Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 26, 1989, edition 1 / Page 4
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4The Daily Tar Heel Thursday, January 26, 1989 Campus Police Roundup D Someone took a parking permit and a pair of shoes from an unlocked car parked on Emer son Drive Tuesday at 8:06 a.m. D A 1977 Chevrolet Chevette was reported missing from a space in the lower Hinton James parking lot Monday at 7:47 a.m. The car had been moved to another loca tion. The incident was found to be a prank, and no damage was done. o A construction site tool stor age area was unlawfully entered Monday at 7:47 a.m. and a torch, generator and other tools, valued at $765, were stolen. The site is near the Carolina Inn. An over-toasted bagel set off the South Building fire alarm Monday at 1 1:04 a.m. a A portable electric welding machine was stolen from the Ransom Street construction site at 12:24 p.m. Monday. The machine is valued at $4,500. a A license tag was reported missing from a Chevrolet truck parked in the parking deck Monday. n A woman left her wallet on top of her desk in the Old Clinic building and left her office for two hours Monday evening. When she returned, the wallet and contents, valued at $70, had been taken. o A Winston resident received an obscene phone call Monday at 9:45 p.m. The student played a recording of the call for police. The male voice informed the victim that he was performing a sexual act and would send her a photo of the activity. composed by Jenny Cloninger Goottram runs; for class secretary, By WILL SPEARS Staff Writer Jeannie Gontram, a junior business administration major from Raleigh, has announced her candidacy for senior class secretary. Gontram began planning her cam paign before Christmas and plans to continue right up to the" Feb. 21 election date. "If you're not willing to work for it, you're not willing to do the job," she said. Gontram said she wants students to respect the office of senior class secretary and to realize the impor tance of their vote. "I want people to care about who they're putting down," she said. "I don't want this to be a poster campaign." . Gontram said the senior class officers were important because they continue to represent their class after Elections 89 graduation as members of the Alumni Association. "The job doesn't stop after gradua tion," she said. "The senior class keeps doing it forever." This year's senior class officers have done a good job, but there is always room for improvement, she said. Gontram said she would work to improve the agenda for Commence ment Weekend bv Dlannine events for the entire weekend. Gontram said she would also help plan programs and publications to help prepare seniors for graduation throughout the whole year. "I think it's important to emphasize life after graduation from the beginning of the year," she said. She also said she would try to get the class together as a whole more often. She said this year's senior class meetings did not seem to have ah "open-door policy." Gontram said she would try to involve as much of the class as possible next year. ' "The only way to increase aware ness is to get people to the class meetings," she said. "If I could ask for two things, I would ask that everyone vote and that everyone listen when I come talk to them, because I have something to say." Gontram has given campus tours for the Admissions Office since her freshman year. She was a hall officer when she was a freshman an4 is currently a member of Kappa Delta sorority. . Feiris) Zeemmao emiteir irace for senior class , positions Officials raid! home,office do Libyan plant investigation From Associated Press reports BONN, West Germany Author ities Wednesday raided the offices of three companies and the homes of 12 people in an investigation of allega tions that West German firms helped Libya build a suspected chemical weapons plant. Some politicians, meanwhile, accused Chancellor Helmut Kohl's government of bungling West Ger many's initial response to the allega tions, and a magazine reported that companies had helped Iraq build a rocket factory. Customs authorities searched the offices and homes "on suspicion that export laws had been violated" with deliveries to the Libyan plant, said Hubertus Voegele, spokesman for the prosecutor's office in Offenburg. He declined to identify the busi nesses searched, but confirmed that the Imhausen-Chemie firm of Lahr was among them. Imhausen-Chemie is suspected of playing a major role in building the factory in Rabta, about 60 miles south of the Libyan capital of Tripoli. U.S. officials say Libya intends to produce poison gas at the plant. Libya says it is a pharmaceutical factory. West German officials who con ducted the searches in cities through out the country seized a huge quantity of material, especially from Imhausen-Chemie, that will take time to examine, Voegele said. Allegations of West German involvement in the Libyan plant came to light late last year. rxn TT02)RJII(fiIHnr -k $5000 "WILD THING" CONTEST $1.75 Imports k 50 Draft 18 or older . i s- 11 rr "Wr. Oi Paid To Do College LU The Wild Thing!" Doors open at 9:00 " WFUNE. Franklin St. at Kroger Plaza Chapel Hill929-WFUN iodadnOndo! : f IceoH fwl Cl lesel S utff : nnn asm mm y yj nnn I w I i3 virprx 'rr L3 U L5L-du 1) IS THE NATIONAL BOARD OF REVIEW fir LAJ Roger Ebert, SISKEL & EBERT Richard Schickel TIME Vincent Canby THE NEW YORK TIMES Peter Trovers PEOPLE MAGAZINE Mike Clark USA TODAY Joel Siegel GOOD MORNING AMERICA Jeff Lyons WPIX-TV Pat Collins - WWOR-T V Stewart Klein - WN YW-T V Susan Granger WMCA-AM Radio Gary Franklin K ABC-TV GEHE An ALAN PARKER Film C uyuULMjL j Lib LrU (a UvJlfi Ilii 17ILLEM 1 FREDERICK ZOLLO Mwim An ALAN PARKER fin GENEHACKMAN WILLEM DAFOE "MISSISSIPPI BURNING" muTREVOR JONES m GERALD RAMBLING, na m i,-,n PHILIP HARRISON GEOFFREY KIRKLAND bM PETER HZHNlut uahCHRIS GEROLMO Mm- Fiiwt) FREDERICK ZOLLO ROBERT F. COLESBERRY c.ALAN PARKER CO'jgfS' P"M Oy DHuif READ TH SiGNET PAPERBACK twiHrMMCnn Om AnG!$IO?tpCTURESRMSI WttTWICTtD Z2f mm it mouw t occohmhtino PMT 0 0UIT 6UAK0IAM B0L"J PLAVIW0 AT THEATRES EVERYWHERE. By WILL SPEARS Staff Writer ' Bobby Ferris, a junior chemistry major from Winter Park, Fla., and Greg Zeeman, a junior political science and economics major from Wilmington, have announced their candidacy for senior class president and vice president. The candidates' campaign.Tocus ing on Your Future," centers around strengthening traditions and provid ing a fresh focus, Ferris said. Ferris and Zeeman said they would expand commencement by planning an entire weekend of activities for students and their families. These activities would include a band party on Friday, and a barbecue and Baccalaureate service on Saturday, Ferris said. Ferris and Zeeman also said they planned to create a Senior Resource Center. The center would allow seniors to gain access to alumni in their field of interest and graduate school contacts, Ferris said. The center would also serve as Ma future roommate finder," Ferris said, help ing students to find potential room mates after graduation. Ferris and Zeeman said they planned to have senior social events scheduled for the entire 1989-1990 school year. These include a spring "Almost Senior Night Out," senior specials at downtown bars, a Fall X v. V Elections 89 Greg Zeeman and Bobby Ferris think the senior class is strong, but we want to strengthen it through experience and innovation." Germans dance, and a spring all campus ball. Ferris and Zeeman said they planned to create a Peer Advising Program, which would allow seniors to share their experiences with underclassmen. "One of our real strengths is that through experience we know how to tackle problems," Ferris said. "We Ferris served two terms on Student Congress, was the congress finance committee chairman and is an aide to Student Body President Kevin Martin. Zeeman has served as president of Magnum Residence Hall, is a member of the Residence Hall Asso ciation (RHA) Governing Board and is RHA treasurer. Witness testifies in case against airplane. hijacker! From Associated Press reports . . . , . FRANKFURT, West Germany U.S. Navy diver Robert Stethem said shortly before he was slain on a hijacked TWA jetliner that he was ready to die to save the lives of other passengers, a witness testified Wednesday. Australian Ruth Henderson told a Frankfurt court how she tried to comfort Stethem after he had been badly beaten by the hijackers of Flight 847 in June 1985. Stethem was later shot to death and his body thrown onto the runway at Beirut airport. Henderson, 20, was testifying at the trial of Mohammed Ali Hamadi, a Lebanese Shiite Moslem charged with air piracy and murder, in the -., hijacking ofthe- AthenstoRome y flight.. . -V . ' J ; ' " Hamadi has admitted taking part in the hijacking but denies shooting Stethem. Henderson said she sat next to Stethem on the plane for several hours after Stethem, 23, of Waldorf, Md., had been beaten. The witness, her voice often shak ing, said she tried to lift Stethem's spirits by talking about everyday things. "He was quite badly injured, and he was crying," she told the court. "His injuries included a bleeding head and back. His wrists had been tied very tightly and he had no feeling in his hands. His knees: and ribs Vwere ery sore. ; "We ' talked about ' Hininiportant things, about his diving, about Greece. By talking about normal things, he seemed to relax and forget the pain. It helped keep both our minds off the ordeal," Henderson said. : "He was unable to light or hold a cigarette, and I had to do it for him," she continued. "He said that if he lived, he thought his life would never be the same again." There were six U.S. Navy divfcrs on the plane. Thirty-nine Americans were held hostage 17 days during the ordeal. , Our chefs are better by degrees. 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 26, 1989, edition 1
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