2 Monday, July 17, 1978 University Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Associated Press, United Press International Philadelphia employee strike goes on PHILADELPHIA - Philadelphia garbage collectors, prison guards and health center employees were among 19,000 city employees on strike yesterday in the county's fourth largest city. The strike began at midnight Thursday and was sparked by a decision by the administration to curb吨瘦 as earlier noted for the cost of a $21 million contract offered earlier to the city's 8,300 police officers, according to officials of the American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees. Taiwan fire kills 5; cause unknown TAIPEI Taiwan—A fire in downtown Taipei killed five persons yesterday, including three children, and destroyed six wooden buildings, the police said. The five bodies were found inside a burned-out bookstore. The cause of the fire was not known. Ammonia affects 11 in Clay Center CLAY CENTER - Nine persons were treated at a hospital and two were admitted after anhydrous ammonia gas escaped from a tank at 9 p.m. Saturday at a plant on Highway 15, north of Clay Center. Officials said a valve on a pipe in the basement loosened by the hot weather. The gas was piped in a large quantity. Mounties seize marijuana cache Amin says Young's statement realistic VICTORIA, British Columbia—Between 15 and 18 tons of marijuana were seized early Saturday and 15 men were arrested in what authorities say was one of the largest drug buets in Canadian history. The Royal Canadian Mounted police said an estimated $28 million worth of high-grade marijuana was taken after a raid on two boats off the western coast of Vancouver Island near Tofino, British Columbia. NAHOBIL, Kenya—Ugandan President Idi Amin says Young was telling the truth about the oppression of American blacks when Young said last week that there were hundreds or thousands of blacks interviewed with the French newspaper Le Mati, angered U.S. administration officials and congressmen. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday during campus hours. For more information, visit us at ksu.edu/kyu or call 617-485-9032. 6049389. Subscriptions to mail are by mary@ksu.edu or by a $1 year in Doucett's Dougherty and a $1 semester in Sederel's Berry. Subscription prices vary. ... Kevin Kious ... Jeff Kious Businessa Adviser Mel Adams Business Manager General Manager and News Adviser Rick Mussel Security shifts peace talks site LONDON (AP)—British and U.S. security officials, fearing Arab terror attacks, made hurried preparations yesterday to shift the site of this week's Middle East peace talks from a hotel town to a castle in the English countryside. The Israeli Cabinet reported, meanwhile, that it had received new peace proposals from Egyptian President Anwar Sadat but that it would defer taking a public stand on them until after this week's talks. Israel would give no details of the proposals. Sources said British Prime Minister James Callaghan's government concluded it could not guarantee the safety of the U.S. Israel and Egyptian delegations, whose meeting, beginning tomorrow, was to have a meeting in the Churchill Hotel in the centre of London. The substitute site is Leeds Castle in Kent County, about 45 miles southeast of London, U.S. officials said. The only access to the castle is a drawbridge. U. S. Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance and foreign ministers Moshe Dayan of Israel and Mohammed Ibrahim Kurdish remain there throughout their two-day conference there throughout their two-day conference. On their arrival in England, they would be shuttled by helicopter to the castle. "It's 99 percent certain that we'll have the talks," a U.S. official said. Earlier yesterday in Bonn, West Germany, where Vance accompanied President Jimmy Carter to an economic summit, another U.S. official said of the scheduled London talks, "We've got a heck of a security problem there." July 17th-22nd Dairy Queen's HAMBURGER SALE 25c only at No Limit Please open Dairy Queen 7 am-11 pm at 2545 Iowa 843-3515 Pope Paul VI, adding his voice to the broad protest from the West, spoke out yesterday against the convictions of three leading Soviet dissidents. in Moscow the Communist Party newspaper, Pravda, said Americans who were calling for a break in trade, scientific and cultural relations with the Soviet Union because of the dissident trials were losing "all sense of reality." In the United States the Washington Star quoted informed Senate sources as saying the Carter administration had decided to postpone indefinitely the sale of computer technology to the Soviet Union in retaliation for the crackdown on dissidents. ROBERT BYRD, D-W Va., the Senate major leader, was quoted as saying the proposed sale of a Sperry Univac computer system had been blocked, at least ten years ago. Without mentioning the trials, Pravda said those Americans were forgetting that detente and business cooperation was as necessary to the United States as to the US. Pope adds to Soviet trial furor By the Associated Press Pope Paul, in a carefully worded address to 3.000 visitors gathered outside his summer palace at Castel Gandolo, did not mention the convicted dissidents—Anatoly The Few. The Proud. The Marines "Although taking into account that when complete information is not available it is not easy to formulate judgments, nobody has ever tried to explain the unanimous reaction against the trials. Get more out of college than just a degree. Can your future employer offer you these options? -- a starting salary $11,299-average pay raise of $100 per month each year for the first five years --continuing to be paid, if disabled--retiring at the age of 42 and receive $1007 per month retirement benefits care...Plus, a career with reward, satisfaction, challenge, and variety. The Marine Corps Officer Program can. Shcharansky, sentenced to 13 years of hard labor for espionage and anti-Soviet activity, and Alexander Ginzburg and Viktorka Zeltschneider, sentenced to eight and 10 years for anti-Soviet activity. Administration officials said President Jimmy Carter also was prepared to hold up approval of an export license for Dresser Industries to build a plant in the Soviet union to manufacture oil drilling equipment, adding to another source quoted by the Star. **REPORTERS** accompanying Carter to the current economic summit conference in West Germany were told Saturday that the United States was willing to take a reduction in Shcharansky's sentence. There was speculation that the United States might try to work out an exchange in which Shcharansky and Ginzburg would be traded in exchange, and that accusations on espionage charges in New Jersey. To learn more about our Officer Candidate School, call COLLECT (816) 374-3031/3616. Ask for Captain KROESCHEN. "We are obliged to speak about the trials for the conviction inflicted with such great severity against persons accused of ideological injections." Pope Paul said. "SUCH A REACTION, stimulated by the lack of publicity of the proceedings, gives the feeling that the right of defense has not been properly safeguarded because of the disproportion existing between the crimes and the sentences." attributed the anti-Soviet feeling in the United States to the "military-industrial complex" which it said was "still stubborn." The American president's a further increase in international tension. Pope Paul said the worldwide reaction was prompted by evidence that political opinion could not be persecuted and punished as a crime. "Is this solidarity that propagates beyond borders when human rights are involved in an incident?" I'll use a LaTeX math environment if possible, but the prompt says "no special formatting is allowed." I will use standard text for the rest. "Is this solidarity that propagates beyond borders when human rights are involved in an incident?" Pravda said the American business community was bristling at suggestions that the government should ban cell phones. joint statement on the issue of human rights in Eastern Europe. THE SOURCES said consultations were under way among Common Market members on the statement. The members are expected to deploy the sentences assessed the Soviet dissidents. The nine voiced their concerns and vowed the human rights provisions of the 1975 Helsinki agreement on European security and cooperation. Jody Powell, White House press secretary, said that he knew nothing about such prison-trade efforts and that it was his responsibility negotiating on Shrcharsanky's behalf. At the economic summit in Bonn, West German sources said the nine-country group is preparing a new bilateral agreement. BONN, West Germany (AP)—President Jimmy Carter yesterday gained the economic summit's acceptance of his efforts to reduce U.S. energy consumption and oil imports and he won commitments from other countries to speed economic growth. Carter reports summit success Carter said he told the leaders of the six other countries at the summit that Congress would pass the first part of his long-stalled energy program tomorrow but that if a satisfactory program was not enacted he might have to take additional steps. In another development in Canberra, Australia, Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser joined the international protest, condemning what he called persecution of human rights leaders in the Soviet Union. Talking with reporters after the first of two days of summit meetings, he said he had not decided whether to impose quotas to reduce oil imports. It appeared from others' accounts that the import quotas were not committed itself to reducing the imports. Carter, who was to return to Washington today, joined German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt in reporting substantial progress in reducing the number of results of the deliberations would be good. JAPANESE AND German pledges to promote economic growth were sought by Majority leader rips Young Fraser, a conservative, said that the Kremlin failed to show it was serious about reaching a "global accommodation" with the West and that the world was witnessing a new phase in Soviet persecution of dissidents. WASHINGTON (AP) - Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., the Senate major leader, said yesterday that U.N. Ambassador Andrew Young could have one more chance but that he should be fired if he embarrassed the United States again. Byrd, asked about Young's remark to a French newspaper that there were hundreds or thousands of political prisoners in the United States, said, "The comment is the most serious in a series of irresponsible statements by Young." young made the statement while the States was condemning Soviet traitors (traitors) to Russia. three sentenced by Soviet courts last week for anti-Soviet activity. Byrd said he had remained silent about previous remarks by Young because he thought Young contributed a service to the country. Young, who arrived in Belgrade yesterday for two days of talks with Yugoslav officials, was questioned briefly by reporters at the airport about his controversial statement. He told them he was against the incumulative unconsciousness of the trials of Soviet dissidents. YOUNG IS scheduled to visit Romania tier higher. He will be in Belgium on developments in the region. Coupon Expires July 19, 1978 CALCULATOR SALE SAVE 10-15% ON SELECT MODELS CHOOSE FROM: TEXAS INSTRUMENTS HEWLETT PACKARD ROCKWELL CITRONIX Carter to help support the dollar and avert a possible new worldwide economic recess. The leaders also agreed on a program to particularly a plan to curtail aircraft lanes. W. Michael Blumenthal, secretary of the treasury, said that despite presummit bickering over responsibility for current world economic crisis was no acridity during the crisis. VISA "There was a frank and cordial exchange," he said. "Each head of state spoke of his particular concerns regarding other countries. Nothing was glosed over." Blumenthal said agreements had been reached on economic growth, inflation, employment, energy and international monetary problems—meaning the decline Schmidt disclosed the summit agreement on new approaches to reducing international terrorism, a specific challenge for other countries represented at Bonn, but he gave no details. 1307 Mass. 843-1151 Castle Tea Room Paraphernalia Love Records 15 W. 9th 842-3059 Casa De Taco Mexican Food Deliciously Different Happy Hours 4-6 M. Sat. 1105 Mass 843-9880 films sua Monday July 17 Our Man in Havana $1.00 Woodruff Dir. Carol Read, with Aluc Guillemin, Murea NeHora, Nost Coward, Emin Kovak. Graham Greene's satirical spoof. Wednesday July 19 The Shootist (1976) 7:00 $1.00 Woodruff Dir. Don Siegel, with John Wayne, Lauren Bacall, Ron Howard, James Stewart. The Duke at his best with an All-Star cast. Friday July 21 Shows at 7:00 & 9:30 in Dyche Auditorium The Three Musketeers (1974) Louis Malle: Monday July 24 (1974) Dir. Richard Lester, written by George MacDonald Fraser with Oliver Reed, Raguel Welch, Richard Chamberlain, Michael York, Michael York and many more. --- Lacombe, Lucien (1974) Dir. Lois Malle, with Pierre Blaise, Aurole Clement, French/subtitles. 7:00 $1.00 Woodruff BOB HOPKINS VOLKSWAGEN INC. Phone 843-2200 VOLKSWAGEN LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 VOLKSWAGEN 1974 Red Volkswagen Super Beetle 4spd. 1974 Blue Volkswagen Dashar Ambo. 1974 Orange Volkswagen Scirocco 4spd. 1976 Green Volkswagen Dashar 4spd. 1976 Green Volkswagen Beetle 4spd. 42,000 miles $2395.00 79,000 miles 1995.00 62,000 miles 2795.00 45,000 miles 3995.00 73,000 miles 1995.00 IMPORTS 1975 Green Toyota TSX Pickup 5spd 1976 Green Datum G10A door 4spd 1976 Green Toyota Corolla 4spd 1977 Green Datum 200-SK 5spd 1978 Brown BWB Bavaria 52,000 miles 2695.00 44,000 miles 2695.00 27,000 miles 3195.00 33,000 miles 4495.00 32,000 miles 8295.00 DOMESTICS 1976 Yellow Furniture Trans AM. Auto. 22,000 miles 5495.0 1977 Maroon Ford Torino 500 & 4 door Auto, AC, PS 67,000 miles 1395.0 1977 Green Ford Tundertbird Auto. 69,000 miles 2995.0 1977 Red Ford F-100 3dp. 11,000 miles 4495.0 1978 Blue Chev. Monte Carlo 58,000 miles 3995.0 1978 Silver Ford Granada 40,000 miles 3995.0 1978 Red Chev. Pickup 60,000 miles 2495.0 These are the cars in stock as of 7/11/78.