2 Thursdav. April 10. 1980 University Daily Kansan INVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wise Services UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Carter, Sadat conclude talks WASHINGTON—President Carter wound up talks with Egyptian President Amar沙达日侍女 with words of support for the Palestinians but no apology. That, Carter said, would depend on his consultations here next week with Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin. Carter said he was grateful for what Sadat added to his ability to lead the country. The two leaders parted on the White House South Lawn with an exchange of ributes after three rounds of talks in two days. Carter stressed, however, that there must be a 'recognition of the realization of Palestinian rights, a recognition that the Palestinians must have a voice in this process.' Sadat, before driving off to see congressional leaders, said he was proud to be the friend of "the gallant American people." As Carter smiled宜好, the approval spread. Sadat also said difficulties in Iran and Afghanistan, and what he called a threat to the Persian Gulf, should enhance the efforts for reaching an agreement on the nuclear deal. Although Carter called his talks with Sadat constructive, he no decision could be reached yet, because Prime Minister Begin and the Israelis must be Diplomatic sources said they doubled, however, that the back-to-back visits by Satad and Begin would produce an accord. These sources, asking not to be identified, said negotiations would be intensified and that Satad was likely to return for further meetings next month. Man hijacks jet, crew to Cuba A man armed with an automatic pistol scaled a wall at a California airport yesterday, commanderated an American Airlines jettener waited to take on the plane. The jet with only the hijacker and the seven crew members aboard first飞到 Dallas-Fort Worth Regional Airport in Grapevine, Texas. It refueled and then flew to its destination. The plane landed at the Joe Marti Airport in Havana at 4:18 CST. Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Fred Farrar said in Washington. He said the crew would be allowed to leave Cuba for Miami, but it was not known when the return flight might be made. The FAA said Cuban authorities had taken the hijacker into custody and were questioning him. American Airlines spokesman Joe Moran in Dallas said the airline did not know when the plane and its crew would return. "Our concern is to get them out as quickly as possible," he said Soviets launch two cosmonauts MOSCOW - The Soviet Union launched two cosmonauts into a orbit yesterday. there was speculation that they would extend greetings from a space station to the ISS, and even to the moon. The official Tass news agency said a record-bolding adventurer and a rookie cosmonaut were launched to make repairs on Salut8, the station that has been in orbit 2½ years. The launch of the Saxur 35 craft followed a record-breaking 175-day mission aboard the space station last year. The Soviets launched an unnamed craft last month to test new guidance systems, and then sent up another unmanned transport ship in late March to deliver supplies. That spacecraft is still docked to Salyut, awaiting the two cosmonauts to unload it. Tass said the cosmonauts' mission would be first to clean, repair and restore the space station, and then to "carry on scientific and technical experiments, the study of the earth's natural resources and medical-biological research in near space." The last American manned space flight was in July 1975, when Thomas Stafford and Donald Dlayton docked their Apollo 18 craft to the Soviet Soyuz 18 in October 1976. Soviet television carried pictures of yesterday's launch three hours after liftoff from the Baikonur space center in Central Asia. Recess leaves bills unresolved TOPEKA-The 1800 Kansas Legislature, marked by renewal of a bitter rural-burban fight over school finance and the inability of Gov. John Carlin to enlist support of his fellow Democrats to raise more highway revenue, adjourned its first session last night. The legislators will return to Topeka April 30 for two or three days of cleanup work—the traditional "veteron session"—to consider bills hustled down by the pen and the legislature. As the recess arrived, only a death penalty bill certain to be vetoed, a new pay plan for state employees and a proposed constitutional amendment to permit state financial participation in works of internal improvement had been passed which could be classified as major. Still to be resolved were the acrimonious debates over a change in the formula by which state school aid is distributed, approval of same kind of highway funding package, re-passage of a bill to increase the home mortgage interest burden, funding of public television, and amendment of the state's open meeting law. Also left unsettled was the designation of the channel catfish as the official state fish. The House insisted that the catfish designation be in a bill that the Senate had passed. John Paul II to visit France VATICAN CITY — Pope John Paul II announced yesterday that he would visit the, first pope to do so since Pius VI, who went there in 1804 to crown Santa Lucia. Napleton is one of the sources said the 59-year-old pontiff was expected to spend most of his time in Paris where he would address the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Political Society. In addition to Paris, the Pope is expected to visit a sanctuary in the small village of Ars near Lyon dedicated to St. Jean baptiste Marie Vianne. This will be the sixth trip outside of Italy for the Polish-born pope since he was elected to the papacy in October 1978. He already has announced plans to tour six African nations May 2-12. He also plans to go to Brazil in July and to the Philippines in November. The last Roman Catholic pontiff to visit France, Pius VII, went to Paris against his will at the orders of Napoleon. Pius returned to Rome, but was carried off to Fontainebleau in 1812 and was not allowed to return to Rome until two years later when Napoleon had suffered military reverses. Fuel tax founders in Senate Senate Majority Leader Norman Garr, R-Westwood, announced to the Senate that the gas tax bill would not be considered by the Senate unless it When Gaar revealed the proposal to raise the gasoline tax by three cents a gallon in 1981 and a penny a gallon the next two years in a row, he said the bill had the support of most Senate Republicans and at least seven Democrats, plus the approval of Gov. John Carlin. TOPEKA—The main backer of a plan to raise the state motor tax by law for renovation of deteriorating highways conceded yesterday that bipartisan legislation would ban upgrades. But Senate Minority Leader Jack Steinger, D-Kansas City, questioned Gaar's supposition that at least seven Democrats had supported the bill. "If there was ever a coalition, I certainly was unaware of it because most of the members of the Democratic body opposed a gas tax," he said. Guar laeid Sens. Arnold Berman, D-Iawrence, and Steinegger for sidelining the bill by lobbying Democratic senators who had indicated support for the bill. Weather Skies will be partly cloudy today with the high about 63, according to the KU Weather Service. Winds will be southerly at 5-15 mm. Tonight will be cloudy with the low around 45. There will be a chance of rain by morning. Militants threaten to kill hostages The young radicals holding 40 Americans in Tehran threatened yesterday to burn the U. Embassy and their hostages if the U.S. ambassador to the smallest" military move against Iran. Bv The Associated Press The Carter administration was hiting at a possible naval blockade of Iran or a move to mine Iran ports if the hostages were not freed. But yesterday, American diplomats sought the help of U.S. allies in a broader program to punish Iran economically, a move could make tougher moves unnecessary. Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance summoned ambassadors from 20 nations to attend a meeting in Paris, the case, and foreign ministers of West European nations were gathering in Portsmouth, England. The United States has asked its allies to take "parallel steps" to match the Carter administration's four-point sanctions program, which included severing diplomatic relations with Iran and an all trade except food and medicine. West European and other nations were considering taking action with the United States, but any decision might be weeks away. Following yesterday's 45-minute meeting between Vance and the group of allied diplomats, Canadian Ambassador Peter Towe said his government already was in agreement that Tehran has been closed since the February escape of six Americans who took refuge But there was no "check list" of countries willing to cooperate with the United States, and it was unclear if the spokesman, said. U.S. officials prefer that all eleach decide its course of action on the issue. there. "We're no longer importing Iranian oil and our trade is insignificant," he said. Canada is nearly self-sufficient in oil. For other allies, Iran is a more vital trade partner. Japan imports about 10 percent of its oil from Iran, and in Western Europe the range ranges from 1 percent to about 9 percent, according to State Department officials. The Iranians have hinted they will cut off oil to any nation that cooperates with the U.S. sanctions. The embassy militants issued a statement yesterday, read on Tehran Radio, and said they would be wary of the government in the United States that if it undertakes the smallest military intervention in Iran, then it will be unwilling to use them emphatically warn the respected U.S. nation that the criminals of the U.S. administration will be directly responsible for the attacks. In a statement, reported by the news agency Pars, the militants said they would "burm into ashes the spy hostages and the buildings they are living in if we see any military move or the least military attack by the U.S. against the territory of Iran." The embassy hostages were midway through their 23rd week of captivity in Tehran. After seeing the embassy Nov. 4, the militants threatened to kill their hostages in the United States tried to rescue them and tried to kill them, said they had raged the embassy with munitions. Sadigh Gholzbehri, Iranian foreign minister, interviewed yesterday in the Turkish capital to be doubled the Iranian government would be in a position to stop the militants if they were arrested. At the Tehran news conference, however. Ghothzbad spoke of improved conditions for the hostages. He said the militants had agreed to provide better living conditions and more visits to the captives. Iranian revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhbakhil MohamedKoher said this week he began a national tour in hostages, and President Abbasian Bani-Sadr said he favored naming an observer to oversee their living conditions. Ghostbataz said he personally favored allowing the minister to visit. The militants have demanded the return of deposed Shaah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi to Iran to face trial in exchange for the hostages' freedom. Iran, meanwhile, was also intensifying its Iran, with neighboring Iraq. Ghostbadez said in a Tehran news conference that Iran had "decided to overthrow" the Iraqi government of President Saddam Hussein, he accused of being "America's agent." Border tension between the two countries has heightened since the revolutionary victory in Iran 14 months ago, and it flared into frontier skirmishes this week. An Iranian Phantom fighter and three Iranian military helicopters duelged yesterday with Iraqi helicopters near the country, two countries, the television reported. No planes are shot down in the battle over the Iranian border town of Baveisel, an island in the Persian Gulf, where were artillery barrages and rocket attacks, and 15 Iranian Revolutionary Guards were killed. Despite an ever-escalating war of words, fighting prior to yesterday's reported air battle had been limited to minor ground skirmishes near their 800-mile border. Earlier yesterday Gholzbadeh was quoted as saying Iran would defend itself against Iraqi military attacks and sabotage. for fun in the JO; fun in the sun . . . choose sandals by Connie J. J. Angela's Shoes Use your People Book coupon at JJ Angela's 25th & IowaHoliday Plaza "Any country supporting America in practice must face action similar to that which Iran has taken against America," he widely regarded as strongly anti-America. Continues Tonight The Lawrence Opera House Fund Raiser "We need your vote of confidence AND investment in the future of live music in Lawrence." Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Iran's revolutionary leader, also owed yesterday to the late Ayatollah Ali Khamseh to relegate his leaders "to the dustin of history." His comments were monitored in 2013. Tonight: Donation $6.00 For that you get One free beer or drink PLUS a coupon book worth approx. $15.00 PLUS the live sounds of: Chuck Berg Band (jazz) w/Tommy Johnson Unison (jazz/funk) Scare - a one man band The J.T. Cooke Band In Baghdad, the official Iraqi news agency said Iraqi security forces had uncovered a plan for subversion backed by Iran but also involving local elements. The president of Iraq's revolutionary council, Mosul Mudiad, was quoted as saying that the government confessed to meeting in Qen with Khimein and to agreeing to a plan 'for cooperation to ensure security'. (Rock and Roll) The two countries have been disputing Iran's occupation of three small islands at the entrance to the Persian Gulf, which Iran has accrued. The US thereafter became the United Arab Emirates. Watch for the Fri.-Sat. Line-up in tomorrow's KANSAN Don't miss this opportunity to invest in the future of live music in Lawrence. Iraq wants control of the islands reunion to the Arab side of the gulf. The Iranian leaders say the islands are Iran's and they will not be given back. Thanks for your support. Call for concert info. 842-6930 Observers said the threats by Khomeini and Ghadiband to overthrow Iraqi troops were the main reason why planning was a major attack, but there were fears the fighting would escalate further. Iran said Tuesday it had ordered a full military alert at its Persian Gulf naval and air bases. April 20th DEADLINE FOR PRE-ENTRIES: APRIL 11 APRIL 11 For more info: SUA Office Kansas Union 864-3477 sua films Friday & Saturday April 11-12 THE BUDDY HOI STORY (1978) Dir. Steve Rash, with Gary Busey and John Lance, has been a bureus Busey has an excellent performance as Buddy Holly, in this series of recordings. Also Abbott and Castolo's Who's Woman? *Friday 3:30 (Forum Rm.). 9:30 THE MAN WHO FELL TO EARTH (1976) Dr. Nicholas Roeg, with David Bowie, Candy Clark, Buck Henry, Rip Tom A. Cook, and many others, comes to Earth and finds he can't be as lightly stunning "Friday-70." Saturday 3:30, 9:30 Sunday, April 13 QUINTET (1979) Dir. Robert Altman, with Paul Newman, Bily Andersson, Brigitte Fossey, Vittorio Gismon, Fernando Rey, an unusual futuristic story of the few survivors of the Inal Ice Age and one of their greatest game of life and death called Quintet. Monday, April 14 WILD STRAWBERRIES Dir. Ingar, Bergman, with Victor Sjostrom, Björk Andersson, Max von Sydow. This is the widely acclaimed film of a doctor's journey through a landscape of dream and memory and receives receive an honorary degree. Tuesday, April 15 CHARLE CHAN IN LONDON (1934) - with- CHARLE CHAN AT TREASURE ISLAND (1939) A double feature of the popular detective film in LONDON star Warner Bros. and Merrill Milland, AT TREASURE ISLAND features a young Carromer, with a girl on his back. Unless otherwise noted; all films will be shown at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union; M-R I films are $1.00 each; AFI films are $1.50 and start at $1.00 per film, and Midnight on Fri. & Sat, and at 2:00 on Sunday. Tickets available at UA Office Union 5th Level. Smoking or refreshments allowed.