2 Monday, February 18, 1980 University Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wire Services Waldheim chooses Iran panel UNITED NATIONS—U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim chose a five-member international commission yesterday to probe Iran's grievances against the deposed shah, and the United States agreed to the selections, a U.N. official said. U. N. speckman Rudolf Saijdhar said Waldehm was awaiting Iran's response on the commission members selected. Stadhair did not name the commission members but said an announcement would be made once both sides had agreed to the composition of the panel. Diplomats said earlier that the commission would consist of five lawyers, including one from Bangladesh, former president Abu Sayed Chwchowdhul, was ill, so he member One source, who asked not to be identified, said the replacement was a lawyer from Sri Lanka. H. W. Jawardene. The commission was designed as a step toward the release of American hostages held by Islamic militants at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran since Nov. 4. The militants have said they take orders only from Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. Dipolmats have said the other commission members would be Algeria's U.N. Ambassador Mohamed Belaijaan, former Paris bar association president Edmond Louis Pettit, Syrian presidential aide Adib Daoayd and former Venezuelan Justice Minister Andras Aaulier. Rush wins Puerto Rican vote SAN JUAN, PUERTO-Rico-George Bush, a former CIA director and ambassador, won all 14 of Puerto Rico's delegates yesterday to the Republican convention. As returned trunks in from rural precincts, Sen. Howard Baker, R-Tem., appeared to be doing better than he had in the urban areas but not well enough to handle his duties. Once on the banana were former Texas Gov. John Commily, who last week canceled a first island visit, California businessman Benjamin Fernandez, former Minnesota Gov. Harold Stassen, and Kansas Sen. Robert Dole. There are still many others in Washington. Karoly of Washington, D.C., and Gerald Thomas of Delphi of Connell,Conn. Bush piled up a 3-2 margin over Baker in the island's first presidential primary, which gave all its delegates to the winner. With 3,963 preprints reporting of 3,438 or 97 percent, Bush received 112,947 votes. But IBM's Perlander 1.822, Stassen 589, Dole 457, Kernberg 189, Karsely 85 and othersiler 59. Bush's son, bj, who was in charge of the campaign here in its final weeks, said. "We won. The numbers are too far ahead for him (Baker) to catch up." In Nashua, N.H., Bush said, "If the returns as they are, it looks like we'll have beat them and beat them bad." Campaian used Brilab cash LAFAYETTE, La.-A. unusual successful 1979 candidate for governor of Louisiana said yesterday that one of his campaign committees, who also administered the state employees' group insurance program, accepted $15,000 from an PHI BRIab informant. The candidate, state Sen. Edgar Mouton, said committeeman Charles E. Owerer II told him he be spent the money on moneyman campaign, although it was not a significant budget item. Roemer, who now is state commissioner of administration, could not be reached for comment. The money presumably was offered on behalf of Prudential Insurance Co. by FBI informant Joseph Hauser, a twice-convicted insurance promoter from Beverly Hills, Calif. Confrd. Prudential has said it did not know its name was being used by the FBI in the Bilab operation. Mouton said Roemer told him he forgot for the $15,000 "contribution" and suggested tapping it onto Mouton's final campaign spending report. he forgot this one accidentally, it was an accident of the mind, not of the heart, said Mouton. "The whole thing took him by surprise. He thought he was seen." "My suggestion was that he go ahead and file the late return. It's legal." Motton said Roemer told him of the oversight Feb. 9, but he did not say when the meeting with Hauser occurred. More rain expected in Arizona Thousands of Phoenix area residents who fled from raging Rai River waters and burned their property in the 1980s moved to Southern California braced themselves for new rain moves in from the A storm in Phoenix Saturday night dropped less than 1 inch of rain, instead of about 6 inches. Some families had been evacuated. More than 6 inches of rain has fallen since In Southern California, seven people have been killed in storms. In the Phoenix area at least 400 homes were damaged, as well as hundreds of streetlights. Clark predicts upset in Canada TORONTO - Canadian Prime Minister Joe Clark predicted yesterday that his party will win. Party would score a Truman-style upset victory in today's national elections. Opinion poll gives former Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau of the Liberal Party a solid lead in his bid to regain power from the 40-year-old Clark. The Conservatives ousted Trudeau's administration in elections just nine months ago. But Clark's forces say that their own poll shows that Liberal strength is eroding quickly, particularly in Ontario, Canada's most populous province. They contend that the Conservatives will defy the pollsters and win, as Harry Truman did in the 1948 U.S. presidential election. A Gallup poll showed the Liberals with a 48 to 28 percent lead among elected voters, and a Canadian Television poll gave them a lead of 43.13 percent. FBI warned before 1961 attack ATLANTA—a chief BFI Klu Kua Klan informant in the 1980s says he warned bureaual agents of an attack on the Freedom Riders, a civil rights group. A Justice Department report stated that the informant, Gary Thomas Rowe Jr., submitted evidence concerning an attack on the Freedom Riders in a Birmingham, Ala., bus station 3/12 weeks before it took place. The attack resulted in violent beats of demonstrators for civil rights. "I was profoundly shocked that the U.S. government allowed that to take place," Rowe said. "I had given them 3 1/2 weeks notice that it was going to happen. I had been repeatedly assured that they would not allow it to happen—that it just could not happen." The report stated that FBI agents covered up evidence that, now under indictment for the 1985 murder of demonstrator Greg Luzzo, took a leading role in the investigation. Rowe, who lives in Savannah under an assumed name, said in U.S. Senate testimony that he was involved in the bus station assault but that he did not kill him. The New York Times said in a story yesterday that Justice Department investigators apparently found insufficient evidence to conclude that Rowe was wrongly charged. Correction... Harry Shaffer, professor of economics and Soviet and East European studies, was quoted falsely in the Feb. 11 Kansas as saying that Russia ranked second in the world in per capita gross national product. Russia ranks second in total GNP, not per capita GNP. Skies will be partly cloudy today with Southern winds winstering 14-20 mph. The high will be near 40, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. It is likely to stay clear for most of the day. Weather... weather ... Composer highlight of symposium By KEVIN MILLS George Crumb, Pulitzer prize-winning composer, and pianist David Burge will be the featured artists at KUS Symposium of Music in May through Wednesdays in Murray Hall. Staff Reporter The 21st annual symposium will include performances of works by Crumb and other 20th century composers. Contemporary composers examined in lectures and a panel discussion. "This symposium has garnered a lot of interest among musicians throughout the area because of George Crumb," said Charles Hoag, professor of music theory and chairman of the symposium committee. He is also the president American composer of his generation. Crumbs's "Echoes of Time and the River: Four Processions for Orchestra, was premiered by the Chicago Symphony and the New York Philharmonic." "Ancient Voices of Children" for mezzo-szoprano, boy soprano and instrumental ensemble received both the International Rostrum of Composers Award and the International Recording Award in 1971. "And David Burge is probably the most important new American pianist. Their names have been associated in music for several years." Crumb, horn in Charleston, W. Va., in 1929, has received grants from the Fulbright Commission, the Rockefeller, Koussavitzky, Burge, a native of Evanston, Ill., has recorded compositions by every major composer of this century. Hodgson said his work is "an enormous accomplishment." I" was nominated for a Grammy award. CRUMB HAS WRITTEN several piano pieces for Burge, chairman of the piano department at the Eastman School of Music. Guggenheim and Coolidge foundations and the National Institute of Arts and Letters. Burge will open the symposium with a recital at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall. He will perform "Doors" by Ann Eberle and Randy McLennan in Burge/Burreth composition contest; "Dimensions II" for piano and stereophonic tape by Bart McLean, who was a guest musician for this concert; "Eloquence" by Richard Wilson, the first prize winner of the 1978 Euraseum contest, and "Makroskosm." Vol. II. With Makroskosm, the Zodiac for Amplified Piano, by Bruce The Crumb piece requires the pianist to strike the strings and wood of the piano and to speak or shout. Haq said. A PANEL DISCUSSION with Crumb, Burge and Harry Haskell, music editor of the Kansas City Star, will begin at 10:30 a.m. tomorrow in Swarthout Recital Hall. Burge will give a lecture titled "The Composer's Craft? Harmonic Consistency in the music of George Crumb" at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow in Swarthout. An 8 p.m. recital in Swarthout tomorrow Black heritage explored through drama and music There's more to being black than meets the eye, Bruce Sayles. Lawrence freshman, a member of KU's blunt drama troupe said she would accept from "No Place to Be Somebody." An excerpt from Douglas Turner Ward's play "Day of Absence" depicted white persons' panic when black servants disappear. He and other members of the troupe explored the emotional aspects of being black in "Ebony Progressions," an anthology of works that explore black life through drama, dance and music. The program was sponsored by the Office of Minority Affairs and the department of African studies as a part of Black History Month. In that segment, Luke (Keith Rainey, Kansas City, Mo., freshman) and Clem (Stuart Wekler, Keith sophomore) wonder why the team doesn't realize that "there ain't no miras." By BRIAN VON BEVERN Staff Reporter With the city on the brink of ruin because no blacks are left to perform the mental chores, the mayor (Sayles) goes on radio to plead for their return. Need an Oil Change? We'll do it in 15 minutes! (With no appointment) At The Quik Lube Center Tom's Auto Service 841-5882 1804 W 6th Kramer vs. Kramer Staring Dustin Holtman and Meryl Streep Eve. 7:30 and 9:40 Sat. and Sun. mat. 2:30 Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 1. Midnite Madness Starring David Naughton and Delerig Clinger Eve, 7:30 and 9:40. Sat, and Sun, mat. 2:15 Starring Farah Fawcett and Kirk Douglas Eve. 7:20 and 9:20 Sat. and Sun.mat. 2:30 Eye 7-15 and 9-35 Sat and sun mat 20-24 Earson Roof Shutter and Location Glow 3. Jaws 2 Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 1. American Gigolo 2. Saturn 3 Staring Richard Gene and Lauren Hutton Eve. 7:20, 9:30. Sat. and Sun. mat. 1:30 "You know you're better off under our control." he tells all black listeners. 2. Last Married Couple in America Staring George Segal and Natalie Wood Eve. 7:40 and 9:40 Sat. and Sun. mat. 1 Varsity Downtown 843-1065 A nightclub scene was to showcase several styles of black music, "Good Morning Blues," "St. Louis Blues" and "Dare I go" were only a few of the tunes presented. The Fog Starring Janet Leigh and Hal Holbrook Eve 7:30 and 9:30 Sat and Sun, mat 1 will include "Capriccio on Five Notes" for viola and stereophonic tape, by Stanley N. Shumway, professor of music theory, performed by his students in viola, and Branscu's Brass Beds" by David Ward-Steinman, winner of the 1979 KU Brass Quintet Composition Contest, performed by him, and David Podzro, professor of music theory, performed by David Weih, Richmond Ky., graduate student in piano, and "Vox Concerto No. 2" by John Podzro, professor of music theory, performed by David Weih, John Bolton, associate professor of fute, Edward Laur, associate professor of cello and Ann O'Bryan, Lawrence special student in "They call me stormy Monday, but I will not," he said. "worse and Thursday's ob., so bad." Cassandra Jackson, Midway, Fl. graduate student, lamented in "Stormy Weekend." A CONCERT at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday, in Swarovski will feature "Songs of This War (1914-1918)," a suite based on four poems for tenor solist and chamber orchestra, by David Holsinger, Hardin, Mo., graduate students; two movements from "Quiet porter of the sea" (1916) by Oliver Messina; and piano by Olivier Messiaen; "Kyrie Eleison" for vocal sex and harp by John S. Prescott, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., junior; and "Sonata for Solo Violoncello" by Crumb, performed by Lapt. 24 HOURS Movie Information TELEPHONE 841-6418 The program also contained a segment on an African wedding and simultaneous monologues of quotes from Martin Luther King and Malcolm X. Music was provided for the presentation by the group "Unison." The next Black History Month presentation, "Communications Between Black Men and Women" by John Geston, a professor at Wichita State University in 4019 West Texas. The final concert of the symposium, at 8 p.m. Wednesday, in Sweetburn Recital Hall, will include "Particles and Waves" for Pierre Fuchs, Lawrence senior, conducted by Leon Burke III, St. Louis, Mo., graduate student; Katie Fuchs, Lawrence senior, conducted by Hunt?" for stereophone tracks by Edward Matilla, professor of music theory; "Cellaplay" for solo cello and chamber orchestra; members of the University Symphony Orchestra; "Crazy Jay Blue," based on an e.c.ummings piece, for mezzo-soprano, Glenn Cookemer, Vickersburg, Miss.; a.graduate student; and "Eleven Echoes of Autumn, 1965" by Crumb, performed by Glenn Cookemer, Vickersburg, Miss.; a.graduate student; and "Vickery Bickhurst, Manhattan graduate student, alto flute; Lawrence Maxey, associate professor; clarinet; and Kevin Rember, associate professor of piano JOIN THE JAYHAWK FIGHT FOR LIFE... RED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE SATELLITE UNION 3rd level southeast conference room 11:30-4:30 sponsored by Ponhellenic Association • Interfraternity Council • Scholarship Halls • AURH