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t Wirereportsi World ' \f Speaker discusses release The speaker of Iran's Parliament says the United States must do more to get the 52 American hostaees in Iran released, but Washington hopes for a different response from the Iranian government. "In principle, the U.S. government has accepted all the conditions," Hashemi Rafsanjani told a news conference in Algiers Wednesday. "But it claims it will take time to implement its acceptance of the conditioning. "We have aprwH to rplp.i?o tho imciaooc - - ?O" V1,V ?IVOV14^VO VU VV/||UIVH/II that the U.S. government implements the conditions. Acceptance in principle is not enough. "When the conditions are accepted, the hostages can be freed. It all depends on the American government showing its sincerity and cooperation. S.C . mission in Taiwan TAIPEI, Taiwan ? Members of a South Carolina trade and investment mission met Thursday at a luncheon reception with several Taiwanese manufacturers. An official said the 15-member group, led by South Carolina Gov. Richard W. Riley, was in Taipei to promote the Taiwan market for the state's agricultural products, including soybeans. Riley arrived in Taipei Wednesday with his wife and a party of six state officials, one state senator and five businessmen for a seven-day visit. During the stay here, Riley and his mission are scheduled to meet with Nationalist Chinese government officials, including Foreign Minister Chu Fu-Sung, director Shao Hseuh-Kun of the Board of Foreign Trade and Taiwan Gov. Lin Yang-Kang. The group will also visit the state-owned steel and shipbuilding companies, an international port in the central Taiwan city of Taichung, the scenic Sun-Moon Lake and a handcraft center. They plan to leave Taiwan on Tuesday. Pilot blamed for crash SEOUL, South Korea ? South Korean investigators blamed the pilot Thursday for the crash landing of a Korean Air Line's jet that killed 14 people, three of them Americans. Yoon Joo-sun, head of the joint government and airline inquiry team, said no evidence of malfunctioning in the plane's computer, engines or landing gear was found after lj it crash landed and burst into flames at Seoul's Kimpo j, \ tPnAf f ?t nupuii Ticunuauciy. He said there was dense fog at the time of the crash, but , visibility was estimated at better than the 874-yard limit at which landing is prohibited. He also said the control tower communicated with pilot Yan Chan-mo 25 minutes before the landing and there was no report of any trouble with the plane. Authorities said six crew members, including the pilot, J and SPVPn nasspntfprc HioH in tho nfn-li Tim f. CJ-' v?vu tuv, \,i uoii. ilic lllll V U L1111 was identified as an airport security person killed by flying debris. Authorities said 15 people were injured. Canada's KKK activity up OTTAWA ? Solicitor-General Robert Kaplan says the Ku Klux Klan is stepping up its activity in Canada, and he is considering whether to place the white supremacist group under Royal Canadian Mounted Police surveillance. Kaplan said in an interview Wednesday the group could be watched by undercover officers if its activities justified it being designated a threat to national security. The Klan, with an office in Toronto and plans for another in Vancouver, has been handing out literature at high schools, including cards reading: "Racial purity is Canada's security." The National Association of Canadians of Origins in |j /" 1: * ? > - 1 .iikini unu me- v^uuciuiaii Jewish congress nave expressed I concern about the acti vites. I Did You Ever want Editor? Applications are available in Room 313 Russell s for: Editor of Gameco< Editor of Garnet and l Editor of the Portf < and Sfatinn mananor ia/i W vx ?-w> ivigvi VI WW ^ Appointments run from June 1, 1901 1982. contact Student Media Office at 777information. l\[??tior? T Muskie pleased by attitude I WASHINGTON ? Secretary of State Edmund S. Muskie \] has said Iran is taking a positive approach to U.S. I < proposals for release of tho 59 Amprimn hncfaooc I j ?? . ....W. <v>vt?a iv/uvwfjvo UIIU * "that attitude is welcomed." c "I think the way in which the Iranians have handled our proposals is positive," Muskie told reporters after a 5 breakfast meeting with visiting West German Foreign c Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher. j But he said he has not received a response from Iran to the U.S. proposals transmitted last week through Algerian s intermediaries. Depending on Iran's reply, Muskie said t he was ready to send a top-level negotiating team back to Algiers. a Reports from Tehran quoted Prime Minister j Mohammad Ali Raiai as savinp tho rarfor aHminicimUnn J J 0 VV,. WV4UIIIUOU MlIV/1 ? |] had agreed in principle to the four conditions set by the I c Majlis on Nov. 2 for freeing the Americans. a UNC's smoke-in aftermath CHAPEL HILL, N.C. ? University of North Carolina officials have been on the defensive this week for their [; action in allowing an organized "smoke-in" featuring free marijuana on the Chapel Hill campus. The UNC offices, the governor's office and the State Rlirpnil nf Invoclirfalinn oil : 1 ' ? ^ v f.ivuu^utiuu on 11JJUI icu II lisy lid VC I t't'ClVCU numerous complaints from parents and the public in I general about the pot demonstration. s About 200 people, including some UNC students, par- ' ticipated in the smoke-in on the campus Sunday. Chapel 1 Hill police said they had an agreement with UNC officials not to come on campus unless they were needed. No s arrests were made during the demonstration, although marijuana was smoked openly. s John L. Temple, a vice chancellor for business and ] finance, said top UNC officials reviewed the situation *= Monday. He declined, however, to say whether the university would adopt a position on such demonstrations. " I ick-tack-toe tor chickens COVINGTON, Va. ? You'd think a chicken that can ^ play tick-tack-toe would be worth more than chicken feed. ] So when three of Mac and Dreama Cole's intelligent fowl were killed by wild dogs, they asked Alleghany . County for reimbursement of $50 per chicken. Tick-tack-toe-playing chickens? Fifty dollars each? No dice, but good try anyway, said a skeptical but amused County Board of Supervisors here Tuesday night. Mrs. uole contended he chickens had a good record e against humans. She said she had one tick-tack-toe player ? left - Henrietta. "I will let Henrietta challenge you any time," Mrs. Cole said. J The Coles trained Henrietta and her three ill-fated friends to play an electronic tick-tack-toe board set up inside their cages, she said. In return for pecking out the F X's and O's, the birds received treats. j Slit skirt causes big flap IY1T. CLEMENS, Mich. ? The girls in Clintondale High < SphfMll'c hnmonnminrt .. i . IJ 1 1_ " ? " * 1 ..u...vvuuiiii5 cuuu aiiuuiu iuuk aii-American" 1 and "wholesome" and slit skirts don't help that image, < according to school officials. I So when Margaret Barile, a 16-year-old senior, showed up for the homecoming parade wearing a skirt with an ? eight-inch slit in the front, a big flap developed. r At first, faculty advisor Ilisha Rothberger ordered Miss ; Barile to stitch or tape the slit, change clothes or be 1 thrown off the court. ? Miss Barile refused, but an assistant principal c overruled Ms. Rothberger, allowing Miss Barile to ride in a car in the parade - but with a blanket over her exposed ? knees. P "It was not the image we wanted portrayed to the s community," Ms. Rothberger said. r ??????I > M f l To Be An HlWffigMilfli JACKSON BRC Mark DOOBIE BROTHE ^ BONNIE RAIH )llO 1 JAMES BKOI.IN ___ MAHGOT KII)I)KI< through May si, J THE - | AMITWILIiE^rw 3888 for further HORROR j-jj MnHMMMMnHBHnMnMMMMMn VaMNMBaMHWBMBHUMMai Statp Family on trial for killing SPAHTANBUKG ? A magistrate Wednesday bound )ver to a grand jury a man and his wife, both charged ilong with their 12-year-old son in the September slaying )f an eight-year-old girl. Magistrate Roland Jones ordered Frances Ann Priro _ - - !8, to go before a grand jury on a murder charge. Jones lirected her husband Grady Lee Price, 42, to face a grand ury on a charge of obstruction of justice. The couple.and their son are suspects in the trangulation death of 8-year-old Tracie Ann Whiteside, he Price's neice. The girl's body was found stuffed inside a plastic bag in in abandoned house next door to the Price's home in Una, ust south of Spartanburg. The Price's son, whose name is being withheld, is in ounty jail awaiting a hearing on whether he will be tried is an adult. That hearing is expected sometime this week. Boy charged in poisoning LANCASTER ? A 13-vear-old bov has nlpnHoH aniltv tr? ? -j i ? o" - *v v" charges he tried to poison his 56-year-old grandmother vith insecticide. Police Chief Frank Harris said the youth, who was not dentified, said he sprayed insecticide into his grandnother's milk "because she spanked him." Judge Thomas Barrineau ordered the boy sent to the itate Department of Youth Services in Columbia for >sychological evaluation. Afterwards, he will be senenced in Lancaster. !????:? ?: J - 1 ncti i is t>rtiu me granomotner grew suspicious Friday ifter drinking some of the buttermilk. "She'd noticed that her mouth tasted funny," Harris aid. The chief said the boy admitted putting the poison in his ;randmother's milk one other time. "He said that he wante^. .3 kill her and than he said that le didn't" Harris said. Teacher robbed at school CHARLESTON ? As her pupils watched, a 22-year-old itudent teacher was robbod nf $4 hv n r?ictoi-\iHoiHir.rt - ~ - T . ?r j v? TTIVlUIIip, 1I1C11I >n the school playground, police said Wednesday. Lisa Karen LaTorre and her class of six youngsters with earning disabilities were not hurt during the midday ncident at Albemarle Elementary School. Police said Miss LaTorre reported the man walked onto he playground, squatted in front of her and said, "Please lo not do or say anything. I don't want you or your itudents to cet hurt " Thon nninlina u nic?nl at ^ - ? u pnovvi U V I1VI , I1C IUIU ler to get her wallet from her pocketbook. She gave him the money and he said, "That's All?" >oIice reported. The man searched her pocketbook but ound no more cash. Before leaving, the man told her, "I ;now you understand. I'm going to turn and walk away," >olice said. .ice report cancels school RUBY ? All 300 students at Ruby Elementary School in Chesterfield County are spending the week at home >ecause of an outbreak of lice among many of the kinlergarten through eighth graders. But Chesterfield Superintendent of Education John lones said, "It seems now that we have reacted to high ibsenteeism instead of the actual number of students who nay have had lice." He explained, "About two weeks ago we had reports of ice. We contacted health officials and parents and began i screening process. Our zeal to knock the problem out juickly may have prompted the absenteeism. 4 m - ? 4 * * y " concerned parents nave kept their children home." He idded, "It appears that closing the school until next Monday may have been an overreaction because the same tudents will come back and the situation could be epeated." THE WNOK FM-AM MIDNIGHT MOVIES! FRI. & SAT. AT 12:00. ALL SEATS $3.00 , jk 4 '"No Nukes' ?\? W knocks your ? w socks off." Ikli IJi^C (TO) )WNE CROSBY STILLS AND NASH :RS JOHN HALL GRAHAM NASH GIL SCOTT-HERON CARLY SIMON I . classic comedy Grandma never told monty python s you this fa,rV tale! and now for Cinderella something ja'Jy. ath smash week! completely different