The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, March 24, 1980, Page Page 2, Image 2
WORLD
KhomRini Hftnniinrpc II ?
TEHRAN, Iran ? The American hostages in Tehran
have ended their 20th week in captivity with prospects
for their release apparently as elusive as ever.
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini did not mention them pr
their captors in his Persian New Year speech
denouncing the superpowers and domestic
troublemakers.
The Iranian revolutionary leader assailed Marxists,
strikers, army troublemakers, the Soviet Union and
the United States ir? hi? crowh Prison uo
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a statement by President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr that
"order and security" must be restored in Iran.
Bani-Sadr repeated his denunciation of the Soviet
military intervention in Afghanistan.!
Gl's better watch mouths
NUREMBERG, West Germany ? Male American
GIs were warned Fridav that a foul month around
female soldiers may send them to jail and cost them
money.
"It's about time something got done," said Pfc.
Mary Sanchez after U.S. military courts gave two
males, in her company jail terms and fines for using
"indecent and insulting language" to her.
Pfc. Bryon Lindsey, 20, of Evansville, Ind., was
sentenced Thursday to 25 days at hard labor and fined
$298. His company commander in the 1st Armored
Division said he was guiltv of "verbal ranp "
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Pfc. Omester Collins, 20, of Mobile, Ala., was convicted
March 5 on the same charge plus a charge of
threatening Ms. Sanchez in an attempt to force her to
have sexual intercourse with him. He got 30 days and a
fine of $500.
Deaths caused by strike
MONTREAL ? Brigitte and Fanny starved to death.
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city aquarium, were victims of astrike by city employees.
Wfeeji their regular trainers took to the picket lines
on ^1^12, Brigitte and Fanny went on a hunger strike,
refusing to take food from the management personnel
who tried to feed them.
After 38 days of starvation they died Friday. Brigitte
succumbed on a stretcher following a blood test, while
:l$i$!^was found lying at the bottom of the pool. f 1
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[NOTION
Unemployment may rise
DURHAM, N.C. ? Secretary of Commerce Philip L.
Klutznick said Friday that President Carter's antiinflation
program will slow the economy and result in
the nation's unemployment rate rising to as high as 7.5
percent.
"You can't stop inflation without some slow-up,"
Klutznick said.
"Seven point five percent unemployment will not be
consternation. We've been there."
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At a news conference Friday afternoon, Klutznick
said anti-inflation measures are necessary to avert the
possibility of an economic collpase similar to the Great
Depression.
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150 arrested at concert
CINCINNATI ? More than 140 persons were
arrested before the main act even began . most of
them on drug charges , as Cincinnati police kept a
tight rein on the first rock concert since 11 fans died in
a stampede for seats last December.
Some 10.000 fans turned out to hpar th#? ormv1?
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Top at Riverfront Coliseum on Friday ? and when they
struck matches or flicked cigarette lighters, officials
trained spotlights on them as a reminder of tough new
concert rules.
The crowd was mostly orderly and the city's rules
governing rock concerts passed their first test, officials
said. When the evening was over, 150 persons
had been arrested, compared to 40 on Dec. 3, the night
11 young people were crushed as fans rushed to get the
best unreserved seats for a performance by the British
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causesjbleeding gums
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LOS ANGELES ? Regular marijuana smoking
seems to contribute to bleeding gums, a forerunner of
more serious dental problems, according to a study of
65 male college students.
Dr. Leonard Horowitz, a dentist from Rockford,
Mass., said he found "a 14 percent increase in bleeding I
gums among the marijuana smoking group (as |
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The bleeding occurred "when the gums were j;j
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Man offers to be hostage
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said Friday 23 persons, including himself, have
volunteered to offer themselves as replacements for
the Americans held hostage in Iran.
Russ Reardon, 62, said that the volunteers range in
age from 23 to 71 and come from throughout South
Carolina as well as North Carolina, Pennsylvania and
California.
Each volunteer, he said, has agreed to pay his own
fare from Atlanta to Tehran at a cost of $807.
Reardon, a former radio and television announcer
who, now operates a jewelry manufacturing business,
said the exchange would be to give the American
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Drill iristuctors charged
PARRIS ISLAND ? Two Marine drill instructors
from the 1st Recruit Training Battalion have been
charged with maltreating recruits and will be courtmartialed,
a spokesman said Friday.
Sgt. Thomas L. Athey, 22, of Charlotte, N.C., and Sgt.
Dean N. Seagers, 26, of New York City, are both
charged with treating recruits in an unauthorized
manner and with allegedly striking recruits.
Seagers is also charged with unlawfully touching
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civilian clothes and stealing clothes from two recruits.
Attorney will plead guilty
BARNWELL ? Allendale attorney Robert Warren
will go on trial April 3 for trespassing unless a
magistrate agrees to a plea bargaining arrangement
Warren has proposed.
Warren, who was scheduled to go on trial Thursday,
said he would plead guilty to charges of trespassing at
the Chem-Nuclear Services, Inc., plant if he can obtain
from the state attorney general's office certain
documents.
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.?uB.aUniv v. iwiauu uunes iuuk unaer aavisement a
prosecution motion to quash Warren's subpoena in
exchange for the documents.
Warren said he will plead guilty and go to jail if the
attorney general's office, which is prosecuting the
case, will turn over 100 documents concerning a recent
probe of Chem-Nuclear's activities.
Warren said the documents will prove the plant is
illegally burying high-level radioactive wastes.
MOwnAv 8
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