2 Wednesday, November 19. 1975 University Daily Kangan DIGEST From the Associated Press Missile sustem shelved WASHINGTON—The Senate voted yesterday to put the missiles in the nation's only antiballistic missile system into mothballs. sry a $24-47 vote, the Senate approved a proposal by Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., that would leave only the system's elaborate radar equipment operational. The House already has voted to abandon the $8-billion installation at Grand Forks. N.D. entirely. The Senate accepted Kennedy's amendment after rejecting, 50-47, his effort to close the ABM installation. Cleaver ends exile NEW YORK - Renouncing his revolutionary past, Eldridge Cleaver flew home from Paris yesterday, ending seven years on the run. The former Black Panther leader, depicted as resigned to imprisonment, was immediately taken into custody by the FBI. Geaver's transatlantic flight, on which he had been accompanied by three FBI agents, landed at Kennedy Airport, where three more agents met the plane. U.S. Customs agents joined in forming a human barrier as some 75 reporters sought to interview the oedipac long revolutionary. Meanwhile, Cleaver's one-time Black Panther comrade disassociated themselfs from him. David DuBos, editor of the yearly newsletter, said that she had been fired by the team. Javits sees Ford change But Sen, Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., said Ford appeared to be close to some kind of aid. WASHINGTON—President Gerald R. Ford was reported yesterday to be unchanged "at this time" in his opposition to pending legislation to aid New York Javits said after a meeting among Ford and Republican members of Congress from New York, that the federal government probably would help to fill New York's vacancy. A compromise House bill providing funding for New York City was worked out over the weekend. It would extend New York City $3 billion in loan guarantees, with a seven-year limit, and restrict the amount of federal rulings on day-to-day operations of New York City. King hounded by FBI **WASHINGTON** - The staff of a Senate committee said yesterday that the FBI waged a campaign against late Senator Linda McKinnon, including sundays attacks on his house and office. The disclosures came as the top lawyers of the Senate Intelligence Committee detailed FBI efforts to investigate, infiltrate and discredit thousands of persons in groups ranging from the Ku Klux Klan and the Communist party to the women's liberation movement. Summit results take time WASHINGTON—The economic summit in France ended in an agreement to stop erratic fluctuations in monetary exchange rates, but it may take months to resolve them. - reassure our and leaders of five other industrialized nations issued an imperative-sounding document that pledged to keep the world from slipping back into recession. The decline of legal abortions in Kansas hasn't directly affected the University of Kansas Student Health Service because abortions aren't performed there, Martin Wollmann, M.D., director of the health service, said last week. Drop in Kansas abortions hasn't affected KU clinic The number of legal abortions performed in Kansas during 1974 fell 20 per cent from the number in 1973, according to the state Department of Health and Environment's annual report, which was released Thursday. Wollmann said that the health service did refer women seeking abortions to local hospitals, but that he wasn't able to determine whether the number of women referred by the health service to other health agencies for abortions had decreased since 2013. In a file issued to abortion referrals wasn't maintained. "Unless an abortion becomes a major problem in the patient, she doesn't come here." Schroeder said. "We get about one woman in the abortion patients who need counseling." "With the heavy load of patients at an average of 425 per day and without a computer, v.s. don't have the personnel to make that kind of statistical analysis," he oryney Schreeder, a psychiatrist and director of Watkins Mental Health Clinic, said he had noticed a decline in the number of women receiving abortion counseling, but the mental health clinic saw only a small percentage of abortion patients. Wollmann said a probable cause for the declining abortion rate in Kansas could have been that women were using other contraceptives, and family planning more effectively. Schroeder said that before Kansas' liberalized abortion law, he had had about 50 abortions a year. because of their mental conditions referred to him yearly. The Kansas abortion law allows any woman to obtain an abortion if her physical or mental health is threatened by the privacy and one doctor approves of her decision. According to the state department of Health and Environment's report, 10,171 abortions were performed last year in Kansas as compared with 12,812 in 1973. The decline was the first since Kanaas' abortion law went into effect on July 18. Arson indicated in Oliver fire A small fire that occurred at 1:15 yesterday morning in Oliver Hall has been classified by the University of Kansas Police Department as aggravated arson. Mike Thomas, director of police and parking, said four persons were in the room at the time of the fire. Dampage to the building was not serious, Thomas said, probably less than $25. "We are in the process of investigating the incident completely." Thomas said. "It will probably take a few days to investigate." Thomas said there were no injuries reported and no arrests had been made. Details of the incident aren't completely clear. Thomas said but should be clarified. "Most of the time this sort of thing is their fault," she said. 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