Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 3, 1980, edition 1 / Page 1
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t 4 Dryo cri:p It will be partly sunny with highs in the middle 60s. Low tonight in the low 40s. Chance of rain is zero percent. There will ta a meeting c? tho DTH ombudsman staff Thursday at 7 p.m. hleet in tha Ictby outsida tha DTH office. L- t i- Serving the students and ike University community since 1893 T Vc.ums L J. iaaua 5 fslcnd-y, tlzvzrrSzzr 3. 1CC0 Ch-pl Hill, f'orth Ccrellna Nw, Sports,' Arts S33 C245 Euneji.'.drt;;:-3 S33-1 163 1 L o o o o - V . ? U u 11 llkj U U (1 1 1 I . L.J m-m K, V ' -: CL Cy CHARLES HERN'BON sr. J MELANIE SILL Staff Wri.era WASHINGTON Cautious optimism was the rr.ee. j here Sunday as the nation's attention focused on the American hostages in Iran and the U.S. presidential campaign entered its final days. President Jimmy Carter canceled all campaign sppearances Sunday, flew from Chicago to Washington to meet with advisers, and delivered a short address on national television Sunday evening. "Let me remind you that we are within two days of a national presidential election," Carter said. "Let me assure you that my decisions on this crucial issue will not be affected by the calendar." Republican challenger Ronald Reagan, campaigning in Ohio, said the issue was too sensitive for comment. Independent candidate John Anderson told audiences in California that the presidential election should be of secondary concern to the release of the 52 hostages. National campaign headquarters for the candidates were quiet as efforts centered on coordinating last-minute drives to lure undecided voters and to strengthen existing sup Neniritv wa tiffht at fh. n-Bush headquarters in Arlington, Va., where Reagan aide Charles Crawford said the Republican candidate's campaign was making final preparations for Election Day. Cut desks were empty in many offices and a few staffers clustered in ethers to watch vice presidential nominee George Bush on the CBS television show "Face the Nation." Crawford said it was impossible to say what influence the hostage situation would have on the election. Reagan forces were not worried, though, about the possible effects of the Iranian developments on the challenger's support. "There has been some development in there of Gov. Reagan's alternative way of getting (the hostages) out," Crawford said, pointing to a large suite occupied by researchers and analysts. Reagan's four-story national center had dozens of offices designated for specific purposes. Several offices were reserved for staffs courting ethnic and ether special-interest voters, while others house research, press scheduling . and The light hum of computer equipment filled the building, and color portraits of the candidate hung in prominent places on the red, white and blue wall. " . Carter staffers seemed harried and slightly tense as they scrambled to adjust to the sudden complications of the president's campaign created by the hostage crisis. Michele Clause, a Carter staff worker, said the national office's main job would be to mobilize support in key states. Clause said most of the other Carter staffers working in the candidate's downtown Washington campaign suite were poring over maps, making dozens cf telephone calls and rushing between offices. Not everyone at Carter headquarters was worried, as some staff workers lay on the carpeted floor watching television and others lounged on desks and drank coffee. Carter's one-floor office suite was sparsely furnished and decorated. Boxes of telephones crowded the halls, while a bigger-than-life poster of the president beamed down at the sprawl of partitioned offices. . Like the Reagan offices, Carter headquarters was divided into sections according to function such as research and public opinion. A pigeon fluttered around a large cage in one vacant office. The mood was more upbeat at Anderson's Georgetown headquarters. Like Carter's staff, Anderson's core of young workers stayed busy Sunday with get-out-the-votc efforts. "Morale is extremely good," said Roy Evans, a University cf Rorida sophomore, v. ho took a quarter off to campaign for the independent candidate. Anderson staffers sorted mail, made calls and talked in small groups in the cluttered headquarters. As with the other candidates, most of the independent's efforts were taking place in the field through canvassing and locally coordinated stumping. Scattered around Anderson's offices were souvenirs of the Illinois congressman's optimistic and often light-hearted campaign. Chapel Hill had its own representative a battered baby carriage, plastered with Anderson and UNC bumper stickers, that was pushed by supporters from Chapel Hill to Washington, D.C., in October. C . I 1 I i t ! ( f t fit f i . i J Polling Sites Polls open from 6:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. Precinct Poll Site Principal areas Country Club ' Woollen Gym Morrison, Ehringhaus, Parker, Teague, Avery Mason Farm Community Church, James, Craige, Married Purefoy Road Student Housing, Spring Garden Greenwood UNC General Admin. Upper and Lower Building, Raleigh Road Quad, Carr, Winston, Connor Lincoln Lincoln School Granville, Whitehead, Frat Court East Franklin Lutheran Church, East Old East, Old West, Rosemary Street . Spencer, Alderman, Kenan, Mclver, Townehouse, ErookMde, Colonial Arms, Westall, East Rosemary Street Battle Park Chapel Hill Community Camelot, Shepherd Lane, Center, South Estes Village Green, Davie Drive Circle Colonial Heights New YMCA ' Bolinwood, Sharon Heights, Vill-"e West Estes Hill Phillips School Stratford HiST Ridgefield Einkley Church, 15-501 Colony Willow Terrace Eastside Ephesus Road School Pinegate, Foxcroft, ' Booker Creek, King's - - . .'-ixa. Arms, Cwtilliart Villa' Glcnwood Glenwood School Glen Lennox, Golf ; Course Frats, the Oaks Wc:twood Frank Porter Kingswood, Laurel Graham School Ridge, Graham Court Northside Municipal Building , University Gardens, North Columbia North Carrboro Carrboro School Estes Park, Cedar Court, North Greensboro Street South Carrboro Carrboro Town Hall Fidelity Court, Chateau, Hiilmont, Greenbelt, Berkshire University Lake OWASA Water Plant Old Weil, Carolina, Royal Park, University Lake Dogwood Acres Culbrcth School The Villages CokcrlLUs Elliot Road firestation Coker HlUs Patterson New Hope firestation tt Whitfield Road lung's Mill Aldersgate Methodist , Laurel Hill Road Church - Plantation Acres Lloyd's Cabin Old Fayettcvifle Road. Highway 54 West A T! I (uleiieat Watts, Soonera spell the end for Heels' unbeaten record Cy BILL FIELDS SpOfU tl'.iQT t NORMAN, Okh. It was a rude awakening. After winning seven straight games, six of those easily, North Carolina found out Saturday about football Oklahoma-style. With 74,852 looking on at Owen Field the majority Sooner rooters out for one of their autumnal football fixes the Tar Heels' lesson came in less than three hours, a 41-7 defeat. The chief teacher was one J.C. Watts, who wears No. 1 on his jersey and carries the name Julius Caesar on his birth certificate. He ran the Oklahoma offense, ruled the Carolina defense and sent visions of UNC's undefeated season blowing away like a prairie wind. Probably no one. save the met fanatical Eoerner Sooners, expected such a rout, and after the last cf OU's triple-option plays had been run, there was nothing left to do but wonder vhy. Emotions ranged from frankness to surprise to shack. "We certainly got the hell bent cut of us," said Carolina's Rick Dc nnadey. "1 didn't anticipate that we would move the ball as well as we did," Sooner coach Barry Switer said. "I was shocked," said Tar Heel tailback Ames Lawrence. After the tame, in a datk, crowded corridor, Carolina coach Dick Cram, while not expecting his team to be routed, said a team any team risks a Lb v. cut r.cn it i Its t! e frncrx ca lh::r here turf. "You go to Oi l Lj.t.i, jcj t ctter Ulle? it cc.dd r.:r;n," he said. Much of the r?e-r t:lk cer.crrr.cJ the effer.e cf Old -he ma and the d:!V:-,e cf Nerth Cere lira. The Ea-cr.eri cr.ttred the came with the third t c:t tctal yard ' ? r.r J -ccrd-l a t ru hi": '.-'c;ti in th; cav-try.TheTar IL J defer.-e l the r v.l-.h the r.:. n$ s:ir:.t d.l.r. e, tlbftlrg ep,- .: rents :: than tlx p '.;!:'.:$ a f -.me. I:i CO r..lv.::.-.. t!.e CkL! r:r i t !f.r. e uon a ur.a-l.rr js d,J.l.:n. Wt'.n atterrpted only two pa.e$ cr.e wa$ intercepted, the ether ir,r:;r:r!cte 1 ut the lr,-:r.ers dld-Vt rccJ any pa.lrg5rrd:;e. They aren't i;;-: :J to p::-.s, zr.i whrn a b:.kf..ld f :J.?.i J$ :;fd, cny c J.j;.:J rr.aa v:,' It ,;;;-, ra'.:.lri rlijj t? eliminated frcnt the CU r!tctk. V.lo riedjthem? j a p: J '::n vi-,hl c-; effrrv: e, Ok!c.!;uru c:-r ei tv.;) rr. :e ?::',:'. th:.n C,-:i.";il.: i i.'r.. ci Cl it:f-::. 11: ar di v.: sju" in thy cf the i:.!:iin,:i i.p i y UNC ill V;,:s v..- the .. f : 1 ! ;ccrcdthrve tr..;l drs c 5, v.l.rn lit' 4 'I c::ry t' I he f .uh:J v i tc,-.;r...:cly t cecff.li r "laiGcnp-JG' I r 03 - ' J " Th Associated Press - The Iranian Parliament, in a major step toward ending a stalemate that has kept the world in crisis for a year, voted Sunday to free the 52 hostages if the United States meets four conditions set down by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and a parliamentary committee. , It was the most promising development in the U.S.-Iranian confrontation in the 365 days since the seizure of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran. But the Iranian proposal, calling for U.S. concession on complex financial matters,, was fraught with potential difficulties. President Jimmy Carter, at a White House news briefing, said the Parliament's terms "appear to offer a positive basis" for negotiating the hostages' freedom, but he could not predict when that might come. He said his administration was pursuing the matter through diplomatic channels and any resolution of the crisis must be in keeping with America's honor and vital interests. "I know that all Americans will want their return to be on a proper basis which is worthy of the suffering and sacrifice the hostages have endured," he said. . The president said any solution would have to be in "full accord" with the laws and the Constitution of the United States, a possible reference to the complexities involved in meeting the Iranian conditions. Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, Iran's former foreign minister and a key figure in the U.S.-Iranian confrontation, told reporters he hoped "the whole thing" could be over in one week. But he said it was physically impossible for the Americans to be freed by Tuesday, Election Day. The - Carter Administration has indicated a willingness to discuss the long-awaited Iranian demands. But there was no immediate word from Washington about whether and how the conditions might be met. ' "Until we see the fine print or understand more clearly the fine print, we cannot see precisely the limits within which we are being asked to act," Secretary of State Edmund S. Muskie said later on ABC's "Issues and Answers." . The Parliament's decision came as Iran struggled into the seventh week of war with neighboring Iraq. The Iranians' presumed need for American spare parts for the U.S. -made military equipment was believed to be a major factor in their action now on the hostage question. The Iranian news agency Pars said the Parliament, with 200 of its 223 members present for the stormy session, voted by a decisive majority to approve the four conditions for the hostages' release recommended by a seven-member select committee. The action had been expected for the past week. The four basic conditions were set out in September by Khomeini, the Moslem clergyman who led Iran's Sea HOSTAGES on pcc;3 2 U "T I- A 77 77 -r-r -O. ;,-- or (jfj & Go Friin wire reports Despite possible Republican gains of 12 to 20 seats in the House elections, Democrats are seen as almost certain to maintain the control they've had for more than 25 years. In the Senate, battle for control is ending in a flurry, of political shootouts, but charged-up Republicans are expected to fall short of the 10-seat gain that would guarantee them "a majority. Nevertheless, the political futures of several prominent Democratic veterans and Senate committee chairmen remain threatened, with the margin of victory in at least six of the 33 states with Senate elections razor-thin and tight races expected in eight other states. Among the well-known senators whose political careers hang in the balance are George S. McGovem, D-S.D., the 1972 presidential candidate; Frank Church, D-Idaho, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee; Jacob K. Javitz of New York, the committee's ranking Republican; and Warren Magnuson, D-Wash., chairman of the Senate In many states, the Senate raccsire a testing ground for the New Right, including the evangelical Christians who make up the Moral Majority and such passionate single-issue groups as Right to Life. If the GOP can't gain control this year, Republicans hope to make enough gains to set the stage for 1932. "We arc all endangered species," says Church, who has been targeted by a coalition of conservative groups and is struggling to fight off Rep. Steve Symrns, R-Idaho. The National Conservative Political Action Committee, which has funded negative campaigns against liberal Democrats in a number of carefully selected states, has abandoned its negative campaigns amid signs of public backlash. Among the Democrats on the NCPACs original target lists are Sens. Birch Bayh of Indiana, John Culver of Iowa, Alan Cranston of California and Thomas Eaglcton of Missouri. Sco PREVIEW on paga 2 ? f t i Javrts Church in Cayh i i F i MeGovern TV3 i QtwQ inmiuieci reactions A. O .. By TIM PRESTON SUff V.V.UT Women who live on the third floor cf Winston dorm breathed a collective sih cf relief Saturday. They had survived Halloween r.:-ht. Rumor had it that some cf them i wouldn't. Last Wednesday morning, a female student tc;d a rei.dcr.ee a'.i.:tar.t the hid heard that clairvoyant Jear.e Dlxcn had predicted a mi:s murder. The event would take place cn the women's floor cf a coeducational dorm at a mapr southern ur.iver:lty. Ti e darn wa.i to be iitu.ated acrccs the street from a cyrr.naalum and next ta a ccnctery, and V.'ir..en dDrm matched that dc:eri-ticn v'.ih an Harming Henderson Residence College Director Mickey S-lllvan called Jear.e Dlxcn in Wa:Mrcn, D.C.. Wcir.rzy 4iwt . w w "Jea-e Dixon $aJJ ihzt these lir.d cf "Not more than 10 people left in rcpcr.'.e to th-e rumor," iiid Unda Drury, the residence a.ti.tar.t for third fioor Wir.iton. According to Drury, met cf those women already had plans end the cr.es that remained were not "overly nervous." Some people did not take the rumor seriously st all. In the cla: ie "Saturday Night Live" land shark skit tradition, clandestine visitors replied "mass murderer" to the "v,ho's there" of the people they were vi iting. "All the guys cn second fiocr offered to let the tiris stay in their rooms for the r. ght, Lury sa. d. But she did report cn- dlvturfcirg 1.-. cf the third fiocr re;'denti re; vrted that h: :d a rvan cuts.de V, mston V: .realty Pcllce r: .1., cd to Drury 's tj. .an ruori start every H.lb'. s:li. "Four cr fivec'd.er t:r,l. ersltles had called her ul:h the iar.;e r-r.rr. "Zlz t:ld that ih? 1:1 r.st m-.'e any s-ach p'c-l-b the: v- cJ.l hie ' , J ' t . i! :llar-'lr :l;-:Th,;T t J C , '1 s : . t.) 1 II c rr M;ri c'.r; : tie r. - r. f:...t .a We cl.'.Vt v.z-.l ta make i: tl.J ,. - ,or.e Cill tut found ro ere. Thoic'i some would say t ecom'.r.j rtencus srj even l:-;-j cre's r'.tce cf ret,ider.:c w? an cu-freartbr ta en ur.suV'.ti-.iiattd rumor, ere UNC s.CK;;l.;y rtcUv.ct e;!-l.-eJ that tl.e t e 1 i 1 f cf the wcr.-.en hj hit the d:::n v-s r.st h rd to tr.ierttsr.d. "Th.ry had h---. l-te! r.r.thlri la Ice " 1! . ry Ur.d.1. er--r ts-d. Ycve f.A t rrJ:.,'y the cst cf :,i r.Jt d.lr 1 the rr; : .-i,:.ty i - - J fcf th...e 1 J Idi. V. :re teas :'- cc-'.t h teeri t f tf:y Ie 1: 4, '-. If vtry ,s - ! f . - 1 r: s:tl :d:: -d. 2 ) i f V. .-,'- ' A. ) r ( f C: 5 i , , It t f t . r v . ! - 3 ' i 1 n ' ti'"" n ' i . .4 , . 3 n cj : t lilJ,: r '.t.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 3, 1980, edition 1
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