2 Monday, February 25, 1980 University Daily Kansar NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wire Services U.N. panel's mission disputed Members of the U.N. commission in Tehran to investigate the deposed shah's regime met yesterday with Iranian President Abbasian Bassan-Sadr in talks described as "extremely constructive," but several high-level Iranian officials insisted the panel's work was not tied to the release of the American hostages. Hahbi did not elaborate, and a commission spokesman said the details had not been settled. The meeting concerned the commission's operating procedure, including possible testimony by the hostages. Hassan Habibi, spokesman for the ruling Revolutionary Council, said the panel might call them "with wishes" some of the people they met yesterday spent their 113th day in captivity at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran. Mansour Farhang, Iran's Ambassador to the United Nations, said in a broadcast interview in New York, "there was no linkage between the formation of the commission and release of the hostages, if by linkage you mean a deal. Kumenei, who has the ultimate authority over the crisis, does not make deals. Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesman, Nasir Osadat Salami, told a Tehran news conference that the five commission members were "to investigate the shah's crimes, not to see the hostages. The two issues are not related at all. We emphasize that they are separate." Iranian Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotzbadeh yesterday also backed Khomeim's position. "It is the Imam Khomeini who determines foreign policy and we in the Revolutionary Council always approve his decisions," he said. Rhodesian newspaper bombed SALIBURY, Rhodesia-At least two persons were killed yesterday when a bomb ripped through the offices of a church-owned newspaper that supports former guerrilla leader Robert Mugabe's party in the upcoming presidential election. It was the latest in a series of bombings since a Jan. 4 casefield officially ended the guerrillas' seven-year war to end white rule in the British colony that is 97 percent black. Mugabe has been the target of two assassination attempts since he was returned from exile last month. Police in the town of Gwelo said yesterday's blust at Mambo Press, which publishes the weekly newspaper Moto, hurled pieces of a printed paper 200 feet and shattered hundreds of windows in an adjoining hostel housing both emeritus and local society that runs the website and visiting West German and Swiss journales. A Roman Catholic clergyman, Leonz Fischer, said the bombing and the publication Saturday of a phony edition of the newspaper appeared aimed at discrediting Mugabe's Zimbabwe African National Union before balloting Wednesday through Friday. Bush angers GOP candidates CONCORD, N.H.—After a presidential candidates' debate that almost did not happen, the Republicans who were not allowed on the panel spent the last hours in an effort to figure out how to proceed. Sen. Bob Dale of Kansas, one of the seven Republicans on tomorrow's ballot, nailed the controversy yesterday, declaring that Bush "treated us like dirt" Sen. Howard Baker of Tennessee called it the "the rarest political act I've ever seen." "He was the heavy," Baker said on NBC's "Meet the Press." And Rep. John Anderson of Illinois, one of the frustrated four, said Bush "shot himself in the leg." Ronald Reagan, who finally got the face-to-face debate with Bush that he asked and called for, called the event "kind of a flasco." Attempts were made to get Bush and the Nashu Telegraph, sponsor of the debate, to agree to the open format. Bush said he would show up no matter who he was. Governors discuss toxic waste WASHINGTON—The nation is in danger of being engulfed by problems from thousands of hazardous chemical dump sites, and the response by the federal government thus far has been inadequate, the country's governors were told yesterday. Colorado Gov. Richard D. Lamm told the opening meeting of the National Governors Association the control of toxins "be the major challenge for all states and leaders in the 1980s." Laram said that of the 700 million tons of oil which had been produced in the United States since 1940, some 600 million tons are thought to be under control. "A national program is urgently need to address the problem of uncontrolled hazardous waste sites," Lamm said. "Hazardous waters which were disposed of improperly in the past are today contaminating ground water and water, infiltrating neighborhoods, schools, homes and the very air we breathe." The governors, opening a three-day winter meeting here, held a day-long devoted to the disposal of chemical waste and the problems of nuclear waste. Chicago, firemen still at odds CHICAGO—Leaders of the firefighters' union, fearful that local labor leaders have deserted them in their 13-day strike, remain at Logergerheads with the mayor and the city council to negotiate. In nearby Milwaukee, meanwhile, firefighters authorized their union to call a strike in an effort to bring their wages to the level of the city's policemen. But Joseph Ruditsy, president of the Milwaukee Professional Fire Fighters Association, said yesterday he would take no immediate action. The chief lawyer for the Chicago Fire Fighters Union, J. Dale Berry, said William Lee, the president of the Chicago Federation of Labor, had canceled a meeting he had promised with union negotiators to discuss the union's position. He reasoned for cancelling the meeting. "Most of us simply feel that Lee has deserved us and that he is too close to Mayan Jane Pierce and City Hall it be effected," said one South Siskiyou firefighter. Acting fire union president William J. Reddy, who stepped in when union president Frank麦赛斯 was jailled for refusing to order his men back to work, asked the president to intervene and enroll him in a membership-birthenduty until the city clarified its positions on a fact-finding provision and amnesty for strikers and answers questions about a section requiring firemen The city said it would hold no further talks, even for clarification on the temporary pact, "until there was action on the agreement," said spokesman William Bardell. Ohio bank fugitive surrenders BEHEA, Ohio - A fugitive who held six hostages at a suburban bank after attempting to attempt surrendered peacefully yesterday after his girlfriend helped to talk him out. Wright, about 50 years old, embroidered the woman identified as his girlfriend and, with his head bowed, was taken into custody by police and FBI aents. No shots were fired as Early Ellery Wright, sought on a federal warrant charging him with a 1979 bank robbery, handed his gun through a drive-up teller's window and released his three remaining hostages, the FBI said. There were no injuries. An orphan office of the Himalayan and National States is a shopping center in that city, where an officer was trapped after a silent alarm was tripped during a robbery, and police raced to the orphan office. None of the hostages were identified by the authorities. However, it was learned that David Valentine and his wife, Bonaine, a bank employee, contacted at their home yesterday. Valentine declined comment, saying, "We do not know." Weather Skies will be partly cloudy today with the high in the 30s. Winds from the north will be 15-20 mph, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Tomorrow, skies will be clearer with the high in the upper 40s. Fallen ducts raise code question Bv LYNN ANDERSON Staff Reporter Lawrence Mayor Bankier Clark said Friday that the collapse of heat ductwork in his office was due to a leak. S.F. Feb. 17 might prompt him to re-submit a Uniform Mechanical Code to the Lawrence Law Firm. different building specifications—which would add to housing costs—and that it would result in too much government regulation. "I'm going to see what the inspection staff reports as to whether the code could have protected us in this case," Clark said. A Uniform Mechanical Code would provide for the inspection of major mechanical systems in buildings being constructed. It requires specification set specifications for installation materials. He said that as far as he knew, an inspection had not begun, but that he expected it to start within the next week. SUCH A CODE was defeated by the commission 3-2 last December. At that time the code was opposed by building contractors. Clark said their main arguments were that the code would require Assistant city manager Mike Wildgen said that the mechanical code dealt with buildings that were not in a rehabilitation and that the Varsity would not have been affected had the code been installed. The code would have paralleled federal building guidelines. Wilden said that the Lawrence fire department inspected public buildings "at least annually" for safety hazards but that a complaint was made about sign that something was wrong at the Varsity. "They aren't going to gear to hearing the ceilings to see if there's a problem," he said. WILDGEN SAID that he expected Clark or Commissioner Dain both, of whom supported the code, to resumit it when supported. He asked to put it on the commission's agenda. Commissioner Marci Francisco, who against the court's decision about taking action, said she was involved in the burden of the city's inspection staff, when complaints about inspections already were being made. Francisco said she would suggest that the commission prepare a check-list of specific danger spots inspectors should look at. She said inspectors did not have sufficiently specific guidelines. ADDING ANOTHER CODE, Francesco said, would not help the problem until the inspectors understood exactly what they needed to inspect. Commissioner Bob Schumm said he was uncertain whether a mechanical code would help in an incident like the Varsity collage. He said that Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo., whose roof collapsed last year, was inspected numerous times. "They'll catch some bugs, but they won't catch them all," Schumm said. "You won't Student nurses to lobby House By STEVE MAUN Staff Reporter About 15 nursing students from the University of Kansas Medical Center will have their degrees accepted by Kansas Legislature Wednesday, Jean Wesley, Kansas City, Ms. senator, said. The group will attend the House session after a tour earlier in the morning. Then the students are scheduled to attend the lecture at House and Way Hips and Means committees. "We want to talk to people on the Ways and Means committees and to present some facts about why we need more faculty and education and for renovations," Wesley said. For example, many senior nursing students did not get to take the medical surgery section of Advanced Nursing because there were not enough instructors, but they were among the most popular and the basic kind of nursing needed in western Kansas, she said. The Kansan is accepting applications for the position of staff artist. Those persons interested in drawing maps, illustrations and graphics for the Kansan should see Tiff Filts, editor, or Cydh Ingulhé, art director, in the Kansan newbie, 112 Fhall Hall. Artist wanted Our chefs are back at it again. Stop in for a lunch that will bring you back, over and over again. From charbroiled Hamburgers to tuscan Prime Rib sandwiches, the SANCTUARY has a meal waiting for you. And of course The SANCTUARY nightlife never stops. The SANCTUARY 1407 W. 7th 843-9703 Happy Hour 4-7 pm Free Hors D'oeuvres every Friday during happy hour Every day of the week TEXAS INSTRUMENTS Professional Calculator Values for College & Career AT BARGAIN PRICES TEXAS INSTRUMENTS TI 58C TEXAS INSTRUMENTS TI 59 - TI Programmable 58 has up to 480 program steps or 60 memories. - TI Programmable 59 has up to 960 program steps or 100 memories - Complete editing ability: Insert, delete, single step, back step, no operation. - User flags, labels and subroutines available. - Flug-in, prerecorded solid state software modules. Choose from 14 different modules. - FREE sourcebook for Programming Calculators, e $12.95 value. - TI Programmable 59 has blank magnetic cards to record your own custom program. - FREE sourcebook for Programmable Calculators—a $12.95 value. Sale ends March 1st. KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES with two locations to serve you Main Store, Level 2, Main Union Satellite Shop, Satellite Union We are the Only Bookstores to share profits with KU students. have 100 percent safety even if you have a code or an inspection system." Schumm, who also voted against the mechanical code, said he did not see the point in adding an inspector or an inspection activity in Lawrence had dropped severally. He suggested that "cross-training" the existing inspection staff to do mechanical inspections might be a solution. THE BEST FROM HOLLYWOOD COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-5788 Kramer vs. Kramer Kramer vs. Kramer PG Hillcrest Staring Dustin Holtman and Meryl Streep Five 7:30 and 9:40 Sat and Sun mat 2:30 2. Saturn 3 9th & Iowa 842-8400 Andres Eve, 7.15 and 9.30 Sat, and Sun, mat, 2.00 1. 10 Starring Bo Derek, Dudley Moore, & Julie Andrews 2. Saturn 3 R Starling Farran Fawcett and Kirk Douglas Eve. 7.20 and 9.20 Sat. and Sun. mat. 2.15 Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 Staring Eric Idle and Graham Chapman Eve. 7:30 and 9:25 Sat. and Sun. mat 2:30 1. Last Married Couple in America 2. American Gigolo Starring George Segal and Natalie Wood. Eve. 7:40 and 9:40 Sat. and Sun. mat. 1:30 2. American Giogo Starring Richard Gere and Lauren Hutton Eve 7:20 and 9:30 Sat and Sun mat 1:45 Varsity The Fog Downtown 843-1065 Staring Janet Leigh and Hal Holbrook Eve. 7:30 and 9:30 Sat, and Sun, mat ; 24 HOURS Movie Information TELEPHONE 841-6418 sua films Monday, February 29 THE 39 STEPS FOREIGN (1935) A man tries to carry out the mission of a spy killed in his flat, while being pursued as the killer. FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT A chilling thriller of a politically naive reporter battles a major spy ring. Both Alfred Hitchcock classics that have dominated the Master's most famous scenes. Tuesday, February 26 ONE-EYED JACKS (1961) Dir. Marlon Brando, with Brandon KMalden, in this strange and fascinating Western. Brondo portrays a man who seeks revenge against a brutal crime by the respectable sheriff of a town. The sheriff's only directorial effort so far. Wednesday, February 27 SHOESHINE Dir. Vittorio De Sica's lyrical study of how two boys, betrayed by their society, betray each other and then flee to Europe from art of Italy in the 1940s. Plus: "N.U.", an early short film by Angelo Antoniol, Italianisubtitles. Thursday, February 28 THE LETTER THAT WAS NEVER SENT 11QKQI Dir. Mikhail Kalatov. This film deals with four people who set out for a remote diamond deposit with one other to tell the story. A rarely seen film, it was frequently screened to Coppola's APOCALYPSE NOW. Russian/susiaids Unless otherwise noted: all films will be shown at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union; M R films are $1.90 and $1.50 and start at 3:30, 7:00, and midnight on Fri. & Sat., and at 2:00 on Sunday, tickets available at Information Unit 5th Level, information-864-6840. No smoking or refreshments allowed.