2 Monday, March 24.1980 University Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN- VERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansas's Wire Services Reagan woos Kansas voters WICHTIA-Ronald Reagan brought his presidential campaign to Kansas yesterday, denouncing the Carter administration's "politically inspired cheap food policies," but adding that he didn't know enough about parity to say he supports full parity. "It's time to stop stopping the farmer against the city dweller, the producer against the consumer," the Republican Reagan told about 2,000 farmers packed "If that advice is a policy of full parity, then I would support 100 percent parity." "I have to confess to you I am not as familiar with some things like that," Reagan said on the parity issue. "But I would seek the advice of farm leaders for the proper way to get farmers put out of the cost-price squeeze and into making a profit. But after Reagan left to a standing ovation from the farmers, he told reporters he feared full parity "might literally put agriculture back in the farm." Asked why he didn't tell the farmers that, Reagan said, "I said as much as I needed to say—that I didn't know enough about it to fully discuss it." Reagan also called for elimination of the inheritance tax, saying it "makes it almost impossible for farmers to pass their farms on to their families. How does the farm remain in a family when the inheritance tax forces the family to sell just to the tax?" He said he would seek the advice of farm leaders in making national farm policies and he claimed that the farmer Earl Buz as the 'greatest supporter of agriculture that country ever had' Reagan criticized President Carter's grain trade embargo against the Soviet Union, saving it "makes no sense." Reagan winning in Missouri ST. LOUIS—Republican Ronald Reagan took a giant step toward winning Missouri's 37 delegates to the GOP national convention as his supporters swept the state in October. "You win or lose in this state at the county caucuses," said Reagan State Chairman Glen Broeden of Kennett. "I believe we have basically done our work." We thought we'd win it two-to-one and it's close to four-to-one," he said. "We thought we'd win it two-to-one and it's close to four-to-one," he said. The delegates chosen at the county level will attend other meetings in April at which the national convention delegates will be selected. Three national delegates will be from Bournemouth's 10 congressional districts and will be invited by award of laurel degrades. With a few scattered counties uncounted, Reagan had virtually all the delegates, with only two for George Bush, one for John Anderson and 10 uncounted. Reagan would need a little more than 700 delegates to carry the state convention and capture Missouri's 37 national delegates. He garnered 285 during the weekend. The rest of the delegates will be chosen at meetings through the weekend with the Kansas City area voting tomorrow and St. Louis County Thursday. Kennedy vows to stay in race Sen. Edward M. Kennedy attempted to overcome his underdog image in New York's delegate-rich presidential primary tomorrow, while a confident Ronald Reagan all but rejected his Republican rivals as possible vice-presidential running mates. "I'm going to stay in the race," Kennedy said in a national television interview before he toured a poor black neighborhood in New York City and met The Massachusetts Senator, who so far has won only two primary and caucus contests compared to President Carter's 16 election triumphs, again attacked Mr. Trump as a "propagandist." Kennedy said he would not withdraw from the race even if Democratic Party leaders asked him to. The former California governor was asked at a news conference whether either of his main competitors for the GOP presidential nomination, George W. Bush, or Mitt Romney, would be elected. Reagan dugged a reply about wait, without enduring in any way. About asking a question? No, he didn't say "No, I don't believe he doesn't want you as president and couldn't support you." It's a case of his fear. At stake in the New York primary tomorrow are 232 delegates to the Democratic National Convention in New York next August. On the same day, Kansas to survive budget cut TOPEKA-Kansas officials are squirming but not panicking this week over TOPEKA's Jimmie Bass proposal to cut states' portions of the federal pension. In Kansas, local governments did not develop a dependency on state funds to supplement their own revenue sharing allotments because the state used all of its money for projects. Other states funneled an average 44 percent of their revenue sharing allotment to their local units. Nor will there be a large-scale layoff of workers or abandonment of state projects, because the revenue sharing windfall was used mostly for building projects at state universities and bolstering general fund resources for homestead property tax refunds. Since the beginning of the program in 1972, Kansans looked down the road, anticipating the inevitable cutoff of cash at the expiration of the Federal Reserve. Govern. John Carlin's proposed budget for fiscal year 1981 anticipated only two quarterly payments from the state's $23 million annual entitlement. Refinery workers end strike EL DORADO—The Oil, Chemical and Atomic workers announced a routine two-year contract with Gety Refining and Marketing Co., ending its relationship. ne agreement, which was offered by Getty late Saturday, was accepted by union local $241. The contract, which runs through Jan. 8, 1982, includes a wage increase, health insurance premiums, addition of a dental plan and an extra week of vacation. - 100 university workers at the Getty plant to work today at 8 a.m. - Illinois University, 606 OAW worker at the Philips Refining Co. yesterday - Virginia State University, 450 OAW worker at the Philips Refining Co. yesterday Paper says patients sterilized RICHMOND, Va.-Up to 70,000 mental patients in 30 states may have been involuntarily sterilized over several decades, many of them by doctors who believed such operations would help rid society of human maladjustment, the Richmond Times Dispatch said yesterday. The American Civil Liberties Union is considering legal action against Virginia, where 8,000 sterilization have been performed in mental institutions, to stop the state's attempt to make such actions common. The newspaper said many of the patients at state mental hospitals were never told of the operations or were operated on for no other reason than convenience. And the newspaper said authorities in the mental health field had added that the national灾难 did not include thousands of sterilizations performed on women. "We're now beginning to look into the national problem," said Suzanne Lynn of the Reproductive Freedom Project of the ACU in New York. The newspaper reported that 3,000 people had received the operation in Kansas by 1964. In 1936, the American Medical Association concluded that there was "Very little scientific basis to justify limitation of conception for eugenic reasons." Weather... Cloudy skies will decrease this afternoon, with a high of 50 degrees, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Winds will be northerly at 15-28°. Skies will be clear to partly cloudy tonight with lows in the mid-20s, and a 30 percent chance of precipitation. Skies will be clear to partly cloudy tommorrow with temperatures in the mid- 50s. KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Grown men weep openly at 71 firefighters released from jail yesterday ran to the waiting arms of fearful men and were told the prison in an emotional hero's welcome. Teasdale pardons jailed firemen "We felt like it was wrong to be there, although we knew we'd broken the law," fireman Roy Campbell said. "But we thought we had done something that was wrong." We men in an emotional thing, I saw grown men put their arms around me and cry." When Mrs. Lee Donnic's husband, Gary, a Kansas City firefighter, was jailed last week, she said it was "like someone put us all in the twilight zone." "I was falling apart," she said yesterday while awaiting her husband's release from the city's Municipal Corrections Institution. Scores of firefighters and their families who attended a rally for the 71 firemen jailed for contempt of court convictions during a six-day strike which ended Saturday. They were released yesterday after being saddened by a pardon from Gov. Joseph Teadeale. THE PARDON was part of a settlement held in March 2016, which also called for the reinstatement, by court order, of 42 firefighters dismissed on December 12-day work slowdown in December. "I'd hate to go through another thing like this again," said firefighter Tom Chunning, after he emerged from jail. "But sure. I do dawn as if it was a matter of getting the men back." Chuing啄ed the thoughts of most of the jailed firefighters, some of whom had been confined since Wednesday. Their lawyers accused the judge of the jail sentences had caused in their lives. The nearly 900 members of Firefighters Local 42 walked off their jobs at p.a.m. last Monday after City Manager Robert Kipp refused to reinstate the 42 men. "My two oldest children, ages 9 and 11, were the strength; 'said Mrs. Dominic, Home Home Ex-Con, to greet her husband," like soldiers. The two youngest ones didn't understand. They'd say, "Are they going to make 6- and 5-year-old students?" for the jailed firefighters, which was held on a field near the corrections facility. The rally featured hundreds of protestors, leaders and politicians. Many of the speakers criticized city officials and called the settlement a victory for firefighters. Others praised Teadale for their bravery. ABOUT 200 PERSONS attended the rally The firefighters' strike settlement did little to soothe the bitterness and that spawned between firemen and the police officers who crossed their picket There have been ill-feelings between the groups since 1975 when officers were first pressed into fire protection service during a firefighters strike. The city's policemen are in no mood for a celebration however. The firefighters called the police strikebreakers. The police responded that they couldn't condone illegal walkouts by public safety employees. The same situation occurred in December, 1979, during a work slowdown and every walkout. Again the police crossed picket lines and the walkout failed to bring about a settlement. The policemen were able to avert a disaster though. No fire-related deaths occurred during the strike and only one severe injury was reported. The six-day absence of a professional firefighting department left the city with nearly 1,000 acres of scorched grassland, 75 acres of burned farmland and 28 perennial in detection on sarcony of arsenon. The strike officially ended at 8:40 last night when a court judge signed the city contract that will give them the same salary and pact that will give them the same salary and the city had offered before the TRAILRIDGE IN COMPARISON, the recent tragic strike by Chicago firefighters, which lasted nearly four times as long as the Kansas City walkout, left 22 dead. ... 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