The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, October 11, 1982, Page 2, Image 2
-wire
Burger wars c
MIAMI (AP) - Burger Ki
federal court when a judge
campaign that claims McD(
20 percent smaller than Burg
But Friday's ruling was j
volving the nation's Big Tfr
Donald's will be back in cou
hearing seeking a permam
Burger King, its chief compe
campaign off the air.
And Wendy's Internationj
jumped into the fray with a
King for ads claiming that a
test'' showed Burger King's
those from McDonald's and V
Chief U.S. District Judge <
the ad campaign after heari
ads for almost two hours.
Studies predici
tfUULIJfcK, rolo. (AP) world
will get hotter in the
destructive changes in glob
turning a cold shoulder to the
Experts at the federal Na
Research say there is growi
scientists that the atmosphe
double over the next 40 to 100;
by an average of 5 degrees.
The phenomenon is known
hp^QIICO lil/o n iti-nnnli
wvvuuov, nrvv. a 51 CUIUI
heat inside the atmosphere.
19th century after worlds
spewing huge quantities of ca
of fossil fuels.
"It's a global problem ? th<
problem facing the 20tn am
Schware, a political scientist;
research center.
Scientists have speculate<
glaciers could raise ocean lev
coastal cities.
Indian village t
TYONEK, Alaska (AP)
village has only 230 resident
evict four of them ? because I
Tyonek officials have aske
departure of two white couplt
li iu<u i uie uarring wniie peo
hours without permission.
"We don't know why they
Slawson, one of the targets o
don't know how I feel yet ?
there are a lot of other white f;
The Native Village Counc
Reorganization Act of 1934, t
establish its own governmer
allowed to live here.
Village leaders have expre
threatens their culture, sayii
caused unspecified problems.
Cheaper doesn
YOUNGSlX)WN, Ohio (AP
are not worth the sacrifice, '
say.
Peter Vukovich, the buildir
soft rolls of toilei tissue in
coarser paper.
Some workers drafted a lett
you please reconsider the t
chosen to use in the ladies' res
"We can't write on the old t
the tissue they put in our restn
Vukovich said the old paper
Burger airlift g
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - /
burgers for U.S. Marines in
early Saturday in boxes carefi
"This will tu/nrM'e 1
John Knox, advertising cooi
restaurant chain in Columbus.
Some 3,000 burgers left Dc
4:20 a.m. bound for New Y<
Freight, the company that ag
New York and then superv
aboard a Trans-Mediterraneai
Hank Deneski, Emery sales
arrive in Beirut at about 5 a m
Steve Allen, operations mai
organized the huge burger ail
troops stationed in war-to
multinational peacekeeping f
meals while Americans were e
Allen contacted White Castl
burgers, and Emery, which ag
i
USC todcuj
RH film: "And Then Ther
9:30 p.m. FREE.
Last day to drop a cours
WF being recorded.
Red Cross Blood Drive: C
| uoiiseum Hoom JUZl) U, J
:ontinue in court
ng lawyers had it their way in
refused to halt an advertising
\nO M 'c POfTiilm* ?
/iK?tu o a vguiai iiauiuui gcid die
er King's.
ust round one in the battle iniree
burgermakers. No. 1 Mcrt
in November for a full-scale
ent injunction to make No. 2
titor, pull the new $20 million ad
il, No. 3 in the industry, has
$25 million suit against Burger
n "independent consumer taste
sandwiches were tastier than
Wendy's.
C. Clyde Atkins refused to halt
ng arguments and viewing the
I* rtlnhal uuarminr
L ijlUUUI VVUI llllllt
Although studies predict the
next century with potentially
al weather, governments are
problem, researchers say.
tional Center for Atmospheric
ing international consensus by
ire's carbon dioxide level will
/ears, raising the temperatures
Q c f ho 4 *rf '
uv> viiv 0iv.ciuiuuac CllCt'l, SU
ouse, carbon dioxide gas traps
It was first noticed in the late
'ide industrializaton began
irbon dioxide from the burning
i most complex and interesting
d 21st century," said Robert
affiliated with the atmospheric
i that increased melting of
els, with widespread effects on
o evict whites
- This isolated Indian fishing
s but its leaders are trying to
they are white.
d a fpdpral inHflo nrHor
? ? - ?- w. VV v/i tu^l U1U
is under a seldom-invoked, 1939
pie from staying more than 24
re pulling this," said Virginia
f the town council's lawsuit. "I
hurt mostly. It's pretty rotten;
amilies here."
il says that under the Indian
he community has the right to
it and determine whn u/ill
ssed fear that modern society
ig certain white citizens have
't mean better
) - Some money-saving moves
Youngstown City Hall workers
ig commissioner, had replaced
City Hall with less expensive
er to Vukovich, asking, "Would
ype of toilet tissue you have
trooms?
issue, but we actually typed on
oom."
would return.
oes to Marines
l giant air shipment of hamBeirut,
Lebanon, left Dayton
illy packed with dry ice.
ongest carry-out order," said
"dinator for the White Castle
lyton International Airport at
ork, according to Emery Air
reed to ship the sandwiches to
ise their shipment to Beirut
i Airways plane.
manager, said the burgers will
. EDT today.
lager for radio station WDJX,
"lift after hp.?rina that
?? -- ? * * VMVI1
rn Lebanon as part of a
orce were dining on gourmet
ating combat rations.
e, which agreed to donate the
reed to transport them.
e were None," 7 and
a nr i?n*Un..t
o ui ifiiiiuiamr vvilliuui
ollege of Journalism,
8 p.m.
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmammmarnmmmmmamammmm/mm i
HHBHIBWHMHHiMMHBHl
Tax cas$ gi
GREENVILLE (AP) - The nation's
highest court will hear arguments this
week on whether private schools that
racially discriminate should be
allowed tax exemptions.
But participants say the case has
implications ranging far beyond the
Greenville, S.C., campus of Bob Jones
University or the classrooms of the
Goldsboro Christian schools in North
Carolina.
They told the Greenville News that
the controversial case has a bearing
on the political structure in
Washington, the civil rights of
minorities, the separation of church
I and state and the right to religious
freedom.
The case stems from a dispute
between the two fundamentalist
schools and the Internal Revenue
Service.
Bob Jones University has a policy
banning interracial dating or
marriage, while Golds boro admits no
blacks.
* mm m m
utticials wari
about poor vei
ATLANTA (AP) - People who seal the
in their homes to save energy also ma;
carbon monoxide fumes inside, the
Disease Control warns.
"A person may add storm windows
essentially seal his house so he won'
W. Holt, environmental consultant for
sday.
"At the same time, if he does n't allow
potential for increased health problems,
The rising cost of fuel and igno
measures may combine to increase tl
monoxide poisonings in the future, Holt:
As fuel costs climb, more people may
stoves, thus increasing the likelihood
monoxide buildup if the unit is ventilate*
"We're trying to alert people to this be
he said.
About 10,000 Americans a year seek rr
least a day of normal activity because
intoxication, the CDC said in its Mor
U/o?) h/\l Dnrvrtff T /\n? ? ? ??? - ?
.. ntfWI l. UV/?f aUtllMXUHUIIllC
' majority of the illness.
Carbon monoxide, a byproduct of corr
odorless and tasteless, but it often occ
that have a sharp odor and may irrital
said.
Accidental exposure to carbon monox
people a year, and about 2,300 people a ;
suicide, the CDC said.
Long-term exposure to low levels ol
offices and schools may cause heada
sleepiness and can lead to nausea,
palpitations. High-level exposure can ca
and death.
In 1980, about 70 deaths were caused
associated with the use of unvented ga
CDC Sflifl Oth<?r cAnr??o ?- ?1
vwava OVUl V,CO l/I Ldl Ulill IIIUIJ
improperly ventilated school buses and <
New office ma
WASHINGTON (AP) - The State
Department has opened a new office
with a somewhat unusual mandate ?
to make life difficult for foreign
diplomats in Washington whose own
governments mistreat American
envoys.
The coal is to counter the hostilp
obstructionist bureaucracies that U.S.
diplomats, particularly those in
Soviet bloc countries, must confront
on everything from the provision of
housing to the fixing of leaky faucets
As of last week, the U.S.-based
diplomats from offending governments
have faced the prospect of
dealing with the Office of Foreign
Missions, whose instructions, in the
name of reciprocity, are to be just as
obstructionist as foreign governments
are.
0 *
State Department o//icials say the
intent is not to harass foreign envoys
as much as it is to induce the governments
thev recreant tn th#?
constraints imposed on Americans.
The tit-for-tat policy will be applied
against those countries where there is
ies to Supren
Along with a host of other issues,
several million dollars in unpaid taxes
are at stake for the schools.
Hie problems for BJU began in 1976
because of $21 in unemployment taxes
paid by the school. The IRS refused a
request for a refund, and when BJU
s>ueu, uie irw> iuea a counterclaim tor
$490,000 in unpaid taxes dating back to
1971.
The school won its case in federal
district court, but the decision was
overturned on appeal two years ago.
Since then, the Reagan administration
has switched sides,
claiming the IRS did not have
authority to revoke the school's taxexempt
status.
That position prompted the
Supreme Court to appoint a third
party to argue against the schools.
After an outcry from civil rights
groups, the administration sent bills
? ' - "
w uiai wouia give me IK?>
the power the administration says it
lacks.
; cracks and crevices
y be trapping deadly
national Center for : -
>,add insulation and B
t lose heat," Kenneth
the CDC, said Thurventilation,there
is a SiiiilgiSlSiil
" he said.
ranee about safety | - .? "
le number of carbon t
>aid.
turn to wood-burning I
of a deadly carbon ;
1 poorly, Holt said. ?v ^ , :
fore it does happen," B
ledical help or lose at J '
! of carbon monoxide :
bidity and Mortality ^ ^
areas account for a
ibustion, is colorless, I
urs with other gases I
te the eyes, the CDC ' ide
kills at least 1,500
/ear use it to commit
use unconsciousness
. . rt .. Mesmerizec
by carbon monoxide . f
is space heaters, the J ?
loxide illness include Sunday afternoon s
)ther vehicles. Carolina. The Tifler
ikes life difficuli
a pattern of discrimination against
Americans, not against countries
where there is a genuine lack of
facilities or skilled personnel.
The unfriendly environment
Americans abroad often must face is
reflected in a variety of ways:
Confiscatory exchange rates
routinely are imposed against
Americans to enable foreign governments
to increase their hard
currency holdings.
ThPSP Oftuornmnnto '
p, v> niiviiio di lcii KMinp on
the supply of telephone lines or
electricity to American embassies,
contributing to reduced morale and a
loss of efficiency.
In the provision of housing, ap
plications from Americans are given
low priority. The result is housing
usually is offered in undesirable
locations after months long delays.
The fees charged Americans for
plumbers, roofers, electricians and
the like often are several tim<>s ???#>
going rate.
The problems are particularly
acute in the Soviet Union and in
countries friendly to Moscow. In these
np Hnurt
The Supreme Court has set aside 75
minutes Tuesday morning to hear the
case.
Bob Jones University has argued all
along that the key question is one of
religious freedom.
"This is not a race case," said
university president Bob Jones III
parlipr thic voor "Tt ip o
V?uu J v^4? . JLV IO Ct 1U11^1UU5
freedom case."
The school contends its policy
banning interracial dating and
marriage is based on religious
teachings.
William Ball, the BJU attorney,
said he will give equal time to the
issues of religious freedom and
congressional authority.
But Attorney John Small, who
helped put together the Goldsboro
case, said the question of whether "we
are going to let an executive branch of
the government take over," rather
than the question of religious
freedom, is the key to the case.
B
I 3 -i-J|jSilS
< aj^^jphSj
.3 _.v-v
9EpdlMf l^H
| Photo by Wm McIUmm
an keeps his eye on the ball riurinn
a
game between Clemson and
s defeated the Gamecocks 2 0.
t for diplomats
countries, Americans face both
politically motivated hostility as well
as government control over the
distribution of goods and services. In
Moscow, all foreigners are at the
mercy of the Administration for
SPTVifPS to thl> ninlnmoti/i
w v>iv i^ipiv/iiiutic V/Ui .
In contrast to Moscow, a Soviet
diplomat based in Washington, until
now, has been able to seek out housing
and services without having to consult
the State Department.
In the search for housing, Soviet
diplomats do what Americans
themselves do: check the classified
arts In i ?1 1
mas MUUlVlUllf JJI1UI1U (IIIU
utility companies provide their services
to the Soviet Embassy on the
same basis as they do to Americans.
Under the legislation which
established the Office of Foreign
Missions, the State Department could
require Soviet diplomats to annlv for
- ?rrv
housing through the OFM. It also
could regulate the provision of
telephones lines and electrical power
in accordance to what the American
offices in the Soviet Union are
receiving.