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Sunny days and fair nights
should last through the week
end. Today's high will reach
the mid 50s with tonight's
low in the upper 20s.
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Serving the students end the University community since 1893
Writer's tzzt
All those who took home
copies of the Daily Tar Meets
writing test must have thsm
finished end turned in by 5
p.m. today.
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CimsTjiing-ioiag- captivity
WASHINGTON (AP) Tales by the former American
hostages of .brutal treatment at the hands of their Iranian ,
captors angered President Ronald Reagan and Jimmy Carter
Thursday, and prompted plans for Senate hearings to lay the
story before the American public.
In a handwritten report on his emotional visit with the freed
hostages Wednesday ' in Wiesbaden, West Germany, Carter
urged Reagan to abide by the U.S. agreement with Iran, "but
never do any favors for the hoodlums who persecuted innocent
American heroes.'
Former Vice President Walter F. Mondale delivered Carter's
report to Reagan at the White House Thursday morning.
Reagan was said to be outraged and deeply upset after readinj
it and hearing Mondale's account of mistreatment of the
American captives.
The reports of Iranian brutality brought a quick, indignant
response from members of Congress. Public hearings by the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee were announced, and
resolutions were introduced . in the House and Senate to
support any decision Reagan might make to refuse to carry out
the entire agreement with Iran.
The House resolution was sponsored by Rep. Paul Findley,
R-Iil., and the Senate measure by. Sen. Dennis DeConcini,
D-Ariz., who urged Reagan to declare that the United States is
not legally bound by the agreement because it was negotiated
under duress of blackmail.
"Rewarding terrorists and blackmailers is a dangerous pre
cedent," DeConcini said.
In his report to his successor, Carter said the hostages had w ', ' ;r------
been "abused more than I had previously known." He said the JLate-tllgflt QOOUOYe
Iranians naa acica ukc savages 10 inz ena, anu nc icrmcu
the hostage ordeal an "official criminal act of terrorism."
The State Department said the Reagan administration-was
"very irate, very angry" over mistreatment of the hostages,
and planned a formal reaction soon.
Department spokesman William Dyes said revelations of the
; Iranians' behavior "esftdniy will not mskejtjtny 'easier!'-to ,
' carry out ths Carter admihistratioa'i eccmsnt with Iin tor
release of the hostages.
Reagan sent the returning Americans a message expressing
respect for their professionalism and patriotism, and a "deep
personal commitment to your future" and restoration of their
family and professional lives.
"As difficult as this experience has been for each of you, it
contains lessons for us all," Reagan wrote. "... this episode in
cur history will be ever with us as, together, we look to the
future."
Mondale, during a 10-minute visit with Reagan at the White
House, said he recounted the Americans stories of "barbaric
treatment" during their 444 days in captivity. Mondale accom
panied Carter to Wiesbaden.
Reagan, he said, "was outraged, as all Americans are and
will be when they hear the full details."
Later, in a conversation with Vice President George Bush
overheard by reporters, the president agreed when Bush said
he had told questioners that Reagan wa3 deeply upset by news
of the hostages' treatment.
Then, meeting again with reporters. Bush confessed to "a
certain sense of outrage" himself. !'The report Mr. Mondale
gave the president is powerful in its impact," he said.
In reviewing the U.S. settlement with Iran, Bush said every
dimension should be considered. "We've seen a new dimension
to this problem, and it" is an ugly dimension."
After the hostage visit and on the flight back from West
Germany early Thursday, Carter accused the Iranians of
"savagery against absolutely innocent hostages" and "acts of
animals almost."
Out the former president urged the Reagan administration
to carry out the terms of the agreement he negotiated for the
hedges' release, saying the nation's word of honor was at
stake.
DiH Matt Cooper
It is a scene repeated all over campus the late-night goodbye when
couples linger together, nofwanting the night to end. This couple found
a quiet spot near Greenlaw to finish that all-important last conversation:
of the day. 4
Dy DAVID POOLE
Sports Editor
WINSTON-SALEM Carolina senior swinginan
Al Wood knew that he'd had a good game in Wed
nesday night's 74-60 upset of third-ranked Wake
Forest.
Wood, who was nothing short of sensational,
scored 25 points and grabbed 17 rebounds and
otherwise kept his Tar Heel teammates in control of
the game. ' ' ." -'
After the game Wood said, "If I could play that
well all the time, I'd be doing it." ,
Doing it indeed. Wood was 8-of-l 1 from the
floor, 9-of-9 from the free throw line and was a
force on both the offensive and defensive boards.
But Wood wasn't the only Tar Heel who did it to
the Deacons as Carolina avenged an 82-71 loss to
Wake in the finals of the Big Four Tournament.
There was James Worthy who scored 19 points
and had eight rebounds, Sam Perkins, who scored
13 points and Jimmy Black who scored 10 points,
had four assists and played another fine floor game.
VWe were very happy to win," Coach Dean Smith
said. "Wake Forest didn't shoot very well. Our
zone defense was effective because they didn't hit
their shots."
Carolina enjoyed a 28-19 half time lead and con
tinued to hold the lead throughout the early part of
the second half. Wake Forest got within three on a
three-point play by Guy Morgan but could get no
closer. The Tar Heels pushed the lead back out to 10
on a Matt Doherty jump bank shot with nine minutes
left. ' . ..
The difference down the stretch was Carolina's
16-of-20 performance from the line in the game's
final 3:55. ',,
Wake Forest coach Carl Tacy wasn't pleased with
his team's offensive performance. "I think their
zone helped to slow things down,'.' Tacy said. "We
didn't get much out of the fast break.
"We were too tentative. We held the ball outside
S
...
;' Si
V ' . v.
) V V
.
I
OTHfti photo
Ccrol'na knocked off Wcko. Forest bst nfght
... senior Al Wood scored 25 points
too much and didn't penetrate enough.
. "Their zone gave us problems and our offense
was the worst it has been all year."
"Al Wood ,was sensational," Smith said. "I
almost wish he hadn't scored as much so people
would know I was talking about his all-around
effort. His rebounding, leadership and defense was
great."
Wake Forest shot poorly. until very late in the
game. Star point guard Frank Johnson, who was a
big reason the Deacons defeated the Heels in
December, hit only 3-of-14 from the floor before
See HEELS on page 2
critical of Qe
77
Ml. UUVeTtlQWl
x- Dy ELAINE MeCLATCI IET-' v -Staff
Writer " ,
Jean Kilbourne, a researcher on the
effects of mass media on American
attitudes, spoke against the use of vio
lence against women and the use of
little girls as sex objects in advertise
ments during her slide presentation
Wednesday night at Memorial Hall.
"Sex is used to sell every imaginable
product," Kilbourne said, pointing out
the caption on one advertisement which
read, "Whatever you're giving him
tonight, he'll enjoy itjnore with rice."
Kilbourne condemned the advertis
ing trend that used young girls in its
campaigns. One advertisement showed
a five-year-old girl holding several bot
tles of perfume in her arms. Kilbourne
also snowed several slides of very
young girls in alluring positions with
what she said was suggestive print
about the advertisement.
Kilbourne said one out of every four
women has been sexually molested,
and the advertising industry should not
be allowed to exploit this problem.
This type of advertising is relatively
new, Kilbourne said, and it is up to the
American public to let the advertisers
know they will not stand for this kind
of advertising. Advertisers are trying to
see:how,much,th can get -awaywith
she added. v-:
The images of women being beaten
and attacked is another distressing ad
vertising trend, Kilbourne said. She
showed one slide with a woman lying
on what looked like a bathroom floor
with her dress rumpled. The picture
implied that the woman had been mur
dered or raped, Kilbourne said. The
advertisement was for shoes.
Other examples Kilbourne cited were
record album covers and advertisements
showing women with their hands tied
or in chains. These advertisements cele
brate violence as erotic and further the
myth that women deserve and love to
be beaten, Kilbourne said.
The snickering, locker room approach
to sex in advertising has a powerful
message, Kilbourne said. These adver
tisements make the woman's body seem
like merchandise, she added, and by
linking the woman with the product,
she becomes an object. "Sexism de
humanizes us all," Kilbourne said.
Kilbourne also mentioned the use of
subliminal images in advertising. No
one is really sure why they work, she
said, but subconscious messages are
often more powerful than conscious
ones. The subliminal sexual imagery is
meant to arouse anxiety, she added.
Tlic consuTix- sees tKc scxn&I nivc
in the advertisement and then represses
the thought immediately. This repressed
thought sets up the anxiety which
makes the product remain on the mind.
Kilbourne's most graphic example
of subtle sexual imagery was a cigarette
commercial in which a man was hug
ging a woman and the caption read,
"don't get your cigarettes crushed with
a soft pack, get a hard pack." A close
up of the woman's back revealed what
looked like a man's penis airbrushed
onto the picture.-
Kilbourne also spoke on the empha
sis placed on ideal beauty in women's
advertising.
"We spend more than a million
dollars every hour on cosmetics," she
said.
The type of beauty achieved in ad
vertising is the result of lighting, camera
angles, airbrushing and cosmetics, Kil
bourne said. It was meant to produce
anxiety so that women would go .out
and buy products they didn't need, she
said.
Kilbourne also attacked the attempt
by advertisers to sell what she called
dangerous or worthless products such
as feminine hygiene sprays and douches
Sea KILBOURNE on page 2 .
61MMQIMICQO
ty MELODEC ALVES . '
Sutl Writer
Robert Eianchi, a junior math major
from Vindmd, N.J., announced Thurs-
dv ht r' v for P I f n M
Anochtion president. ...
L'anchi said his miinCiI as RHA
president would be to show the indivld
ud reiidznts whit RHA did for then.
'Th:re is a mhccncer-n among many
that HI 1 A is just the governors and dorm
officers," he iz'i.
To f :t students involved in RHA,
Eicr.d.i proposed en official joint com
rr.;'.i:e with Student Government to
drv,!.j) a closer wcrkms relationship
with th: residents.
I','. j rJho rrepesrJ a jpcdJ projects
cc;r.;r.ii!ee within MI I A to terse es a ref
er:: cetcrvice to the ItUA governors end
C - ----- t i
Vtt-;:.-u..Jli
'V,e need p:r-l; to f;r.J infcrmition
cn bue$ we'll tecife rext yeir. We
sterteJ a Sot of cc"srr..:!tr$, tut we
!-';r.Vt pushed c-r v,.:y thrc.rV' ht
i ' , "It will jtresrr.h.-.e the whc.'e pfo-c--:.
if the gavcn-.-.'sci cr;cu'4 the iv.L-es
v. : h t!.e fz:i tht-jy t-efcre thrni.
If t!-fed HJIA presidrnt. Ihihi
: y e v j co.-.t:.ii:e lo I h I :u tu Ji
Robert Cicnchi
issues as dorm visitation, parking, racial
balance in the dorms, Southern Cell rate
increases tad the noise ordinance. '
E'anchi said he would Lie to see RHA
co-?ronsor social events with dornss end
other campus organizations instead of
sponsoring events alone,
"This would enerate mere student
interest end HHA wou!d f-t to work
with a t reader base of pe-ephe w ith 7.0U0
students livirj on eanirus," he vaid.
Ihar.cU is currently a me;r.her of the
RHA -jerr.:n3 board and preiden! cf
Mi.T'-tn djrm. In the past, he was a
member of the constitutional committee
lor Oh'e Carr-rus and ireavarcr of Man.
fun ' rn.
l I I i I l ' ' I t ? J It X 1 I 3 f 1 . .it II I I .1 , . tj i i i i II ;( l! iltf . H m If i i a I ' !JV 13 t 4 t
is; is
. -i. a. at a.
Ey WILLIAM PESCIIEL
Staf Wrficr
The Elections Board decided Thursday night that
sheets and buttons obtained by student body presiden
tial candidate Joe Buckner w ere of no val ue and should
be recorded as such on his financial report.
. It ruled that- because the buttgns and sheets had no
market value to the donator, they could be reused by
Buckner without affecting his campaign spending.
The board also established a policy requesting all
presidential candidates to submit preliminary campaign
reports, and that all future complaints to the board be
written.
Board member Desna Williamson said the funeral
hemes she called said the sheets which will be used as
banners were worthless to them because stains could
not be washed cut.
She-also called four companies that make buttons
and received the same response. "They cost lA cent to
them so it b not worth it to them to recycle," she said.
"They are of no value, period,"
The buttons were Jim Hunt campaign buttons from
Democratic headquarters in Raleigh.
"We really didn't worry that much about it," said
Summey Orr, Buckner's campaign manager. "Our
finances had been planned so carefully, even if they
had assigned a value to them, we wouldn't have or.e
over." fcach presidential candidate fca a VMAnpcnumj
limit.
Buckner was not at the meeting and could not be
reached for comment.
Board member Thomas Sharpe said the request for"
financial reports from the other presidential candidates
w as made "so we could get some idea of what it is going
to cost everyone."
The board also voted to consolidate the offices onto
four ballots, instead cf having one ballot for each
office. Sharpe said the board would save at least $ 305
over last year, or 74 percent of its printing budget.
"This also lessens the chance for a counting error,
since we won't have 22 ct 24 ballets cn the table," he
) .
i j-a af-Mm
. WASHINGTON (AP) President Ronald Reagan ordered
government bureaucrats Thursday to cut back on equipment
purchases and travel and instructed his Cabinet chiefs to save
taxpayers' money by net redecorating their offices.
The order does not sply to Nancy Reean's plans to refur
bish the family living quarters in the White House.
As from the start of his 2-day-cld administration, Reagan's
actions competed for attention with devebpments surround
tri the freed American hcsta:?s.
lie r.-v:ied a f, r-p: e I ;..ri:tcn r:4-"rt ftcr.i farmer
Trc :de:.t Carter cn h. i cr -sir- Jvi t Wed'.. d:y vi:h the 52
Ar. Ih. l ; .; t a r . e v.: '"j t! f- frc.d
l)..r:-: If e d.-y. R:.:"-! p:rs-.'dy ar:--.r:eJ lis r -:.-p
:.h 1- :r.:.i- r.MzC:1 --tr" vf$ : i rrs : & L.;f
:v: tt.th:V,l :eIL .(.ij:'. ,:.:C t
f s cf i : :: l rejuhtiar.s.
J 9
V -lmar -
s i
mrg -wf P.
It also was disclosed that Caspar Weinberger was sworn in
Wednesday as secretary cf defense and that Alexander Wi'
was sworn in Thursday as secretary of state.
were s second step in his caer.ra.gn to "bring the runaway bud
get undsr control." As t'.i first ast It crdrre J a frceie Tuesday
on tswcrnmer.t hiring.
"f'a sing'e action as far as I Ir.aw will jet our eccnemy hack
on the re-dto fli re;ccry, I we must te;'n," Reagan tali
in a-.rsourci; g his Ltest mse.
"I view th ierplement.t.n cf tl r.e c rderi as critics! Ttse
Ar; r,'.:in p ; ; '? are de:rr ' J K hae W. .1 cn tl ? ecor.c-rr k
rral hns th-i w fa,e.. Tl 'd fi. J c .t v z't e I ' .-; ..-g u thern."
V,J he 11. .; e prc-s te.-rs'ry J.'. : t.z .$ s J I e chJ r.m
In 3 h. r...;h mor.;y wt . j t ; used 1 y Re.-; sn't action
ScaCUTS enp
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