2 Tuesday, July 25, 1978 University Daily Kansan -UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN- Capsules From the Associated Press, United Press International CAIHO—A five-story apartment building in one of Cairo's teeming slums collapsed yesterday, knocking down two parts of two adjacent buildings and killing at lease 42 persons, officials said. City officials designated the building for demolition three months ago, but residents would not leave. The residents are thought to have resisted eviction because low-rent apartments are scarce and they had nowhere else to go. NASA attempts new Skylab rescue 12.39 **HOUSTON - Controllers today plan to use new data about the behavior of the station, SKYLAB, to streamline Skylab's orbits in hopes of keeping it flying until a space shuttle crew can boost it higher or destroy it. Today's million dollar effort will be the third Skylab streaming in its annual million dollar effort to save humanity and duplicate the fate of a Russian satellite unpredictably dropped from orbit and disintegrated last winter satellite debris over northern Canada.** Israel to propose Sinai trade talks JERUSALEM—Irish Prime Minister Menachem Begin told the Knesset yesterday that Israel would not give Egypt "a single grain of sand" in the occupied territories as a one-way peace gesture but that he would propose a truce after the next time the two countries have peace talks. Israeli Foreign Moshe Dayan, also speaking to the Knesset, said the Israelis were prepared eventually to negotiate sovereignty over the territories. Chile ousts liberal junta member SANTIAGO, Chile—The Chinese militant junta ousted yesterday its most outspoken liberal member, Air Force commander G. Gesuvo Leigh, in the first change in the government since the right-wing general overthrew the years ago Marxist President Salvador Alvarez criticized President Augusto Pinchares and called on the army chief to speed up plans for restoring civilian democracy in Chile. Leigh's whereabouts was not plausible, and the air force command would not comment. Soviets extend retraction deadline MOSCOW - The New York Times and Baltimore Sun have until Aug. 2 to publish retractions of articles by two reporters who were found by a Moscow court to have slandered Soviet television. Soviet legal sources said yesterday. court to have slandered Soviet television, Soviet legal sources said. The judgment against the reporters was given R. Whitehall, Times and Harold Piper of the Sun, was unanimous in JB Hines, a court city judge, who newspapers five days to publish retractions in their pages or in the press press. The newspapers have said they will not issue retractions in the case. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily. August through May and Monday through Thursday during Kansas campus weekdays, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas 68045. Subscriptions by mail are a $9会员 or $14年 in Douglas County and a $10会员 or $14年 outside the county. Student subscriptions are a $2会员, passed through the student activity fee.) Editor Kevin Kluus Campus Editor Edith Petit Associate Campus Editor Kerry Barrett Copy Chief Lori Bergmann Wire Editor Mary-Anne Olivar Photo Editor Trash Leak Photographers Suzanne Burdick, Alan Zikky Staff Artist Leiroy Johnston, Linda Word Business Manager Jeff Kinsen Assistant Business Manager Ginger Munger Avinger Manager Kathleen A. Langdon Promotional Manager Jessica Spekman Associate Premidional Manager Keith Wagner Associate Manager Nicholas P. Hallley By The Associated Press Angry postal workers will vote on N.Y. strike The local's president, Moe Biller, said, "If the country will follow," he strikes, the rest of the country will follow. Union officials for postal workers in the New York area, angry over fringes by the Postal Service, agreed yesterday to authorize a strike vote. The Postal Service yesterday had announced the dismissal of 122 employees in New Jersey and California who had taken part in a protest against a new nationwide contract proposal. The New Jersey workers are part of the New York Metro Area Postal Union, which represents about half the area's postal workers and which authorized the sirt vote. If other American Postal Workers locals did the same, a nationwide strike could result, despite the tentative contract set forth earlier by a nationwide strike early Friday morning. If the New York local votes to strike, the effect would be to sanction the wildest strike by more than 10 percent. The American Postal Center at the New York Post Office and Mail Center in Jersey City, N.J. Dismiss notices were issued to 80 strikers in Jersey City on Sunday and Monday, officials said. In California, Postal Service representative Jim Middleton提明 a facility in the West Coast bank facility in San Francisco would be dismissed. Carter tells staff to avoid drugs WASHINGTON (AP) - President Jimmy Carter told his White House staff yesterday that they must avoid marijuana and other illegal drugs. Carter said he wanted his position understood by all White House employees. Carter's directive, in a memorandum to the 11 members of his senior staff, followed a statement last week by Peter Bourne. Carter's drug policy adviser who resigned on Thursday was dismissed for marijuana use and occasional use of cocaine among White House employees. "I expect every member of the White staff to患组 the law," Carter wrote. "Whether you agree with the law or whether others obey the law is totally irrelevant. You will obey it, or you will seek employment elsewhere." In an apparent reference to Bourne's statement, Carter began the memorandum by saying: "I am deeply concerned over the safety of our children." White House staff are using illegal drugs." Carter instructed his staff to convey his testines directly and in no uncerter aftemins terms. Jody Pewll, the White House press secretary, said Carter's order was relayed to a senior staff meeting daily morning by Jennifer Jordan, White House chief of staff. BOONE'S RETAIL LIQUOR EXCELLENT SUPPLY OF AMERICAN AND IMPORTED WINES - Cordials and Spirits - Cold Kegs - Chilled Champagnes and Winos Case Lot Prices REIDSVILLE, GA. (AP) - Georgia officials said yesterday that a riot at the state prison in Reidsville Sunday may have been sparked by news accounts of deadly riot one day earlier by inmates in Pontiac, N.J. Four guards and two inmate died in the riot. 711 W. 23rd 843-3339 10 a.m.-11 p.m. Next Door to Safeway in the Malls Shopping Ctr. In a different kind of prison protest, meanwhile, 450 of the 600 inmates at the Moundsville, W.Va., maximum-security prison began a peaceful, day-long sit-down strike yesterday, demanding that it be restored. They also sought a more liberal "good time" policy—tiny subtracted from a sentence for good behavior. Both the Georgia and Illinois prisons were tense but quiet yesterday. Authorities kept the inmates locked up while they sought the cause of the disturbances. News accounts provoke riot, investigators sav "OUR FEELING is that this occurred because of the incident Saturday in Pontiac," Sara Passmore, a Georgia Department of Offender Rehabilitation spokesman, said. Three guards were fatally stabbed, and three guards and three inmates were injured in the Saturday riot on the Pontiac Correctional Center in Illinois. In the riot at the Georgia prison, one guard and two inmates were stabbed to death. David C. Evans, the Georgia rehabilitation commissioner, said prisoners at Reidsville saw on television and read in newspapers the details of the Pontiac, III, incr. The disturbance at Reidsville originally was thought to have been another in a series of recent racially motivated disturbances, where two inmates died and 30 others injured. But Evans said the latest turmoil was different. Inmates also set fires, which caused almost $3 million damage. He said, "There were no demands, no reasons by any of the inmates. In the Evans said the riot began about 4 p.m., when a guard was overpowered as he opened the door to a dormitory to allow inmates to go to dinner. Inmates then stabbed the other guard to death in that room and went another building, Evans said. past we have been able to pick up really quick the reasons, causes and demands." THE MURDERED guard was Dan Harrison, 36, Guard Preset Foskey, 32, who also was stabbed, was reported in stable condition at a hospital. Inmates James D. Garmon, 36, of Jonesboro, and James M. Milk, 45, of Vidalia were stabbed to death. Two men imprisoned for murder say they are the kind of people U.N. Ambassador Andrew Young was talking about when he was a political prisoner in the United States. Inmates say convictions political By The Associated Press James Earl Ray, who pleaded guilty to killing Martin Luther King Jr., the civil rights leader with whom Young worked, has written to Young, seeking help. "Since Memphis is a lot closer than Moscow, I ask you to meet with President Jimmy Carter and ask him to request that I be given a new trial," Ray wrote last week. "Those dissident trials in Moscow may be unfair and completely political but at least the defendants there have a trial. For 10 years, that is all that I have asked for." Because he pleaded guilty, Ray was not tried, although he attempted to change his plea three days after he was sentenced. He is now serving a 99-year sentence. Young prompted the anger of Carter and other U.S. political leaders when he said the United States had hundreds of political prisoners. young. Young later said he did not mean to imply a similarity between political freedom in the United States and China. Russia and the Americas, IN MONTGOMERY, Ala., death row inmate Johnny Harris said yesterday that he too, was a political prisoner. Harris was sentenced to death for killing a prison guard during a riot at Fountain Correctional Center in January 1974, but he is challenging his conviction in the courts. Harris was tried under a law that makes the death the penalty mandatory for anyone who commits a crime. He died while Acme Dry Cleaners, Inc. 3 convenient locations Hillcrest Downtown The Malls 843.0895 Cash Paid for Good Used Cars See John Wells at Bob Hopkins Volkswagen 2522 lowa boring stuff with bills --under a life sentence. Harris was already serving five life sentences for rape. Bang& Olufsen Bang& Olufsen "I am a political prisoner," Harris wrote to the Montgomery Advertiser. "I received the death penalty conviction not because I committed murder, but because of my participation in the prisoners' rights movement." Evans said two unarmed guards apparently got caught between rioters and other inmates leaving for dinner, but they escaped. The inmates the inmates and were not held as hostages. Harris rejected any suggestion that he be swapped for one of the Soviet dissidents. He said, "To leave this country and go to another country doesn't prove my innocence, and that's why I want to stay here and fight these cases to the end." CVILL RIGHTS leader Jesse Jackson told 100 inmates at the Leavenworth Federal Prison Sunday that oug was not the only political prisoner, though many political prisoners in the United States. "Some may debate the 'diplomacy' and 'timing' used by Ambassador Young, but the truth and accuracy of his statement Wednesday July 26 The Marx Brothers: Room Service (1938) Dir. William Selter, with the Marx Brothers, Lucille Ball, Ann Miller, Frank Albertson 7,000 $1.00 Woodruff Friday July 28 (1970) Women in Love (19\IU) Dir. Ken Rutherford with Glenda Jackson, Oliver Reed, Alan Bates. Based on D. H. Lawrence's novel 7.00 $1.00 Woodruff Monday July 31 Alfred Hitchcock Double Feature: Murder (1930) Lifeboat (1944) Murder (1930) Rare Early Sound Who-done-It With Tallahua Bankhead, John Hodak, Hume Cronyn. Based on a Steinbeck story. 7:00 $1.00 Woodruff $1.00 Wednesday August 2 Bogart Double Bill: He said investigators thought five suspects were involved in the slayings, but no charges had been filed. The Georgia Department of Investigation was aiding the investigation. (1943) Dir. Zoltan Korda, with Humphrey Bogart, J. Carroll Naish, Lloyd Bridges. Sahara The Caine Mutiny Dir. Edward Dmyrtky, with Humphrey Bopart, Jose Ferrer, Van Johnson, Fred MacMurray. 7:00 $1,00 Woodruff Each dorsitory at the prison holds about 500 inmates—most of them black. Of the guards involved, three were white and one black. Two of the guards said about 60 inmates took part in the riot. $1 THREE TACOS for only regarding political prisoners is beyond question," Jackson said. with this coupon at Taco Grande 9th & Indiana . . . 1720 W. 23rd Offer expires Aug. 1, 1978 "Thousands are in jail because they are too poor to pay bail bond. Thousands are in bail because they are too poor to pay bail bond. Thousands are in bail because they don't have the political clout to be released on personal recognition. Thousands are in jail because they are not a by a jury of their peers. That is political." MATHERS S FATHER'S 2406 Iowa Drinking Establishments Featuring • computerized dance floor • Disco BIG DEAL DEPARTMENT - Disco G. P. 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