2 The Daily Tar Heel Monday, February 4,
News Don liroeff
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Guardsmen, police regain prison control
SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) National Guardsmen and a police SWAT team
recaptured the burning New Mexico State Prison on Sunday to free all the
remaining hostages and end a 36-hour bloodbath that left at least 27 inmates
dead and 50 persons hospitalized.
State Criminal Justice Secretary Adolph Saenz said the death toll had
reached 27 "not counting the gymnasium' which had been burning for more
than 12 hours.
"The violence was incredible," Saenz said. One of the prisoners was
beheaded.
Carter to propose secret intelligence court
WASHINGTON (AP) The Carter administration intends to propose that
a new, secret court be given power to authorize covert government intelligence
agents to break into the homes and offices and open the mail of certain
Americans.
But with President Carter's proposal still at least five days from being made
public, debate already has begun over just which Americans should be targets
of such intrusions.
oh recruiters here
Recruiters from the following organizations will be on campus on the dates
indicated. Students can sign up for an interview eight days in advance at U niversity
Placement Services, 211 Hanes Hall. A resume is required at the time an interview
appointment is made.
Feb. 1 1
Conoco Chemical Company
Commerce Union Bank
Metropolitan Life Insurance Group (Crum & Forster
Organization)
Learning Unlimited
Citizens & Southern National Bank
Citizens & Southern National Bank
Radio Shack (Tandy Corporation)
Newport News Shipbuilding
Pattern Analysis & Recognition Corporation
Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Company
Suffolk City Public Schools
Wang Laboratories
Oxford Industries
IBM
Cargill, Inc.
Portsmouth Public Schools
American Management Systems, Inc.
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
Easton Corporation
Sharrard, McGee & Company, PA.
Burlington Industries
Reliance Electric Company
Keller Manufacturing Company, Inc.
Westvaco
E & J Gallo Winery
E & J Gallo Winery
Prince George's County Public Schools
Price Waterhouse & Company
W.S. Peebles & Company '
W.H. Brady Company
Feb. 12
Feb. 13
Feb. 14
Feb. 15
UNC panel to discuss Soviets
In an attempt to explain recent events
in the oil-rich Persian Gulf area and their
implications for the United States, the
UNC Russian and Eastern European
studies program will sponsor a panel
discussion, "The Soviets in Afghanistan
and the American Response," at 8 p.m.
Tuesday in 104 Howell Hall.
. Richard Lowenthal, a specialist in
Soviet and world communist affairs, and
MEDICAL SCHOOL
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208 W. Franklin 942-5149
15-501 Bypass 929-0289
CAWIP THUNDERBIRD
Excellent summer counseling opportunities for men and
women who are interested in serving boys and girls ages 7
16, guiding them in their physical, mental and spiritual
development. Only those persons who will dedicate their
wholehearted efforts to help each individual child develop
his or her potential should apply. One must have ability to
teach in one or more of our specialized activities. College
students, teachers, and coaches should apply. CAMP
THUNDERBIRD. located 17 miles south of Charlotte, N.C.,
is an ACA accredited camp member, specializing in water
sports (sailing, water skiing, swimming and canoeing), yet
an added emphasis is placed on the land sports (general)
athletics, tennis, golf, archery, riflery and back packing).
Horseback riding, white-water canoeing and tripping are
extras in our excellent program. For further information
write or call G. William Climer, Jr., Director, Camp
Thunderbird, Route 4, Box 166-A, Clover, S.C., 29710 (803-831-2121).
1980
professor emeritus at the Free University
of Berlin, will open the discussion with an
evaluation of the situation. UNC
professors Edward Azar, Robert Rupen,
and Herbert Bodman will comment on
Lowenthal's statement.
Azar said the discussion is intended to
explain not only what has happened in
the Persian Gulf area, but also the
reasons behind the events and their
influence on American policy. Azar said
the panel also will evaluate the "Carter
Doctrine" and its implications for future
relations in the Persian Gulf area.
ELIZABETH DANIEL
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February 29, 1980
UNC student presidents, meet with
By LYNN CASEY
Staff Writer
"The Department of Health,
Education and Welfare needs to be more
sensitive to people and not numbers and
statistics," said UNC Student Body
President J.B. Kelly after meeting in
Washington last week to discuss the
UNC-HEW dispute, with department
officials.
Kelly and 1 1 other student body
presidents from the UNC system
attended the two-hour meeting. The
students told officials from H EW that the
federal government should not eliminate
freedom of choice for students attending
public colleges in North Carolina.
The purpose of the meeting was to
inform the student body presidents of
was happening between HEW and
Whitted up for re-election
Richard Whitted, chairman of the
Orange County Board of
Commissioners, announced Friday that
he is seeking reelection.
. Whitted, 35, has served on the board
since 1972. He joins incumbent Don
Willhoit and Ben Lloyd, a conservative
northern Orange County dairy farmer
who led the fight against the November
county bond referendum, in the race for
two commissioner seats.
The differences between Whitted, who
is regarded as a liberal member of the
board, and Lloyd could generate a heated
campaign. Whitted was a strong
supporter of the $20.4 million
Novembver bond referendum, the most
ambitious in county history, which was
defeated by Orange County voters.
Whitted said balancing rising service
it-in commemorated
By DAVID TEAGUE
Staff Writer
The atmosphere was reminiscent of the
1960s civil rights movement as authors, .
professors, and one-time political
activists gathered last week at the
Carolina Union to commemorate the
Greensboro lunch counter sit-ins 20 years
ago.
"The subject of the teach-ins was
analysis of social conflicts and social
justice in this country," said Leon Fink, a
history professor at UNC, Fink is an
organizer of Critical Perspectives Forum,
a monthly forum on political issues,
which sponsored the teach-in.
Topics discussed at the sit-in ranged
from the sit-in itself to the history of the
Ku Klux Klan, its present revival and the
anti-klan march in Greensboro held over
the weekend.
One of the speakers for the teach-in
was Allan Trelease, history professor at
UNC-GreensborO and author of White
Terror, a history of the first Klan. He
spoke on the history of the Klan, tracing
its activities from its first rising in 1868 to
its revival in the 1920s.
"The goals of the first Klan were to
destroy the Republican Party and Black
Reconstruction, and generally to keep
blacks in their place," Trelease said. "It
died out because it was more spectacular
than effective. The second rising of the
Klan interested more people because its
list of hates was broader."
The original Klan hated Jews,
Communists, Catholics and blacks, he
said. Membership in the Klan sagged in
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UNC, and why and it was happening,
Kelly said.
Jeffrey Champagne, a lawyer in the
HEW Office of Civil Rights, told the
students that one of the the department's
goals is for the state to increase black
enrollment by 150 percent during the next
five years.
Another goal is the enhancement of the
five predominantely black colleges to
draw more whites, Champagne said.
Cheryl Armwood, student body vice
president at North Carolina A&T State
University, said she was concerned that
while as many as half of the state's black
students may be steered into
predominantly white schools, the
predominantly black schools may fail to
get an equal number of white students to
keep up their enrollment.
costs and taxes will be a particularly
difficult task facing the commissioners.
Whitted also said he would work to
make joint planning between Orange
County and towns within the county a
reality.
Orange County and Chapel Hill have
discussed joint planning for several years
but have yet to resolve the issue.
Discussions on joint planning between
the county and the town are continuing.
Whitted touched upon another subject
which has been the source of conflict
between Chapel Hill and the county. The
town has argued that the county should
be chiefly responsible for human services
funding. Whitted said he would try to
bring more coordination and
cooperation between town and county in
human services funding.
the late 1920s, and the Klan disappeared
during World War 11.
Pat Bryant, a journalist and member of
the staff which organized the Greensboro
march, spoke on the media and the Klan,
pointing out that the Klan believed that
advancement of blacks was done at the
expense of whites.
"We have a situation where the Klan is
rising up, shooting people," Bryant said.
"They are pushing the idea that for the
blacks to gain something, whites must
lose something."
William Chafe, author of a just
released history of the Greensboro sit-ins,
spoke about the history of the event and
its significance.
Two of the most well-received speakers
were CP. Ellis, a former Klan member
who is now an organizer for a
predominantly black union, and Anne .
Braden, a civil rights activist for four
decades. Ellis spoke of his experiences
with the Klan and the events that led to
his joining and leaving the Klan. Braden
spoke of the civil rights movement.
Other speakers included Nell Irvin
Painter, a visiting history professor from
the University of Pennsylvania, who
spoke on the Communist Party and race
relations in the South; Tony Whitehead,
a UNC professor of health education,
who spoke on black poverty in the South;
and William Kunstler, a civil libertarian
lawyer known for his defense of the
Chicago Seven and of Joann Little.
Kunstler urged blacks and whites to get
together in a united movement. "If we
cannot do that, we're all going under," he
said.
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Officers
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Class
. Armwood also said that black students
are concerned that the federal
desegregation criteria may result in black
colleges losing their identities.
"They are looking for a new balance in
the system but overlooking the identity of
the schools," Kelly said.
Kelly said Champagne also told them
that HEW would like to end the
curriculum duplication in the 16-campus
system.
"1 don't think HEW understands the
entire ramifications of the criteria it's set
for UNC, Kelly said.
Kelly questioned whether all students
go to a university because of its
curriculum.
What they want to achieve is noble,
but whether it's realistic is questionable,"
Kelly said.
V ,
Richard Whitted
Whitted, a Democrat, is a native of
Hillsborough and works at Duke
University.
ANNE-MARIE DOWNEY
FBfl
From page 1
investigation, suggesting the possibility
of entrapment occurs when a defendant
who was not otherwise predisposed to
commit a crime is dawn into it by an
undercover law enforcement tactic. If
proved, it can cause a case to be thrown
out of court.
Sources said that FBI director William
Webster and top Justice Department
lawyers closely policed the probe and that
the FBI was never the first to suggest
bribes to public figures. One source
familiar with the investigation said flatly
that videotape evidence will show there
was no entrapment.
"Informants and lawyers who came to
them brought in officials seeking bribes,"
he said.
The reports prompted a weekend
conference of Republican congressmen,
governors and other officials in Easton,
Md., to urge an immediate, full, impartial
investigation of the charges by
congressional ethics committees.
Rep. Charles E. Bennett, D-Fla.,
chairman of the House ethics committee,
said Sunday the panel will expand an
investigation already under way to cover
the FBI allegations.
"We've already had a continuing
investigation of one or more of those
people going on for months," Bennett
said.
"The accusations that were made were
similar to those investigated by the FBI,
but the FBI was not involved in the
committee's work," he said.
No charges have been filed, or arrests
made, but several sources said federal
officials were planning to present their
evidence to one or more grand juries,
perhaps as early as this week.
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MEW
An administrative hearing is scheduled
for May 1 9 to determine whether the
University should lose about $90 million
in annual federal aid for failure to meet
HEW's desegregation criteria.
"I think the dialogue between the
students and the HEW staff was very
helpful and should be continued," Kelly
said.
The UNC Association of Student
Governments, of which Kelly is
president, requested the meeting with
HEW officals. Previous meetings had
been scheduled but not carried out.
"The UNC Association of Student
Governments had met with UNC
President William C. Friday and kept up
with the issue from a UNC viewpoint,"
Kelly said. "But we felt a real necessity to
.;tH HFW fo rt their viewpoint."
More vaccines
expected today
Student Health Services gave red
measles vaccinations to 2,000 students
last week and will continue today when
500-1,000 more doses arrive from the
state Department of Health in Raleigh,
an SHS physician said Sunday.
The health service ran out of vaccines
Friday.
Dr. James McCutchan said students
should call the SHS infirmary at 966
2281 before coming to receive a
vaccination because the additional doses
may not arrive until late today.
No new cases of red measles have been
reported since an outbreak of the disease
last week in one UNC student and IS
other persons in Orange County and the
Chapel Hill-Carrbbro school system.
nriarcEl From page 1
"We have learned something from the
'60s," Vivian told 46 marchers at the
Communist rally. "We must fight for
what we want. We gave the 70s to the
politicians. But the 80s belong to us a
new, peaceful, non-violent movement
that will overcome racial injustice."
Both city officials and march
organizers were pleased by the
demonstration's orderly progression
through almost-deserted streets.
Although the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference assumed the
coveted lead position, the bulk of
demonstrators consisted of various
communist and socialist organizations
with a smattering of special interest
groups, .anti-racist organizations and
non-aligned supporters.
Despite the CWP's expulsion from the
march after their refusal to commit
themselves on a weapons ban, several
large groups of the communists
participated in the parade. One group
carried a large banner that read
"Remember the Greensboro Massacre."
The CWP caused the nearest thing to a
confrontation when they tried to lead the
demonstration. Twice during the march,
CWP members worked their way to the
front of the parade, chanting "Death to
the Klan," and "Avenge the CWP 5,"
referring to the five persons killed last
November.
"I want to send a message to Jimmy
Carter there ain't going to be no
reinstatement of the draft," shouted
Wilmington 10 leader lien Chavis who
was first greeted at the coliseum rally with
a standing ovation. "We're not going to
fight no' more wars of capitalism; we're
not going to fight no more wars for
imperialism. We're not going to be
drafted into the freedom struggle.
"We must blot out capitalism and
imperialism once
Chavis.
and for a!!," said
Tell your prince
he's not a frog
on Valentine's
in the DTH
classifieds. Only
$1.50. Deadline
12 noon on
Feb. 7, 1980.
25 words or less.)
Remember
them on
VALENTINE'S
DAY