2 Monday, July 31, 1978 University Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Associated Press, United Press International SAN FRANCISCO- An $11 million lawsuit trial begins today will debate the question of whether television induces violence or is simply an objective medium that portrays real life, and which is produced by Valeria Neimi contends in the suit against BCDTV and its local affiliate, BKTV, four times daily who are sexually assaulted with a soda bottle by four court officials who were imitating an attack portrayed in the made-for-television movie, "Born Innocent." Bergland wants more China trade WASHINGTON - Secretary of Agriculture Bob Bergland, who has accepted an invitation to visit China, called yesterday for expanded U.S.-Czech trade. At a dinner in honor of a chinese agricultural delegation, Bergland said he had purchased more than a half million bales of U.S. soybean from 40 million tons of wheat and about three thousand quantities of soybean oil. He said that millions of Chinese farm products, worth $76 million in 1977 and $85 million this year, were small but increasing. Tourist jet slips off runway SHANNON, Ireland — A lifetime carrying 376 American tourists home from European vacation left for the United States last night after a minor accident caused an eight-hour delay. The Trans-International Airways and the edge of a runway on landing, but officials said the plane had arrived in Philadelphia with Stone's destination, said that the pilot turned too sharply while taxing to the Shannon terminal after landing, and that the landing gear sided off the runway. Notice now required for mergers WASHINGTON - In what government trust-busters say is an important new step in antitrust enforcement, officials of the Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commission are requiring a notice of at least 30 days before mergers occur between major companies. The regulation, to be published today, require that the government be informed about challenges to the government by when the regulation takes effect next month on assets of more than $100 million acquiring control over a company with assets of more than $10 million will have to give advance notification of the merger. Somalis on trial for coup attempt NAIROBI, Kenya—Twenty Somali army officers are on trial before the National Security Court in Mogadishu, Somalia, on charges of trying to stage a coup against the military government of President Mohammed Siad Barre of Mogadishu radio reported yesterday. The defendants are charged with high treason and face a mandatory death sentence if convicted. In the aftermath of Somalia's defeat by Ethiopian and Cuban troops in the Ogaden war this spring, the group of disgruntled officers staged a short-lived attempt to topple the government, which itself came to power in a 1989 coup THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday during June and July except Saturday August 29. Admission is $15 per person or $16 per student for a 6 year outside the county. Student subscriptions are £1 a semester, paid through the student account. Kevin Kausha Business Manager Kevin Kausha Business Manager News Advisor Business Manager ... General Manager and News Adviser Walt Muster WASHINGTON (AP) - Major decisions on U.S. policy in South Korea, Turkey and Rhodesia are scheduled for House votes this week as the nation's largest defense bill in 118-41 billion. In the Senate, a filibuster appears certain when debate begins Friday on lifting natural gas price controls, a chief stumbling block for President Jimmy Carter's energy policies. sen, James Aboreux, D-S.D., began filbustering the natural gas compromise before the Senate even it took up and says he will lead a filbuster when the debate does bases, the compromise is the one that ended a months-long deadlock among House-Senate groups. The House voted against the deregulation on gas prices, would give the gas companies more power. The Senate favored lifting controls so prices would go up and discourage wasteful use of natural gas while giving gas companies profit incentive to find and drill for THE COMPROMISE would lift the price controls, but gradually between now and 1985 with provisions for reimposing them if companies began making huge profits. The closest vote in the House is expected to come on Carter's request for Congress to repeal the embargo it imposed in 1975 against U.S. military aid to Turkey. The Senate already has agreed and Carter's supporters believe the House will, also. But they say the vote will be so close that it could be against them. Congress imposed the embargo after Turkey violated U.S. foreign aid law by using American weapons to invade and occupy Cyprus. Castle Tea Room 1307 Mass. 843-1151 But Carter says the embargo threatens to drive Turkey out of the North Atlantic Treaty Alliance and has not worked to force Cyprus peace negotiations. REPEAL OF THE Turkish aid embargo is in a proposed $1 billion U.S. military aid package. Also in the bill is the authority Carter requested to turn $800 million worth of U.S. military equipment over to South Korean units while patrolling all 32,000 U.S. ground bases. but Rep. Samuel S. Stratton, D-N.Y., said he will try to cut the figure to $30 million worth of equipment to be left behind by the 6,000 troops already leaving. Rep. Richard Ichard, D-Mo., plans to introduce an amendment similar to one approved by the Senate to end U.S. participation in the United Nations trade embargo against Rhodesia if rhodesia elects a new government through free elections. The Senate approved the full $800 million last week but added language that said Carter should consult with Congress before withdrawing any more troops. Then Carter would have to get Congress' approval of additional transfers before he could withdraw his waiver. The House is scheduled to do all that tomorrow and then vote Wednesday on a $7.3 billion foreign aid appropriation that includes military, economic aid, the Peace Corps and U.S. contributions to the international development banks. ALEXANDRIA, Egypt (AP) – President Anwar Sadat said yesterday that there would be no more Mideast take talks until Israel agreed that all occupied territories must be returned to the Arabs and recognized that the land issue was nonnegotiable. Sadat cites conditions for talks "I don't want to embarrass my friend President Carter, but as I said before, the United States should act as a full partner, not mediator," Sadat said at a press conference after talks with U.S. envoy Alfred Atherton. Sadat also made an indirect appeal to the United States to help break the deadlock. The Egyptian leader said fairly there was torture or territorial compromise, as he called the operation "terror." "If it is agreed upon officially that land and sovereignty is dropped out of any compromise and farmland is ready to discuss peace in all its aspects, we shall be ready," Congressmen urge Carter to curb Japan's imports WASHINGTON (AP) — The chairman and four members of a House trade subcommittee requested President Jimmy Carter to consider imposing temporary tariffs on goods from Japan. Rep. Charles A. Vanki, D-Ohio, chairman of the Ways and Means Committee's subcommittee on trade, yesterday made public a letter to Carter saying that an excess of exports, especially from Japan, and the decrease in dollar were reaching a significant point. The letter said subcommittee members had repeatedly told Japanese officials visiting Washington that Japan should undertake voluntary measures to improve the flow of U.S. goods to the Japanese market, making commitments to reduce the trade imbalance. influence. "These warnings that time and patience are running out do not appear to be taken seriously," the congressman's letter said. He said Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan brought up the possibility of a territorial compromise during talks at Leeds Castle in England two weeks ago with Israeli Foreign Minister Mohammed Brahim Kamel and Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance. Maritime authorities said the French trawler Elsinor began towing Maig. Christopher Davey and Donald Cameron and their sail-rigged gondola toward the small Brittany fishing port of Concarneau, where they were expected to arrive today. Two balloonists almost complete ocean crossing Cameron, a 38-year-old aeronautical engineer, and Davey, 34, a Royal Tank Corps officer, came closer to making the crossing than any other balloonists, and members of the team already were talking about another try. There have been 18 previous known attempts, and at least six balloonists have died. BREST, France (AP)—Two British balloonists, bedeviled by changing winds that threatened to blow them back out to sea, ditched their crippled craft in the ocean yesterday, just 110 miles short of the first trans-Atlantic balloon crossing. The balloons detached the bag from the gondola when they ditched and rigged the gondola for sailing. They spent about three hours ahead before being picked up by the boat. THE TWO men refused to board British or French rescue helicopters and planned to say with their 14"+foot gondola-boat all the members, the Maritime gonfidence said in Brest. It was reported that another ship picked in the balloon itself. Cameron and Davey had made fast progress after leaving Newfoundland, on Canada's northeast coast, at dawn Wednesday. But they were plagued by an eight-foot rent in the inner helium-filled bag of the hot-air balloon, named Zanzuili after the Italian appliance firm that provided the money for the flight. By Saturday, although they had jettisoned equipment, treacherous weather and unpredictable winds left them suspended over the ocean west of France. Just before ditching, they were forced to jump into it just above the water, despite their desperate efforts to gain altitude. exhausted from three almost-sleepless nights, they decided to ditch and hit the water at 6:15 a.m. EDT. At least four vessels went to their aid although the boatman was unable to identify balloonists had said earlier they would continue the journey by sail. They cited Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 that requires the president to proclaim a temporary import surcharge of up to 15 percent when such action is needed to deal with a serious balance of payments deficit or to prevent deterioration of the dollar or to allow the government to more aggressively market imbalances. The section also authorizes the imposition of quotas. "We urge you to give full consideration to action under Section 122," the letter said. "The rapid appreciation of our jobs, the floods far less competitive in the United States market and United States exports cheaper and more attractive in Japan with the decline of the "Instead, United States exports to Japan have declined in the first four months of this year while imports from Japan have increased 48 percent." Signing the letter with Vanik were Reps. James R. Jones, D-Oka.; William Steiger, R-Wis; Dan Rosenkowski, D-III., and Bill Frenz, R-Minn. That proposal, he said, was one of several 'new negative elements introduced into the peace process by Israel and represented a step backward. Varsity Daily at 2:30, 7:20 and 9:40 "STAR WARS" P4 AT THE Leeds talks, Satad said, Israel has responded to the recent territorial compromise. Cinema Twin STARTS FRIDAY Eve. a17 20 & 9:20 Cinema Twin Eve. at 7:30 & 9:30 BURT REYNOLD! "THE END" PG "HEAVEN CAN WAIT" Hillcrest Eve 7:40 & 9:45 Harper PG Valley PTA THE Hillcrest Tonight 7:30 & 9:45 Cal Run Mat 1:45 "But more than that, Foreign Minister Dayan added verbatim: 'There is no substitute for territorial compromise,'" Sadat said. "COMING HOME" STARTS FRIDAY Eve. at 7:20 & 9:40 "I consider we are now at a decisive turning point. Something of great significance has happened at Leeds. Let me say it is a new element, but it is a negative." Hillcrest "THANK GOD IT'S FRIDAY" Apex Air Fares/Youth Fares/Eurail and Student Fares/Auto/Hotel Rates and Amtrak Reservation "If Ever I See You Again" Maupintour travel service Israeli Prime Minister Menacham Begin said last week that the Israelis would not give anything to the Arabs without getting something in return. Begin made the statement after the Israeli cabinet rejected what it said was a proposal from Sadat that Israel return two areas in the occupied Sinai Peninsula—El Arish and the biblical Mount Sinai—as a peace gesture. Travel Plans? NOW SHOWING PG Starts 9:15 Sunset A WESTERN STUDIO SHOW make them with us. 411 W. 14th Street 841-4488 The Israeli said Sadat made the proposal at a recent meeting in Austria with Israel Defense Minister Ezezer Weizman. Sadat said the proposal was based on what he told Weizman El Arish would be a good place for peace talks if it were in Egyptian hands and that he wanted to build a Jewish temple, a Moslem mosque and a church on Mount Sinai as a peace symbol. KANSAS CITY, Kan. (UP1) - Ballistics tests are expected to reveal today whether a county deputy fired the shot that killed a reserve policeman attached to a vehicle during an inquiry of a minor traffic accident, police said yesterday. The tests are expected to determine whether Michael Haen, 38, died from a bullet fired Friday evening by Bruce Baldwin, the police officer Sheriff deputy, during an exchange of gunfire between the deputy and Herman Rucker, who police said rushed from a crowd. Police spokesman Ron Miller said the shooting occurred in Kruger apparently killed Khaen. Hoen died a few hours after the shooting at Bethany Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. Tests to determine whether deputy shot fellow policeman Prime Cut Hair Co. It was later determined, however, that the shooting started when Rucker, 39, who lived near the scene of the accident, knocked Haun to the ground, removed the officer's 38-caliber revolver and pointed the weapon at Neville, police said. HARLEY/DAVIDSON HONDA 1811 West 6th Street 843-3333 SALE on all REDKEN PRODUCTS (offer good thru Aug. 31) REPUBLICAN State Representative 45th District Curtis Scoville The desire and the ability to serve. 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