The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 13, 1979, Image 8

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THE BATTALION
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1979
CJ/fast pmntI
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DIAL
846-2318
Fed Mart Shopping Center College Station
Owned and Operated by John Edd Tucker *68
•he s
Emergency state ends
after Klan violence
AGGIE MUMS
FOR THE
ARKANSAS
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NOVEMBER 17th
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BY AGS”
- FREE CAMPUS DELIVERY
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FLORAL CONCESSIONS
ORDER AT MSC
MON.-FRI.
9 A.M. TO 4 P.M.
United Press International
GREENSBORO, N.C. — A state
of emergency that gave police wide-
ranging arrest powers during the
weekend to prevent renewed vio
lence between communists and
members of the Ku Klux Klan and
American Nazis was lifted Monday,
city officials said.
“It appears a state of normalcy
now exists in Greensboro,” City
Manager Tom Osborne said.
Osborne said most of the people who
participated in a Sunday funeral
march for five slain communists had
left the city.
Police said only five of 34 people
arrested — all but one on weapons
charges — posted $500 bond and
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were released from jail. Most of the
arrests occurred away from the fun
eral march. Police used a blanket
warrant issued by Superior Court
Judge Douglas Albright to stop two
separate caravans of Communist
Workers Party sympathizers coming
into the city. Searches of vehicles led
to at least 17 arrests, the seizure of a
number of weapons including shot
guns and handguns, and the confis
cation of two vehicles.
About 350 communists and sup
porters demanded vengeance for the
five slain CWP members who were
gunned down Nov. 3 in a shootout
with Klansmen and Nazis. An honor
guard of three men and seven
women carrying unloaded rifles led
the funeral procession on a 2Vz-mile
procession Sunday through cold,
pelty rain.
All but one of those arrested were
charged with violating the state of
emergency declaration that banned
possession of weapons outside the
home. The other person was
arrested for displaying an obscene
sign.
It was not known how many were
march sympathizers or opponents.
Fearing a repeat of the violence
that broke out Nov. 3 between the
Communist Workers Party and
Klansmen at a “Death to the Klan”
rally, authorities placed some 350
National Guardsmen, 250 highway
patrolmen and 175 police officers
along the march route to Maplewood
Cemetery. Two National Guard
helicopters circled overhead.
“The whole world is watching;
avenge the CWP Five,” the mar
chers chanted. “We re going to turn
the country upside down.”
There was no violence — only
chants, slogans and hundreds of pro
test signs.
“They will live on forever, ” CWP
central committee chairman Philip
Thompson told the group after the
funeral procession. “Every fallen
comrade must and will be replaced. ”
Authorities are holding 14 men,
most described as Klansmen or
Nazis, in the slayings of the five at
Nov. 3 “Death to the Klan” rally.
Thompson called the shootings
“the single largest assassination of
communists in the history of this
country” and vowed the CWP would
sponsor a march from North Caroli
na to Washington “to expose the
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Dining: 11 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. — 4:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.M.
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I BLENDS OF GIH-GIviNb
Teas]
i
i
MONDAY EVENING
SPECIAL
Salisbury Steak
with
Mushroom Gravy
Whipped Potatoes
Your Choice of
One Vegetable
Roll or Corn Bread and Butter
Coffee or Tea
TUESDAY EVENING
SPECIAL
Mexican Fiesta
Dinner
Two Cheese and
Onion Enchiladas
w/chili
Mexican Rice
Patio Style Pinto Beans
Tostadas
Coffee or Tea
One Corn Bread and Butter
WEDNESDAY
EVENING SPECIAL
Chicken Fried Steak
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hypocrisy of human rights in the
U.S.”
“We must carry on and take up the
cause,” he said.
With CWP leaders predicting
5,000 people would attend the fun
eral procession, city officials
obtained a court order giving police
the authority to search any vehicle in
the city for weapons.
Police had been searching for guns
because the CWP, claiming author
ities failed to give participants in the
Nov. 3 rally proper protection, had
said many marchers would be armed
in self-defense. The march was de
layed for an hour during a dispute
over whether the weapons carried
hy the CWP honor guard were to be
merely unloaded or inoperable.
Part of the delay also was caused
by CWP accusations that police were
using the emergency declaration to
keep out people who wanted to take
part in the march. But police said the
barricades set up around the march
site were only to keep vehicles — not
people — from entering.
Irish prime minister?
courts U.S. industry Phil
| the
United Press International ,
HOUSTON — Prime Minister John Lynch of Ireland Mondjj
courted American industry with a promise of a set tax rate to the yet
2000 and better profits than the companies can earn at home.
Lynch used the Houston stop on his seven-city U.S. tourt;
announce the commitment of nine more U.S. corporations tospeni
$26 million and create 1,600 jobs in Ireland through new manufactm
ing or expansion projects.
American capital investment will be worth almost $500 million tfe
year, Lynch said.
“Our main attraction to U. S. investors is our access to the Europe®
community of 260 million people,” Lynch said. The return frot
American investment in Ireland is the highest of any area including^
U.S. itself.”
Lynch said the profit rate for U.S. industry in Ireland wasrunnini
29.9 percent and said manufacturing taxes have been set at 10 perctr
for the next 21 years. », \y as hing
“By locating in Ireland, American firms have duty and tarin-fret ^ qU arterl
access to the Common Market, ” Lynch said, explaining that almost3! 1 ff ere d a sp
percent of all foreign investment in Ireland is from U.S. companies u
Rising oil prices this year have trimmed Ireland s economic growl
rate from 7 percent to 4 percent. Lynch said, and pushed inflation bad
up to about 13 percent after it fell to 7.5 percent in 1978.
Lynch said he was hopeful deepwater drilling technology
result in significant offshore oil production in the next few years aaj
enable Ireland to attain energy self-sufficiency rather than importk
80 percent of its energy needs as it now does.
Industrial investments announced Monday included construction,
or expansion of factories for the manufacture of electronic components
magnetic tape, toys and crafts, medical supplies, cosmetics, pliai
maceuticals and glassware by companies based in the United States
United Press
INC, Texa;
:1c John Wa
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and Text
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1 the Philad
upset of th(
ladelphia’s
;ame Dalla
Eagles
8-3, with
In the NFC E
Woman angered
after being lost
.rst half, h
cl Carmichi
down pass i
-eturned to
ig pass to <
period,
hough the
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s’ Wilbert 1
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^ it was the
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United Press International
JACKSON, Wyo. — Dvamv
Tholen could have been lost forever
in the mountains of Wyoming. And
that makes her mad.
The 23-year-old Midvale, Utah,
woman spent five days and nights
wandering in the snow in the Wind
River Mountains — a chocolate bar
her only source of food.
Suffering from exhaustion and her
feet blue with blisters, the hiker was
about a date?
w/cream Gravy
j PA auntfnbfe a* paefcoged.
^ 3609 Place E. 29tn - Bryan I
Whipped Potatoes and
Choice of one other
Vegetable
Roll or Corn Bread and Butter
Coffee or Tea
Jupfnamha
Anthropological Society
Presents
“Ancient Maya Production and
Commerce at Co!ha, Belize”
by Dr. Harry Shafer
Eddie Dominguez
Joe Arciniega '74
66
Room 301 Bolton Hall
7:30 Wednesday
Nov. 14th
THURSDAY EVENING SPECIAL
Italian Candle Light Spaghetti Dinner
SERVED WITH SPICED MEAT BALLS AND SAUCE
Parmesan Cheese - Tossed Green Salad
Choice of Salad Dressing - Hot Garlic Bread
Tea or Coffee
m
FRIDAY EVENING
SPECIAL
breaded fish
FILET w/TARTAR
SAUCE
Cole Slaw
Hush Puppies
Choice of one
vegetable
Roll or Corn Bread & Butter
Tea or Coffee
SATURDAY
NOON and EVENING
SPECIAL
Yankee Pot Roast
(Texas Style)
Tossed Salad
Mashed
Potato w/
gravy
Roll or Corn Bread & Butter
Tea or Coffee
(“Quality First”)
SUNDAY SPECIAL
NOON and EVENING
ROAST TURKEY DINNER
Served with
Cranberry Sauce
Cornbread Dressing
Roll or Corn Bread - Butter -
Coffee or Tea
Giblet Gravy
And your choice of any
One vegetable
It you want the real
thing, not frozen or
canned ... We call It
'Mexican Food
Supreme.”
Dallas location:
3071 Northwest Hwy
352-8570
Formals
airlifted Wednesday to a hospiti|
Jackson after hcvwy, tesewi
team of climbers. She m
charged during the weekend,
Tholen said her first reactio:
discovering she was lost wasaii
“I could have bitten nails,
told a reporter before leaving
hospital.
She recounted her ordeal,#!
began when she lost her way#i
returning from a hunting cani[
Brooks Lake Lodge near Tog#'
Pass.
Leaving the camp, she
what she thought was a trail oven
Continental Divide and back to
lodge. The weather was bad-
clouds, wind, snow and cold,
trail ended, hut when she tr«|
backtrack found her footprints
NYXY-A YiN New. WYNN 'SWSN.
She survived, she said, becai
her warm clothing: insulated
alls, a red down parka, three pi
wool socks and hiking boots
On Tuesday, at the bottom oil
canyon, she heard a helicopter
was near exhaustion. She was
ware the chopper crew had seen
on its first pass up the creek.
'yaway tht
hold it
Now at
Northgate!
The crew dropped her foods
survival equipment, but it •
almost lost in the fall. She
little food.
Early Wednesday a team of®
climbed down the gorge walls
Tholen, put her inside two sleep!
bags and carried her on a stretcher!
the top of a nearby ridge, where'!
was airlifted to the Jackson hospii
Couple falls
72 feet durn
WHAT IS A j
PARALEGAL CAREER? jirerfcimg p/tfl
MSC TOWN HALL
Presents:
paralegal career is one of the most exciting new careers for
college graduates.
A paralegal is a lawyer’s assistant who is able to do many
tasks traditionally done by attorneys. Not a clerical or a secre
tarial role, the paralegal is a new legal specialty with excellent
job opportunities in law firms, corporate legal departments
and banks.
Three months of intensive training in courses taught by law
professors and lawyers can give you the skills to interview
witnesses, conduct legal research, prepare pleadings, draft
transaction documents and prepare cases for trial all under
the supervision of an attorney.
The Basic Legal Assistant Course begins January 28, 1980.
In addition to the three-month daytime program, the same
course is offered as an eight-month evening program. A
representative will be at the Career Planning and Placement
Center on Thursday, November 15, 1979.
Sign up now for an interview!
For a catalogue and further information, call or write:
The Southwestern Paralegal Institute
5512 Chaucer Drive
Houston, Texas 77005
(713) 528-3803
APPROVED BY THE AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION
BS Genera
BA/BS Any
i
United Press Internationa! ,
WEST HAVEN, Conn.-Abn , Specia| rec
and groom fell 72 feet from an apt ' Philippines
ment terrace Saturday where tk 1 BA/BS Eco
were sitting for a wedding picM • BA/BS Plar
police said.
Kenneth Burke, 39, and his W
Donna Kriehn, 30, were listed
stable condition Monday at a ^
Haven hospital.
Police said Burke sat on
smooth-surfaced terrace wall at
bride’s sixth-story apartment so®
couple could have a final weflt
picture taken with city lights i»
background.
“They were going out to tal
picture,” a police spokesmansai 1
day. “They were out at the led!
understand he was on the ledge
she saw him falter and when
went to get him, they both t
bled. ”
The groom’s brother had l 0 ’ 1
the couple on the terrace totak
photograph and witnessed the
dent through his camera viewin' 1
The couple, married earlierin
day, landed on a grassy area
narrowly missed a cement patio^
several brick walls, authorities
I
FLORICULTURE - ORNAMENTAL HORTICULTURE CLUB
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16 — 8:00 PM
G. ROLLIE WHITE COLISEUM
TICKETS: $ 4 50 , $ 5 25 $C^75
Tickets & Information
MSC Box Office 845-2916
PLANT SALE
S
SATURDAY, NOV. 17
AT THE
5ec Urity gi
'us and s
PLANT
SALE
town holll
COMMONS
T~
QUAD
LURpOCK ST.
tf-l
HELD
<
—:—-— —-Z
FLORICULTURE -
GREENHOUSE
10 A.M. TO 2 P.M