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iH tfliijinidiiMl-ynir 2The DailvTar HeelH'hursdav. March II (V What do we have? LOCATION, right downtown, next to Campus And, what else? UNLIMITED SERVINGS for all MEALS, plus Specials 1 And ."..?: PAID UTIUTIES, Air-Conditioning And . . .? WEEKLY MAID SERVICE DAILY MAINTENANCE SERVICE And ? PROGRAMS for EVERYONE Dances . . . sure Floor parties ... of course Weight room ... yes Synergy ('aerobics") ... just started Cook-outs . . . weather-permitting VCRs and Camera ... fun Sundeck ... Swimming pool ... Billiards ... . Ping pong ... all standard And . . . ? INDIVIDUAL LIABILITY . . ; you are not responsible for your roommate's rent Anything Else? Hate to brag, but Granville Towers is just about THE BEST OF EVERYTHING Got to be too expensive! NOW, wait a minute . . You show me any other furnished room with all utilities plus AC, 19 jiieals per week while classes are in session, all social programs included and NO traveling costs for only $13.79 per day from August 21 through May 8! Try that figure on your folks! And, you don't pay for the first half of August or the second half of May or any of June or July! Now You Know What We Have! And you can see it NOW And you can become a WE by joining US at 3 mnvme University 929-7143 Whoxo Convozilozizo lo Standard :1R 1U 1- ' 4 1 -4 including X 3 r w to r IV &. i. t- 1 r s e" Square . TV 'tJ$wm Central Am M African relief bill part The Associated Press WASHINGTON The Senate Ap propriations Committee gave President Reagan the go-ahead for more military aid to El Salvador and anti-leftist guerrillas in Nicaragua on Wednesday, six days after handing the administration an embarrass ing defeat on its Central America policy. The aid to the El Salvador regime, which is fighting a leftist insurrection, would be tied to periodic reports from the president to Congress that the Central American nation ft improving its human - rights record. The committee's actions were taken by voice vote on amendments to a bill pro viding $150 million in emergency food aid for drought victims in Africa. The measure -still must be approved, by the full Senate. The House, which had passed the Africa bill, must agree to the Central America amendments. House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr., D-Mass., when asked about the commit tee's action, said, "It was a lousy, mean thing to do. it was a mean thing to do to those Africans over there. There is no question that there will be terrific opposi tion to it on the floor over here, and I just think it's a mean way to operate." Meanwhile, the House Foreign Affairs Committee deferred action on a com promise, embraced by most of its Democratic majority, denying emergency aid for El Salvador in the current fiscal CGC The CGC voted 23-1 to amend an article of the Stu dent Judicial Governance which would make it an of fense of the Honor Code to "intentionally inflict severe ' mental or emotional distress upon a person through a course of conduct involving repeated abuse or disparagement of that person's race, religion, creed, sex, sexual preference, age, national origin or disability." The CGC voted unanimously to establish a commis sion on Women and Minority Faculty recruitment. The CGC bill describes the functions qf the commission to be: to examine current Affirmative Action efforts and provide the CGC with ah evaluation of these efforts; to formulate and submit to the CGC proposals for actions Til2 COST O? nut AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY. MOVIE POSTERS Over 2000 different original movie posters will be on sale at Univer sity Mall on Tues., March 12 thru Sat., March 17: The selection of titles will include current favori- the Lost Arc, Breathless, E.T., Fast Times at Ridgemont High, The Outsiders, etc. Rock buttons, antique advertising (Coca-Cola, neon beer signs, etc.) and other nostalgia will also be for sale. See Robert Gerwig at booth located near Nowell's. P free -j J Bring along this ad for a j J free Blues Bros., Cat People, J J Cheech & Chong, or Blade J I Runner button. No purchase I I necessary, while supply I lasts! I L"r r uazn trait uiiiuuuL onnu i Real Pit Bar B Q 15-501 Bypass at Elliott Road 933-9248 ine In Take Out zxrmiTtt mixer univassnv The Apartment People Avoid the lottery blues. Apply now! All apartments on the bus line to U.N.C. Call today for full informa tion. 967-2231 or 967-2234. ??8 1 am. rim. m . T 2Z Pcnf? year and placing strict conditions on aid in the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1. ;i Last Thursday, the Republican controlled Appropriations Committee re jected 15-14 the administration's request for $21 million in continued aid to rebels fighting Nicaragua's leftist government. The $93 million emergency appropriation for El Salvador was put off at that time until this week. It was clear that sentiment on the com mittee had changed by Wednesday when the panel rejected, 16-13, a motion by Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, D-Hawaii, to defer the Salvadoran issue still further and hold hearings on it. . A change in adrninistration tactics arid compromises placing conditions on ap proval of the funds apparently were responsible for the turnaround. Last week, the administration did not consult, in advance with the Senate In telligence Committee about its request for funds for the CIA-backed rebels. Members of the panel were miffed. . This week, administration officials did meet with the panel and its members voted 14-0 Tuesday to approve the funds. It allowed only $7 million to be spent im mediately, however, reserving the .rest in a fund requiring committee approval later. The Appropriations Committee accepted this compromise. : Last week; the adrninistration asked for the money for El Salvador with no condi tions. From page 1 that could be taken by students in assisting Affirmative Action programs; to hold public hearings and meetings to receive input from all interested parties, including students and administrators, and to increase student awareness of the issue. The CGC voted to support the National Armband Day Against Apartheid and U.S. Racism in com memoration of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on the date of the anniversary of his assassination. "The CGC will help plan the rally and appoint one member of the council to be in on all planning sessions. In other action, the CGC approved Melinda Snow as Executive Secretary and Keith Johnson as Student Body Attorney General. Tf TUC Support the March of Dimes BiRTH DEFECTS FOUNDATION Eegistcr to Win WEEKEND ACCOMMODATIONS in MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. at the luxurious SAND DUNES HOTEL Drawing at midnight Friday the 16th! You must be present to win. and Nation The Associated Press ; Gary Hart told Michigan voters Wednesday that trade protectionism would be "economic surrender" while Walter F. Mondale accused Hart of ad vocating "dangerous defeatism" in foreign policy as the fight for the Democratic presidential nomination shifted from the South to the industrial Midwest.' Michigan and Illinois are major bat tlegrounds in the next six days in what now looks like a long war for the nomination after Hart won three primaries and Mondale two in "Super Tuesday" primaries. The counting was slow in four states that held caucuses Tuesday, but Hart was ahead in tallies in Washington and Nevada. He and Mondale were neck-and-neck in Oklahoma, Mondale was the leading candidate in Hawaii, but an uncommitted slate of delegates took a majority of the vote. The Tuesday results left Mondale with 332 national convention delegates to 193 for Hart. LAUSANNE, Switzerland Lebanon's rival Christian and Moslem leaders debated conflicting peace pro posals on Wednesday and suspended their formal reconciliation talks for 24 hours to hold private . meetings in search of a compromise Negotiations on the future shape of Lebanon's government moved into private rooms and suites after the delegates argued over sharply con trasting working papers presented by pro-government Christian leaders and the Syrian-backed opposition. Wadih Hadded, President Amin Gemayel's national security adviser, told reporters that a plenary session was scheduled for today after private meetings to "reconcile views." While the leaders met in peaceful Lausanne, their followers in Beirut generally appeared to be observing a cease-fire on Wednesday. WASHINGTON An attempt to schedule a quick Senate vote on a con stitutional school prayer amendment fell apart Wednesday when Sen. Alan Dixon, D-W., protested he was being denied the right to vote on anything but the version President Reagan wants. Senate Majority Leader Howard H. Baker Jr., R-Tenn., tried to get unanimous consent from all senators to schedule a vote today on a constitu tional amendment strongly favored by Enjoy your Favorite Green Beverage, corned beef and Irish Potatoes plus our regular menu fare lOt for each green beer or Harp's beer will be donated to benefit the Muscular Dystrophy Association chADelhill .,,, , .ii lining in n ii ummmm m i Iiimiiw i il r i mmmn 9mm.j . ft p jumWwW"- . wt' ' 'mm9mmmm gonna l I I cl Reagan which would pc;.v.!l vocal organized prayer in the nation's classroom. Baker's request would have permit ,ted no amendments other than one added by the Judiciary Committee, which would bar government officials from composing any school prayer. Reagan supports that addition. WASHINGTON White House counselor Edwin Meese III should withdraw as nominee for attorney general because of his failure to list a $15,000 interest-free loan on his finan cial disclosure forms, Meese's main Senate foe said Wednesday. "In view of this new evidence, I think it is appropriate that Mr. Meese withdraw, .his name from consideration," Sen. Howard Metzen baum, D-Ohio, told reporters. Metzenbaum made his statement a day after Meese, President Reagan's top policy adviser, disclosed to the Senate Judiciary Committee that he had failed to list the loan on his 1981 financial disclosure forms. NEW YORK Calvert DeForest, who plays the offbeat Larry "Bud" Melman on a late-night television talk show, has lost his city job because he was making too much money in the limelight. . DeForest' s salary as a semi-regular on NBC-TVs "Late Night with David Letterman" exceeded the $6,075 ceiling on outside income placed on workers at a city drug rehabilitation center, said Suzanne Trazoff of the Human Re sources Adrninistration. The jobs are set aside for low-income elderly people, she said Monday, so DeForest was dismissed Feb. 22. An NBC spokesman, Peter Spivey, said DeForest was paid a "very hand some" salary for his appearances, which began two years ago when Let terman staffers spotted him in a New York University student film called "King of Disease." RALEIGH Gov. Jim Hunt on Wednesday halted the use of lie detec tor tests to determine whether a state employee in the Division of Motor Vehicles stole the nonpublic driving record of gubernatorial candidate D.M. "Lauch" Faircloth. Hunt also blasted television adver tisements by Republican Sen. Jesse Helms which question why a New York committee is raising money for Hunt's U.S. Senate campaign. Faircloth's record was taken from a computer terminal in the medical review unit of the division's driver's license section and mailed to people across the state last month, apparently by a supporter of one of Faircloth's op ponents. 1 tJtKut $9.95 $1.00 of which will be donated to Muscular Dystrophy Association Shamrocks Against Dystrophy ll VX Shirts r JL Tyy Sale
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 15, 1984, edition 1
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