I
2 The Dally Tar Heel Monday. September 15, 1975
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Beginning
Monday, September 15
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One of the widest selections
available anywhere,
including prints by
Matisse Homer
Gauguin Klee
Van Gogh Miro
Breughel Monet
Picasso Magritte
Rembrandt Toulouse-Lautrec
Renoir M.C. Escher
Chagall Cezanne
ali Frankenthaler
Prints measure 22V2" x l812"
at values
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lower tlha&i
001
The Daiiv Tar Heel has revised its phone listings. Here
aJtheSphone numbers for advertising, business,
news, sports and editorial.
News, sports and editorial: 933-0245, -0246, -0252
Business and advertising: 933-0372, -1163
3.
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these listed below
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Fowler's has North Carolina's largest selection of beer and
wine, both domestic and imported. Complete party
beverage supplies.
When you're hungry after hours, you -
can still enjoy the convenience and
variety of supermarket shopping at
supermarket prices at Fowler's.
W. Franklin St. Downtown Chapel Hill
.. .mi M 1111. I ....IU, .ui...,.,. ii.n - , i 1 .ji.ii 1
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from the wires of United tress mieruau
Clemency ends today
WASHINGTON President Ford's
limited clemency program for Vietnam war
objectors ends today, with the praise and ;
criticism that launched it a year ago still
sounding.
"We're quite pleased with the work the
Presidential Clemency Board has done,"
Chairperson Charles Goodell said, as the 18
members prepared to make their final
recommendations to President Ford.
However, Warren Hoover, executive,
director of the National Interreligious
Service Board for Conscientious Objectors,
said the program failed in all areas. "Less
than 20 per cent of the people eligible applied
and many of them have since dropped out."
Both sides concede the program failed to
reach vast numbers of young men who found
themselves in legal jeopardy because of draft
evasion or desertion.
Henry Schwarzschild, director of the
American Civil Liberties Union project on
amnesty, called the program "a tragic
failure" because of its "need for punishing
those young Americans who refused to
participate in the war."
Draft dodgers and deserters, including
many young men who ran to Canada and
Europe and still have not been indicted, were
eliglbe to apply for generally low-paying,
public service type civilian jobs.
After serving for up to two years, but
usually after only a few months, they would
avoid prosecution or would receive a
presidential pardon if they had convictions.
Vandal slashes 'Nightwatch'
13 times with kitchen knife
AMSTERDAM A former mental
patient wielding a serrated kitchen knife
walked up to Rembrandt's masterpiece the
"Nightwatch" in the Amsterdam State
Museum Sunday and slashed it at least 13
times. Museum guards overpowered the
man and handed him to police who
identified him as Wilhelmus Adrianus de
Rijk, a 38-year-old teacher.
- "The painting was seriously damaged," a
museum spokesman said. Some of the
slashes were almost three feet long.
Police said de Rijk made an incoherent
statement suggesting he felt an irresistible
urge to attack the painting and that he had
been "forced to act by supernatural forces."
They said he had a history of mental
instability and at times had been a patient in
9
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a mental institution-
The work, which is worth millions of
dollars, occupied a place of honor in a
special room along with a selection of other
Dutch masterpieces.
Deputy Museum Director Pieter van
Thiel said the museum's experts would
repair the painting and the damage would
then be invisible.
A museum spokesman said de Rijk had
been discharged frornhis teaching job "for
being medically unfit."
Disputes arise
between candidates
in New Hampshire re-election
CONCORD, N.H. Democrat John A.
Durkin accused Republican Louis C.
Wyman Sunday of playing Watergate-style
campaign tricks two days before they meet in
New Hampshire's historic rerun Senate
election.
Tuesday's rerun election is between
Wyman, Durkin and the American party's
C. Carmen Chimento. The first election last
fall ended in a virtual tie between the
Republican and Democrat. A new election
was called when two state recounts and seven
months of Senate review failed to resolv e the
deadlock.
Durkin said the Wyman campaign sent
letters misrepresenting his stand on gun
control to gun owners in the state. The letters
say the former state insurance commissioner
favored federal control of firearms and will
promote gun confiscation laws.
The letters, distributed by Wyman for
Senate campaign, were signed by California
state Sen. H.L. Richardson, a board member
of the National Rifle Association.
Durkin called them a "last minute attempt
to mislead the voters bringing in the
Segretti-Nixon-Haldeman-Ehrlichman-type
political campaign."
Durkin said during debate with Wyman
on the ABC television program "Issues and
Answers" that he is "interested in Mr.
Wyman's position on truth because he
knows on two occasions in debate 1 have said
I am flatly opposed to gun control, flatly
opposed to confiscation."
Wyman, 58, a five-term former
congressman and long-time opponent of gun
control, accused Durkin of changing his
position.
First wholly American saint:
Mother Anne Seton
VATICAN CITY Mother Elizabeth
Ann Seton, a riches-to-rags New York
debutante and founder of the Sisters of
Charity, Sunday became America's first
native-born saint.
Pope Paul declared the canonization
Vatican Women's Day. Elizabeth Ann Seton
"was wholly American," the pontiff said.
"Rejoice, we say to the great nation of the
United States of America. Rejoice for your
glorious daughter. Be proud of her. And
know how to preserve her fruitful heritage "
More than 100,000 persons, 16,000 of
them Americans, crammed St. Peter's
Square beneath an azure sky spotted with
creamy clouds.
America's new saint was a widowed
socialite who converted to Catholicism at
age 31 and overcame social ostracism and.
near-poverty to found the Sisters of Chanty
in 1809 and pioneer the U.S. parochial
school system.
"This most beautiful figure of a holy
woman presents to the world and to history
the affirmation of new and authentic riches
that are your Americans: that religious
spirituality which your temporal prosperity
seemed to obscure and almost make
impossible," the Pope said.
OPEN
t nAvc
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10 a.m.- X
2 a.m
Rosemary St.
Across from Blimpie'sj
announces
HAPPY HOUR Plus!
from 2-5 p.m.
and 7-1 2 midnight daily
we witi serve all
DRINKS Vz PRICE
with purchase of any sandwich
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