Monday, January 26, 1987/The Battalion/Page 7 i( > ire World and Nation Report: Reagan’s intent as hostages’ release iov;-. ih, •Hliitl 1 me I enrcv h! nil:,, tenj cist ■ ?01 k| i )ui i ■ WASHINGTON (AP) — A new draft report being prepared by the Senate Intelligence Committee on tjie Iran arms-Contra affair says one of President Reagan’s chief motiva tions in approving the arms transfer was the release of U.S. hostages in Beirut, congressional sources said Sunday. I Ever since the U.S. dealings with Ii an became public in November, Reagan has maintained that his chief motivation was the re-establishment ■f ties with the Moslem government of Iran because of the oil-rich na- ■on’s strategic location on the Per- ||}an Gulf. I But “it is clear that getting the hostages back was one of the main Concerns, and was a higher priority than the White House has been will ing to admit publicly,” a source said, speaking on condition of anonymity. The draft is being prepared by the staff of the Democratic-con- trolled committee and will be circu lated to panel members this week, said another source, also speaking on condition of anonymity. The panel, when it was under the control of Republicans last month, investigated the controversy, and a draft report prepared at that time contained little detail about the pres ident’s role, the sources said. The new draft has more informa tion about Reagan’s role, partic ularly his concern for the hostages, they said. Attorney General Edwin Meese III told the panel last month that Lt. Col. Oliver North, the Fired National Security aide who oversaw both the Iran and Contra programs, said Reagan was preoccupied with the re lease of the hostages, the sources said. North has cited his Fifth Amend ment rights against self-incrimina tion and has refused to testify or publicly talk about the controversy. Meese is the only high govern ment official to talk to North about North’s role in the deals. Those con versations, including North’s com ments about Reagan’s worries about the hostages, came several days be fore the link between the two pro grams was publicly announced by Meese on Nov. 25. inisters complain march isrepresented community ectK n H ils (J i Ltvj wop | ir xb er r as it even' ■ GUMMING, Ga. (AP) —Aday af ter this all-white community was Jammed with up to 25,000 march ers demanding racial tolerance, min isters complained Sunday that Gum ming had been characterized Unfairly. 1 But a counterdemonstrator, one of 56 people arrested in the South’s largest civil rights demonstration since the 1960s, said he would work to oust the officials who welcomed the marchers. I “The politicians and system Stooges are through here,” said Frank Shirley, Forsyth County leader of the White Patriot Party, a militaristic white supremacist group. H “We’re going to put our own can didates in the next election,” he was quoted as saying in Sunday’s editions of the Forsyth County News. I The marchers had come in re sponse to a Jan. 17 attack by a jeer ing crowd of 400 Ku Klux Klansmen and their supporters who pelted about 75 marchers with bottles, forks and mud. I Televised images of that attack Spurred Saturday’s huge turnout that left behind some would-be marchers in Atlanta when more than 160 charter buses were filled. I “It looked like Forsyth County is the worst place in the world to live, and is filled with the most hateful E eople,” the Rev. Gary Armes told is congregation at the First Chris tian Church. “I wanted to shake the TV and say, ‘That’s not so!’ ” Gumming, a community of 2,800 people that is becoming a suburb of Atlanta, was quiet Sunday. The last of the marchers had left town at about 9 p.m. Saturday after walking 1V* miles to the courthouse square in the name of racial tolerance. They were shielded by 1,700 Na tional Guard troops called out by Gov. Joe Frank Harris and by 600 “It looked like Forsyth County is the worst place in the world to live . . . I wanted to shake the TV and say, ‘That’s not so!’ ” — The Rev. Gary Armes state and county law enforcement officers who arrested 56 people, ap parently none of them marchers. Media reports put the bill for the Guard protection at hundreds of thousands of dollars, but a spokes man for Harris, Barbara Morgan, refused to say how much calling out the Guard had cost. Again, the marchers were jeered by about 1,000 people, some wear ing Klan robes, who chanted racist slogans and waved Confederate and U.S. flags. Saturday’s marchers were greeted by local officials. “I just want to wel come you,” Gumming Mayor Henry Ford Gravitt said. “I just want to wel come you. This generation today can’t help what happened 75 years ago. Let’s start now and move for ward.” Forsyth County’s blacks were driven out in 1912 after a white woman was raped and later died. Three blacks were accused of the crime; one was killed by a mob and two were convicted and hanged. County authorities today say they still know of no black residents that live in the county. Civil rights veterans among Satur day’s marchers praised the Forsyth County Chamber of Commerce, which placed newspaper ads wel coming the march, and the over whelming number of blacks and whites who turned out. Observers estimated that about one-third of the marchers were white. Marcher Ermias Aregay of At lanta, gesturing toward angry coun terdemonstrators, said, “I just won der what happens tomorrow and the day after tomorrow. I will march for the purpose, but I think we’re not solving the problem. We have to talk to those people.” Southern Christian Leadership Conference President Joseph Low ery said Forsyth County has nothing to fear from Saturday’s visitors. “We did not come to Forsyth County to scare you to death, but to challenge you to a new life,” he said. “You don’t have to hate.” I pledge | t on» e fori Congratulations to the members of the Sigma Chi fraternity, with the initiation of the 1986 fall pledg class and specifically: Wade W. Beckman/ you have displayed an insight and a perspicacity that attests to both your wisdom and your character. They will prove to be the pride of Texas A & M University. You are to be applauded/ ^XWe. /^d\/erfh;r<£. Cc*iVnue^>! ana your |[fexas/ sot MSC SCONA 32 THE UNITED NATIONS DELEGATE APPLICATIONS MSC 216 DEADLINE JANUARY-27, 5 PM INTERVIEWS JANARY 28 & 29 FOR INFORMATION 845-7625 Texas A&M Flying Club COME LEARN TO FLY WITH OS Interested people are urged to attend our meeting January 27 at the Airport Clubhouse For information Call Bret Orr 696-2434 7:30 p.lTl. Summer Engineers M.E., Chem E„ I.E., and M.B.A.’s with technical undergraduate degrees: What does an engineer do in MANUFACTURING MANAGEMENT? FIND OUT! PROCTOR & GAMBLE will be hosting an open house