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r AW---"'' '-' 2 The Daily Tar Heel Tuesday, November 20, 199 Leaders remt punmhing UoS NeM Odd liroeff Palestinian violence escalates TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) Palestinian guerrillas, in grim reminders of their opposition to Egyptian President Anwar Sadat's Nov., 1977, peace initiative, planted two bombs in Jerusalem on Monday and were rebuffed in a seaborne attack on the Israeli coast. Police said 12 persons were wounded, most of them slightly, when the bombs exploded 1 5 minutes apart on two Israeli buses during the morning rush houi . By late afternoon, hospital 'officials said all but one of the victims had bee,n released. - In Beirut, the Palestine Liberation Organization claimed its terrorists planted the bombs, but made no mention of the battle in the Mediterranean. Late Sunday, an Israeli patrol boat fought a sea battle with Palestinian guerrillas off Israel's northern coast: The Israeli military command said two guerrillas were killed and two captured. ' No Israelis were injured in the fight, the Israeli commander said. MacDonald denied bond in appeal RICHMOND, Va. (AP) Former Army Green Beret Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald was denied bond by a federal appeals court Monday while he appeals three life sentences for the murder of his wife and two young daughters. The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals spelled out no reasons for its decision. It said it would hear oral arguments on MacDonald's appeal of his murder convictions during its January 1980 term. MacDonald, 35, of Huntington Beach, Calif., is being held at the Terminal Island, Calif., federal prison. He was convicted by a federal jury Aug. 29 in Raleigh, for the 1970 stabbing bludgeoning deaths of his wife and daughters. He was given three consecutive life sentences. The crimes occurred while he was stationed at Fort Bragg, N.C. More than 400 recruiters fired WASHINGTON (AP The Army said Monday that 427 recruiters have been fired from their jobs in the worst recruiting scandal since the end of the draft six years ago. Reporting to Congress on a six-month investigation, officials said an estimated 12,700 soldiers had been enlisted through fraud or other irregular procedures by recruiters since October 1977. The Army is consulting with the commanding officers of the improperly enlisted soldiers to see if they want to keep them in the service, the officials told the Senate Armed Services manpower subcommittee. Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., chairman of the panel, said the Marines and the Navy apparently have a worse problem with recruiting malpractice than the Army, based on discrepancies in recruits' test results. Marine and Navy officials did not take part in Monday's hearing. About 75 percent of the Army cases involved false information about education records of potential recruits who had not graduated from high school, officials testified. Others involved illegal coaching for enlistment tests and concealment of police records, medical problems and other information. Gas rationing back in California LOS ANGELES (AP) Odd-even gasoline rationing was back Monday for millions of California drivers. The system was reimposed at 12:01 a.m. in San Francisco, Los Angeles and 13 other counties where it had operated for four months earlier this year. It will take effect statewide at 12:01 a.m. on Dec. 3. On the system's first day back in practice, it was business as usual at service stations in San Francisco and San Diego. A spot check at a dozen Los Angeles area service stations showed.a normal sales volume for a Monday morning. Nearly all the owners or operators were) pledging to follow the law, despite some disgruntled customers. Former first lady is well SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. (AP) Pat Nixon left San Clemente General Hospital in the company of her husband, former President Richard M. Nixon, on Monday after seven days of treatment for bronchial pneumonia. Hospital administrator Malcolm Johnson said the 67-year-old former first lady was "in extremely good spirits." THE Daily Crossword ACROSS 29 Grill's 1 Entree meat partner 5 Bit 32 Arkin 9 Honey drink 33 Save up 13 La Douce 34 Corroded 14 Battery 35 Theatrical pole hit 15 King of 39 Chemical the Huns ending 16 Star's role 40 Far from in 35 A fresh 19 Poetic time 41 Goddess 20 Avian abode of discord 21 Preliminary 42 Longing contest 43 Shredded 22 British 44 Opportunity composer 46 Cloy 23 Preminger 47 Mine car 25 Mended 48 Violin 28 Horn or family shine 51 Beginning Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: 5 1 1 ILK a & 1 1 4M a a $ Mai li elj e 1 v iETRiTTrrnAiTToi A C El fuTp A 6 EOA L L Q R 1 A R I T T FTlTTT h R N LElPIEiN . I IJl SOT ! 1 A 1 M I tTTm aTTTn frff q p a 1 5 13 4 5 i p p J 9 10 111 11 2 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 "Jo 21 22" " aSnpT" 25 26""" if"" """"" """"" """" 2T"" """" " " f"" 30" iiT" 32 ji3 ' 24 35" """" 36TiT W 39 """" 40 41 " ' "" 42 43 " 44 1 45 " " 46 47 4T49 " ho"" 5T TTbrTsn" mamm mmmm mmmamm wmmm mmmm i-mm mm mmm tmmma w -miki immmm ammm mm 59 6Q 3l """" """" o4 I I I I 1 I I J L. 1 I I 1979 by Chicago Trlbun-N.Y. News All Rights Reserved by Betty Jo Punches 52 Edouard's 24 Turn's friend partner 55 Co-star 25 Former of 35 A mayor of 59 Swiss Chicago painter 26 Isolated 60 Lower in 27 Poe's bird rank 28 Strike 61 Be foolish 29 Child: Scot. 62 Aquatic 30 Loft mammal 31 Baseball 63 Greek great commune 33 Lit up 64 Being: Lat. 36 Reach 37 Horse race DOWN 38 Ray 1 le roi! 44 Greek 2 Gardner island 3 "I met . . ." 45 Pilgrimage 4 Fellow to Mecca: 5 Flavoring var. plant 46 Mme. de 6 Legal wrong 47 Uptight 7 Singular 48 Inquires 8 Malde 49 Stubborn 9 Long: comb. one form 50 Bewildered 10 Case for 51 Thailand small items 52 Biblical 11 breve prophet 12 Computer 53 Ball team knob 54 Words of 14 Blue-pencil understand- 17 About ing 18 Swear to 56 Iron or 22 Baxter or sack Francis 57 Honest 23 Chicago 58 Summer airport cooler Synd. Inc. 112078 TUNIS, Tunisia (AP) Kings and presidents of the Arab world are likely to reject demands from a radical minority to wage economic war against the United States, an official skid Monday on the eve of a three-day summit. Delegation sources said moderates in the Arab League formed an overwhelming majority determined to resist militant demands to punish the United States for supporting Israel and chastise Egypt for signing a peace treaty with the Israelis. Arab League Secretary General Chedli Klibi said he did not expect the summit to support the demands of Arab militants, led by Libya, for an intensified boycott of Egpyt and a cutoff of oil to the United States. Klibi set the tone for the summit with .' runo for Robert Kennedy Bruno said he "didn't get a kick out of it. "Bobby used to say 'You can't look back, there's so many things to look forward to. He gave us that renewed feeling of 'there's so many things that have to be done." After Robert Kennedy's death Bruno moved to Syracuse, N.Y., where he started his own company to handle political promotions. From 1968-1974 he fared well as a consultant, handling three or four campaigns a year. He went on a lecture circuit from 1972 to 1975, the most memorable incident involving a talk he gave at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. "I was very critical of the officials in Dallas and 1 really clobbered 'em. 1 got a standing ovation," he said. After his book, The Advance Man, came out in 1971, Bruno taught two classes of practical politics at University College in Oswego, N.Y. One of his students ran for president of the student By Young Democrats Hunt favored in 980 From Staff and Wire Reports At statewide meetings last week, North Carolina Young Democrats put their support behind Gov. Jim Hunt for the 1980) state elections, and the chairman of the Federation of College Republicans called for the resignation of the chairman of the state GOP. The Young Democrats, representing 53 community and college chapters, including UNC-CH, gave more than 90 percent of the vote in a straw poll to Hunt in his race for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination against former Gov. Bob Scott. Jt Speaker of the House Carl Stewart took 93 percent of the vote for his bid for lieutenant governor against the incumbent Jimmy Green. The delegates gave President Carter 82 percent of the vote for the presidential nomination, making him a heavy favorite over U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy, who received 14 percent of the vote. California Gov. Jerry Brown received 1 percent. In their annual fall platform convention, the Young Democrats narrowly voted for abolition of capital punishment and against a proposal that would make the sale and use of marijuana legal. In other measures, the delegates EXCEPTIONAL MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITIES WE OFFER CURRENT 5tarting salary up to OPPORTUNITIES $15,000 increases up to 'NUCLEAR ENGINEERING $26,000 in 4 years. 'BUSINESS mamarpmpwt 30 days paid vacation annually. fully financed graduate programs. superior family health plans 'more responsibility and leadership opportunities 'world wide travel and adventure prestige and personal growth potential . Most liberal arts majors are also eligible The Navy Officer Team will be visiting your campus on: Tuesday - Thursday, Nov. 27-29 at the Student Center Or contact your Navy Officers Programs Representatives at: ' Navy Officers Programs 1001 Navaho Drive Raleigh, NC 27609 or Call TOLL FREE 1-800-662-7568 Present for Monday, Nov. 19 & Tuesday, Nov. 203:00-4:00 p.m. With your I.D., you can get self-service photo copies for ONLY 3C on regular white bond 20 pound paper. SAVE 20 PER COPY! Carolina Copy Center Ramshead Plaza Monday-Friday 8:30-5:30 the disclosure he had rejected a request from Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini to admit an Iranian observer delegation to the meeting. Arab sources said Khomeini wanted to exhort the Arab League to support the seizure of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, thereby "deflecting the Arab League from its purpose." Klibi said the summit could overrule his decision, but other sources said only Libya and South Yemen, among the 30 league members, were likely to advocate granting Khomeini's request. Iran is not Arab, but shares the Moslem faith with the Arab nations. Libyan Foreign Minister AH Triki failed to win approval in a ministerial meeting last week for a special Arab summit to plan use of the oil weapon against the United States, but Triki said From page 1 council and used Bruno's advice on campaign techniques. "He won!" Bruno said. About a year and a half ago, Bruno and his wife traveled through 24 states. They camped out to get a look at more than the hotels and airports Bruno had seen while crossing the country hundreds of times as an advance man. Chapel Hill seemed like the ideal place for him near libraries and students so he wrote to the University. "We ended up here," Bruno said happily, referring to the Pi Beta Phi house where he and his wife have lived since August. But Bruno doesn't regret his experiences as an advance man. "Just to say that 1 knew him (JFK) was invaluable to me. For all the agony in the world I wouldn't trade those years. I cherish them." He smiled and said reassuringly, "I'm not bitter. I'm not sad. You learn to live with it. I'm very happy with Cathy, and I enjoy life." adopted proposals endorsing the cutoff of American food being sent to Iran, the reinstatement of Selective Service registration without resumption of the draft and a temporary ban on the, licensing of nuclear power-generating plants. Gary Upchurch of North Carolina's Federation of College Republicans said last week that he would ask Jack Lee to step down as chairman of the state Republican party. Upchurch, a Duke University student, said he challenged Lee's dual role as party chairman and : as chairman of a' committee promoting U.S. Sen. Jesse Helms as a vice presidential candidate. "I don't think it is ethically right that he holds both positions, especially this close to primary time," Upchurch said. Lee denied any ethical misconduct in filling both jobs. "Basically, I can think of nothing that would enhance the chances of having Republicans elected to all levels in North Carolina than to have Jesse Helms on the vice presidential ticket. After all, he has won two statewide elections," Lee said. Lee said he was devoting very little time to the Helms committee. He also said party money was not funding the Helms committee. AVIATION LAW NURSING MEDICAL SCHOOL SCHOLARSHIPS PERSONNEL ADMINISTRATION 'CIVIL ENGINEERING SHIPBOARD OPERATIONS DON'T MISS OUR THANKSGIVING SPECIAL! UNC Students! your I.D. card: big savings . . . 967-2585 he would raise the matter again at the summit. "We are not against the United States," Klibi said. "We are against Zionism. We know the United States is Israel's ally, but what we want in the first place is to make the American people understand the Arab problem." The meeting is the first Arab summit since the 1978 Baghdad meeting that expelled Egypt. Two crucial issues on the summit agenda are the drafting of a joint strategy against Israel and ending the continuing bloodshed in southern Lebanon, where Israeli-backed rightist. Lebanese are fighting Palestinian guerrillas. The foreign ministers meeting last Buses cents from bus stop to bus stop, 60 cents from bus stop to door or vice versa and 90 cents for door-to-door service. I would term it (shared ride) at least a moderate success right now, Callahan said. He attributed part of the increased ridership figures to shared ride's feeder service, which provides transportation for residents of the Mason Farm-Morgan Creek area from 7 a.m.-6 p.m. weekdays. The feeder service, now making 50 trips per day, previously offered service only during mprning and afternoon rush hours, Callahan said. "Also, (shared ride's) productivity is up, 'due to dispatchers linking trips together, Callhan said. "We're carrying the same number of people in two cars as we did in three previously." v . Callahan said he expected high ridership to continue indefinitely. "The effects of the Iran crisis will have a very telling effect on our ridership," he said. "And if things get worse beyond earing The lack of requests for aid from departments which had no minority faculty- members does not necessarily mean that those departments are not concerned with the employment of minorities, Smith said. It is possible that such departments had no faculty vacancies, he said. Hayden B. Renwick, associate dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, said the creation of an office for minority and disadvantaged students could help make these students' matriculation here more rewarding. The office could coordinate the actiyities of these student seirye as a referral service to other services' of the' University and evaluate the academic progress of minority and disadvantaged students, he said. Renwick said that this proposal had been misrepresented in the press as an office for blacks. "Contrary to popular belief, the recommendation itself never said that this would be solely a black office," he said. The office would serve blacks, native Americans and other minority students as well as white students who may be disadvantaged in a college setting, including a number of students from the eastern part of the state, he said. Renwick said he had traveled to For the record A picture on the front page of Monday's Daily Tar Heel was incorrectly identified as John Akin, director of undergraduate studies in the UNC economics department. Also, because of a last-minute switch in pictures, a front page football picture was identified as a defensive play by linebacker Buddy Curry instead of an offensive effort by Amos Lawrence. The DTH regrets these errors. RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH ORGANIZATION ABORTIONS U7S ""'-"' (All Inclusive) . . Pregnancy Tests Birth Control - Problem Pregnancy Counseling For Further Information Call 832-0535 or 1-800-22 1-2568 917 West Morgan St. Raleigh, N.C. 27605 IMPORTANT MEMO TO ALL FAITHFUL TAR HEELS Our Maddest Sale Of The Year Falls On Friday Night Nov. 23rd At 7:00 p.m. Until Sat. 4:00 a.m. So If You're Coming Back For The Duke Game, Start Your ,Week-end Festivities With Milton's THIS IS oOfl "third zonker, and will BE WILDER THAN EVER! CHECK THE VILLAGE ADVOCATE OF NOV. 21ST FOR COMPLETE DETAILS. Hate To Interrupt Your Holiday, But The Zonker Must Fall On The Carolina Duke Week-end. Chapel Hill SS3-44C3 U r All To AIo: 518 S. Tryon Charlotte week ran into deadlock on both issues and was unable to agree even on a final communique, but Klibi told the Associated Press he was confident the Arab leaders would reach a compromise on both points. The Lebanese delegation and the Palestine Liberation Organization clashed repeatedly in the ministerial meeting and the PLO rejected a Lebanese demand for withdrawal of PLO guerrilla bases from the U.N. -controlled area south of the Litani River. A compromise drafted by the ministers would commit the PLO to stop hostile action against Israel from south Lebanon, while confirming the guerrillas right to continue the war against Israel on all Arab fronts. From page 1 that, we'll see a phenomenal increase in our ridership." The town of Chapel Hill is planning to purchase additional buses, Callahan said, which will help to accommodate increased ridership. "We opened bids Tuesday on 17 new transit buses, but the bids were higher than we had expected," he said. "It's going to be about $128,000 per vehicle, and that's over our budget. We'll either get more federal money or buy fewer buses." Callahan said he expected delivery of the buses by summer, in time for use in the faU. "This will mean retirement of some of the older buses, but we won't sell them. We may have to put them back into use if ridership really shoots up," Callahan said. Callahan also said the C route would split into two routes next year if the new buses are acquired by then. "There's definitely enough demand for two routes," he said. From page 1 universities across the country that have successfully established similar offices. In North Carolina, Wake Forest and Duke universities have established minority and disadvantaged affairs offices, he said. Also appearing before the committee was Vice Chancellor for Health Affairs Christopher Fordham, who reported on minority student, faculty recruitment and student improvement programs in the Division of Health Affairs. Programs utilized by the division include a summer enrichment program and an aggressive-admissions program which Fordham said attempts to evaluate applicants as human beings as well as consider their academic achievements. . Remedial programs were composed mainly of black students a few years ago, but that composition has changed, Fordham said. "There has over the years been a modest but significant increase in involvement of minority students in all affairs of the School of Medicine," he said. "I would say now that this school more closely reflects the society it serves." Black enrollment in the medical school now stands at slightly less than 16 percent, he said, but minority faculty, recruitment has not been as successful. Approximately 20 students .attended Monday's hearing, including representatives from the Black Student Movement and Student Government, who will present recommendations concerning the enhancement of the status of minorities and the disadvantaged at a second hearing to be held at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 26 in 202-204 Carolina Union. The committee will use the information gathered at the hearings to formulate its annual report to the Faculty Council. FROM MILTON'S Mon.-Sat. 10-6:30 Sun. 1-4 Fn, till 9 C0 FREE ZJ VALIDATED ni:iM::i PARKtMdf
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 20, 1979, edition 1
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