Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 2, 1980, edition 1 / Page 2
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2Tha Daily Tcr H:c!Tuesd3y, December 2, 1980 o o r- rl I 4 "a' ' - a.A. U li u RA' HIGH (AP)-Gov. Jim Hunt met Monday with a tnracia! group to discuss the recent acquittals in the Grcer.rbcro Klan-Nazi murder trizl and its effect on North Carolina's imae. Tl.: 4:J5 p.m. meeting between Hunt and about 20 black, and white leaders was closed to reporters. It was held in the governor's Capitol office. "I'm here to listen," Hunt said as the meeting bean. Ben Ruffin, Hunt's assistant for minority affairs, said a cross section of black, religious, human-relations and student leaders was invited by the governor to discuss the verdicts, their effect on the state's national irr.cce and on relations within the state. 'We' tried to get some people involved in the Greensboro situation and also some from around the state Raleigh and Charlotte," Ruffin said before the mi rt rt . A Superior Court jury in Greensboro found four Ku Klax Klansmen and two Nazis innocent on Nov. 17 of Hiram uecemes first-degree murder and rioting charges stemming from the slayings of five Communist Workers Party supporters at an anti-Klan rally Nov. 3, 1979. Hunt spoke briefly to the group with reporters present and said, "I appreciate all of you being here, representing various groups of people and communities. I think we'll have lots of points of view here." Among those attending the meeting were state NAACP Chairman Kelly Alexander of Charlotte, state Sen.-elect Henry Frye of Greensboro and Julius Chambers, a prominent' civil rights attorney from Charlotte and president of the NAACP National Legal Defense Fund. Some of those attending the meeting said they weren't sure what would be gained from it. Chambers, who as head of the Legal Defense Fund was an instigator of the desegregation case now pending against the University of North Carolina system, said he didn't know why he was invited and had nothing to tell the governor. "I don't have the faintest idea," he said when asked what was likely to be accomplished. "I received a letter that indicated concern about the Klan trial and the image the state is portraying nationally...! was just asked to come." Saying "no meaningful purpose would be served" by further prosecution, state officials dropped all charges last week against 13 people yet to be tried. District Attorney Michael Schlosser announced his decision to end the case Wednesday, citing th Nov. 17 acquittals of six Ku Klux Klansmen and American Nazis of charges stemming from the deaths of five communist demonstrators. The four Klansmen and two Nazis were charged with five counts each of first-degree murder. They also were charged with felonious rioting. The innocent to all charges. men pleaded Cil From page 1 WASHINGTON (AP) Deputy Secretary of State Warren M. Christopher was sent to Algeria Monday night with the U.S. response to Iran's request for clarification on terms for freeing the American hostages. The mission appeared to keep alive the give-and-take with Iran over the 52 Americans, held captive for nearly 13 months. Eut there was no indication of a breakthrough in the efforts to gain their release. In Algiers, Christopher will meet with Algerian Foreign Minister Mohammed Benyahia and Algerian officials who have been serving as intermediaries between the United States and Iran. State Department spokesman David Nail said Christopher and his delegation would be prepared to answer any questions the Algerians might have regarding the U.S. position. Christopher conferred over the weekend with President Carter at Camp David, Md., about the U.S. response to Iran's request for clarification, brought here by Algerian emissaries last Tuesday. The contents of the U.S. message were not disclosed. Iran's terms, announced Nov. 2, call for an American promise not to interfere in the country's internal affairs, cancellation of all American claims against Iran, release of more than $8 billion in impounded Iranian assets and return of the wealth of the late Shah Mohammad Reza Bahlavi. Earlier Monday, a ranking White House official said the outcome of the hostage situation remained impossible to predict and the domestic political situation in Iran was the crucial factor. . "The question continues to reside in the political situation domestically in Iran," the official said. "And I don't know if there is any way to predict if, how, when they will be able to resolve it." President-elect Ronald Reagan was asked Monday about reports that an Iranian official suggested Iran might wait until Reagan was inaugurated before releasing the hostages. "Well, he's pretty foolish," Reagan said. The White House official, who asked not to be identified, said the United States was trying to provide clarification on points raised by Iran about the U.S. response to Iranian conditions for the release of the hostages. He said Iran had enough individuals who were familiar with the American political situation "to obtain an independent assessment of what it is and what is not possible under American laws and the Constitution." The Carolina Union Presents n.c. vvitli laa vf I Leo Drichuyo, conductor Friday, Dec. 5 - 0 p.m. Memorial Hall Tichets 02.50 at Union EoH'COce A Friends of the College Presentation u rones world renowned Tied, end Tuurs. . Dec. 3 4 . 0 po. a on the campus of NCSU Tickets for .UNC. Students $2.00 ; at Union Box Office court From p3ge 1 not enhanced but is in fact limited by the complete exclusion of women," the lower court's July 18 decision said. The legal challenge that led to the July 18 ruling was filed in 1971 by three Pennsylvania men as a protest to the Vietnam War. It had gone unnoticed in the federal courts for years but was revived last December when President Carter reinstituted draft registration in the wake of the Soviet Union's intervention in Afghanistan. On July 19, Justice William J. Brennan Jr. allowed the government to go ahead with its July 21 registration of all 19- and 20-year-old men. OVA v i a i a ywt t m ) m f m f m j m-i .m a I m t aa j -m j m fa f s fa jar x aa raM D O YOU "NEED MONEY WE ARE BUYING GOLD AND SILVER! NAVAJO TRADING FOSI 510 W. FRANKLIN STREET ' 929-0263 WE ARE BUYING DIAMONDS B We are now buying CLASS RINGS, DENTAL GOLD, WED-C Ob Q A jvE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR STERLING SILVER Onf Zy' SILVER COINS f J .DUCG DANDS, GOLD COINS, GOLD JEWELRY, SILVER I TV JEWELRY, anything MARKED 1CIC, 14K, 1SK GOLD cr 999 f WE tilt NOW SELLING JEWELRY! COME SHE OUR DISPLAYS 712 Ninth St. ' . 510 Franklin St. Durham Chapel Hill 236-7714 929-0263 Oir. ft - lla "'"TAUE A STUDY BREAK j , .-" I i: - K i it . 4 ' f If- - Orngx I- t , ', 'C,Z , ir-, -' ....-'mm. i y . ..... , . . - - i i , 4 . . - mm . m... fcjif, tt- --J ikk w wa Wti Kft W lf (K ft 4 im to .-. 4 m 4 m i j I ai 1 I I i j i 1 i rl r--! n- I f RH- I I v.....! I j L-wiJ 1 aMiapaa? asaajiMaBMi 2 i 600 tanks began Nov. 22, the sources said. Prime Minister Mudar Badran of Jordan told the parliament in Amman: "We shall not shoot first, but we shall defend our country against whatever attack or whichever enemy." Saudi Arabia attempted mediation and U.N. Secretary General Kurt Waldheim urged restraint in the confrontation that has arisen between Jordan and. Syria Jordan, whose King Hussein is considered among the most trusted Arab allies of the United States, said it would turn Jordan into a "flaming inferno to burn every aggressor." Jordan strengthened its forces on the border to counter the Syrian deployment. At Ramtha, the Jordanian border crossing post, a young Jordanian colonel said, "The situation is very dangerous and anything might happen any minute." Saudi Prince Abdullah Bin Abdul-Aziz, deputy prime minister and head of the national guard, ended talks with President Hafez Assad of Syria and flew home. He had been expected by Jordanian officials to' visit Amman. Shortly after Abdullah's departure from Damascus, Vasily V. Kuznetsov, Soviet first vice president,, arrived to a red-carpet welcome in the Syrian capital to exchange ratification documents of a new Soviet Syrian treaty of friendship and cooperation. Kuznetsov was expected to discuss the Syria-Jordan situation in addition to participating in a ceremony to ratify the treaty signed Oct. 8 in Moscow by Assad and Soviet President Leonid I. Brezhnev. Although Abdullah's unexpected trip home triggered speculation that the Saudi mediation effort had collapsed, the Saudi state radio quoted Abdullah as saying he was optimistic Syria-Jordan tensions ' .were receding. : But observers in Damascus said Saudi Arabia made threats in a message to Assad that apparently made the mediation effort counterproductive. il Positions available for college seniors with bachelors or graduate degree in math, physics, chemistry or engineering, (U.S. citizenship under the age of 29). Teaching graduate level courses at the Navy's Nuclear Power School in Orlando, Fla. Complete benefits package in cluding the opportunity to pursue an advanced degree. Starting salary $18,000 and projected salary after four $27,000. Send transcript or call: 1CD1 IZzvzho Or. to.Uf 4a W m IWwy I f d .1,7' I r o 9 M u n L i, 4 1 ! Va -i t 1 L ! U ' 1 1 1 i t 1 1 1 I (A 7C to 01.CD Vu:) GccJ v,:Ji e-.lj'ccvpoa Exp!rc3 1'31 1 s I I m & m & ; - ' ' J a a a ' - .. L-. l 'If , a a .-a -.a (11 n.-Thi 4:C3-1;C3 a.m. 12;C3a,m. i I I s i 2 1 I I m t i I 4 i if - M fill I I I i i HIM I Iran could lioM out cin more rnontl BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) A top Iranian official said Monday that Iran could fight Iraq for six months on available cash reserves, without access to money frozen in U.S. banks, gold reserves cr income from oil experts. While Iranian and Iraqi forces reported battles vath helicopter gunships, paratroops and artillery, Central Bank Governor Ali Reza Ncbari told the Iranian people they should not worry, the official Pars news agency reported. The agency quoted Nobari as saying Iran had cash reserves of S5 billion, and that "If we cannot, for political reasons, free our blocked reserves, or sell a drop of oil, and have no other exports, this reserve could last us for six months. "Of course, this is impossible, for w e have other exports, plus the fact that we have gold reserves," he said. Nobari's comments appeared to dim U.S. hopes that the cost of the war might cause Iran to act quickly to free the hostages whose capture prompted the United States to freeze S3 billion in Iranian assets held in U.S. banks. Israeli religions minister indicted TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) Israel's attorney general said Monday that he will indict Religious Affairs Minister Aharon Abu-Hatzeira on charges of accepting bribes. If the parliament removes Abu-Hatzeira's immunity from prosecution, he will be the first Cabinet minister in the country's 32-year history to go on trial. 1 The decision by Attorney-General Yitzhak Zamir climaxed months of investigation by police into the funding of Israel's Jewish religious institutions, an inquiry that has rocked the clerical establishment. The Abu-Hatzeira affair was not seen by observers s a threat to Prime . Minister Menachem Begin's government. They said it could even strengthen the government, since the scandal would hurt Abu-Hatzeira's political party? the National Religious Party. tsars From paga 1 "We go to a bar just because it's relaxing and it wouldn't matter what time of day it was." The next stop was Spanky's. There the lights were much dimmer than they had been at Papagayo's. The room was smaller and the tables were placed much closer together. The music was similar, however, and there was the same steady low buzz of conversation. Stephanie Johnson, a bartender there, offered several reasons for the difference in day and night bar patrons. "During the day people come to get away from work-type pressures," Johnson said. "There is more time for conversation and you get to know people better.. "We have people here who have come to conduct interviews. They come in to see what the town is like. It's more dignified to have a martini than beer. "At night it is a lot more rowdy," she added. "These people are not after our house specialty."' Also at Spanky's was Mike Stegman, a professor at the. University who is on leave ' from Washington, D.C., and Chuck Laven, a retired professor from New York who was a guest in Stegman's city planning class. The two were reminiscing over some wine about past experiences together. Both felt that bars definitely were different during the day. "There was no music until we came in," Stessan said. He explained that they had been the first ones to ccme in to Spanky'i that day. "When my wife and I come at night to a bar, I can't hear myself talk," Stegian said. : "I can't even get in, so a lot of times I don't evea try. My wife and I go where we can have dinner and drink. You can't get food at bars where students go." "If I go to a bar I go in the laie afternoon on the cusp between work and home. It's a transition," Lavin said. Stegman also said he sometimes went to bars with out-of-town guests to get in touch with old times. "Having mixed drinks is something we can do now in this area that we couldn't do before, because we do not share the students' interest in beer." Sure, Chapel Hill is the beer drinking capital of the world. But, not everybody 'drinks beer and not everybody Likes the upbeat social atmosphere that characterizes late-night hours at bars. That's what afternoon, hours jtt bars are for. ' ' - Apparently, discussing old times, renewing acquaintances, conducting interviews or finishing a profitable business deal is still the in-thing over a mellow afternoon drink. 1) . J ' arecw3 w m- . 3 X IrO 3-a. CO Sunday ay lSfc C-al 3 Lcsca C2.54 Czlzd Cl.70 CreztVctzio 2.10 J Xa..-a7 Present thlj cd for 2 fcr 1 Flrza Sp-sdd a.a jars' w fe G1CD HHUiKiM f f t ' t ; if i r et mx e-t m wtiiwiiiisi The proper or ideal cutting of a diamond is a highly scientific procedure requiring greet skill and precision. Few diamonds are cut for maximum beauty and brLianec. - 1-3 y .j. ' , , ,-,1- iL rs j lo 1.7 ! - v jf - - I X y '? - . 2 1', h'ozt diamonds 4:j'zxz cut too sha"ov, thus Vin3 the fal:e appearance J i WW 1 M VW Vafta. . W -J t-aW f light to escape thrcjh the bcttcm cf the C-rn. Failure to ach':ve the "Id :;.!" cut directly reduces , K 4 t Kal Kf w. . y V w w-W V- W y - 4 . VV . A "a W V "f-r f - r f a- Ivy t t fy 1 id:a!'y cut dlimond from the c ai f In Cr.rr.rrcn V... ' A ! 1 S71
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 2, 1980, edition 1
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