The Daily Tar HeelWednesday, November 8, 1989 World and Nation iDemociralts claim wins So state races From Associated Press reports In Virginia, Democrat L. Douglas Wilder clung to a narrow lead in his bid to become the nation's first elected black governor and capture the state ' house in the old capital of the Confed Study Abroad Information Session November 8 3:00 pm Study Abroad Office Talk to visiting German students and returnees of Tubingen, Gottingen, and Berlin Recieve UNC Credit (German Language Background necessary) 17 D D D D D D Q with purchase of 9 or 18 hole green fees with this ad through November 30, 1989 Limit 1 8 holes per person per day 18-hole Public Course q Complete Line of Golf Equipment D Driving Range, Lessons Available outbtotc Golf 0 a November 8, 1989 n I 0 "You'll Iaugh And You'll Cry. Jack ILemmon Is Sheer Brilliance, Ted Danson has never been better and Olympia Dukakis outdoes her role in 'Moonstruck! " -Pat Coffins, WWOR-TV "FILLED WITH LIFE AND JOY, 4DAD' IS A VERY RARE FILM. A towering achievement for Jack "APPLAUSE FOR 'DAD'. It's original, moving, witty and truthful!' Daphne Dafc, WOMAN MAGAZINE "JACK LEMMON AND OLYMPIA DUKAKIS ARE SENSATIONAL These are two of the best performances of the year!' -Lisa Kariin, ABC RADIO "TED DANSON IS SUPERB, and Olympia Dukakis is awesome. Jack Lemmon caps his remarkable career. Gary David Goldberg goes to the head of the Hollywood class, wringing our tears and laughter." - -Guy Flatky, COSMOPOLITAN MAGAZINE "FUNNY AND 'DAD' HAS GOT IT ALL Easily one of the best movies of : the year. It's a movie you won't soon forget' Neil Rosen, WNCN RADIO JACK LEMMON -TED DANSON Sometimes, the greatest jfflliflllliOlllSWIfflBI DM iwnun AMBLIN PG PARENTAL GUIDANCE UMt MtTEDIU M 0! IE iNMIUINMENT OPENS FRIDAY AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU. eracy, while in New Jersey, Demo cratic Rep. James Florio breezed to victory Tuesday night. In New York, David Dinkins won election as the city's first black mayor. Wilder was fewer than 6,000 votes in Germany SI D D km D Q D D D D Directions: From NC 54 ByPass take Jones Ferry Rd. to Old Greensboro Rd. 1 9 Fi milfva tn MP 7 Q D D Q fOl I KQP Turn right on NC 87 vuu, oc (north) For 9 miles to blinking light. Turn right for 1 .2 miles on Boywood Rd. to sign. D Q Call for Tee Times 9420783 Lemmon. - r r4 at the movies man you ever meet... ilUiUl MM SUGGESTED tUITMU FOU CHtLOKEN f ft 1 iMi ahead of Republican J. Marshall Cole man with 98 percent of the vote counted. With 1,924 of 1,967 precincts in, Wilder had 872,707 votes, or 50 per cent, to Coleman's 867,451 votes, also 50 percent. Virginia's first woman attorney general, Democrat Mary Sue Terry, easily won re-election, crushing Re- publican state Sen. Joseph B. Benedetti by more than a 3-2 margin. The governor's race pitted two can didates with a history of overcoming long odds and featured a high-profile debate over access to abortion, which Wilder supports and Coleman opposes. Turnout was described as heavy in most parts of the state. Florio, who lost the closest governor's race in New Jersey history eight years ago, easily defeated Repub lican Rep. James Courter. After eight years of GOP tenure in the statehouse and an unusually nasty campaign, Florio came back to win the Garden State's governorship. With 47 percent, or 2,775, of the state's 5,845 precincts counted, Florio garnered 672,160 votes, or 62 percent, while Courter had 418,846, or 38 per cent. Earlier, election officials had said voter turnout around the state ranged from moderate to heavy, and was espe- cially strong in Florio's home district of Camden. m ' ,. TheracetosucceedRepublicanGov Thomas Kean was Courter s first and Florio's third. In the final weekend, Florio, an eight-term congressman, held a 24-point lead in an independent poll that gave him a better than 2-to-l ad vantage among independent voters. At stake was control of the Legisla ture which will control redrawing con gressional districts after the 1990 cen sus. In New York, Dinkins won election as the first black mayor of the nation's most populous city, propelled by a East German government officials resign From Associated Press reports BERLIN East Germany's gov- ernment resigned Tuesday amid grow- ing nationwide unrest, a continuing exodus of thousands of its people and pleas from within the Communist Party for a sweeping top-level shakeup. Also on Tuesday one day after the is the first one. 6 9M UNIVERSAL. C1T V STUtMOS NC JPU mifBIlBSMifflflifflll multiracial coalition drawn to his mes sage of social conciliation. Dinkins, the Manhattan borough president, defeated Republ ican Rudolph Giuliani with the support of white lib erals who had enabled him to retire three-term incumbent Mayor Edward I. Koch in the Democratic primary. With 94 percent of precincts report- ing, Dinkins had 848,4 1 1 votes, or 5 1 percent, to Giuliani's'795,222 votes, or 48 percent. Conservative and Right to Life can didates each had about 1 percent. Giuliani, hamstrung by the vast Democratic majority in New York, had accepted the tiny Liberal Party's nomi nation in a bid to fashion a reform minded "fusion" candidacy that crossed party lines. "For a Republican, Rudy did a tremendous showing," said his campaign manager, Peter Powers. In another Virginia race, Democrat Donald Beyer Jr. easily upset Republi can Edwina "Eddy" Dalton Tuesday to win election as lieutenant governor in his first bid for public office. In unofficial returns from 1,284 of 1,967 precincts, Beyer led Dalton by 589, 1 7 1 votes to 486,90 1 , or 55 percent to 45 percent. Dalton, a Henrico County state sena tor and the widow of Virginia's last GOP governor, held a double-digit lead in pre-election polls over Beyer, a Falls Church automobile dealer making his first for electiye office Dalton, 53, drew upon her name recognition to raise more than $1.2 million, but had spent all but $3,500 by the end of October. Beyer, 39, built a $1.5 million campaign treasury, much of it his own money. Dalton avoided negative advertis ing, but Beyer's commercials attacked her opposition to abortion, her support of oil drilling in the Chesapeake Bay and her ineffectiveness in the Democrat-controlled Senate. government introduced a proposed law promising up to 30 days of travel to the West a parliamentary committee rejected the measure and urged a new law allowing unrestricted stays abroad. The 44-member Council of Minis ters resigned jointly, government spokesman Wolfgang Meyer said. The cabinet, led by 75-year-old Premier Willi Stoph, has little power and imple ments policy made by the Communist Party's ruling Politburo. Stoph and several other ministers also are Polit buro members. "We appeal to the citizens who in tend to leave our republic to reconsider their step pnee more. Our socialist fa therland needs everyone," said a state ment issued by the outgoing cabinet. Since early Saturday, more than 28,000 East Germans have fled to the West through neighboring Czechoslo vakia. They arrived in West Germany Most of the Time One Hour! University Opticians ' S f; IT y' - f f, .,."' ''- J.1 J Hasc"SoFa"vip froljressive IF'iKSj2" ! No Line Bifocals !! Bifocals ! with frame purchase starting at II S89.95 irus inciuaes tj uay lens aaapiaouny University OPTICIANS Economic difficulties dampen Soviet celebration From Associated Press reports MOSCOW Anti-Communist marchers, striking workers and clashes between police and protest ers vied with a scaled-down military parade on Red Square as the Soviet Union celebrated the 1917 Bolshe vik Revolution Tuesday. Even President Mikhail Gor bachev tempered the Revolution Day festivities by saying the nation's economic problems hang like a "sword of Damocles over us." A column of about 5,000 march ers paraded peacefully through Moscow to challenge Communist Party authority, while a few miles away, Gorbachev and other leaders celebrated the 72nd anniversary of the revolution reviewing the tradi tional show of military force. Activists in the southwest repub lic of Moldavia said police broke up a crowd of thousands of would-be protesters and beat some of them. The military part of the parade in its capital, Kishinev, was canceled. Bush looks for Iran's help WASHINGTON President Bush graded himself highly Tues day on the anniversary of his elec tion, vowed to "veto and exhort" until Congress approves his pro grams and brushed aside criticism that he has responded too timidly to the awakening of democracy in Eastern Europe. Bush, at a mid-morning news conference, also expressed fresh hope Iran would help win the release of American hostages in Lebanon after a U.S. decision to release $567 million in frozen assets to Tehran. "I carry the fate of the hostages with me every single day." The buck stops Thursday WASHINGTON Congres sional leaders sought agreement on Tuesday at the rate of 120 an hour. The government will remain in of fice until Parliament elects a new Council of Ministers, Meyer said. He did not say when such an election would occur. The party's Central Committee was to meet Wednesday to consider further changes. Several Communist officials and three small parties allied with the Communists have urged the Politburo itself to resign. Leaders "should resign without any delay" to make way for a new Polit buro and a new Cabinet that will imple ment reforms, said the East Berlin newspaper Junge Welt, an organ of the country's Communist Youth group.. At least eight Politburo jobs were on the line at a meeting Tuesday. New party leader Egon Krenz has said five elderly Politburo members closely associated with former leader TIRED of WAITING Days or Weeks for your Eyeglasses? Come to us & get your glasses in ONLY ONE HOUR! 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Owners of maturing federal secu rities would have to continue holding those bonds, creating a cloud over the government's credit rating and rais ing interests rates, economists say. ' "It is important to our economy! and our country that we not risk the ' adverse consequences of default by . the government," Senate Majority: Leader George Mitchell, D-Maine, said. Drug surveillance under question WASHINGTON The Customs Service is investigating whether its. supervisors at a vital drug surveil lance center covered up problems with high-tech radar planes. The investigation involves "eve rything from safety concerns ... to management being aware of prob lems and not taking appropriate ac tions," William Green, the agency's assistant commissioner for internal affairs, said. Rep. Glenn English, D-Okla., said he would request hearings by the full committee. English is a Government Operations Committee member who has conducted numerous hearings on the Customs program for interdicting airborne drug smugglers. The panel deals with funding for the Corpus Christi, Texas, center that launches aircraft to detect drug-ferrying planes. Erich Honecker would be replaced by the end of the week. Two other Polit buro members lost their jobs Oct. 18 when Krenz took over. The Politburo, which normally has 21 members, also discussed an "action program" that Krenz has said would contain sweeping political and eco nomic reforms. As the government resigned and the Politburo met, about 5,000 people marched in East Berlin to protest elec tion fraud and urge free elections. Po lice did not intervene as the demonstra tors challenged the Communists' monopoly on power and shouted: "All power to the people." On Monday, 750,000 demonstrators took to the streets in cities around the country, with about 500,000 in Leipzig alone. East Germany's embattled leaders have been promising democratic re forms and eased travel restrictions in hopes of halting the growing unrest. But a draft allowing 30 days of travel to the West failed to curb discontent. ; The constitutional committee of Parliament rejected the measure in its present form, just one day after it was published, the state-run news agency ADN said. "The proposal does not meet the expectations of citizens ... and will not achieve the political credibility of the state," the committee said. The panel recommended lifting the need for exit visas, separating travel regulations from em igration rules, clari fying access to foreign currency for trips abroad, reconsidering the 30-day limit and changing grounds on which passports can be refused. The committee also urged an emer gency Parliament session to discuss the tense situation and find ways of per suading skeptical citizens to remain at home. IS Just starting out? Exploring Career Opportunities? 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