The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, January 21, 1985, Page Page 2, Image 2
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Children scale one of the monuments on the Ha
the world to
Jamaican protests end
KINGSTON, Jamaica ? Police said most of
Jamaica was calm after two days of violent protests,
but two people were killed in a gun battle between
rival gangs before security forces chased away
the combatants.
Police and soldiers cleared away the roadblocks
erected during the protests against Prime Minister
Edward Seag? economic policies, anc?taost
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hear the capita downtown area. (tkf
In radio broadcasts, factory managers appealed
to their workers to return to work today and
schools advised students they would reopen today
or Monday.
2 Americans die in crash
PEKING ? A Soviet-built domestic airliner
rrachprt u/hilp InnHino at Tinan nirnnrt in pastern
China, Federal Aviation Authorities said Saturday.
Thirty-eight people, including two Americans, died
in the crash.
The twin-engine turboprop Antonov-24 was en
route to Peking from Shanghai when it crashed late
Friday afternoon, officials said. It has stopped in
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JENNIFER STEIB / Tht Gwmcock
irseshoe during a chilly January day.
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Nanjing prior to flying to Jinan, capital of the east
coast nrnvincp r>f Shanrlnnc. ahotiJ 220 milps
southeast of Peking.
Officials gave no explanation for the crash, or for
the delay in reporting it. A Jinan police officer said
in a telephone interview that the weather was cloudy
at the time of the crash.
Three people survived the crash, officials said.
They were seriously injured and under treatment at
a local hospital, CWua's official Xinhua news agen- g
cy reported. 9 "
|J&uaeni H^yis selflrTclassf,
AKLIINlilUIM, lexas ? A nign scuuui SCIIIUI
who climbed onto a classroom stage and killed
himself with a sawed-off shotgun as a teacher and
four classmates watched had been a good student
and showed no apparent signs of suicidal distress,
officials say.
James Austin Stailey, 17, a drama student with a
flair for jokes, killed himself Friday afternoon after
asking the others in the room "heavy philosophical
questions" about the meaning of life, said police
spokesman Jim Willctt.
He had had the lead in the school play, a murder
mystery called "The Real Inspector Hound." The
performances Friday and Saturday were cancelled,
and the other students at Arlington Hi?h School
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Icy inaugural
Temperatures plunge
By Associated Prexi
WASHINGTON ? Ronald Wilson Reagan,
standing on the landing of the White House grand
staircase, swore the presidential oath for a second
term Sunday before % guests and a national television
audience. Outside, icy winds foretold the rigors
of today's outdoor ceremony when Reagan reenacts
his swearing-in with public pomp and a declaration
of "American Renewal."
The Republic's 50th Inauguration was the sixth
to fall on a Sunday. Tradition held that the pageantry
would come Monday, and allowed the president
to relax and watch the Super Bowl with 100 million
other Americans.
It was 9 degrees outside when Reagan took his
nath in the rcH-cnnvtcH plponnrp nf the executive
mansion's State Floor. Forecasters were warning
parade-gcers that today would be the coldest public
inaugural in history.
PRESIDENTIAL SPOKESMAN Larry Speaks
said today's inaugural speech to be delivered from
the West Front of the Capitol ? would look forward
to "an American renewal, continuing
America's proud and revolutionary tradition." He
characterized it as being "poetic at times, ringing"
and uplifting with its expressions of pride in
America and the American spirit.
Vice President George Bush was sworn in a
minute before Reagan, with his friend, retired
Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart, returning
from New Hampshire to administer the oath. After
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Barbara, and stepped aside for Reagan.
Chief Justice Warren E. Burger administered the
oath to Rea;gan, who said: "I Ronald Reagan, do
solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute the Office
of President of the United States, and will to
the best of my ability, preserve, protect and defend
the Constitution of the United States, so help me
God." The final four words, which others have used
before him, are not part of the constitutional
language.
were sent home early after school officials confirmed
his death by an announcement over a public address
system.
Blacks develop strategies
ATLANTA ? Southern Black Democrats must
develop new political strategies in the aftermath of
President Reagan's landslip re-election that will
de-emphasize racial rhetonq t and avoid raoiaiv
iM?Urlzatlon ofcou^^^rmingnsnri ivrayOT
Richard ArringTOn said toc^. * ~
P* Arrington spoke to th 1985 Conference of
Southern Black Democrats meeting in Atlanta for a
one-day session to re-evaluate the role of blacks in
the Democratic Party.
Arrington said blacks must not abandon their
political priorities while developing new strategies,
but at the same time must realize that "any polarized
national election is a sure loser for blacks."
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LOUISVILLE, Ky. ? Future updates on how
William Schroeder is faring with his artificial heart
will be issued weekly because there has been little
change from day to day, a spokesman for Humana
Inc. said Saturday.
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as Reagan takes oath I
When Reagan finihed, Burger said, "Congratula- ?|
tions, sir." The President kissed first lady Nancy ffl
Reagan, and hugged her. mrfc. Reagan, wearing a H
red dress with large gold buttons, carried a Bible
that belonged to Reagan's mother.
THE 10-MINUTE ceremony began when the
president, wearing a midnight blue, pinstriped
business suit and preceded by a Secret Service
agent, descended the Grand Staircase with Mrs.
Reagan and the Bushes and sat in the front row of
chairs set up in the grand foyer at the entrance to
the White House.
The Rev. Donn Moomaw, Reagan's pastor from
California, delivered the invocation, praying; that
the oath-taking might begin "a splendid new time
of commitment and dedication."
It isn't the oath that made Reagan the president
me constitution dictates tnat tne president s term
ends at noon on Jan. 20, when his successor's
begins. Thus, Reagan's second term would have
begun Sunday even if he had postponed his oath to
await the public ceremony today.
THE GUESTS, still seated, listened to the U.S.
Army chorus sing the hymn "America" before adjourning
to a reception. Reagan ?.ad Bush stepped
outside, where the wind-chill factor was minus-22
degrees Farenheit, to pose for pictures ? without
overcoats ? and answer a few questions from
reporters before joining their guests a few moments
later.
Asked what he hopes for in a second term,
Reagan said, "Well, I hope it's a little warmer."
Asked if it would be different the second time
around, Reagan, who is only the 14th American
president or have been re-elected, replied: "It
always is, isn't it?"
ine wnite Mouse n aa consiaerca maKing Sunday's
oath-taking a private affair, as Dwight
Eisenhower's was in 1957, the last time Inauguration
Day fell on a Sunday.
"In talking with Dr. (William) DeVries Friday,
he said the situation has reached the point where
there's really nothing new to talk about," said Bob
Irvine.
"As a matter of fact, next week we're going to
weekly updates because there just is no news. It's
the same thing we've reported the last three weeks
? the family comes in on the weekends, physical
therapy, occupational therapy, but basically it's
ft recycling the same situati<|feve've had for three
vw - v v y /.
^aclfson denleffl^a WASHINGTON
? SojJgJ^frica on Saturday
denied the. Rev. Jesseiirckson a visa to visit the
white minonl^u'jedTcountry next month after
earlier giving permission to make the trip in
January.
"The period during which you now wish to visit
South Africa is...not opportune for the South
African government," Bernardus Fouri, the country's
ambassador to the United States, said in a letter
tn thp rivil riohtQ Iparlpr
Jackson, who led a "counter-inaugural" march
Saturday past the White House to protest President ^
Reagan's policies, said he had not yet seen Fouri's
reply to his request for a new visa. ?
- Compiled from wire reports
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