, is in many ways a microcosm of Europe. This three-week seminar will involve classes in the mornings with afternoons and weekends free for excursions, sailing on the lake of Thun, or snow skiing in Zermatt. Courses offered are Political Science 128, EUROPEAN POLITICS (3 semester hours credit, 1st summer session 1985) and Political Science 99, INDEPENDENT STUDIES (3 semester hours credit, fall semester 1985). Instructor for the seminar is Dr. Jurg Steiner, Professor of Political Science at UNC Chapel Hill and at the University of Geneva, Switzerland. Class size is limited to 20 students to allow intensive discussion. Double accommodations at the beautiful Gwatt Conference Center. Students live in Swiss chalets and share light bed-making and dishwashing chores. Cost is $1195.00 if you enroll by January 15, 1985; $1345.00 if you enroll after January 15. The cost includes room and board (breakfast and lunch weekdays), bag lunch for excursions, tuition and instructional costs. The cost does not include transatlantic trans portation, transportation on excursions, passport cost, books and personal expenses, and evening and weekend meals. For further information, contact either EXTENSION AND CONTINUING EDUCATION r - 101 Abernethy Hall 962-1106 (office hours Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. 4 p.m.) or DR. JURG STEINER Department of Political Science 369 Hamilton Hall 962-3041 (office hours Tuesdays and Thursdays, 8:45 -Home phone: 929-9858 -10:45 a.m.) DIVISION OF EXTENSION AND CONTINUING EDUCATION University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill gucD l?J3xii3ifi) 0 3 - MldnlcM B Mufo ff.ffin ODrd!!? Itost Ey!ms3y it Chcapol Hi!! Blvd. rfffiBfc jtf JKIfa -Bhh 4Uv-'j ovu. Jj Fourth Amendment. Charles Ruff, U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, said the papers would have been valuable in refuting Hinckley's successful use of the insanity defense because they were the type of evidence jurors could read for them selves and easily understand different from the often complex testimony of several psychiatrists at the trial. There were eight people involved in plots to kill Jimmy Carter and Reagan along with Hinckley, the papers say, in a conspiracy that began in 1979. "It now seems obvious that 111 have to settle for life in prison if I continue with the one gunman story much longer," Hinckley said in the papers. "After March 30 I decided to go the insanity route and hope for acquittal." 'Mind' workshops begin today The Student Union Weekly Features committee is sponsoring a "series of workshops titled "Mind Your Own Mind" through Thursday. Today at 7 p.m. a psychic healing workshop will be held in room 205 of the Union. This workshop is designed to help people develop a sixth sense to use to figure out life and relationships. For creative problem solving and growth, a meditation workshop will be held tomorrow at 7 p.m. in the Union auditorium. Interested personscan explore inner worlds for out-of-body experience with soul travel Wednesday at 7 p.m. in room 21 1. The relaxation workshop on Wednes day in room 211 at 7 p.m. will teach participants to learn to use guided imagery and music to attain deep states of relaxation. 1 Ix '1 Wjf kj 8 .aartao-ao? oarat 3 19 fsSJjP CZf REAL PIT 5 BAR B-Q : J S"15-50T BypVi t EnPofTRd.; S 77 Chapel Hill ft 933-9248 JR mt Jatly, An editorially independent newspaper serving the UNC Campus and Community since 1872 Carolina Union 065A 962-0245 c;L Restaurant and Lounge Restaurant Open 1 1 am-10 pm rving burgers, sandwiches and salads. Try our New Orleans French Quarter Oyster Sandwich! Disco Open 10 pm-2 am Happy Hour 4:30-6:30 Catch your favorite team on our wicIp screen TV! Wide open to the public 1 4 YS-IV it h Restaurant and Lounap 400 W. Franklin St. Chanel Hill. NC 27514 967-5887 The Amos Tuck School of Business Administration Dartmouth College Hanover, N.H. Men and Women Seeking Graduate Education for Management are invited to discuss the TUCK MB Monday, November 5 Kenneth Davis, Professor Emeritus Check with University Placement Services 962-6507 fani-.il,. n ill u , Jr PIZZA, LAS AG N A, SOUP AND SALAD MONDAY ONLY 5-9 PM GIVE US A FRESH TRY! Leftist guerrillas kill 12 From Associated Press reports SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador Leftist guerrillas armed with mortars and automatic weapons attacked an electrical installation north of the capital yesterday, killing 12 soldiers and wounding seven, a military spokesman said. He said 30 rebels were'killed and 30 wounded when soldiersrepelled the attack, and that two civilian employees were hurt in the fighting. In a homily, a top Roman Catholic Church official yesterday deplored renewed violence in this Central American nation a week after President Jose Nepoleon Duarte and leftist guerrillas held initial peace talks, and cited new military operations and the deaths of four CIA operatives in an air crash. The military spokesman, who insisted on anonymity for security reasons, said the guerrillas attacked and partially destroyed a trans former station at Las Delicias, a village 16 miles north of San Sal vador, before dawn. Indiana frat blaze kills 1 BLOOMINGTON, Ind. A pre dawn blaze roared through an Indiana University fraternity house yesterday, killing one person and injuring 34 others during homecom ing weekend, campus police said. Israel Edelman, 19, a student at the schools' campus at Richmond, Ind., and a guest at the Zeta Beta Tau fraternity house, was pronouced dead on arrival at Bloomington Hospital. Deputy Monroe County Coroner Tony Pizzo said Edelman died of smoke inhalation. Four fraternity members were hospitalized, three with second degree fractures and smoke inhala tion, said an emergency room nurse ews in liseti who refused to give her name. Thirty other people, including two campus policemen, were treated for smoke inhalation, abrasions and fractures, the nurse said. Damn, were good The Daily Tar Heels returned to the win column in softball Friday with a victory over the desk of the Student Union. Led by the hitting of University desk writer Mike Allen, and sports writers Mike Schoor and Kimball Crossley, the Tar Heels scored early and often to record an 11-5 victory. Editor Jeff L. Hiday was the winning pitcher in relief of Crossley, who never recovered from a shaky first inning and was dispatched to fright field. Associate Editor Mark Stinneford pitched the final inning to record the save. Chess creates Moscow tension MOSCOW Two Western press reports on the World Chess Cham pionship, including an allegation that challenger Garri Kasparov may be under pressure to lose the match, have caused a stir in the sedate Moscow playing hall and prompted two protests by the head of the world chess body. Controversy is no stranger to international chess tensions at the 1972 Bobby Fischer-Boris Spassky match made world headlines and Soviet defector Viktor Korchnoi has accused his former countrymen of trying to poison him and hypnotize him during matches. 1984 McNAIR LECTURE ON AMERICAN CITIZENSHIP J1EI3EVJY CARTER President, United States 1977-81 Tuesday, October 23, 1 984 8:00 PM Memorial Kali, UNC Campus Wit l t .,.. . The public is invited. Sponsored by The Chancellor'q-pommittee'on Established Lectures n tiiN,ili4t nnl1tMtb Jisi- m- itfH fit inn ikhmuv U ,l .Mil Sllfiffl-i 0M( IV' f :: T:!;i(!!S,i..;iHi,(v!;IS i " iil'"ni ' f 1 jr"s...-t. m I it" - a f xt& 1 x i 1 m wires t ' Be a winner this season with our storewide sale 20-50 savings on all our fine jewelry Monday Saturday, October 15-27 Punt and kick but don't pass this sale! Present this ad for Vi off the item of your choice. Monday-Saturday 10-6 942-fc334 f -.. Y EetUuniRt Sn Car MIME tim: Wl outlay Bod served with house salad, Prima ISfilb homemade rolls and your choice of vegetable an unbelievable $7.95 HAPPY iiOUft Monday thru Friday 4:30 6:30 All Highball 2 Price Lunch Mon.-Fri. 11:30-2:30, Dinner Nightly From 6:00 157 E. Rosemary, Two Floors above Troll's 942-5757 mmmmmmmffiii.i ,208 W. FRANKLIN ST. 942-51 Ari

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