2 Tuesday, March 25.1980 University Daily Kansan INVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wire Services UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kennedy. Bush futures on line Sen. Edward M. Kennedy new New York while George Bush sought votes Connecticut Republicans who threatened to shred the Republicans as serious preridential contender. The New York Daily News said that while Kennedy was about even with President Carter among the state's Jewish voters—about one-third of the population—he did not make any changes. At least two Kennedy aides were prepared to tell him to quit if he loses New York badly, but Kennedy said he would not. On the Republican side, front-runner Ron Reagan was already a winner in New York, where the GOF content effectively boiled down to a choice between "President" and "Rick Santorum." That left Bush focusing on Connecticut, but a University of Connecticut poll showed Reagan with a sizeable lead in that state. Many of the uncontested slates were likely to support Reagan since he was the favorite of the state party organization. Rep. John B. Anderson, R-III, also was on the ballot in Connecticut, but concentrated his campaign on the upcoming primary in Wisconsin. NRC starts Wolf Creek probee BURLINGTON - A Nuclear Regulatory Commission spokesman confirmed yesterday that the NRC has begun a probe into allegations of shoddy conduct by the agency's nuclear weapons unit. Clyde Wisner, chief spokesman of the NRC's regional office in Arlington, Texas, said the on-site investigation was started last week after the regulatory agency was made aware of the allegations contained in a Dec. 21 story in the Emporia, Kan., Gazette. Among the allegations were reports that: The prime contractor, Daniel International Corp., had hired incompetent supervisors. Unqualified workers were hired as journeymen for key jobs. A foreman had certified satisfactory completion of a weld which had not yet been completed. -Conected had been poured from five or six feet high, increasing the possibility that it would separate and weaken. —The company did not demand quality work of its supervisors and employees. The NRC's findings will be released to the public in six weeks, Wisner said, after a 20-day review period which the plant's builders, Kansas City Power & Light Co. and Kansas Gas and Electric Co., are allowed to make sure no proprietary secrets are revealed in the report. Trains come back to Liberal LIBERNAL - The beginning of service yesterday by the St. Louis Southwestern Railway, a subsidiary of Southern Pacific Transportation Co., represented a major victory for the community which fought hard to preserve the line once operated by the defunct Rock Island Railroad. Gov. John Carlin was on hand for ceremonies celebrating the first train to come to Liberal in more than 90 years. The service yesterday marked the beginning of the Southern Pacific's takeover of the route from the 128-year-old Rock Island. The line runs from Tucumcil, N.M., through Liberal, Pratt, Topeka, Kansas City, Kan., and on to St. Louis. The Southern Pacific's operation remains temporary until plans to purchase the line are finalized. Freight service along much of the Rock Island track was halted yesterday because of a federal appeals court ruling, but the Southern Pacific was granted temporary operating rights. Firemen get hero's welcome KANAS CITY, Mo.-The city's firefighting force returned to normal after a circuit court judge dismissed 700 contempt of court charges against the city's fire department. Firefighters, released from jail to a hero's welcome from families and friends, returned to the job at the 3 p.m. shift change. Deputy fire chief of that shift, Edward Wilson, said the transition was smooth. The regular crews replaced a patchwork firefighting force of police, battalion units and firefighters. Wilson said there would soon be a major change in the department under a new contract pushed by the Firefighters Union Local No. 4, a 18-hour shift. Fire Chief John Waas said he was not sure when the new work hours would be implemented. The main factor in the settlement by the City Council was the disstatement of 42 firefighters dismissed for refusing to work overtime during a strike. Rancher seeks PCB paiment TOPEKA—Newton rancher Don Buseinit, who last summer lost 168 cattle to contamination from PCB-based transformer oil, yesterday asked the Senate committee to ban PCBs in the nation. Before considering paying off Busenitz's loss with money from the state, the committee decided to investigate the possibility of compensation from manufacturer Dow Chemical or the federal government, which banned PCBs—polychlorinated biphenyls—in 1976 after linking them to cancer. Bensitz said he is innocent of wrongdoing and had no knowledge PCBs could be dangerous when he purchased the transformer oil in 1972 from a salvage After tests determined that 53 of his cattle, which died last May at the Pawnee Valley field in Houston, had a high level of FCB contamination, Buenaiz's NPCO detected no trace of E. coli. Mel Gray, deputy director of Environment for the Kansas Department of Health and Environment said byproducts from the cattle, which had already been recovered, were taken to the facility and recovered and destroyed after the incident. They included Carnation dog food, fed caked by chickens in Arkansas and leather products manufactured in The rest of his 168 head herd were destroyed in September. Governor's secretaru ousted TOPEKA—Sister Jeanne McKenna was ousted from her position as appointments secretary to Gov. John Carlin effective yesterday. In a tenet statement issued through his press secretary, Carlin would only contribute to this administration. I feel at this time that a change is necessary. Carlin named Sister McKenna's chief assistant, Shirley Allen of Hiwatha, as acting secretary. Those criticisms broke into the open in mid-1979, but Carlin said he had no intention of replacing her. Sister McKenna came under fire frequently from some Democrats who considered her unresponsive with their suggestions in recommending persons to vote. Weather... Skies will be cloudy today with a 30 percent chance of snow this afternoon, with the high in the low 40s, according to the National Weather Service in Chicago. There is a 70 percent chance of snow tonight and the low will be in the 20s. Tomorrow the snow will be ending and the high will be in the low 40s. WASHINGTON (AP)-The United States warned Iran yesterday against punishing the American hostages held in Tehran as part of the capture of the deposed shah from Panama. Shah's move upsets Iran Insisting that the decision of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi to leave Panama for Egypt was made by the former monarch alone, Carter administration officials also tried to cool tempers in Tehran by offering them the 1/2-month-old hostage crisis ends. The officials said the Soviets posed a common danger to U.S. and Iranian interests in the Persian Gulf and reaffirmed the 50 American hosts were liberated. The shah's sudden departure from Panama on Sunday upset the 'hell out of people' in Tehran, a senior administration official acknowledged. Teban radio called for a march on the occupied embassy to demonstrate what it is doing to the people in the States and Egyptian President Awar Salat to help the shah escape extradition. THE MOSLEM embellish holding the Tehran embassy said again their 50 American hostages, captive for 142 days, on the shack and his fortune are returned in Iran. Even so, the administration issued a statement from the State Department spokesman Hodder G. Holding that the Iranian government is aware of the consequences and condemnation that would result. In Washington, a senior Carter administration official dismissed the threat of hostage trials. WHITE HOUSE official, who asked that he not identified, indicated that the administration does not attach "the same For the most part, officials within the administration indicated that they felt the United States could not be affected by the shah's move to Egypt. He left Panama after two presidential advisers, Hamilton Jordan and Lloyd Carter, held quot negotiations with "The concern we would feel has not changed," the official said, "but our assessment of the problem is certainly less than it was before." degree of concern" to the trial threat that it did when Iranian officials earlier suggested the Americans could be placed before courts. THE IRANIAN government had hoped, through legal proceedings, to have the shah returned to Tehran for trial as a war criminal. Punishing him is the principal demand of the Moslem militants who seized the hostages and the U.S. Embassy on Nov. 14. Still, the White House official said flatly that "there was never any prospect that the shah would be extracted to Iran and made clear to him and to his people." Panama has no extradition treaty with Iran. However, Iranian officials had taken a number of steps to circumvent that problem. The families of the hostages were assured on Saturday that the shah would not return and the family would have no need to come back here," the White House official said. "Those involved in the attack had been made no request to come back here." THE SHAH and his wife, Farah Diba, took off from Panama on Sunday aboard a chartered American tiltiner. He left Panama just a day before Iran's lawyers were to submit documents requesting his extradition for alleged mass U. S. officials said medical reasons led the shah to accept Sadat's long-standing invitation to reside in Egypt. The shah's doctors say he requires surgery to remove an enlarged and possibly cancerous spleen, but U.S. specialists and Panamanian men had been wrenched over who would be responsible for the operation in Panama. murder and corruption during his three decades as Iranian monarch. IT WAS ALSO clear, however, that the Islamic nation had a Panamanian willingness to consider the Iranian extradition request—even though some Panamanian officials said he would be held accountable. The shah was met by Sadat at Cairo airport. Sadat accompanied the shah to a second-floor, river-view wing that he and his entourage will have to themselves. Hospital director Dr. Sabry Ismail said it Encore Copy Corps 842-2001 "We deliver" $3^{\text{¢}}$ copies (8½ x 11 regular) Now through April 5 We also do typing, editing and art work. 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza THE MOUSE THAT ROARED Fri, March 28 at 7 & 9:30 pm Sat, March 29 at 2, 7, & 9:30 pm DYCHE AUDITORIUM $1.25 and 75* for kids under 12 Partially funded by Student Senate presented by KU Science Fiction & Fantasy Ass'n --was too early to tell when an operation could be performed, pending medical testing. Opera House Productions presents IGGY POP One night only Wednesday, March 26th "I've been through it all, and proved that I'm equal to anybody you'd care to mention." - Mr. Pop With The Janet Jameson Band March Coming Soon Featuring Janet Jameson former lead vocalist for Cole Tuckey & FEMALE TROUBLES • Advance tickets available at Kino 27 Debbie Harry in INMADE BEDS & THE FOREIGNER 28 JOHN MAYALL & Used Parts 29-99 & the Dickens Egypt was Pahlavi's first stop when he began his exile 14 months ago, and he successively moved on to Morocco, the Netherlands, Mexico, the United States and Panama. Sadat, asked by reporters whether the shah would remain in Egypt, said, "Yes, yes,permanently." 3-N.Y. Erotic Film Festival 4-5-PAT'S BLUE RIDDIM BAND 17-Divine in PINK IMAGINGS Get your advance - Advance tickets available at Kiefs, Better Days & the 7th Spirit Club Get your advance tickets while you still can at Kiefs, Better Days and the 7th Spirit Club. Doors open at 8 Show starts at 9 Only 6.50 adv. 7.50 d.o.s. Sadat, who has branded Iranian kings in the past, is known for Khomeini's 'hunical', is unlikely to entertain any extratition request by Iran. The two countries do not have diplomatic relations. Wedding Reception? Call The Castle Tea Room 1307 Mass. 843-1151 Call for concert info. 842-6930 sua films Tuesday, March 25 Peckingah: RIDE THE HIGH COUNTRY Dir. Sam Peckinpach, with Randolph J. McKeen, Marathew Hartley, Jillian Worthington, symbols of the romantic old West. as it was entering a new century, as it was entering a new century, Wednesday, March 26 The Lubits Touch: TO BE OR NOT TO BE (1942) Dir. Erinn Lubish, with Jack Benny, a lawyer and an executive of Robert Bess, Inter-derm Europe is the setting for this bitting satire of star actors traveling across the world. HEAVEN CAN WAIT LUNA /10701 Thursdav. March 27 Dir. Ernst Lubitsch, with Don Krasnykh, was the historian of a recently deceased noードer who must justify to the authorities that he heavens up "home-children," a short story to heaven. *"Home-children,"* a short story to heaven. Dir. Benarrodo Bertoluciu, with Jill Clayburgh, Matthew Barry, Fred Gwynne. An American star opera star, she is the author of her with her heroin-addicted teenaged son. From the director of 1900 and LAST TANGO IN PARIS. 8:00 p.m. Hoch Auditorium, in 35mm! $1.50 Dir. Luise Bunnel, with Fernando Rey, Carole Bouquet, Molina Angola. A man in his fifteenth fade maltly in love (Bourke), and a woman, played by two different actresses, spurs his affections with an unseen man of his own passion. A delightful friend, the young L'AGE DOR and BELEE DE JOUR, Francis tubillies. The ballet, "A Miracle," by Friday & Saturday, March 27-28 THAT OBSCURE OBJECT OF DESIRE Midnight Movies ROCK 'N' ROLL HIGH SCHOOL (1927) Dir. Alarkan Attack, with P.J. Soles. The Ramones. New Wave rocks the Rainy Mountains. A band roll band who are ostracized by school officials; however, anarchy reigns. Lots of fun and loud music. A short film with Cheap Trick. Unless otherwise noted; all tickets will be shown at Woolford Auditorium in the Kansas Union; M-R firms are $1.00 each; S-A firms are $1.50 and start at 7:30, 9:00 and Midnight on Fri. & Sat, and at 2:00 on Sunday, Tickets available at the SAU Office, Union 5th Level. You can smoke a smoking or refreshments allowed. SOUTH AFRICA NIGHT Listen to Dumasani Kumalo, Exiled African journalist Wed. March 26 Talk to D.S. Kumalo Potluck Dinner Later: Entertainment Partially funded by Student Senate 6:30 p.m. 8 p.m. Ecum. Ministries Building Sponsored by KU International Club