Page 2 University Daily Kansan, June 30, 1980 Capsules Daily Kansan From United Press International Schmidt goes to the Kremlin BONN, West Germany—Despite irritated warnings from the United States and little apparent chance of defusing tension with the Soviet Union, Chancellor Helmut Schmidt goes to Moscow today to talk about missiles and foreign trade. "The Russians apparently hope to concentrate on trade in their talks with Schmidt and spend a little time as possible on Afghanistan and related issues." Schmidt has said he intends to "speak clearly and with meaning and not conduct soft talk" in the Kernstein. A conservative challenge in fall elections is that he would like voters to consider him a candidate. Schmidt and Foreign Minister Hans-Deitch Genscher—the first Western leaders to visit Mali since the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan—will hold a forum in Khartoum on Friday. The missiles issue has clouded relations with both superpowers since NATO decided in December to deploy 527 U.S. bulk weapons to counter the Islamic State. Bani-Sadr demands power Iranian President Abbaslahan Bani-Sadr has demanded more power and morning he had offered Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini a letter of resignation. He also said Iran's economy was staggering because of Western sanctions imposed to force the release of the American hostages. "Any time I step out of the line of revolutionary and religious principles he may publish the letter," Bani-Sadr said in an interview with the newspaper He responded to Khomeini's complaints that the government was moving too slowly to solve the country's problems. The Ayatolah also threatened to have bureaucrats shut if they continued using the office stationery left over from the shah's rezime. "If the president is going to investigate these matters, then he means to do so." Bani-Sadt told the official news agency Pars. "I don't have any objections, although my load of work is very heavy," he said. "It is not possible that others have the means and I have the愿望." He added that they had to work on a daily basis. Aked about the state of Iran's economy, Bani-Sadr said he had been rallying audiences around the country to overcome the effects of the partial shutdown. "We are trying to figure out how we can live," he said. American car sales sputter DETROIT--The disastrous second quarter of 1980 ends today with four U.S. automakers in the red. It was one of the worst quarterly financial losses of the decade. Auto industry analysts on Wall Street believe combined second quarter losses could far exceed $1 billion. Ford Motor Co. Chrysler Corp. and American Motors Corp. have acknowledged they will lose money in the period. General Motors Corp. has described its profit outlook as questionable and analysts outside the company generally agree it will post a deficit. GM is considered the only one of the four with a chance to show a profit for the entire year. When second quarter statements are released over the next several weeks, analyst David Healy of the Wall Street firm of Drexel Burnham Lambert believes they could show losses as high as $450 million for Ford, $300 million for GM and at least $400 million for Chrysler. The past six months have been marked by massive layoffs, plant closings and other internal cost-cutting measures by which the battered industry has But they have not offset the impact of extremely weak sales, which fell most heavily on the most profitable car and truck models, profit-eroding rebates and other sales incentives and the need to spend at unprecendented levels to tool up for future generations of more fuel-efficient cars. TMI gas venting resumes MIDDLETOWN, Pa.—Scientists are resuming the venting of radioactive krypton gas into the atmosphere from the crippled Three Mile Island nuclear power plant at the originally planned rate after they resolved a snag in radiation monitoring Saturday. A spokesman for the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Karl Abraham, said Met-Ed planned to release approximately 500 to 1,200 curies of the 57,000 curies of radioactive krypton gas trapped in the facility. A curie contains one erram of radium. Gov. Dick Thornburgh toured the crippled nuclear power plant and its control room nerve center, and said the venting operation would not harm people who lived nearby. He advised residents of the area to go about their daily business. Nevertheless, hundreds of people fled their homes for the weekend because they doubted official assurances. george Hickernell, commissioner of nearby Lower Swatara Township, said as many as 700 had fled his community of 7,000 and that the snug in conditions at the border were a hazard. Anti-nuclear organizations opposed the venting partly because a state government study showed 20,000 to 40,000 local citizens were still so upset about Three Mile Island that they had recurring headaches, insomnia and other disorders. The snag Saturday developed when a monitor designed to detect radioactive particles apparently was falsely tripped by the radioactive gas, Detroit union hints at strike DETROIT — With July's Republican National Convention ever present on stage, the city municipal workers met yesterday in an effort to strike a during a strike at Glenview. Contracts for Detroit's 20,000 union-covered workers expire tonight, just two weeks before the convention. The lack of progress in the talks and the "no contract, no work" policy set by the workers' union prompted fears that city services would结 a halt with the agreement. Mayer Coleman Young said a strike during the convention "place a negative image on Detroit that would take us many, many years to recover "I believe that all the employees are just as anxious as a farm for Detroit to make a good impression on the nation and be recognized as a renaissance man." Both Young and Detroit Labor Relations Director Mark Ulcny were guarded optimistically during the marathon weekend sessions. "It's not necessarily going all that badly." Uiciny said Saturday. "It's just that we get a lot of ground to cover." Pope in Brazil for 12 days VATICAN CITY - Pope John Paul II left today for a 12-day trip through the primitive Amazon jungles and modern glass cities of Brazil, the world's largest city. The pope was scheduled to leave Rome at 6 a.m., 11 p.m. Sunday CDT, on an 11-hour flight to Brasilia, the ultra-medium capital of the South American country. During his trip the pope will travel about 18,650 miles and be away from Italy longer than any other pope in modern times. An estimated 17 million people will see the pope celebrate 13 masses and listen to him deliver 44 scheduled courses. He will visit 12 cities, two leoparochors, five churches and many others. In Sao Paulo, residents whose houses or apartments overlook the pope's motorcade routes have rented out some of their window space to those who want to get a glimpse of him. Some are reportedly getting as much as $4,000 for an overnight stay. In Brasilia alone an estimated 10,000 police and military personnel were on special duty to maintain order and protect the pope. The Graduate Women's Group will meet at noon in the Cork Room in the Kansas Union. MONDAY, JUNE 30 GRADUATE WOMEN On Campus Daily Kansan GRADUATE WOMEN Summer orientation for freshmen entering the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is all day at the Kansas University. SUMMER ORIENTATION IS an all day at the Ransom ON TRUMPET WORKSHOP TRUMPET WORKSHOP A trumpet workshop by Anthony Plog will be held at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. in Swarthot Recital Hall PIANO CLASSES Piano Master Classes will be held by Leon Fleisher at 9:30 a.m. in Swartwout Hall and at 2 p.m. in murphy Hall. The SUA movie is "Wages of Fear." at 7 p.m. MOVIE LECTURE A lecture on 'Exoloring Furnishings' will be given by Douglas Hyland at 1 p.m. in the north balcony of the Spencer Art Museum. A lecture on "Traditional Japanese Painting of Today" will be given by Sumio Kuwabara of the University of Tsukiba, Japan at 2 p.m. in Room 211 of the Spencer Art Museum. PAINTING A fishing clinic will be held at 7 p.m. at the Community Building. For more information call Steve Hawks at the Fish and Game Commission office. FISHING CONCERT CAMEL UNION The Campus Christains will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlors A and B in the Kansas Union. The KU summer concert series presents Anthony Plog on trumpet at 8 n.m in Swarthout Hall. CAMPUS CHRISTIANS BLACK STUDENT UNION The Black Student Union will hold choir practice in 328 Murphy at 5:30 p.m. TAU SIGMA DANCE ENSEMBLE The Tau Sigma Dance Ensemble meets in 220仁布罗安 at 7 p.m. RU MAHARAJ JI GURU MAHARAJ JI A free introductory program about Guru Maharaj JI and the knowledge he reveals the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union at 7 p.m. For more information call 842-1741. The KU Research Institute on Women will have a lecture given by Elaine Showalter at 10:30 a.m. in the Spencer Library Auditorium. WOMEN The KU Sailing Club meets at p.m. in the Kansas Union Parlors. WEDNESDAY,JULY 2 SAILING MOVIE The SUA movie will be "Inherit the Wind." Showtime is 7 p.m. KANU radio presents the 27th annual Newport Jazz Festival at 10 p.m. SUMMER ORIENTATION Summer orientation for freshmen entrained in the College of Arts and Sciences and the School of Fine Arts is all day in the Kansas Union. CARILLON CONCERT CARLETON CONCERT Albert Gerken, University Carillonneur, will give a concert at 7 p.m. at the Memorial Campanile. PARK CONCERT PARK CONCERT. The Lawrence Union Band will give a free concert at South Park at 8 p.m. Hangar to be built if funds are raised BY LAURA LUCKERT Because the current building is structurally unsound, David C. Kraft, dean of the School of Engineering, has been instructed to hangar to replace one of the two hangars that belong to the University of Kansas at the Lawrence Municipal Staff Reporter THE NEW HANGAR will house the University's airplane and shop classrooms for aerospace engineering classes. THE OTHER HANGAR at the air- port, which belongs to KU and will not be replaced, will house a propulsion laboratory, also for aerospace classes. The 'hangar we hold classes in out there now was built in the '30s and is completely inadequate.' Kraft said. This problem justifying the need for a new one. Kraft said that if he and the KU Endowment Association raised enough money, they would build construction. They estimated completion time is 11 months. Martin Henry, Endowment Association spokesman, said before the new hangar could be built, the approval of the city of Lawrence. Farmers object to KEPCo pact By NANCY SEARLE and and WALTER THORP WALTER THORP Staff Reporters Thousands of Kansas farmers are upset because they may have to pay for a contract they never voted on. The contract, between the Kansas Electric Power Cooperative, Inc. (KEPCo), and its 28 Rural Electric Cooperative (REC) members, gives the super cooperative exclusive electrical power to the cooperatives for the next 40 years. The contract would also enable KEPCo to buy 17 percent of the campaign troubled Wolf Creek National State could raise farmers' electric bills. Dale Lyon, president of the Kansas JOE MULHOLLAND, KEPCo manager of power supply and engineering, said the 40-year exclusive supply contract was necessary in order to qualify for a low-interest government loan from the Rural Electric Administration that would allow KEPCo to buy into the nuclear facility. Farmers Union, said farmers had not allowed to vote on the contract or on KEPCo's subsequent decision to purchase part of the nuclear plant. "I am a member of a Rural Electrical Cooperative and I am an in-charge officer. I even know that my cooperative belonged to KECPo until they asked the Kansas Corporation Commission for income to become a generating utility." "The whole idea behind the cooperative movement is democracy," he said. "But KEPCo's member Mulhooland said all the cooperatives had been informed well in advance of KEPCo's decision. It was not the KEPCo's responsibility to see that each individual cooperative voted on the decision. That responsibility belonged to the board of directors of each cooperative, he said. LYON SAID THE Kansas Farmers Union was concerned about the future of the cooperative movement in Kansas. “KEPCo has been suckerked into a trap because of the special relationship between the state government. It has become a pimp for the big power companies and the farmers will be a captive market for the industry, nowhere else to so for our electricity.” cooperatives did not vote on whether they wanted anything to do with Wolf Creek. He said that if KEPCo was allowed to become a generating utility, the company would have a purpose for existence. Eventually, he said, the smaller cooperatives would lose their autonomy and merge into one organization - KEPCo. When KEPCo applied to the Kansas Corporation Commission (KCC) for permission to become a generating utility and to purchase part of Wolf Creek, nine legal, environmental and municipal interventions intervened to stop the purchase. THE INTERVENING organizations contend the extra power from Wolf Creek may not be necessary, that it will be more expensive than conventional electricity and that KEPCo may not be as cost-effective alternatives before making their decision. Wolf Creek's co-owners, Kansas Gas and Electric and Kansas City Power have partnered to sufferning financial troubles with the Wolf Creek project. Intervengers said the nuclear project may not be compliant with the KCC does not approve the purchase. Mullholland explained that KEPCo needed the generating capability from the Wolf Creek project to qualify for an extra 90 megawatts of inexpensive power. The NRC has led west Power Administration, SPA only sells power for peak load periods. He added that KEPCo owned no transmission lines and would have to buy them. He said the hydroelectric power, KEPCo could not be sure that KECP&L would allow the use of its lines if the KEPCo bought into another company, he said. The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts SUMMER CONCERT SERIES Presents ANTHONY PLOG, Trumpet Tuesday, July 1, 1980 8:00 p.m. Swarthout Recital Hall An Orson Welles treat, the music of *The Lady Warrior*, his doom by a beautiful woman (Rita Heworth). The finale is pure sense. The film is a hall of miracle, (1948 87 min). No Admission Charge Mon. June 30 THE WAGES OF FEAR SVA FILMS Mon. July 7 THE LADY FROM SHANGHAI Spencer Tracy as Clarence Darrow and Frederic Markas as William Jernings Bryan in this brilliantly acted film about the Scope Monkey Trial, directed by Stanley Kramer. A convenient well-made film (12 min.) A fierce, taut suspense film about four drivers trying to get nitroglycerine through the Amazon thriller, remade as jungle adventure for Zack Clouzet, with Yees Montan (Franculez/subtitles) (1955 138 min). Unless otherwise noted; all films will be shown at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union; M-W. Films are $1.00 and start at 7:00; FIllms are $1.50 and start at 7:00. Use BW or 84347 Union 5th Level. Information 884-3477. No smoking or refreshments allowed. Wed. July 2 INHERIT THE WIND "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2:1 and Acta 4:25 Often and on all our days we have heard the expression, "Crazy as a bed-bug." Don't know how it came by this reputation as it seems rather smart the way it hides "under cover" and attacks while one is asleep. The flies or the fly don't have sense enough to fear and will attack one ten thousands big in broad daylight and while the birds make = make me think of the power of the sensual sense so that attack God Amignity and His Book, The Bible! The Word of God, The Bible, is food The Almighty has prepared for mind, soul and spirit of man. "They have rejected The Word of God, what wisdom is in them?" asked the Prophet. "God made man to be formed in his mother's womb, and ordained him a Prophet to the nations: A PROPHEET TO THE NATIONS — don't the nations need one? God has provided one and the other, and he gave us both." He rejected it and the messages of all the other Prophets, including The Son of God Himself, in that they have ruled out The Bible from our public educational institutions! In their words, "There are no more nothing; and they are counted to Him as less than nothing, and vanity." Christ likened those that God rejects to goats placed on the left" to us forwarded by Jesus. Is your moral and spiritual life the product of the food God prepared for man, or is it the result of crawling anywhere to satisfy the appetite of the goat? The more we read God's Word, the Bible, consider its history, its origins, and its meaning. If you can fought with fire and sword and crosses through the ages the power and blessing and the changes wrought to pace and good for mankind when honored and obeyed, the more we are persuaded that the opponents of The Bible and those who reject its God-inspired Authority, the more we are persuaded that Birth and the Miraculous, and in many other ways corrupt the Word of God Almighty; all such are "Crazy as the bedbug"; don't care where they can crawl for food, and if not found in the Garden they will have the "goat appetite" and in danger of partaking of the goat nature and fitting themselves for the fires of eternal hell! They have refused "angels food" raised down from the earth and chosen to eat trash with the goats and slops the hogs. Rightly the effort is being made to head off the publishers and peddlers of obscene and vile literature and the misogyny that they represent. Young and old that gretely devour the filth as if they had a tapeworm? All animals eat their parents and that which they eat becomes a part of them, and is not such an appetite as a child would have. We just eat like jadakiss. When I used to have such an appetite I was more or less strongly conscious of the fact that I was born on the Holy Lord God Almighty. Turn you, turn ye, why will ye die," God says. "No every one that thirsts, come to the waters, and that he hath no money; come you, buy, and eat; yes, come, wine and bury wine; not only the wines, but the fruits, spend money for that which is not bread? and your labor for that which satisfeitif foet non hafteren diligently unto Me, put forth your arms, and let your soul delight itself in farness." Isaiah 55:1-3. P. O. 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