2 Friday, February 22.1980 University Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wire Services Kennedy to speak in Topeka TOPEKA-Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., will meet with reporters tomorrow before attending conferences for Democratic state senators and for the Kennedy, who is challenging President Carter for the party's presidential nomination, is scheduled to arrive at Topeka Forbes Field airport at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow. He will need with reporters at 4 p.m. and will attend the receptions at 4:30 p.m. he then will speak at the annual Washington Day dinner at 6:30 p.m. The main banquet hall at the Ramada Inn Downtown is being prepared to feed 790 persons for dinner. Plger said. Tickets for the dinner here are $35.50 each. Jim Pilger, executive director of the state party, said yesterday that he expected more than 1,000 tickets to be Rain, floods inundate Southwest In addition, another 500 standing room tickets will be sold for $4 each to those who want to hear Kennedy, but who do not want to pay for dinner. Those tickets will be available today and tomorrow at state party headquarters in the Holiday Inn Downtown, or at the door tomorrow night. Floodwaters rushed over the tops of overloaded dams and broke through levees on Southern California yesterday, sending thousands of people fleeing the desert resort region of Palm Springs. The floodwaters also inundated a hotel and shopping district in San Diego. New rain from the sixth in a series of Pacific storms during the past nine days has driven down the ice shelves and hundreds of millions of dollars. The storms also threaten dams in Antarctica. A seventh storm was heading for the coast last night. About 100 National Guardsmen were flown to Palm Springs to help restore order and to prevent looting. There, many evacuees were taken to emergency shelters at two high schools, while the area's many hotels and motels lowered their rates for food virements. A bridge to the community of Andres Hills, Calif., washed out, stranding five residents there with no water, telephone or sewer service. residents there with no water, telephone or sewer service. "We warned them to evacuate twice." fire department spokesman Julie Bassett Boycott gets little allied support LONDON—Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance said at the end of a European major tour yesterday that he failed to win unanimous support among America's major allies for a boycott of the Moscow Olympics in protest of Soviet military intervention in Afghanistan. Beginning the tour Tuesday night in Boon, Vance went to Rome and Paris, Vance could count only Britain as a firm public supporter of President Obama. The secretary encountered the stiffest opposition in Paris, where he had talks earlier in the day with French Foreign Minister Jean Francois-Poncet. France has argued that a boycotts would disrupt East-West detente, and Vance apparently failed to alter that position. At a brief news conference on the steps of the Foreign Office after conferring with British Foreign Secretary Lord Carrington, Vaux refused to be drawn into the debate. He only said, "The French have not yet arrived at a final decision. I said I was seeking a coordinated response, not that everybody had to agree with the Long-absent Kosygain cuts U.S. MOSCOW — Supremet Presiet Alexei N. Koryagin, who emerged yesterday after an unexplained four-month absence from the United States was moving toward the capital on Monday. Smiling briefly as he acknowledged congratulations on his 76th birthday, Kogi appeared well, but he fledged slightly several times while delivering a speech. "I have been very happy," he said. The Soviet premier was last seen in public at an airport ceremony Oct. 17, when he bade farewell to visiting President Hassel of Syria. He had suffered a heart attack or stroke, but there was no official word on his condition. The Navy said Koogsa said the United States was striving to undermine detention and to He also said that the Soviet Union and its Communist allies were dedicated to establishing defense, ending the arms race and promoting peaceful Origin of flash is still unknown WASHINGTON (AP) - Administration officials said last night there was no evidence to indicate that a light signal picked up last fall by a satellite in the Southern Hemisphere had been the flash from an atomic test conducted by Israel. CBS News quoted "informed sources" last night as saying that Israel, with help and cooperation of South Africa, will use a nuclear bomb in September. (Magnuson) But a White House source, who asked not to be identified, said it was still not known whether the light signal, picked up by an American satellite on Sept. 22, detected an explosion in the building. In addition, he said, there has been no political or military intelligence that would link Israel or South Africa to such an explosion. There was speculation that a nuclear test was conducted in the Southern Hemisphere after the Vela recommission satellite recorded a double pulse of light. The light was similar to a pattern that is always caused by a nuclear test in the atmosphere when the fireball flashes, briefly disappears, then flashes Afghan shops close in protest KABUL, Afghanistan—Almost every merchant in Kabul closed his shop yesterday in the most dramatic demonstration thus far of opposition to governmental rule. "We have won a great victory today," one shopkeeper told a group of Western reporters. "We have shown the Russians what the Afghan people think of the US." Afghan police and army units were on alert throughout the city, and the Soviet-supressed regime of President Babak Karmal made some frantic efforts to force shops to stay open as thousands of civilians gathered in the streets to observe the success of the protest with obvious enoyment. The protest, which brought the commercial life of this city to a halt, was staged in response to leaflets in which Afghanistan's anti-communist rebels urged the shopepkeepers to show their "unanimous condemnation" of Moscow's two-month-old military intervention. Mercantis said the shutdown was "indefinite" and would continue tomorrow. Shops are normally closed Fridays, the Moslem Sabbath. FEC OKs Bush-Reagan debate At several points, plainclothes police were seen trying to force shopkeepers to remove boards from their windows. The shopkeepers generally obeyed, but a police officer was struck by one of them. WASHINGTON—The Federal election Commission refused yesterday to stop a debate scheduled for tomorrow night in New Hampshire between Republican President Donald Trump and Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton. A large black limousine escorted by police toured the main shopping areas. Senior officials, including the governor of Kabul, were inside, observing the street scene. Sens. Howard Baker of Tennessees and Bob Dole of Kansas and Rep. John Anderson of Illinois had appealed to the regulatory agency to stop the debate, but the governor said he was not ready. The appeal claimed that by limiting the forum to Bush and Reagan, the newspaper had chosen front-runners in the New Hampshire presidential race. Weather Skies will be mostly cloudy today and Saturday with occasional drizzle, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Temperatures will reach the low to mid-40s today and tomorrow with 15-20 mph winds from the Northwest. Militants retain stance on shah Inspired by a message of support from Ayatollah Rahabkhomeini, the young militants holding the U.S. Embassy in Tehran woke again yesterday that they would not release their American hostages or the "fugitive" shiha is extradited to Iran. The militants' reaffirmation of their tough stand raised new questions about the prospect of an early release of the hostages. Bv The Associated Press Abolhassan Bami-Sadr reiterated Iran's demand for the shah's extradition. The U.N. investigative panel on Iran, whose work might be crucial to resolution of the crisis, stayed in Switzerland. Iran's foreign minister both insisted there was no need to intervene in the hostages in exchange for the U.N. inquiry. And both Khomeini and President ONE OF the co-chairman of the five-member U.N. commission, Mohamed Bejdujah Algeria's U.N. ambassador, Mohamed Algeria's U.N. ambassador for New York yesterday. The commission members had been scheduled to fly from Geneva to Tehran Wednesday, but U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldemer at the meeting departed their departure until this weekend. Waldheim told reporters at the United Nations that Biedsaijn was returning because he had "urgent business" in his diplomatic mission in New York, but a U.N. Presumably they will discuss obstacles that caused Waldheim to delay the communication minister, Sadegh Ghobzadh, indicated yesterday they might arrive after the weekend. He told the Iranian news agency he would be coming to Tehran "early next week." spokesman later said Waldheim and Bed-jaoui would meet today. WELL-PLACED sources at the United Nations should be identified to identify the delay was necessary. Saudi needed more time to marshal various groups in Iran behind a settlement in Iraq. The commission will complete a 'fact' finding” mission to bear Iranian charges of mass murder and corruption against the Islamic State and of U.S. interference in Iran affairs, and to haunt American greivances over the attack. About 50 hostages spent their 110th day in captivity yesterday. In a statement broadcast on Tehran Radio, the militants said the United States "must deliver pp fugitive Mohammad Reza and the assets he has stolen." Chicago fire union leader jailed for contempt In statements Wednesday demanding return of the shah, neither Khomseni nor Khorasan had responded. The contingent on the shah's return. But the embassy militants made the connection By the Associated Press CHICAGO—The leader of the city's striking firemen was sentenced late Thursday to five months in jail after he was found in criminal contempt, and the judge allowed the city to withdraw from a strike. The city also forced the firefighters' union had broken its word. There was no immediate indication whether firefighters would resume their picketing of firehouses in the eight-day-strike. The picketing had been halted earlier The executive board of the Chicago Fire Fighters Union was to meet during the night to decide its next move. In a 15-minute speech after a lengthy hearing, Court Judge Jill Hechinger accused union President Frank Muscarec of being an accomplice in the agreement was reached Wednesday night. The judge said the city had kept its end of the bargain. "They have not breached one thing in this agreement," he said. "There was some bumpkinism involved in where you were to report." But the union should have gone along with the city's plan for reporting back to work, he said. Hechinger emphasized that Muscat's agreement there would be no packaging and that Fire Commissioner Richard Albrecht would have authority to design and implement the system. Union attorney Dale Berry said that Hechinger ordered pickers removed yesterday morning, but that it took time to order the order because of the city's size. Hechinger, obviously upset, told Berry. "It's too late. You have to toyed with this course sufficiently." The pact worked out Wednesday night with Hechtinger called for the firefighters to return to their jobs at 11 a.m. yesterday and will resume the training to resume at that hour. SHERMAN CARMELL. Chicago Federation of Labor attorney, said the city was used because union leaders told men to report to their regular fire houses, instead of following mimeographed assignment sheets issued by the city. We have positions to fill. Put yourself in the headline-making industry that's tackling the nation's energy crisis. Kansas City Power & Light Company choice care card opening for superior engineering graduates to meet the energy challenge during a period of rapidly changing regulations. 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