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News E Two-term i (AP) ? The South final step necessary i consecutive terms. On a unanimous voi proval to a House-pa! amendment allowing g The ratification bill i Dick Riley, who has vantage of it and run fc The proposed amenc /\55emDiy ana me voce Laborers tl PEKING (AP) ? 1 factories are taking threatening to form in< Editors of the offici firmed in an interview some cities, including the banner of unions control. The editors claimed and isolated and that only as a strategy agai Any talk of free 1 troublesome to the Cc brooks no challenge to of union independence Poland have touched < ficial press. FBI official WASHINGTON (AP criminal investigate Reagan on the need I forcement personnel ai have handguns. In an interview, CI J! A. _ 1 ?. _ A director in cnarge 01 i division, and his depi organized crime and phasized they were sp FBI. But both men, who agents, spoke vehemei its director, William H on gun control. 0 u ?. ,, ? v r> *\ 'Reagan to NEW YORK (AP) a new national poll sa; likely to coritrolTfiflati< The poll of 754 adults inoatA #1 /?0 cuiicui. ioouc,.9A?f no that Reagan has been: the public of the need U It said 32 percent bl cause of inflation, and to control the problem. The poll said 53 j ministration shoufo-ho gain most of the budget the respondents said tt major tax cut and 15 what policy the admini The Gallup Organiz terviews for Nwsweek rvrtl 1' uiai urc pun . four percentage points Police tyy atlanta4<apT? a buried Tuesday, invest the boy's body rema before its discovery. The timing of the di factors in trying to de killer, according to im 17 young black childrei Officials say evident might have been dumj found last Friday. Tto might have been left 01 area Tuesday and Wed Safety Director Dick H The boy had been suffocation or strangul in July 1979. Others hai to death. Sea bird cl< MYRTLE BEACH < been cleaned by volun the sea birds were fouj with crease. And it's n< "The birds are still of the National Audu need volunteers, tow work." The work is being c Guard Armory, wher ii. _ i _ _ wasn me 100ns ana me "It takes two washe completely cleaned," i Once cleaned and dr observation. They are seafood distributor. Before being return* with numbered metal 1 The source of the oi who have washed up i has not been determine iniefs ? approval Carolina Senate Tuesday took the to allo^|<^||veraor to serve two ice vote, the Senate gave final apssed bill ratifying a constitutional gubernatorial succession. does not need the signature of Gov. nnt saiH u/hpthor ho \uill foto qW - w?.v. ?? vvaa^/a IIV ?* *** bUUV l^VI >r re-election next year. Iment was approved by the General rs lastyear ireaten union Militant workers in some Chinese a lesson from the Poles and dependent labor unions. al Workers Daily newspaper con> this week that militant workers in Shanghai and Wuhan, have raised independent of Communist Party such groups of workers were small the threat of free v ions was used nst the factory managers. irade unions in China is deeply mmunist Party leadership, which > its supreme authority. Rumblings i and scattered efforts to emulate off a vigorous campaign in the ofs for gun control ) ? Two of the FBI's top-ranking *s, disagreeing with President For gun control, say only law ennd the military should be allowed to harles P. Monroe, assistant FBI he bureau's criminal investigative ity, Dana E. Caro, who oversees white-collar investigations, emeaking for themselves and not the began their FBI careers as street itly on the subject. The bureau and . Webster, have not taken a position control inflation' - More than half the respondents to V they believe President Beagan is >n. : , reported in Newsweek magazine's percent of the respondents agreed somewhat successful in convincing ) trim the federal budget. tamed federal spending as the top 57 percent said Reagdn was likely - |K;ivuiv UCUCVC UIC UU* id off on a major tax ct$ ifif fails to t cuts it is seeking. But 32 percent of le president should go ahead with a percent said they were uncertain stration should undertake. ation conducted the telephone in; on Feb. 11 and 12. The magazine s margin of error is plus or minus i-TV. ?4kt3P?*- { . .iw to see habits is 11-year-old Patrick Baltazar was igators tried to determine how long iaed in a DeKalb County ravine a. piping and the death are critical (grmine the path and habits of the pgstigators probing the slayings of i-gpid the disappearance of another, indicated young Baltazar's body ?e& a number of days before it was & body was wet, perhaps a sign it it in the open before rain doused the nesday, said DeKalb County Public and. - i asphyxiated, the eighth victim of lation since the bizarre cases began ve been shot, stabbed or bludgeoned sailing 'not over' (AP) ? More than 500 birds have teers who responded to a call after fyd washing up on the beach covered ot over. coming in, says i^arry mompson bon Society. "But we desperately els and bedding to continue our lone in the Myrtle Beach National e the volunteers have gathered to n return them to the sea. s and a good rinse to get tlie birds idded Bolton's wife, Barbara, led, the birds are placed in a pen for fed pans of fish supplied by a local ed to the wild, the birds are tagged >ands for later identification. 1 that soaked the hundreds o* loons at Myrtle Beach in the last 10 days 3d. Rita Jc (AP) ? Abscam fans wl April Playboy featuring an and pictures of Rita estranged wife of former Jenrette, D-S.C., can do pleasure. About the same time edition of the magazine newsstands early next m< Jenrette's life story will coi Bantam Books paperback, 10 an eaitor tor Bantam. . Meanwhile, a disc j Jenrette's hometown of No Beach is entertaining lis radio station' WNMB witl recordings of "Jenrette' tunes. ' Among Billy Smith's j "Ode to Rita," "Making' L Capitol Steps" and "It Giv Low-JJK)wn Blues Ever ? Found Money Stashed in N all references to recent dev in the Jenrette story. The Texas blonde, who Jenrette's womanizing anc habits in an article in the W Post magazine last Decemb authored another article for She also reportedly app< nude in photographs that a Small dancers -Dancers fron. the Helen Tilton- Kearney School of Dance provided half-time entertainment at the Lady Gamecocks win ' against Auburn Monday(Photo by Chip Lowell) ? ^ < * vK. l? < ? "? ' 'I I'" ~ ' ... I 1 ,j m I .1 Takes str< Pnrti A MANILA, Philippine CAP) ? Pope Johij Paul II in a face-to-face meetinj with President Ferdinand E Marcos Tuesday, told th Philippine president tha human rights violation cannot be justified "even ii exceptional situations." In what Roman Catholi cnurcn officials said was m pope's strongest statemen to date on human rights, th Today at use Tennis - Coastal Carolina i season at 2 p.m. i Stadium. USC Basketball Florida State at Coliseum. RH Film - "Doub - * n - ? Hiuviciuiicwi), at at 7 and 9:30 p.m. foi * Theatre - "The Longstreet Theatre. Weather Wednesday: Partly the 40s. High in the 6 Thursday: Continue in the 40s. High in th> snrettc w ho buy the the article. i article by Gene Stone, wl Jenrette, Jenrette's autobiogr Hep. John says the paperback uble their written by her. Mrs. Jenrette deni a ~ ?? m uic /\pni ct quitKy hits the vantage of the pub with, Mrs. by the Playboy artic ne out as a "I've been workin according book," she said. 4Ti years...this is not ji jockey in doing on the spur of 1 rth Myrtle In South Carolina neiiers uii riayuoy uruue cui i his own tense. News dealers ' country say they are being b willing to plunk d songs are chance to read the ove on the pictures of the < es Me the wife. Jince You "People in our chi i.. 01 ?> u.. .... 1 J . iy oiiucs, uy uui nuuae auu pi( elopments said one Columbia who asked not to be i described News distribute i drinking markets and other Washington mally wouldn't tou er, nas co- put in requests lor ir Playboy. Since Mrs. Jenre jars semi- appeared in the^Wai ceompany Jenrettes' story, wh *& /SWmmMmmz rvn/r/ini L/MJjCOL Oiailli * speal s pontiff declared that basic rights oannot h#? rMirtail*?H g even for "legitimate concern I. for the security of a nation, e as demanded by the common t good." s Marcos has lifted martial n law but is still under attack for continued detention of c political prisoners and other e human rights violations, it John Paul, on the first day e of a six-day visit to the ; USC Carolina men against n first match of the n Sam Daniels Tennis - Carolina men against 8 p.m. in Carolina le Indemnity," plus Fox *0 p.m. for 75 cents and j r ti T" Twins," at 8 p.m. in j cloudy and mild. Low in Os. d cloudy and mild. Low 2 60s. rites lif referrii ho edited Mrs. has tak aphy for Bantam, Like is "Rita's story" x has be aboute _ _ At. _ A At- - I _ _ V A les mai me dook is jl^isi led to take ad- nounce licity surrounded bus ban le. stuffed g for years on this locked re kept a diary for townho ist something I'm fhtf? mnm#?nt " Hnrii i, interest in the convict ntinues to be in- prelimi 5 across the state Last teseiged by people the rev lown $2.50 tor a made ] article and ogle Capitol ex-congressman's Congre Thes< ireh want to come one m? :k ud their codv " wrote, j bookstore owner "We dentified. little bi >rs say super- Mayl outlets that nor- But I ch Playboy have likeyoi le magazine. You t tte's first article Yout shington Post, the But F ich observers are in the a 1 yet I rc r*r* 1 I ? I Philippines, spoke at a reception at Malacanang presidential palace. Marcos discarded his prepared welcome remarks and in an emotional extemporaneous speech apologized for what he called "petty and small" church-state differences. "Forgive us, holy father," Marcos said. "Now that you are here we resolve we shall wipe out all conflicts and set up...a society that is harmonious to attain th#? nnHc of God." In the Philippines, Asia's only predominantly Roman Catholic country, the church has been a leading critic of human rights violations under the Marcos' govern meni. "Social organization exists only for the service of man and for the protection of his dignity, and...it cannot claim t H cot*\f?b t hn nAmnrtnri rtn/vrl v V, UV> TV Vliv VUllllliUH gWlJ when human rights are not safeguarded," the pope told Marcos, who has ruled the Philippines for 16 years, the last eight under martial law which was lifted only last month. In an apparent reference to the ending of martial law and the announced plan to hold presidential elections in May, the Pope said: "Recent initiatives that are worthy of praise augur well for the future since they maifest confidence in the estoxy ig to as the "Jenrette Saga," en on an almost unreal quality, a television soap opera, there en a new development just very wteek. month, Mrs. Jenrette and she would divorce her d, then discovered a - shoe with $25,000 in cash. She him out of their Washington use. lg a court hearing on his ion, Jenrette was served with inary divorce papers. week, Jenrette came out with elation that he and his wife had love on the steps of the U.S. during a late-night session of ss. b develoments have inspired in 10 sing, uisc jockey smith and sings, in "Ode to Rita": thought you was acting just a t strange, >e even a little bit shady. lita, we still tried to treat you i was a lady, .hink you're so pretty hink you got so much class tita you ain't nothing but a pain ft v ^1^ riijhts capacity of the people to assume their rightful share of responsibility in building a society that strives for peace and justice and protects all human rights." John Paul said the Philippines? the only Roman Catholic nation in Asia, has a special obligation "to bear witness to the values of its christian culture before the world. "If ic m 1 f llArWk iv io mjr iivpc uini jji dyci that all the Filipino people and their leaders will never cease to honor their commitment to a developement that is fully human." From the palace, the Pope went to the resident of thp Vatican's diplomatic representative, where he is staying. There a young woman relative of a political prisoner surged through the crowd and reached over the heads of security officers to had the pontiff a letter. It informed John Paul that 28 nolitir*n 1 Hofainonc? ~ g u\.?wiiivvo mc ?ii d hunger strike to protest what they claimed was their "unjust continued detention despite the lifting of martial law." A religious group working to free political prisoners claimed last Saturday that the numl>er of Political prisoners still in jail has reached 1.014 with at lf?a?t two dozen on hunger strikes since martial law was lifted.