2The Daily Tar HeelThursday, February 25, 1988 m mh calls for expaesioe off Reagan's domestic policy By STACI COX Staff Writer Vice President George Bush has had an up and down campaign, 'suffering a disappointing third-place finish in the Iowa caucuses but rebounding with a strong victory in the New Hampshire primaries, v As he takes his revitalized cam- paign South for the Super Tuesday primaries March 8, he is calling for domestic policy expansions from the Reagan era as well as national defense increases. ; Bush supports the lntermediatc range Nuclear Force treaty, but sees it only as a beginning to improved Soviet-U.S. relations. He feels the Ireaty is a measure of Soviet sincerity, Svhich will serve as a plan for further 5iegotiations. Bush supports aid to the contras In Nicaragua and would make such Jundine government policy. He has tailed Nicaraguan President Daniel lOrtega a Marxist-Leninist who threatens democracy in surrounding Countries. C : "The vice president has some Treservations about the Arias plan," Osaid Bret Wacker, deputy director of ;lxesearch for Bush. "The plan tells supporters of freedom fighters they ; "can't send arms (to the contras), but Imvestiffsitioe off RDU crash coeliiraes By HELLE NIELSEN S$ff Writer l Although several planes of the type tEat crashed outside Raleigh Durham Airport Friday were involved in accidents recently, nothing indicates a common problem with the planes, investigators said Wednesday. I Fairchild Metro II and 111 planes crashed in Durango, Colo., in Jan uary and at Dulles International Airport in Washington, D.C., in December, in addition to the Metro III that crashed at RDU, officials with the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) said. - l"We are always very sensitive to similarities in accidents," said Alan Pollock of the NTSB. "But there is ? "vay to speculate whether these idents) were related. We have no Dllock said further investigations of the accidents will determine if the NTSB will recommend action against the planes. v,Two crew members and 10 pas Robertson apologizes to Bush campaign By TAMMY BLACKARD taff Writer ; Presidential candidate and former .jelevangelist Pat Robertson said ;Vednesday that Vice President ; George Bush's campaign had not produced any religiously biased : television commercials and ads, as he I had said Tuesday, and that he was ". Vnisquoted in his statement suggesting tthat political motivations lay behind ftfie timing of sexual misconduct allegations against televangelist im- '" "" ' " ' CENTRAL TRANSPORT, ONE OF THE LEADING MOTOR CARRIERS IN THE TRANSPORTATION INDUSTRY, WILL BE ON CAMPUS MARCH 29 TO INTERVIEW GRADUATING SENIORS IN MARKETING & GENERAL BUSINESS PROGRAMS. IF YOU: o ENJOY A FAST PACED WORK ENVIRONMENT THAT DEMANDS DECISION MAKING SKILLS & CUSTOMER RELATIONS SKILLS. o HAVE LIGHT DATA INPUT CAPABILITY o ARE FLEXIBLE IN RESPECT TO WORK SCHEDULE WE OFFER: CAREER OPPORTUNITIES IN : OPERATIONS & SALES : o ADVANCEMENT BASED ON HARD : WORK EXCELLENT SALARY AND BENEFITS CONTACT THE BUSINESS i PLACEMENT OFFICE TO SIGN UP FOR AN INTERVIEW. LAST DAY TO SIGN UO IS MARCH 1. E.O.E. Campaign '88 the Soviets can (send arms to the Nicaraguan government)." Bush would work for a continual dialogue with the Soviets to maintain peaceful competition. He does not support complete disarmament but is willing to meet any Soviet proposal for a weapons decrease. "We cannot assume that world domination is not part of their (the Soviets') political theory," Wacker said. Bush believes that a "Star Wars" defense system is an excellent deter rent of war and supports funding for the Strategic Defense Initiative research to decide the possibility of deployment. He maintains that the Soviets have been working on their own space defense program since the early 1970s and are far ahead of U.S. technology in this field. Bush's domestic policy closely resembles Reaganomics, which he wants to expand and improve. Bush supports the Prospective Payment System, which slowed the rise of hospital costs payed by Medicare, and would expand the program to outpatient services. He sengers were killed when Flight 3378 crashed shortly after takeoff from RDU en route to Richmond, Va., Friday night. The plane took off normally and was several hundred feet up before it descended, hitting the Brier Creek Lake and proceeding into the trees on the shore, said Barry Strauch, NTSB head investigator. The plane was destroyed by the impact and a small fire, which ignited when the wings tore from the plane and caused a fuel spill, he said. The investigators have not deter mined what caused the plane to crash, he said. "We have not found anything that would suggest why the plane went down," Strauch said. "The mainte nance history appears to be good." Steven Meeham, a spokesman for AVAir, which owns the commuter system, said the plane had no unusual mechanical problems. Meeham said the fact that Fair child Metro planes make up about Jimmy Swaggart. Robertson had originally accused Bush's campaign of engaging in "dirty tricks." hinting that he or some of his other political opponents may have had a hand in the release of the Swaggart story two weeks before Super Tuesday. But Bush and others involved in his campaign denied the charges, saying they had nothing to do with the release of the Swaggart story. Bush said Wednesday that Robertson would not cut Social Security but would promote optional enrollment in private medical plans other than Medicare, which could remove some of the financial burden Medicare faces. Bush has a five-point agenda for economic reforms: reducing the capital gains rate, implementing a presidential line-item veto over congressional economic policy, multi-year budgeting for defense, creating more free trade amendments like the U.S.-Canada agreement and improved education to prepare workers. . Bush would like educators to require higher academic standards and would have them emphasize English, science, math and history. He advocates annual or semiannual testing for students, beginning in elementary school and continuing through high school. "Education is the high point of the vice president's message," Wacker said. "Lack of education is the beginning of all the major problems of our society. Bush would increase funding to Head Start and Chapter One pro- overlooked by federal loan and grams to assist the poor and attack scholarship programs but can't corn illiteracy early in a child's life. pete with the prices the rich can pay Bush supports competency tests of for education," Wacker said. 50 percent of commuter planes nationwide could explain why the Metros were involved in several accidents. "If a commuter plane has a prob lem there is a pretty good chance it is going to be this one, based on that statistic," Meeham said. On-site investigations of the acci- dent are expected to end by Friday, Strauch said. Remnants of the plane From Associated Press reports WASHINGTON President Reagan said Wednesday night "we've never let up and we never will" in efforts to win freedom for American hostages in Lebanon and said if Republican presidential contender Pat Robertson knew anything of their whereabouts, it was "very strange" that "he kept it to himself." At a nationally televised news conference, Reagan also said he had should "provide proof by sundown or offer an apology," said Barbara Pardue, Bush's campaign press secretary. Robertson said Wednesday in a press conference that he never intended to accuse the vice president of being involved and he had no knowledge of current or future religiously bigoted television com mercials produced by the Bush campaign. There was never a link between Bush and the Swaggart story, said Scott Hatch, Robertson's national press secretary. The General Council Headquarters of the Assemblies of God in Spring field, Mo., and the Louisiana District Council of the Assemblies of God have asked Swaggart to refrain from making any public comments, said Barbara Klein, a spokesperson for Jimmy Swaggart Ministries in Baton Rouge, La. Officials still do not know who released the information about Swaggart, she said. Reag MILTON'S WINTER FROGSTRANGLER! 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For families who cannot afford bonds, Bush would increase federal funding of work-study and low-interest loan programs. This savings plan would mainly help the middle class, which has been will be sent to the NTSB in Washing ton, D.C., for further investigations. The training and the physical con dition of the crew will also be examined further, he said. "We are not doing anything unusu al," Strauch said. RDU Public Affairs Manager Teresa Damiano said it could take up to a year before any conclusions on the cause are reached. an bashes Robertson in TV speech "every confidence" in the personal integrity of embattled Attorney General Edwin Meese. But he said he could r ot comment on reports of the investigation of Meese's role in a proposed Middle East oil pipeline. In a session with reporters that blended international affairs with the domestic presidential campaign swirl ing around him, the president con firmed anew that Vice President George Bush expressed reservations iroer Officials change preliminary site selection date By LAURA FRANCIS Staff Writer The preliminary selection for the $4.4 billion superconducting super collider site has been moved from July to November, Department of Energy (DOE) officials said Wednesday. Jeff Sherwood, press officer of the DOE, said . the department would publish in August a draft Environmental Impact Statement that the Envionmental Protection Agency will have 45 days to review. The DOE will then have two months to sponsor debates on the super collider at the sites being considered. The superconducting super col lider is a proposed 53-mile, 175-foot-underground tunnel 10 feet in Labor Are Tj . At Unreal $29.90 Entire Stock Rugby And Fleece Shirts, Reg. $45, At Give-A-Way Of $14.90 Lots Of Other Great Buys To Make This Frogst angler A Must For Saving Lots On Wanted Clothes! South African government squelches opposition groups From Associated Press reports JOHANNESBURG, South Africa The government on Wednesday banned political activ ity by 18 opposition groups, including the nation's largest anti apartheid organization and its biggest union federation, in the most sweeping crackdown in a decade. Anti-apartheid activists had anticipated a crackdown this year, suggesting that P.W. Botha's National Party government would seek to blunt criticism from the extreme right in advance of par- liamentary by-elections next week. The Congress of South African Trade Unions and several of the affected organizations said they would consider legal action to challenge the regulations. Violence continues in Gaza Strip JERUSALEM West Bank villagers burned the home of a fellow Arab accused of helping the Israelis and lynched him Wednes- day after he fired on the crowd, killing a 4-year-old boy and wounding 13 people, security sources said. Israel radio called the event "a serious escalation" of 1 1 weeks of violence in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. Secretary of State George Shultz will arrive in Jerusalem on Thursday to discuss a new U.S. plan for ending the unrest and reviving negotiations for Middle East peace. Supreme Court reverses award WASHINGTON The Supreme Court expanded signif icantly the legal protections for parody and satire Wednesday as it overturned a $200,000 award evangelist Jerry Falwell had won against Hustler magazine and publisher Larry Flynt. during the Iran-contra affair. But he reufsed to say precisely what Bush had told him. Reagan said he didn't want to become involved in the GOP nom- ination fight, but he showed plenty of zest when it came to bashing the Democrats vying to succeed him. To hear them, he said, "we're in an economic slump" suffering from a variety of ills. "At the moment none of those things are true," he said. collider diameter which would be used to study the effects of high-speed collisions of protons and smaller matter. North Carolina and six other states, Tennessee, Texas, Illinois, Michigan, Arizona and Colorado, are under consideration for the location. Susan Dakin, scientific writer for the super collider at Gov. Jim Martin's office, said that the delay in site selection doesn't change the state's deadlines. By March 15, state government writers from each of the seven states must submit environmental information in areas such as land and water resources and socioeconomics. Martin's office hired Edward Forgotson, a Washington, D.C., lawyer, to lobby for the N.C. site For the Record In Friday's story, "UNC faculty criticize system's drug policy," Craig Calhoun, associate professor of sociology and author of the faculty resolution, was misquoted. Calhoun said there is no strikingly new drug 9 FiM-2 AM fit any Chapel UillCarrboro location AJO C0SP0AI NEESSM1VH u with UPS Dorrntovm- next to Johnny T-Shirt 967-5403 Glcmvood- next to the new Harris-Teeter 963-4233 Eastgate Shopping Center- 967-7027 Csrrboro-Willow Creek near Food Lion 929 2200 News in Brief The justices ruled unanimously that "emotional distress" lawsuits filed by public figures targeted by such spoofs should be as difficult to win as libel suits. "Outrageousness in the area of political and social discourse has an inherent subjectiveness about it which would allow a jury to impose liability on the basis of the jurors' tastes or views," Chief Justice William Rehnquist said, adding that such results are con stitutionally impermissible. Panel urges funds for AIDS WASHINGTON The chair man of a White House commis sion recommended Wednesday that federal and local governments spend an additional $20 billion over the next decade to fight AIDS among drug abusers. Retired Navy Adm. James Watkins, head of the AIDS corn- mission appointed oy President Reagan last summer, acknowl edged that the call for such massive spending on drug addicts might prove controversial. But he said 200 hours of tes timony from 350 witnesses has left the panel convinced that the deadly disease is spreading most rapidly among the nation's esti mated 1.3 million intravenous drug abusers and their sexual partners. Watkins noted that some health leaders are estimating 10,000 to 20,000 infants could be infected with the AIDS virus three years from now as a result of sexual unions involving drug addicts who can easily spread the disease among themselves by sharing contaminated needles. It was Reagan's first news confer- ence in four months, and he passed ' up several invitations to criticize Israeli action against Arab protesters IJ on the occupied West Bank and Gaza $ Strip. On other matters, Reagan said- Secretary of State George Shultz had X given him an "encouraging" report on his just-completed trip to the Soviet.'' Union. X urodatie since last spring, Dakin said. "This large governmental project will be a tremendous advantage for North Carolina," Dakin said. "It will allow this area to plan for orderly controlled growth. We feel that we are one of the best of the seven choices for this project." The DOE will issue its final statement of choice in January. "The postponement may be an attempt of the DOE to keep up political support for the whole project," Dakin said. But Sherwood said the delay is an attempt to get more varied opinion from the public and envir onmental agencies. "The delay from July to January has nothing to do with politics," Sherwood said. policy at UNC-CH to motivate the adoption of a new drug policy, and '. the policy should not be standardized for all 16 UNC-system campuses, The Daily Tar Heel regrets the error. THIS WEggrs SPECIAL fjj any sub or large salad. Limit J one per customer. Not good any other offers. Good only after 9 p.m. x ii.iiiiHlilii)int mi liKiifriiiwOiUM'.W"!!