2 Trie Daily Tar Hesl Thursday. January 24, 1980
News Bun
House panel backs Carter on Olympics
WASHINGTON (AP) A House committee approved a resolution on
Wednesday backing President Carter's drive to have the Moscow Olympic
Games moved, canceled or boycotted if the Soviet Union does not withdraw its
troops from Afghanistan within a month.
The action by the House Foreign Affairs Committee came by voice vote.
Rep. Clement J. Zablocki, D-Wis., the panel's chairman, said he expected
approval by the full House on Thursday, or Friday.
The move came after Robert J. Kane, -president of the U.S. Olympic
Committee, testified that the Carter administration's suggested boycott is an ill
advised, go-it-alone stance that is unpopular around the world.
Soviets: Sakharov banished for security
MOSCOW (AP) The Soviet government , newspaper accused dissident
leader Andrei D. Sakharov on Wednesday of having revealed state secrets to
Westerners and said he was banished from Moscow for national security
reasons. Sakharov later sent a telegram saying, "Everything all right."
. IzvestUCs toughly worded denunciation of Sakharov was the fullest
authoritative explanation of the government's action against the Nobel Peace
Prize winner, who was picked up by police Tuesday, stripped of his state honors
and exiled from Moscow.
Relatives and friends said Wednesday night that Sakharov and his wife
Yelena Bonner Sakharov sent telegrams from Gorky 250 miles east of here, an
industrial center closed to foreign visitors and foreign reporters.
Khomeini admitted for heart problems
French radio reported Wednesday night that 79-year-old Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini had been admitted to the cardiology department of Reza
hospital in Tehran with a heart problem.
The report quoted a Khomeini spokesman in the holy city of Qom, Iran,
where the ayatollah lives, and gave no further details.
Khomeini's doctors said earlier Wednesday that his condition is good. The
statement, broadcast on Tehran radio, came after Khomeini's office in Qom,
100 miles south of Tehran, said he would continue foregoing appointments
because of fatigue and a mild illness.
Meanwhile, Iran's foreign minister insisted that deposed Shah Mohammad
Reza Pahlavi had been placed under detention by Panamanian authorities: k
preparing his return to Iran. He dismissed denials by various Panamanians,
saying they were false reports.
Renwick roast in Great Hall
A roast for Hayden B. Renwick,
associate dean of the College of Arts and
Sciences, will be held at 7 p.m. today in
Great Hall of the Carolina Union.
Renwick has gained widespread
attention as an outspoken critic of the
University's admissions policy and the
LAWRENCE WHITFIELD
$250 FELLOWSHIP
FOR SUMMER TRAVEL
Available to undergraduates only. Contact
WESLEY FOUNDATION on Pittsboro St. for
information and application. 942-2151 .
Deadline is MARCH 15.
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FLEETWOOD MAC
Includes Think About Me Sister Of The Moon
I Know I'm Not Wrong Walk A Thin Line
Tusk
LP & Tope
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( flecort )
Look for the qualityilpe of record 8c
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lack of an office for minority and
disadvantaged students.
The roast will include dinner and
performances by the Opeyo Dancers and
Ebony Readers. Tickets can be purchased
for $4 from members of Kappa Alpha Psi
fraternity.
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LITTLE FEAT
Down On The farm
Includes Six Feet Of Snow
Straight From The HeartFront Pig News
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Hunt and Lake enter
ubermatorial race
RALEIGH (AP Democratic Gov.
Jim Hunt and Republican State Sen. I.
Beverly Lake Jr. both formally, entered
the 1980 race for governor Wednesday,
with Hunt promising a positive campaign
and Lake calling for repeal of the
gubernatorial succession amendment.
Lake also called for H unt to join him in
a debate, and Hunt said he would accept
appropriate invitations to appear on the
.same stage with Lake during the course of
the campaign.
The two men officially became
candidates within minutes of each other
by paying their $500 filing fees to state
Elections Board Director Alex Brock.
One other candidate for governor, former
Democratic Gov. Bob Scott, has already
entered the race and will meet Hunt in the
May 6 Democratic primary.
Hunt is the first North Carolina
governor eligible to seek a second,
consecutive four-year term. It was with
Hunt's strong backing that the General
Assembly approved and voters ratified
the constitutional amendment allowing
gubernatorial succession in 1977.
Although Scott supported the
amendment during his administration
and at the time Hunt pushed for it, he has
since called for its repeal.
olmes declines to run
M
By ANGIEDORMAN
Stall W riter
North Carolina, representative Ed
Holmes, D-Chatham, announced
Tuesday that he would not seek a fifth
term. ';, f .,
Holmes said he had mixed emotions
about his decision not to run for re
election. "My business and family situations are
such that I just decided I shouldn't run
again," Holmes said. "It was a tough
decision to make.
"I hope we can -get. someone from
Chatham County " "
Five residents in the 17th District are
considering candidacies for the N.C.
General Assembly.
Wallace Kaufman, a Pittsboro writer,
real estate appraiser and owner of
Heartwood Realty in Carrboro, filed
Tuesday morning for the 17th District's
Democratic primary race.
Chapel Hill attorney Joe Hackney said
he would make up his mind in a few days
on whether he would enter the race.
"I'm interested to see what Chatham
County residents think about me as a
candidate," said Hackney, who grew up
in Chatham County.
Robert Gunn, a Chatham County
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"I also support repeal of Governor
Hunt's succession amendment. The
succession issue was passed by only 13.5
percent of our registered voters and then
very narrowly," Scott said, referring to
the low voter turnout at that 1977
referendum.
In a prepared speech. Lake repeatedly
quoted criticisms leveled at Hunt by
Scott, including charges that Hunt is
practicing "politics of power," is
promoting his national ambitions and is
backed by an organization that seeks to
dominate North Carolina politics.
Lake said he wanted to debate Hunt
and Scott, even before the Democratic
primary.
Hunt referred to his record during
three years as governor and declined to
respond to Lake's pointed charges. But
Hunt said he would participate in joint
appearances with Lake during the
campaign. "I look forward to that
contrasting." he said.
Hunt cited as the accomplishments of
his administration economic growth,
competency testing in public schools and
a small tax cut. He said future reductions
of class size are needed in the schools.
attorney, said Wednesday that he was
waiting to see who would file for
candidacy.
"I'm interested in Chatham County, I'm
waiting to see who else will decide to run,"
Gunn said.
Bobbette Eckland, purchasing agent
for the town of Chapel Hill, also is
considering entering the Congressional
race.
Eckland worked on several campaigns
for former Chapel Hill Mayor Howard
Lee.
Eckland has supported passage of the
Equal Rights Amendment and is a
delegate to the Womens Political Caucus'
national committee.
The Reverend James Riddle, pastor of
the Chapel Hill Community Church, said
he also would consider entering the race
for the 17th Congressional District.
Riddle was re-elected to the Chapel
Hill-Carrboro Board of Education in
November. He also served on the Joint
Orange Chatham Community Action
(JOCCA) Board of Directors.
Riddle is currently chairman of the
Orange County Democratic Party.
Orange County Commissioner Anne
Barnes is also a possible canidate for the
State House of Representatives or the
state Senate. Two of Barnes' associates
said she was considering both races.
14-30
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Carter
recommendation for the renewal of
registration.
In the past, the White House has said
Carter has authority to require
registration without congressional
action. But he does not have authority to
institute a draft unilaterally.
Carter said, "The Soviet Union is now
attempting to consolidate a strategic
position that poses a grave threat to the
free movement of Middle East oil."
Asserting that the situation "demands
careful thought, steady nerves and
resolute action," he called for "collective
efforts to meet this new threat" by all
nations "who rely on oil from the Middle
East and are concerned with global peace
and stability."
In a key declaration, the president said:
"Any attempt by any outside force to gain
control of the Persian Gulf region will be
regarded as "an assault on the vital
interests of the United States. It will be
repelled by use of any means necessary,
including military force."
The administration official who
briefed reporters on Carter's remarks,
said, "We are not headed for an
immediate confrontation" with the
Soviets and that the president's message
was "not a bugle call." He said the
Draft reinstatement
may apply
WASHINGTON (A P) President
Carter announced plans Wednesday
night for registration of the nation's
draft-age youth and a rebuilding of the
dormant Selective Service System in
readiness for possible future military
emergencies, "if they arise."
Carter's action marks a reversal of his
administration's flat opposition,
expressed only a half-year ago, to
peacetime registration.
"1 am convinced that our volunteer
forces are adequate for our current
defense needs," Carter told Congress in a
State of the Union speech in which he
threw a U.S. security blanket around the
oil-producing Persian Gulf region.
"I hope that it will not become
necessary to reimpose the draft," Carter
said. But, he added, "we must be prepared
for that possiblity."
Although the president can order
registration in peacetime, he cannot start
actual inductions without congressional
approval.
Administration officials said the
president now has legal authority to start
up registration of young men, but would
require specific congressional permission
to register young women as well,
j ' They said that the question of whether
to draft women is still open, alohgSvith
many details on how the peacetime
registration would be conducted. Less
than a year ago, however, Carter
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From page 1
president was looking toward a long-term
foreign strategy.
Promising to "further strengthen
political and military ties with other
nations" around the Persian Gulf, Carter
said: "We believe that there are no
irreconcilable differences between us and
any Islamic people. We respect the faith
of Islam,' and are ready to cooperate with
all Moslem countries."
Noting that "the Moslem world is
especially and justifiably outraged" by
Soviet actions in Afghanistan, Carter
added: "Verbal condemnation is not
enough. The Soviet Union must pay a
concrete price for their aggression. The
Soviet Union must realize that its
decision to use military force in
Afghanistan will be costly to every
political and economic relationship it
values."
Although foreign crises dominated
Carter's remarks, he touched upon what
he has termed the nation's No. 1 domestic
problem inflation.
Citing skyrocketing world oil prices as
the biggest single factor behind a current
annual inflation rate of about 13 percent,
the president said, "We must take
whatever actions are necessary to reduce
our dependence on foreign oil and to
reduce inflation."
to women
indicated that drafting women may be
"inevitable."
Officials indicated that those between
the ages of 1 8 and 26 would be subject to
such registration, but that not all
necessarily would be required to do so. It
might depend on the perceived need for
certain numbers of draftees to back up
the regular forces in a war emergency.
Officials said plans call for building an
entire new network of draft boards
about 1,800 at the local level, 434 area
officials and 97 appeals boards. But they
were unprepared to say how the board
members would be selected, trained and
directed.
As things now stand, officials said
there will be no draft physicals following
registration and that such things as
classifications and determination of draft
exemptions are "down the line."
About $10 million will be requested to
modernize the Selective Service
recordkeeping using computers. Some of
the money also will be used to train draft
board members.
Senior military officers, long dubious
that the Army National Guard and
Reserve could respond quickly enough to
deploy in emergencies, have urged
peacetime registration of draft-age males?
and creation 6T1-ai-' standby i draft
machinery.
Otherwise, they contended, the new
manpower that would flow from the draft
through the training camps and to the
combat units might come too late to
avoid defeat in a war with the Soviet
Union.
DO YOU CARE?
enough to spend a couple of
hours a week with the mentally
retarded?
Get Involved come to a meeting
about volunteering at the
MURDOCH CENTER, a home for
the mentslly retsrdtd.
Vtd. Jen 23 Union 215
ThursM Jen. 24 Union 213
STUDENT
OPPORTUNITIES
We are looking for girls interested
in being counselors activity
instructors In a private girls camp
located in Hendersonville, N.C.
Instructors needed especially In
swimming (WSI), Horseback
riding, Tennis, Backpacking,
Archery, Canoeing, Gymnastics,
Crafts, Also Basketball. Dancing,
Baton, Cheerieading, Drama, Art,
Office work, Camp craft, Nature
study. Inquiries Morgan
Hiynes, P.O. Dox 4S0C, Tryon,
N.C. 23762.
Tho Following Courses
will bo offered beginning
Jen. 21, 28, end Feb. 5th:
Clay Sculpture
Counted Cross Stitch
Knitting
f.tccrcme
Needlepoint
Tcpcstry
Quilting
For details call
or come by
Vomsncrsft
412 YA Frcnklln St.
929-&3D2