2The Daily Tar Heel Friday, November 4, 1988
World and ' Nation
Dykakos
From Associated Pri reports .
Michael Dukakis asserted Thurs
day that voters by the millions are
giving his underdog campaign "a very
strong second look" in the waning
days of the race for the White House.
George Bush said Democrats were
"grossly unfair" to say his advertising
is tinged with racism.
"You're looking at a man who was
out front for civil rights and I will
be again," the vice president said in
a network television interview. He
defended running mate Dan Quayle
on the same score and said any
political wounds would heal quickly
after the election.
Dukakis combined an attack on
the Reagan-Bush administration's
record on drugs with ritual declara
tions that the political tide was
turning in his favor. "His adminis
tration has cut deals with foreign drug
runners. I'm going to cut aid" to their
nations, said the Democratic
nominee.
Most of the national attention was
on the White House campaign, but
not all.
Broadcast
viewers could hear each candidate's
own opinion, not so the candidates
could talk about each other, Gibson
said.
"When we sat down with the
candidates we said we wanted to talk
about the issues, not about the other
guy," he said.
The program included interviews
with educational experts such as John
Silber, Boston University president,
and Mary Futrell, National Educa
tion Association president.
The program also included inter
views with two UNC students, Dawn
Siler, a junior from Graham, and
Edgerton Coble, a senior from Hope,
N.J.
. Coble said appearing on national
TV was exciting, but he wished he
could have had more time to speak.
"It definitely was excitng, but I felt
that it was too rushed," he said.
About 15 UNC students inter
viewed with ABC, and two students
were chosen to be on the program,
Coble said.
"I told a friend of mine who was
involved in this (the program) that
I was interested in being interviewed,
then ABC called me and they asked
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Democrats were expressing confi
dence they would control both houses
of the new Congress, although
Republicans said they had a chance
of picking up a seat or two in the
Senate. A dozen gubernatorial con
tests dotted ballots being printed for
next Tuesday's Election Day.
The public opinion polls in the
White House campaign continued to
provide encouragement for Bush.
ABC said its survey of North
Carolina once Dukakis' strongest
hope for a Southern success gave
the vice president an 11-point edge.
Dukakis held a four-point margin in
a New York survey.
Newspapers were choosing up sides
on their editorial pages and in one
case in the comics as well.
Bob Bryan, owner and publisher
of the Cullman Times and Athens
News Courier in Alabama, replaced
the comic strip "Cathy" with an
advertisement for Bush. Bryan had
objected to the comic strip as being
pro-Dukakis, and he said he "just
took the panel out that would have
been Cathy and right where Cathy
me a slew of questions," he said.
Some of the questions involved
school prayer and education as an
issue in the presidential race.
The questions asked on the pro
gram were much more direct than the
ones in the interview, Coble said.
"His (Gibson's) questions were
extremely pointed," he said. "The
questions over the phone were
broad."
Coble said he was pleased with his
answers.
"I felt I could have stated things
a little more clearly, but overall I
thought my answers were accurate,"
he said.
Students and faculty watching the
broadcast on Polk Place said they
were excited and proud of the
program.
"I came here (to Polk Place)
because I thought it was a big deal
that they're here at Chapel Hill," said
Denise Kohler, a freshman from
Hendersonville. "I think it's exciting
that these people came here to do the
show."
"I think it shows respect for the
institution, and the national recogni
tion of the institution," said Dennis
styling,
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THURSDAY
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Phone:881-9995
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yodlerdbg victory
has been, put in big type, 'Vote for
Bush.' "
Bush and Dukakis both were on
morning television programs while
embarking on another dawn-to-dusk
dash through key battleground states.
In a live 30-minute interview on
NBC's "Today" show and later at
campaign appearances in Illinois and
elsewhere, Bush said any political
wounds would heal in the weeks after
the election. "I think the country will
come together," he said. The vice
president also renewed his no-new-taxes
pledge.
Bush heatedly denied that his
attacks on Dukakis over the Massa
chusetts prison furlough program had
racist overtones for citing the case of
Willie Horton Jr., who is black.
Horton, a convicted murderer, bru
talized a Maryland couple after
escaping, but Bush said his commer
cial "didn't have any reference to his
race and no picture on it."
He said Dukakis countered with
an ad showing a picture of a Hispanic
prisoner who had escaped from a
federal prison program and commit
Appleyard, an economics professor.
"I think it's great for the school,"
said Mark Ricker, a junior from
Burlington. "I was watching on TV
earlier and they're getting some nice
pictures of the campus. There's some
kind of pride in having them want
to come here."
One student said he came by just
to see how a national news program
works.
"I came to see how everything was
run," said Dana Taylor, a sophomore
from Hookerton. "IVe never seen a
national show, but IVe seen a local
one. I wanted to see what the
difference was."
Ted Bonus, UNC director of public
information, said UNC's selection
added prestige to the University.
"We understand that the choice
was between (the University of
California at) Berkeley, (Harvard
University in) Cambridge (Mass.),
and here," Bonus said. "It's nice that
when ABC thinks about education,
the names that come to their mind
are Berkeley, Cambridge, and Chapel
Hill."
Chancellor Paul Hardin said he
was pleased with the show but
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ted crimes.
"You're looking at a man who is
one of compassion, of concern, and
yes, I was out front for civil rights
and I will be again," Bush said.
"And I don't have one ounce of
bigotry in my body. Nor does my
running mate," he said. Bush added
he wanted to "leave the tired baggage
of bigotry behind us."
Dukakis began his 55th birthday
in the interview chair at "CBS This
Morning," saying that despite the
public polls, the race was beginning
to break his way. He said voters are
unhappy with the Republican cam
paign, and added, "That's one of the
reasons that they're taking a very
strong second look at me and Mr.
Bush, and seeing some very important
differences."
In an appearance in Fairless Hills,
Pa., Dukakis continued his emphasis
on the war on drugs. He outlined a
proposal for a $400 million federal
contribution for a federal, state and
local alliance to assure drug-free
schools across the country by the next
decade.
from page 1
disappointed that audio difficulties
disrupted much of the information
about the University.
"Of course I was delighted that it
was beamed from our campus,"
Hardin said. "I was disappointed in
some of the technological
breakdowns."
"I was very happy that it was a
beautiful day on a beautiful campus,"
he said.
Hardin said his own appearance on
a taped portion of the show would
not cause him to consider a career
in television.
"I like where I am," he said.
Child Care
to everyone, Bridgers said.
"This is no longer a woman's issue,"
she said. "It's a family issue. It's a
man and woman issue."
Victory Village charges $325 a
month for day care services, and it
is often too expensive for parents who
are also students, Segal said.
"Three hundred dollars a month is
not affordable when rent is $300 a
month, too," he said.
Parents desperate for child care
often are forced to place their children
in inadequate facilities, Segal said.
. To begin the meeting, Segal read
a letter he had received from a second
year law student.The student related
his experience as a law student and
father of a one-year-old child.
In the letter, the law student said
his wife had to work nights because
he was unable to afford day care while
he was attending school during the
day.
"For me this means that I have full
care of our child from 3 o'clock until
12:30 at night," the letter read. "I am
Duko Union
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Israeli leader
of Palestinian
From Associated Press reports
JERUSALEM Prime Min
ister Yitzhak Shamir refused
demands by possible coalition
partners Thursday to annex the
occupied lands and expel Pales
tinians from them, but he supports
more Jewish settlements, an aide
said.
The United States considers
such settlements in the West Bank
and Gaza Strip an obstacle to
peace between Israel and its Arab
neighbors.
Violence continued in the occu
pied territories, where a rebellion
that began Dec. 8, 1987, has cost
the lives of 10 Israelis and more
than 300 Palestinians. Israeli
soldiers blew up four houses
Thursday and nine Palestinians
were reported wounded by army
gunfire.
Sources in the Labor Party said
Foreign Minister Shimon Peres
might be dumped as leader after
the center-left party's poor show
ing in Tuesday's general election.
Soviets attack Afghan rebels
WASHINGTON The
Soviets have fired SS-1 Scud
missiles on Afghan rebels in an
escalation of the war in Afghan
istan, the State Department said
Thursday.
The attack, involving six to
eight missiles, was carried out in
the Nangaraq region near the
border with Pakistan, spokesman
Charles Redman said. He gave no
estimate of the damage or of
casualties.
The spokesman said U.S. diplo
mats in Moscow had registered
unable to get much class preparation
done during this time ... I urge the
University to stop dragging their feet
on this issue that is so important to
all of us."
The expansion of Victory Village
could be funded by alumni, Segal
said. He suggested that students
volunteer to phone alumni and ask
them to donate the money.
"If the University has enough
money to renovate Kenan Stadium,
they can get enough money to
improve children's lives by expanding
the day care center," Segal said.
The SAU plans to submit six
demands concerning the need for
inexpensive, quality child care to
Chancellor Paul Hardin and the
Board of Trustees Friday. The
demands are:
a after 35 years of proven high
quality child care service, Victory
Village should be officially recognized
as a University organization;
B the University should provide
affordable, accessable high quality
child care to all students, staff,
teachers and employees who are part
of the University community;
D the University should say yes or
no to a 1986 child care proposal that
calls for the expansion of services and
facilities at Victory Village;
D the University should provide an
explicit plan and timetable to end
UNC's child care "crisis";
in two weeks, Hardin, Betty
Boling and the Board of Trustees
should meet with members of the
University community to announce
Speech
tance of the mirror, to tell me about
that guy and the changes he has to
make," he read.
Parks gave a slide presentation of
some of his photography, accompan
ied by a piano concerto he wrote. The
slides expressed beauty, surrealism
and oppression of people in the
world.
"His pictures inspired me to move,"
said Susan Wallace, a sophomore
journalism major from Maiden. "He
For the
In Thursday's article, "Planning for
new BCC discussed at forum," the
size of the Black Cultural Center
being built by N.C. State University
was incorrect. The actual size of the
center will be 13,000 square feet.
Also, the number of black students
f i J i ...J m i i ijnj 4 lal kaj m M t- ''-, ImI M i n mmm m-m "-l
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the student community
rejects annex
settlements
News in Brief
their concern at the Soviet foreign
ministry and Deputy Secretary of
State John Whitehead complained
Wednesday to Soviet Ambassador
Yuri Dubinin.
The arrival of new Soviet mis
siles in Kabul had raised U.S.
concern about Pakistan's security
and whether there would be a
delay in the second stage of the
Red Army's withdrawal from
Afghanistan.
Gulf peace talks discussed
GENEVA Experts from Iran
and Iraq met for the first time
Thursday to discuss technical
details of the U.N.-mediated Gulf
peace talks, a development U.N.
Secretary-General Javier Perez de
Cuellar called "a good sign."
The meeting included experts
from the two countries and the
United Nations, said U.N. spokes
woman Therese Gastaut. She
refused to say what type of experts.
Absent were Iranian Foreign
Minister Ali Akbar Velayati, his
Iraqi counterpart Tariq Aziz, and
Perez de Cuellar, who has been
mediating.
The talks, which entered their
third round Monday, aim to bring
peace to the region where a fragile
cease-fire in the eight-year war has
held since Aug. 20.
In announcing the meeting,
U.N. special representative Jan
Eliasson said the two sides
remained apart "but we have come
to a stage where we will have to
discuss technical details."
from page 1
the decisions they have reached; and
n when prospective students con
tact the University, the University
should not falsely advertise that UNC
provides child care when there are
long waiting lists at Victory Village. .
University officials have a history
of not responding to demands for
child care, he said. Nine years ago,
a committee stud vine child care:-
suggested that the University institute
a child care service, but University
officials failed to act on the sugges
tion, Segal said.
In 1981, a campus survey showed
there was a lack of effective child care
at UNC, Segat said. Again, University
officials did not respond, he said.
Despite tms nistory, egai saia ne
is very optimistic that the University
will act on SAU's demands.
"We want to work with the admin
istration in a very cooperative spirit,"
he said. "By the semester's end we're
expecting action. We want the plans
agreed upon and work on the facility
to begin by next semester."
Segal said a response in two weeks
would prevent any student protests.
"We would like to avoid protests"
he said. "We can avoid them if tKe
University responds in two weeks."
Victory Village employees plan to
have the children write invitations to
Hardin; Boling; and Donald Boulton,
vice chancellor and dean of student
affairs, Saturday requesting their
presence for lunch at Victory Village
on Nov. 18, Whitenack said. Segal
said he plans to discuss the demands -with
them at the lunch.
from page 1
expressed a black (person's) point of
view about things, a very profound
view. I felt pain, triumph and hope."
Whpn the slide nresentation was
over, Parks received a standing
ovation and took questions from the
floor.,
Parks said he is working on ;a
Martin Luther King ballet and a book
of poetry, as well as his fourth novel.
"Whatever work I leave behind,
may it be my sunset," Parks said.
Record
at Duke University was incorrect.
Duke has 400 black students.
The date of the next BCC student
forum should have been Nov. 9.
The Daily Tar Heel regrets the
errors.
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