Page 2 University Daily Kansan, July 14, 1980 Daily Kansan Capsules From United Press International Conspirators seized in Iran More than 600 military men and civilians were arrested in connection with an alleged plot to overthrow the Iranian government and kill Ayatollah Khomeini. personal, including top ranking officers and air force pilots, and politicians. No names were disclosed but earlier reports said Gan. Seed Mahboum, a former空军 commander, and a former commander of the gendarment, identified only as Gen M. Moshahshebi were among those arrested. In Ankara, Turkey, government officials said two Iranian military officers had been arrested and asked for passage by the United States so they could ask political allies to help them. Islamic Judge Shaikh Sadgh Khaikhai, the so-called "hanging judge" has sentenced the scores of people to death, was appointed by parliament to investigate the plot and warned that no mercy would be shown to "conspirators" who will be "deaf with in a revolutionary manner." Khalkhai told reporters that Shabpour Baktari, prime minister under the ousted Shah Mohammed Karel Pahleli, was involved in the attempt. There was growing speculation the abortive coup would be used as a pretext for further purges—called for by a number of parliamentary deputies—in the Iranian armed forces, whose top ranking commanders were liquidly quashed immediately after the overthrow of the Shah 16 years ago. Ex-hostage rests with family WIESBADEN, West Germany—Former American hostage Richard Queen, grinning widely from his wheelchair, "looked in real great shape" yesterday for his first shopping trip since being taken hostage in Tehran eight months ago. The shopping trip with his parents and a visit to the chaplain of the U.S Air Force hospital where Queen is staying is a break in a day spent with her family. The spooky skirts will be a fun addition. Queen, 28, was released Friday after 250 days in captivity on orders from Ayatollah Rubolhali Khomeini because Iranian doctors were unable to treat an unspecified neurological complaint that affected the envoy's coordination. Fifty-two other Americans remain hostage in Iran for the 23rd day. Their militant Moslem captives have reportedly dispersed them to various Iranian towns. Queen was flown from Tehran to Zurich, Switzerland, where he underwent preliminary examination before being transferred Saturday to the U.S. Air Force (USAF). Hood tremors spark plans VANCOUVER. Wash.-Officials discussed emergency plans yesterday in the Mount Rushmore, hooded by a swarm of earthquakes last week, shows that the area is under stress. "We're not running around screaming," said Bob Oliver, an aide to Gwyn. "If it settles down, fine, but if it follows the same pattern as St. Helena." A series of tremors at the majestic 11,245-foot mountain, located 60 miles south of Mount St. Helens, prompted the U.S. Geologic Survey to issue Yesterday, however, officials reported no activity on the mountain. Local Oregon officials met Saturday at the city of Hood River, 20 miles north of Mount Hood. Jan Kurahara, a representative of the Hood River County emergency services department, told them it was time to put together "some kind of plan." Clackamas County emergency service director Dick Bass said 4,000 residents of the area might be affected by an evacuation plan. Ford urges moderate choice DETROIT—Former President Gerald Ford said yesterday he would urge Ronald Reagan to pick a moderate as his vice presidential candidate in an effort to broaden the Republican ticket. Reagan, however, said he felt no compulsion to go to the middle. Ford said he would recommend the name of a moderate to Reagan when they met and indicated it might be Senate GOP leader Howard Baker, former ambassador George Bush or former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. Reagan said he hadn't reached a decision and wanted to talk with party leaders at the convention. Bush, generally considered a moderate who differs with Reagan on some policy questions, and Sen. Richard Lugar of Indiana, a little-known conservative, are considered the front-runners for the vice presidential nomination. Bush said yesterday in a news conference that he would not bend to the pressure of the issue and other political differences should dissuade his Rape Act. In addition to Baker, Bush and Rumsfeld, others believed to be on the original list of possibilities are Sen. Paul Lailall of Nevada, Reagan's personal favorite; Rep. Jack Kemp of New York, backed by the conservatives; Senator Ted Cruz, the convention keynote speaker; and former Treasury Secretary William Simon. Most are already in the convention city, staging low-key campaigns with high-exposure activities as they wait for the verdict. President of Botswana dies GABORONE, Botswana—Sir Seretse Khama, the Oxofrd-educated lawyer who has been the only president of Botswana since its independence from Britain 14 years ago, died early yesterday of stomach cancer. He was $9. Thousands of his countrymen, many of them weeping openly, crowded churches and open air masses in the capital to mourn Khama's death. Political upheaval in this poor, simi-desert nation, one of Africa's few stable democracies, is considered unlikely. As a leader of a "front line" state, Khama delicately jugged his support for black liberation states in Zimbabwe and South Africa with his commitment to the cause. Khama had returned only two weeks before from London where he was treated for his illness. In 1948, in order to marry his white English-born wife, Ruth, he renounced his hereditary right to the chiefship of the majority Humanitarian tribe and became a member of the French Botswana, a nation of 800,000 people, is wedged between Zimbabwe, South Africa, and Southwest Africa Namibia. In 1970s the United Nations listed it as one of the world's poorest countries. He became reconciled with tribal leaders after winning pre-independence elections by a landslide victory, and gained political power when Botswana Soviets say CIA at Games MOSCOW-A Soviet newspaper yesterday charged the CIA with using cloak-and-dagger spy tricks, including false-bottom suitcases and underwear with secret pockets, to disrupt the Moscow Olympics with political subversion. But the Sovietskaya Rossia newspaper said the Kremlin was confident that any attempt by the CIA and other anti-Soviet organization in the West to target it would be defeated. "A number of U.S. publishing houses are fulfilling orders for subversive said Soviet literature which is to be smuggled to Moscow," the newspaper said. *Special firms have been set up to manufacture double-bottom suitcases, underwear with secret pocket pockets and nans of coffee stuffed in their pockets. They are worn on tissues or newspapers.* Sovietskaya Russia didn't accompany its article with any photographs, but there are no recent reports of such confiscations at Moscow's airport. The graduate Women's Group will meet in the Cork Room of the kansas Union from 12:1-30 p.m. MONDAY, JULY 14 GRADUATE WOMEN On Campus AFRICAN THEATER A lecture entitled "Traditions of African Theater in Practice" will be presented in the Jayhawk Room at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at University of Ibadan. A workshop will be held at 2 p.m. entitled "African Theater in Practice." The events are sponsored by the International Theater, Affairs and the University Theater. Daily Kansan BUSINESS SEMINAH A week long seminar on Basic and Advanced Life Insurance and BUSINESS SEMINAR Marketing Institute will be held in the Kansas Union. There will be an enrollment fee. WATER MANAGEMENT COURSE a short course on Quantitative Aspect Management will be held this week in Nahobs Hall. There will be an enrollment fee. WATER MANAGEMENT COURSE WORKSHOPS MOVIES The Museum of Natural History will sponsor several workshops this week. For times, fees, and reservations call (813) 527-4010 or Human Ancestors' (ages 8-10), "Aquatic Biology" (ages 10-13), "Exploring Nature" (ages 5-7), "Native American" (ages 5-7), "Native American" (ages 9-10), "Vertebrate Fossils" (ages 10-13). The SUA film to be shown at Woodruff Auditorium is "All the Kings Men." The show will start at 7:30 p.m. $1. TUESDAY JULY 15 ORIENTATION CAMPUS CHRISTIANS Incoming freshmen, transfer students and their parents will be going through an orientation all day, starting at the Union. BLACK STUDENT UNION CAMPUS CHRISTIANS Campus Christians will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlors A and B of the Kansas Union. BLACK STUDENT GROUP Choir practice will be held 5:30-7:30 p.m. in room 220 Robinson Gym. KEPCo nuclear power need disputed Bx WALTER THORR Staff Reporter Kansas' largest electric cooperative could buy the extra electricity it needs for peak load periods without owning a generating plant, according to Walter Bowers, spokesman for the Southwest Power Administration. The cooperative, Kansas Electric Power Cooperative, Inc. (KEPO), has a capacity of 25 megawatts of cooperative (REC) members that it must own 17 percent interest of the Wolf Creek nuclear Station in order to keep it up with the electric power it needs from the SWPA. BUT BOWERS said all that was necessary to qualify for SWPA power was to have access to electric power. KEPCo currently brings its electricity from Kansas Power and Light (KP&L, Kansas City Power and Light (KP&L) would be used in peak-load conditions. is not necessary. Joe Mullholland, KEPCo manager of power supply and engineering, said buying into Wolf Systems CICS with the "cheapest possible power." Dale Lyon, president of the Kansas Farmers Union, which has intervened before the Kansas Corporation Commission to stop the Wolf Creek purchase, has argued that nuclear power is the most expensive power possible. Even if becoming a generating utility "I don't understand why KEPC wants to buy into any power plants." Lyon said. "The RECs can get a hunk of money." The WBC is against Wolf Creek. It's a buyer's market." MORE THAN ONE prospective buyer is interested in Wolf Creek power. Gil Henson, general manager of the Kansas Municipal Energy Agency (KMEA), said last week his cooperative was considering buying between 5 and 10 percent of the plant's electricity. Hanson said KMEA had hired a consulting firm to study the feasibility of buying from Wolf Creek. The results that study should be ready soon, he said. KMEA, which is ready to begin negotiations with Wolf Creek's owners, is watching closely as KEPCo tests the willingness of the Kansas Corporation Commission to approve KEPCo's purchase. Hanson said. An investment by either KEPCo or KMEA would be a godsend for the financially-strapped owners of the Wolf Creek project -KGGE and KC&PL Projected construction costs for the nuclear plant have almost tripled since the early 1970s from $484 million to $1.5 billion. Dykes names dean of medical school During hearings before the Kansas Corporation Commission last week, KG&E disclosed that if KCP&L were drop out of the Wolf Creek project, completion of the plant would be impossible. William J. Reals, physician, has been named dean of the University of Kansas School of Medicine - Wichita, Chancellor Archie R. Dykes announced last week. The appointment was effective July 1. Reals succeeds Richard Walsh, who accepted a position in Phoenix, Ariz., as assistant area director of the Indian Health Service to the U.S. Public Health Services. Reals was previously associate dean for research, professor of pathology, and chairman and program director of the department of pathology at the University of Kansas School of Medicine—Wichita. Reals received a B.S. degree in 1944, an M.D. degree in 1945 and an M.S. degree in 1949, all from Creighton University, Omaha, Neh. He also holds positions at St. Joseph Medical Center in Wichita, where he has been pathologist and director of the department's internal medicine president for medical affairs since 1973. He is a member of several medical associations and is a fellow of the American Pathologists and the College of American Pathologists. In March, he was elected to the executive committee of the American Board of Medical Professionals. HOLIDAY TRAVEL SERVICE He was president of the Kansas Medical Society from 1971 to 1973, and has been a trustee of the American Board of Pathology since 1973. In the Holiday Plaza 2449 K. IOWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 (913) 841-8100 ★ Airline Reservations Get These services free! ★ Charter Information Tour Information ★ Car Rentals ★ Hotel/Motel Reservations ★ Cruise Information Let us make your travel plans. Tame Your Mane at MANE TAMERS 10th and Mass. 841-0906 --at Auditoriums also has: The Discwasher system 1%; or D3 fluid in bottles; Gram 16 or D3 fluid in ONE BUCK FILL UP Gold Office 1800 July 19th D3 fluid from Diswasher—the washbasin maintenance! 1.20 D3 FLUID, REG. $1.25 VALUE. Bring your empty 1.0z D3 盘 to Audioronics and we'll refill it for only $1.00! DISCWASHER D3 FLUID AUDIOTRONICS 928 MASSACHUSETTS DISCOUNT COPIES ENCORE COPY CORPS 25th & Iowa 842-2001 Holiday Plaza WEDNESDAY 4 hour country swingshow with country legend ERNEST TUBB !THIS WEEK! Tickets now available THURSDAY Animated Film Classic SEXTOONS FRIDAY 2 shows----9 & 11 FRIDAY Direct from Springfield, Mo old rock—new rock—they rock YOU ROCK! THE SKELETONS SATURDAY COMMANDER CODY in concert with TOFU TEDDY $6.50 advance tickets now on sale - Memberships always available at the 7th Spirit Club * Happy Hour till 8:00 SATURDAY - All nights except major concerts cheap pitchers & highballs 8:30-9:15 Tues.-Sun. now on sale AVEN. * Where the stars are 24 FIR : MIMALA, TAILS 25-26 THE BLUE RIDGE THE CRAMPS BAND * August 12 FABBURT AND BABBURTBIRDS 14 ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL here the stars are 7th & Mass. 842-6930 Lawrence Opera House