2 Thursday, July 27, 1978 University Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus Egypt ousts Israeli delegation **Egypt** In Egypt ordered Israel's military delegation yesterday to leave Cairo, where it has remained since direct peace talks broke down in January. Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, responding to the Egyptian move, the ouster as minor. There was no immediate response from Egypt, the move, which came after a lack of Likud coalition easily defeated an opposition of no confidence stemming from Labor Party changes that begin has not made sufficient efforts to reach a peace agreement with Egypt. Einstein's brain studied in Wichita Aides predict relief from inflation WICHTA—A 23-year-old secret study of Albert Einstein's brain was made public yesterday, but the head of a pathology team that has been researching it at Einstein's request, for physical clues to the late physicist's genus was reluctant to say what he had found. Thomas S. Harvey, a pathologist at Statlkat Inc., confirmed that he was studying the brain. Soviets convict Jew of hooliganism WASHINGTON. The huge increases in food prices are over and Americans can look forward to relief from the headache of double-digit inflation, Charles Schaltez, President Jimmy Carter's top economic adviser, said yesterday. President Obama, Economic Adviser, Rai Liuin, director of the Congressional Budget Office, said inflation should moderate somewhat during the second half of the year. Even so, she predicted inflation for the year would be between 6.8 percent and 7.8 percent—above last year's figure of 6.6 percent but less than the current annual rate of about 10 percent. Attempt to recall Miller overruled DENVER-The International Executive Board of the United Mine Workers said yesterday that an effort to recall UMW President Arnold Miller and other union officials did not follow constitutional procedures and would not be pursued. The union's constitution requires that recall attempts cannot be initiated until after an official has been found guilty of malfeasance. SOCIETE contient MOSCOW—A Soviet court convicted jewish activist Martin Slepak yesterday of "malleous bolognaizing" and gave her a three-year suspended labor camp sentence. She also could join her husband, who was sentenced to five years for the same charge, in internal exile. The couple were arrested after they hung a banner from the balcony of their eighth-floor apartment on Moscow's central Gorky Street demanding that they be allowed to emigrate to Israel. KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday during June and July except Saturday, September Sunday, and holidays. Second-class postage, and $10 per book, for 19640, Subscriptions Only, and $25 per book, for 19630. E-mail enquiries to the university@ku.edu. Student subscriptions are £1 semester, paid through the student activity fee. Editor: Kean * ... Kevin Kions ... Jeff Kions Business Adviser Mel Adams NEW YORK (AP)—The new federal Ethics Advisory Board will begin gathering information next month on complicated issues involving test-tube babies, eggs, donor eggs and the question of using another woman's uterus to carry a baby. "I feel fairly clear there will be a marked increase in requests for this procedure from couples whose marriage is sterile," the Rev. Richard McCormick said yesterday. "There should also be a marked increase in requests for federal funds for research." Rv the Associated Press McCormick, a professor of biological ethics at Georgetown University in Washington, is a member of the new federal board, which will meet formally in Sept. One of the many questions the board will examine, he said, is that of discs, embryos grown in the test tube but not implanted. "WHAT HAPPENS to the embryos that are discarded at the end of the day—washed down the sink?" one scientist has written. "There would necessarily be many. Would this amount to abortion—or to murder? We have law to cope with the kind of situation." McCormick said, "Another question is where do you stop? If there is no serious moral objection to donor eggs, then do you take the next exotic step and use a host Established in 1975, the board had no members until last fall, when Joseph A. Califano JR., secretary of health, education and welfare, selected 12 persons from various fields, including medicine, law and education. Two others are still to be named. With all the questions, it is not clear when test-tube conceptions might take place in the United States, where perhaps 10 percent of the population become unable to do so. Test-tube baby research was curtailed in this country in 1975, when federal funding was barred unless the projects were approved by the Ethics Advisory Board. Ethics of test-tube baby argued business manager General Manager and News Adviser Boston, Massachusetts EUGHA, Mo. (AP) - A cable car crashed 70 feet to the ground yesterday at the Six Flags over Mid-America amusement park. Authorities said three persons were killed, another was critically injured and two others were stranded on the cable cars temporarily. The St. Louis County police said snorkel-equipped fire trucks were used to rescue the stranded riders. Just before midnight Tuesday, Lesley Brown gave birth by Caesaran section to a 5-pound, 12-ounce girl in Oldham. Far away from one of Bowles's ovaries and fertilizing 3 killed in crash of cable car A spokesman for the park, Bob Kochan, said that the ride was capable of holding 121 persons and that about 100 riders had been stranded. his late teens was dead on arrival there. He was thought to be related to the two girls. St. Joseph's Hospital in nearby Kirkwood identified two of the victims as cousins, Trisha Weeks, 10, and Christian Johnson, 15. The St. Louis County Hospital said a man in Kochan said the four victims were the only occupants of the car. Another girl, Janine Weeks, 12, the sister of Trisha Weeks, was reported in critical condition and was undergoing surgery at St. Joseph's. The ride runs across most of the width of the amusement park, which is about 25 miles south of St. Louis. Passengers are allowed to walk around the heart that cars suspended on a moving cable. Kochan said the car was approaching the first tower that supports the cable when one of the arms of the tower broke off. The car was knocked down by the cable. The cable did not break, he said. Six Flags officials immediately began stopping all rides and closing parts of the through part of the fence on the park's perimeter. "Everything really was pretty calm," Kochan said. "There was no panic." The car fell into an area of bushes and it in a laboratory, is believed to be the world's first test-tube baby. ASKED WHETHER the English doctors had merely been lucky, Carl Paurestein of the University of Texas Health and Science Center in San Antonio, said. "While that's a possibility, from the very strong rumors coming out of Cambridge about women in various stages of pregnancy, I would guess it was a methodological breakthrough. In other words, I don't think it was a lucky shot, but a change in methodology." He said the cable car ride would not be used again until a rides engineer from Six Flags Over Georgia, a sister operation, arrived for an investigation. In Oldham, Patrick Steppee, the British gynecologist who developed the procedure, said, "We are not creating life. We have merely done what many people try to do in our own time. I know more, cannot see anything immoral in trying to help the patient's problem." Lunch 11:00-2:30 Dinner 4:30-10:00 CATHAY Specialists in Chinese Cuisine Closed on Tuesdays Holiday Plaza 842-4976 Giles Ecclestone, secretary of the Board for Social Responsibility of the Church of England said he welcomed the development because the birth represented an advance in meeting the problem of childlessness for married couples. Get a Taste of the Good Life... BUT GORDON CARDINAL GREY, president of the Scottish Roman Catholic bishops, said, "I have grave misgivings about what I think is the possible implications for the future." In Rome, a spokesman for the Vatican said the Roman Catholic Church considered artificial human insemination illicit. Jewish and Moslem spokesmen saw no conflict with their religious laws as long as the procedure involved married couples. Medical authorities warned that the birth of an apparently healthy girl to Brown did not mean an immediate solution for the problem, and the infertile because of reproductive problems. "It is obvious this is not immediately available to everybody," Steptoe said. But Robert Edwards, a Cambridge University physiologist who worked 12 years with Steptoe to develop the method, said he was not fit by childless couples all over the world. "I WOULD HOPE that within a very few years, instead of this being a seven-day wonder, this will be a fairly commonplace affair." Edwards said. Edwards said 40 percent of the infertile women in the world suffered from the cause of Brown's infertility-malfunctioning Fallonian tubes. "If the methods we have developed continue to be developed further," Steepte said, "the whole approach to infertility will be changed. "The baby came out crying its head off. She is in a perfectly healthy state, although for the first few hours after the birth she was put into the hospital's special baby care unit, which we do with all Caesearans. But then we transferred her to her mother." Although Steppee and Edwards said the details of their technique would not be published for a few months other researchers may have had access to advanced that others could learn it quickly. The baby was conceived by removing an egg from one of Brown's ovaries with a specialized lapiscope, an instrument that allows the embryo to be abdomen and remove the delicate egg. The egg was placed in a sophisticated piece of laboratory glassware, where it was fertilized with the sperm of Brown's husband. After five days of nourishment in the test tube, it was planted in Brown's womb to develop normally. Travel Plans? make them with us. Maupintour travel service Apex Air Fares/Youth Fares/Eureail and Student Passes/Auto Rentals/Hotel and Amtrak Reservations KENWOOD SYSTEM KR-2090... 22500 ESSEX 200 pr. ... 19800 GARRARD GT10... 9900 GRADO E3E+... 4900 $571^{00}$