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2 Th? Dc;!y Ter H:c!Thursday, August 28, 1980 o jjf" """ - ; - .fflfH. "C-: m,-. -.a WASHINGTON (AP) President Jimmy Carter and his challenger, Ronald Reagan, were at odds Wednesday ever how, when and with whom to kick off. the lO presidential campaign debates. Hc:h sides insisted they are ea;er to debate each ether but were, stymied over whether independent candidate John D. Anderson ought to be included. ' Their disagreement left uncertain their response to invitations from the' League of Women Voters, the National Pre:s Cub or ether organizations. Meanwhile, campaigning in Ohio, Reagan accused the Democratic president of plunging the economy into a severe depression that is throwing hunderds of thousands of people out of work. The GOP nominee told ' a Teamsters union convention fa Columbus that "workers and their families today are suffering more than at any time since the Great Depression of the '30s." 'l -am here to tell you that the working people cannot afford four mere years of Jimmy Carter. Their lives have teen shattered by a new depressionthe Carter Depression." Reagan's use of the word "depression" was disputed by Alan Greenspan, former chairman of the ' President's Council of Economic Advisers and a Reagan policy adviser. Greenspan said he "wouldn't describe it as such," although he was sure depression. conditions existed in certain parts of the country'. The debate flap was generating harsh exchanges between. the staffs of the two candidates.- "They're afraid of a one-cn-cne debate," White. House press secretary Jody Powell said after Reagan refused to agree to Carter's conditions : for a joint appearance before the National Press Club. "We very much want a cne-cn-one debate," said James Baker, the senior Reagan campaign aide who is in charge of the GOP side of debate negotiations. Only an hour after a fruitless negotiating session Tuesday at the headquarters of the League of Women Voters, the president . snapped up the press club : invitation for a one-on-one debate. Baker termed that move "showmanship." ' Raker told the press club that Reagan couldn't accept its invitation until negotiations with the league had been completed. "- "It would be just basically wrong to squeeze Anderson out of the first debate," he said. At the league negotiations, Carter campaign chairman Robert Strauss said it was the president's "strong preference and almost insistence" that the first encounter include only Carter and Reagan. In the mean time, Anderson is seeking support from .the politically powerful United Farm Workers of '' America. ' From pago 1 KAOS Anderson is the only presidential candidate who has asked to address the union's nominating convention Sept. 7 .in. Los'-Angeles, union spokesman Marc Grossman said Wednesday, '. Neither Carter nor Reagan has asked to speak to the militant labor organization, a powerful force in the ' Latino communities of California, Arizona and New Mexico. - ' ' , However, Grossman said the union "still has some problems with Anderson's record in Congress." The AFL-CIO, with which the UFW is affiliated," says Anderson opposed organized labor in more than 70 percent of the votes in the last session of Congress. The UFW endorsed Carter far the presidency in 1575, but sir.es then it has cooled to his policies. The -union supported en. Edward M. Kennedy for the Carter ?will campaign in Philadelphia next week, visiting a community center and speaking to residents meeting in a Daptist church. The president is to tour the South Philadelphia Community Center Wednesday, which provides neighborhood services ranging from day care for children to programs for the elderly. From pago 1 The high ratio usually results in classes of about 75 students, Langenderfer said, and i onetimes classes have more than 400 students. School cf Business Administration Dean John Evans said that the inflated student faculty ratio may be the main reason for the decline in students who passed the CPA exam. Dut he added that this summer in order to combat overcnrcllment, administrators raised the grade point average needed for admission to the business school from . 75 to 2.5 Without a 2.5 grade average and the proper prerequisites, a student will net be accepted in the business school. Langenderfer said the easiest solution to the problem would be to allow the business school to hire more faculty members, but that is impossible unless budgeted enrollment for the school increases. Last year, however, the provost office projected only a very slight increase in enrollment here through 1932, and that chances of getting' more faculty members were slim. Richard E. Neel, dean of UNC-Charlottes's school of business administration, said that the most students enrolled in a typical UNC-C business class is 50, ?ta& typically its 35 or 40." Neel added that since UNC-Charlotte had no graduate program in business, no graduate students instruct, the classes. ' UNC-Greensboro has an average of 40 students in upper level accounting classes, 45 ' in intermediate, and 60 in principal classes, accounting instructor Jim Ogburn said. Graduate students at Greensboro instruct only optional accounting lab classes, he added. .' . Despite lower CPA exam scores and large classes, some students here say they aren't dissatisfied with the business school. The drop in the percentage of UNC students who passed the CPA exam does not worry senior accounting major Larry Goodman. He said he is "self-motivated" and that the sizes of accounting classes are not as large as business classes. ' But Senior Shawn Poole said he was a little worried. "There are changes in the accounting school.- They're--getting-' away -from the basic, from teaching the fundamentals. We're getting into areas of accounting that we'll never use. Yes, I'm worried," he said. Evans denied that the content of accounting classes is to blame for the poorer results cf the CPA exam. "The content that is there is well chosen by the faculty members. That is not a problem," he said. There are now about 30 people signed up to participate in the first kill series." "I'm trying to get 50 members by the first Ida series with an equal distribution of males and femalss," 'he said. Some may wonder if members of KAOS have somewhat deviant or criminal minds. "A lot "of people who are normal or in the mainstream are getting involved," Whitehead said. "I'm terribly anti-violent. KA OS is just a toy. It's just the name that is misleading. - . . "The game sounds like some people take it seriously," he said. "But it is a good outlet for meeting people. This is just what UNC needs." . . Whitehead said KAOS will apply to the University for official recognition as a student -organization. But Dean Frederic Schroeder, director of the Department of .Student Life, and some of his colleagues are , wary of the idea. "We will provide recognition to organizations meeting established criteria," Schroeder said. "The criteria for, official University recognition is without subjective or value judgment as to the organization's program or subject of intent. "Personally, it is a pretty sad commentary that we make light and game of something which is about as far from "being funny as I : can imagine. As far as I know, they have not submitted the form of recognition yet." The organization must have a faculty adviser and a majority of the members must be registered students at UNC to be officially recognized by the University. Schroeder sugsested that Whitehead notify campus police about KA OS. "My strong ' suggestion to him was that he do so to make darn sure we didn't get into a situation where a student would get him or herself into a bind. Jan Flowers is a junior accounting major. , Her roommate told her about KAOS. "We thought it would be a good way to meet new people," Flowers said. "It sounds like fun," said sophomore Joni LaMarre, Na potential assassin. "KAOS is something different." Whitehead mentioned that if he found out someone was taking the game too seriously, something would be done. "In any organization, there is always a possibility you'll get some books. I don't want to start any hassles. ' - "If KAOS is causing more harm than fun, we're going to get out of it," he said. "I'll just hand in my gun." GDANSK, Poland (AP) Polish strike leaders claimed viotcry cn their true, the agreement could signal the end cf Poland's worst labor crisis in a decade and give workers in a Soviet-bloc state their own unions for the first At about the same time in Moscow, the official Soviet nev.s ac"-y iued a touch commentary attacking "anti-socialist" elements within Poland that it said were striving to push the Soviet ally cff the socialist read." Eat there was no overt sign that Moscow was planning any intervention in the Polish crisis. Polish government negotiators would not comment cn the strikers' victory claim. Strike leader Leszek Walesa said no further negotiations would be held Wednesday. , Federal officials invcotigatc hijacking";" - MIAMI (AP) Federal officials Wednesday bean investi-atins how three Spanish-speaking men slipped through tightened airport security with bottles of what possibly was gasoline and hijacked another jetliner to Cuba . The new sky marshal program and use of a psychological profile to identify potential hijackers didn't stop the seventh U. S. skyjack in 2Vi weeks on Tuesday. That angered some passengers and seme of the people who met Eastern Airline Flight 401 after it returned from Havana early Wednesday, , finally, completing the New York-Miami hop. 'This is ridiculous," said Manuel Quintans, as he waited in a lounge for his mother-in-law and sister-in-law. They shoud go through the personal luggare this is getting to be a joke already" complained Pauline Navarro, 67, who was waiting for her grandchildren. Gunmen ambuoh U.S. ambacoador'o car BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) Gunmen fired machine guns and a rocket propelled grenade at a three-car convoy carrying U. S. Ambassador John Gunther Dean Wednesday near the presidential palace, but Dean escaped unharmed, Lebannon's stale radio reported. v The sources said the ambassador's convoy was leaving his summer residence near the palace when it was ambushed on the main Beirut Damascus road. The lead car in the American convoy returned the fire and three persons : were arrested, the sources said. The other two cars in convoy sped from the area, which is controlled by the Lebanese army. The attack came just hours after Dean said the United States was working with Israel and the United Nations to end the violence between Christian militiamen and Palestinian guerrillas in southern Lebanon. It was his first public statement since he sparked an uproar Aug. 21 by condemning a massive Israeli attack cn Palestinian guerrilla strongholds in the area. HP Professional Calculators. fi ' n mi is risfiL now Qjn0i3Slona - !" !; ! (I:" P - r f & i : 0 f. : Q . j fcl t.iin e o K Ask any professional about Hewlett Packard calculators. Youll discover they're the ones dedicated to solving your problems. In the world of calculators Hewlett-Packard means outstanding per formance: the most advanced functions , , and programming features to save you time and increase accuracy; the most advanced design to give you greater ease-of-use; rigid quality control for flawless perform ance year after year; the most comprehen sive and easy-to-read documentation; the most extensive selection of software solu tions so you can spend your time solving problems instead of writing programs; and Continuous Memory in programmable models so you can retain your programs and data, even when the calculator has been turned off. Hewlett-Packard features six different calculators starting at just $70, to pro vide professional solutions to problems in science, engineering and business through out your academic and professional career. HP-52E Scientific with Sutsstic HP-33C Programmable Scicnulic with Continuous Memory HP-34C Advanced PrtrmmMe Scientific with Continuous Memory HP-37E Business HP-38C Advanced Finncil Prog wnmible with Continuous Memory ' HP-4 10 Alphanumeric Full Periormsnc with t Continuous Memory So visit a Hewlett-Packard dealer now. Then J make the professional decision : buy an HP. For details and the address ci your nearest dealer, CALL TOLL-FHEH COO-547-3400, Department 6SSM, except from Hawaii or Ahska. In Oregon, call 753-1010. Or write: Hewlett-Packard, 1000 N.E. Circle Blvd., Ccrvallls, OH 97330, De r t. 63SM. Saf sested ret. ptict hc!v.!.aj sJjest'e nJ local tsies Cont.nenul U.S-A AUiLs n4 Hwi t m mr" . V..us 'w w V . 4 m r - J V f New teot aids in leukemia treatment EOSTON (AP) For the first time, a new test allows doctors to predict acurately when patients treated for leukemia will relapse and suffer a new bout of the disease. The test, given to people whose leukemia is in remission, spots cancerous cells in the bone marrow before they have multiplied and spread the disease throughout the blood stream. "It can give advance notice to the physician that the patient may go into Telapse three or four monthsfrom now," Dr.'Pctu 'Rao, a biologist; said: "It gives-him'time to take steps and make a preventive strike to head off that onset." Doctors then would use traditional chemotherapy or drus treatment to battle the relapse, he said. i t ( i : EST FRIENDS OLD C: 11211 TELL TALES O? SUZR PAST OVER Mi ICE COLD DRAFT FOR A L:ERE 250 our way of welco::i::g you daci: aug 10-sept. 7 11 a:.mi f;.v 0 L - I mm' 1 c. r Ins c in i ni E i Miiif i I f FALL GSrZGTEn GTUDiiT AID fuiid DiDTninuTiOii ! ' will bo cvaifabto at tho 3rd floor of Pct:!:rcv Hall j 8:00 a.m. till 5:00 p.m. on tho foHovlna echedulo: i i I Law, Medical and Dental Students checks will bo cvallablo cn f both Thursday, August 2tX and Friday, August 22nd. All ether students' checks will bo cvaiiabb cn this schedule: I Uet names beginning A through E ?ondey August 2th j Last names beginning F through L Tuesday. August 2Cth Leet ne-nee beginning M through n Wednesday. August 27th ! Last names beginning 5 through Z Thursday. August 2Clh (Thcso students v,ho do net meet this schedulo must c-t their j cheeks on Friday. August 2Cth) i Undzrcrzduzto efucfenfs who cro c'jto for C::'s Educzvcnzl Opportunity Crcnt Funz (CEOG) c:n recefvo no chzzkz untile'! CCD';: 3 cf thzir Czzlz Crcnt Zlutznt E!'!ti:.:y F:pcrt (CZR) hzvo tzzn tcczh'Cd end prc:::::d by tho Ztvdznt Aid Oi'.zo. f -ietiens! f.'erlt tndfietlcnal Aehievmcnt Cehelerehlp Chee':s will ti r.veiiet'2 fetsr. fetiees w,:i to p'eeed In tho DeiiTcrH; :l : Ail fund: v.-.:it e distributee! by cheek cnthe:oc:;3. including til teheierships. Pieces pick up the so cheeks v.-;:hsut feil cn tho ind'.eetsd deys. C e sure to bring yeur Olhciel n:g';tretier Ferm (Class Ceheduis) w.th ycu. Cmerv.::?. your cheeks cannot to cf ere :i to yeu. hi
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Aug. 28, 1980, edition 1
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