..4 Kite Fever There will be a 20 percent chance of rain with partly cloudy skies and breezy conditions. High in the upper 50s, and low in the 30s. 4 s ACC Tickets Sheet number 37 is eligible for tickets today and tomorrow. Sheet 15 is eligible Thursday and Friday. f r ,4 4 .,-0 i i ; ... jL r 1 Li i V S Serving the students and the University community since 1893 VcIum-3 00, issuofy Tuesday. February 24, 1901 Chspe! Hill. Worth Carolina NewtSportsArts 933-0245 Buswess; Advertising 933-1 163 ": "V,S "". y rv I i if ft U It I if tiff itti H tiiiii i I ( i I f I i is - w 7 el ' V 'V-' , .... - -"v N. o 1 X 'S f? - - , V' f yff T Ti - a f IT! TT'i" v" iiimiili By LOUISE GUNTEH Staff Writer The University Police received a report of a suspicious per son following a woman near the Morehead Planetarium before 9 p.m. Sunday. The UNC student who reported the incident said she thought that the "suspicious person" was the same man who had assaulted her and her sister in the Arboretum in early February, Sgt. Walter Dunn of the University Police Depart ment said. The woman, who Dunn declined to identify, reported that she and her sister were walking through the Arboretum late at night earlier this month when a man ran up behind them and snipped off some of her sister's hair, Dunn said. No report of the first incident was filed until the woman re ported that the "suspicious person,' whom she suspected was the same man, was following her Sunday night, he said. Two or three cars and several policemen were sent to the Arboretum to investigate the incident Sunday night. "As far , as I know, the campus police did not find the suspicious person they were looking for," Dunn said. Beverly Schultz, a Spencer dorm resident, said that she saw two police cars on Raleigh Street next to the Arboretum as she was walking from Spencer toward Cobb Dorm about 9 p.m. One of the policemen there told her that he was looking for a man who had used a pair of scissors to assault a girl, she said. Margie Hoffman, STOW Area Director, said that she received a call from a STOW Resident Assistant and called the University Police about 1:30 a.m. to find out what had hap pened. 'They told me that someone reported a man running around, but they told me that no assault has been reported for that evening," she said. Brenda Jenkins, an R.A. in Spencer Dormitory, said that many girls on her hall were very concerned about the incident. "I got the A.D. to call the police to see if she could get the real story," she said. "We just wanted to know general details so we could tell the girls what happened. I guess what they told Margie (Hoffman) was the truth, but the story about the attack with scissors got crossed with what actually happened Sunday, and they wouldn't give us details." Jenkins said she was going to hold a hall meeting later this week to warn Spencer residents to be aware of this kind of incident. ' Betty Harmon, an R.A. in Alderman Dorm, called an emergency hall meeting Sunday night and told the residents to be careful when walking alone. "The stories were all mixed up," she said. "The girls want to find out about things like this, and often times they're not informed. It's important to know the facts, and Sunday night no one knew what was happening." N - . , . - ' , ' V - ; 1 v- : i i DTH Suhwio Cunvet smh Although the calendar shows it's February, our weather has been unseason ably warm. Many Carolinians have taken the opportunity to get outside and enjoy this weather. These two friends, seated on the famed Silent Sam statue, seem to be in no hurry to return to class, studies, or the cold weather. k The Associated Press MADRID, Spain Members of a right-wing military faction opened fire Monday in the lower house of Parliament in an attempt to take over the government. They seized the Cabinet and more than 300 legislators as hostages. King Juan Carlos, commander in chief of the armed forces, opposed the coup attempt and Spanish news agencies said troops began moving into the cap ital to take up protective positions. A statement from the joint chiefs declared that "all necessary methods have been taken to put down this attack on the constitution and to re-establish order." After conferring with the joint chiefs of staff, Juan Carlos scheduled an address on national television and ordered all government undersecretaries to stay on the job. The attack came during a pre-vote parliamentary debate on confirmation of a new premier. A rightist officer pulled a gun, ordered everyone to drop to the floor and opened fire. Other uniformed officers began firing as well, with bullets lodging in the ceiling above the parliament members' heads and above the press gallery. . The rebel officer and some 200 paramilitary civil guards held the legislators, . Premier-designate Leopoldo Calvo Sotelo and caretaker Premier Adoifo Suarez, who resigned the post three weeks ago. The number held captive was estimated at be tween 340 and 350. Madrid Radio newsman Miguel Angel reported that in the midst of the debate over Suarez's succes sor, a man in Guardia Civil uniform grabbed a microphone and pointed a pistol at Parliament President Landelino Laviila and shouted for the members of the Parliament to fall to the floor. An outburst of bullets then erupted in the chamber. The Spanish news agency, EFE, reported that when the shooting began in the parliament building, Suarez demanded to know what was going on. It said a civil guard responded by telling Suarez to shut up and hustling him out of the chamber. Gutierrez Mellado, the deputy premier for defense, was thrown to the floor in the ensuing melee. Photographers and television cameramen were ordered at gunpoint to stop filming. An automatic camera of Spanish state television continued to operate. Those monitoring its view of the scene reported the civil guardsmen holding clubs and pointing submachine guns at the captives. The officers told the Cabinet members and mem bers of Parliament to keep calm until a military go vernment was established. National police surrounded the Parliament building in the center of the capital but made no move to dislodge the rebel civil guards. The leader of the attack was identified as an ultra-rightist officer, Lt. Col. Antonio Tejero. Two years ago Tejero was tried for plotting a military coup and given a six month prison sentence. Civil guards, or Guardia Civil, do police work but regard themselves as military and have fought Parlia ment's efforts to put them under police control. They have been a prime target of separatist guerrillas in Spain's northern Basque region, who killed 95 people last year. Within minutes after the attack, army troops in armored combat cars occupied national radio and television stations, apparently as a protective mea sure against the civil guard. A long line of army vehicles with troops, apparently from the Madrid region armored division, was seen moving south toward the capital from the barracks 15 miles north of the city, motorists reported. But reporters at the parliament building said the regular army soldiers had not appeared there. . About six hours after the parliament building was seized, the civil guard director general and army vice chief of staff entered the parliament building to begin negotiations, Madrid Radio said. A Madrid Radio broadcast said the council of state had made contact with persons inside the parliament building and had been told that Col. Tejero would not obey any orders other than those of the King or Lt. Gen. Milans Del Bosch, commander of the Valencia region. -i i i) f '- s Miotorieal "ourvey by UNC . g 'may help oave. older Cari ii ate "students ore structures - By TRACY FORD Surf Writer Two UNC geography graduate students have nearly completed an historical survey of buildings in Carrboro. The inventory, begun in July by Burgess McSwain and Steve Matchak, now identifies 139 structures of architectural and historical significance built before 1930. A few more structures remain to be studied. Highlights of the inventory were presented in a slide show sponsored by the Carrboro Appearance Commission on Feb. 16. The inventory. will be used to encourage the rehabilitation of sbme of Carrboro's older buildings. The John Weaver house, possibly the oldest building in Carrboro, was built by Weaver around 1740, and is included in the inventory. This house on the old Hillsborough Road served as a sometime tavern and rest stop. Tom Lloyd was the man who started Carrboro by bringing industry, in the form of a grist mill and a cotton gin, to the town in 1883. His Alberta Mill, built in 1898, was sold to Gen. Julian S. Carr in 1909 and eventually became Carr Mill, McSwain said. The mill has since been converted into Carr Mill Mall, a major town shopping center. What is now The Station restaurant was built in 1952 and was actually Carrboro's third railroad station, McSwain said. The first sta tion had been nothing more than a railroad car. The railroad that runs through Carrboro was built in the 1880s for the purpose of carry ing iron ore. Carrboro thrived in the 1920s when there was a boom in the textile industry. The town was also a leading railroad cross-tie market during that decade. , . The fact that most of Carrboro's houses are mill houses also tells something about the town's history. McSwain and Matchak's slides show a typical Carrboro mill house, with the vari ations in style that came as the town changed and grew. A picture and a write-up on the historical significance of each structure is included in the inventory, which is on file at the North Carolina Division of Archives and History building in Raleigh. McSwain and Matchak are also working on an essay about the history, and the architectural history, of Carrboro. One use of the inventory could be to identify Carrboro buildings that might be eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic See HISTORY on page 2 . . , - -:: I k t "A r ' ?' i T ' v ?' " " - - . - J ' i 4 . f i ' i '"i w'f.w - " " ' " . ' - vv, ' '- L : : ' - ' " " ... - ' ' '' . v. f ". ' ... ' . ... ;"''' r' Ones a trwin station, now tha Station restaurant end tavern ...one of tho many Carrboro landmarks in graduate students' survey DHH fit Photo 1LMU U uUL n n J- s y J 9 1 ; n 4t il Cy MARK SCIIOEN Waff Writer The 11 students "ho were accidently excluded from the generd lottery for Conner Residence Hall last week will be guaranteed cn-campus housing, Phyllis Graham, assistant director of university housing, said Monday, In a telephone interview, Graham said that the students' names wer not returned to Connor's central lottery after they were not drawn in the preliminary lottery he'd early last week. "It was simr'y a case of human error," she said. Graham said that she could not determinj exactly how the names were left out or who made the mistake. "We are not concerned with putting the tbme on anyone," she said. Graham added that the h irtment will attempt to place :r.U in one of the dorm choices listed in cer thdr houiing contracts. The draw ins to place the names cf students closed out during Thursday's lottery will be hdJ tt 9 a.m. today in the Carr Bui'Jir j lobby, f t:j;.!J Hits for men and women wiU he f-oaed in tt.e hous-nj office Thursday, SI: ia:J ituder.ts on t!.? u'.i'-j i:-.t wouU l ,e the option lo cactl their contract and receive a refund of their rent r-'cr-Vmn!; inform the housing office that they i'J accept any sssirn inckjJ.rj tcntporary isomer;'; cr scicpi ia.ins th ;f tadd.-Jihat men?. . f p- u L .I..CS t f ! . . la a tv : July 1 ia V, HI. hh I'A &tud; dorm. rtvyliis Graham The number of contracts cancelled and the number of students remaining cm the wait ins list will be taken into account when the students" chances of rcccmnj spaces are determined, Graham said. She the probability but make r.o guarantees. Assignments from the waiting; ha will not be made until mid-July, Graham said. A symposium to assist students vrarchins for off campus housing will he held at 7 p.m. Much 4 in the Great l fail of the Carchr.a Union. (... and t ; tbJe; all stu ore J t houvh fjdenlCv :t Action Union U, thesympo'-.oni wi'ltn ep!a:iaioa of why UN'C is unable to house icr.ts and answers to ucuions about spirt- meat payments, lea .t and ether r-ii.is. llitcn t a: i .;; Ucm SCAU, Univrrsity H : bioJcnt r.:riccs Chi;pr If J lieu-:.".,? Authority and El Salvador reseiviiag nfeinnieiat firosia Com. ft jp' The AucHiatrd Pma WASHINGTON The Reagan administra tion unveiled captured documents Monday as purported proof that the Soviet Union, Cuba and other Communist nations conspired last year to send 800 tons of arms and other equipment to insurgents in El Salvador. Wfiile the How of arms may have slowed in the past two weeks, at least 200 tons of those arms were funncled through Cuba and Nicaragua to the guerrillas for their "failed general offensive" against the U.S.-backed govern ment last month, the administration said. The charges were contained in a report entitled "Communist Interference in El Salvador," which was released by the State Department along with another inch-thick document, which included the captured papers, a.s supporting evidence Department spokesmen said the evidence demonstrates that Cuba and the Soviet Union were en japed in "a well-coordinated covert effort to bring about the c-.erthrc. of El Salvador's established government and to impo,e in irs place a Cemmunhl regime v.i.h no pr'ar support." The document were re'uerod to by the o.t f'f ll- i: ' "t f th ;t cf U bJ.adar. Wh'.!: U.S. grouro rt r co - 111 , V.boe H . , o;d h . action they r t . t , a cou'd to.!,.de . : e,. : r- t .lire 4 i" V oo t act u i-.. ft- .'ib - & n "I think it's to Cuba's own self-interest to halt them (arms shipments) right now and end this transmittal of subversion into Central America," Meese said on ABC's "Issues and Answers" program. The documents contained information ga thered from intelligence sources, including a letter from a Salvadoran identified only as "Vladimir" who said warehouses in Cuba were over-flowing with arms for the guerrillas. The State Department placed great stress on the amount of arms that Communist rations have committed to the guerrilla movement, evidently to emphasize the magnitude cf the, Communist involvement. It said most of the arms were of Western manufacture, which it dimissed as an attempt by the Communists to "cover their involvement." John Du-dmen, acting assistant secretary of state for Inter-American Affairs said there was evidence that the (low of wrespons into EI Salvador has stopped in recent weeks, mdudins weapons entering the country from Nicaragua, Reagan's press secretary. Jurors S. Hrady, laid, "We have clear evidence of caching the communists hands in the coekic jar. hu! ailed whether the situation in EI SSador was fimibar to that at the start of the Vietnam war. he said; "I wouldn't be prepared today to draw - a parallel t clet El Salvador and Vietnam." Err ,h:: i: ,.n ! " 3 r r e end. J a v.;..:. v in C viry i.. - i t . ... i . 1 1 ...f v. . i 4 ." r ar , e lev ... e "1 1: ': A v; r : Eh V t - ; - o t. f e i . t Mecse, asked whether the United States would send troops to El Salvador, replied, "1 don't rule out anything, but it is highly unlikely we will move military forces." He said evidence of Soviet-bloc complicity with leftist Salvadoran guerrillas was incontrovertible. Administration offieialv hope that releasing the evidence today buttrcAC- their contention that the Soviet Union and its allies are commit ted to converting the country Into the first Marxist state on the American continent. The administration al vo decided to release its findmrs to build public support for actions to ensure that EI Salvador remain friendly toward Western ir.temts, U.S. officials said. The ba.ic message of the report is that directly or indirectly, the Soviet Union, Cuba, Ethiopia, Vietnam, Kkraragu:! and sohjc Eastern I'.uropean countries base undertaken it major effort to supply the Sulvudorgn guerrillas with . tons of weaponry and other equipment ver the prA scar. Much of it h l-ctevcd to (m through Cubi. A!:c . (uo!ed State Department sources w r.' 'bi at ;sstn CvlVa htJL dfCCtlv from the U.S. g-nenonent th.it the Ileajan adm-nistraiion won't toh-tafe tunhct amis "'! report, ...... I S i 'i te Ifcpartiofot ti. MXitty fth.-.eJ co Is! u ' or 1 f. I lie 'h h , v 4 l , - r 1 we j HirsVorfuri :ent vn the i lonh'u' "V.c'rv t i them vf their i! mm- into a rtn;cnt compL-es wkJ