2 Monday, January 28, 1980 University Daily Kansan NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansas's Fire Services U.S. may host its own Games COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — The United States College Committee, after its 2018 meeting on college sports, groundwork yesterday for games of its own if there were a boycott of the NCAA. Sources said American authorities also would consider inviting athletes from any country that boycotted Moscow to attend the alternative festival, a Carter event. The USOC Executive Board voted to continue training an Olympic team even if a decision is made that no American athletes should be sent to Moscow because of the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan. Those athletes could then participate in a festival sometime this year if they did not go to the Olympics this summer. No site for the sports festival was named although Colorado Springs, which was host of two previous summer events F. Don Miller, USOC executive director, said yesterday he thought a sports situation would be feasible but not specify when the event could be held. He added: "We have a good plan." Pakistan leader attacks Soviets ISLAMABAD. Pakistan—The Soviet military intervention in Afghanistan threatens world peace and the security of small nations everywhere, Pakistan's president warned yesterday at the start of an emergency three-day meeting of Islamic foreign ministers. Afghanistan hosted the session. Gen. Mohammed Iziu ual-Haq, the Pakistan president said the Kremlin could restore cooperation with the Islamic world only by withdrawing its troops from Syria. Libya and the Palestine Liberation Organization, both usually pro-Soviet, and Iran were among the 35 nations and organizations attending the meeting of the Organization of Islamic Countries. Syria was one of eight members of the Organization of Islamic Countries, and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Grigoryk was to Damascus. Syria was also Foreign ministers from Gambia, Malaysia and Morocco also denounced the Soviet presence in Afghanistan before the conference went into private session on Thursday. Afghanistan's Soviet-backed Maraist government said yesterday in Kabul that it would consider decisions at the Islamabad court "null and void." However, in his latest conciliatory gesture, Afghan President巴拉克RMarnal promised "all freedom and immunity" to religious and tribal leaders who fled the country after the first of three Marxist governments took power in April 1978. Chicago schools face closings CHICAGO--Mayer Jane Byrne said yesterday that a week's pay would be ready for Chicago teachers regardless of whether they reported for work. City teachers would they shut down schools today for the first time in the 76-day staleen atluate when they received the full two-week pay they were owed. Byrne, in seeking a way to save the nation's third-largest school district, had called for another round of talks yesterday. But Chicago Teacher's Union president Robert Healy said the mayor called him just before noon to say such talks would be fruitless. He said the 28,000 union teachers would not be "diverted by the Board of Education's clean tactics of trying to tempt them into the buildings on Monday with the one-week check they already have coming to them. They won't be bought off with their own money." The teachers did not receive their two-week pay check Jan. 18, and have not received schedules scheduled to start last September. Another two-week payroll, Teachers cannot get their full pay until the City Council authorizes the sale of $25 million in notes, providing money for the payroll and for keeping schools Sinai border opens to tourists Tourists from Tel Aviv and Cairo crossed the border between Israel and Egypt-tailed Sinai yesterday, renewing a land link that had been closed for 31 months. But what was termed a "bureaucratic hitch" prevented a Cairo-bound group from completing the journey. Meanwhile, Sol Liwitz, President Carter's Special envoy to the Mideast, arrived in Cairo for talks with Egyptian officials. He will leave tomorrow for Tel Aviv for a formal round of negotiations on Palestinian autonomy in the occupied territories seized by Israel in the 1967 Mideast war. In an arrival statement, Linowitz said Egypt and Israel had fulfilled the bilateral part of their peace treaty "so graffitiely and so faithfully." 1981 budget priority is defense WASHINGTON—President Carter today will send Congress a $615.8 billion budget for fiscal 1981 designed to strengthen America's defense against a "hostile world" while fighting inflation by reducing the deficit to a seven-year low. Carter's spending blueprint, which calls for spending $2,786.43 for every American, also places major emphasis on energy conservation in an effort to keep the planet green. But, clearly the top priority, defense spending will be increased by an initiation-adjusted 3.3 percent, though many military advocates had asked for it. Also included in the budget were social programs that may help Carter defend his budget against possible campaign criticism from advocates butter In one of the social programs, Carter proposed a 24 percent rise in funds for subsidized housing. The budget also includes an appropriation of $2.1 billion for the space shuttle which is a year and one-half behind schedule and 20 percent over cost. Carter's concern for the growing problems of the disposal of hazardous chemicals was tested in his proposed funding increase of 47 percent for the department. Another quake jars California SAN FRANISCO--The ninth sizable earthquake in four days rattled Northern SAN FRANCISCO - The nine muzzle驾qequark in four days rattled Northern California, and scientists warned more quakes can be expected in the area about 30 miles. Scientists Yesterday's tremor registered 4.0 on the Richter scale, not so violent as the 5.6 quake that shocked the area Saturday night. Kay Thomas, who lives near the quake area, said, "My refrigerator flew open and everything flew out. The refrigerator moved a foot out from the wall." Moscow, Kan., wants Games Last week, Moscow, population 250, began distributing bumper stickers and writing letters to draw the U.S. Olympic Committee and President Carter's art collection. MOCSOW, Kan—Residents of this southwest Kansas community say if the Summer Olympics must be moved, a boy chooses MOCSOW analysis site. At a bowling alley in Dublin, nature rolls a gigantic strike. "All 40 lanes, 400 pins, went down at once," said Joe Kreins, an employee. "We have lots of acreage and lots of wide open country," said Mrs. Doug Bell. "And we've got a lot of nice people." Rosie Lang, Moscow Olympic Coordinator and owner of Rose's Safe said, "We called the county seat last night and asked if they could provide plenty of room." Accommodations could be a problem, the group said. But nearby Huguenot 10 miles north and Liberal 32 miles to the south have "quite a few motels and things." Weather... Occasional light snow is expected today and tomorrow with an accumulation of one to three inches by tomorrow night, according to the National Weather The high today will be in the upper teens, with a low tonight around 5 degrees. The high tomorrow will be in the teens. Med students observe rural Kansas doctors Staff Reporter By STEVE MAUN Brian Andrews, Ferguson, M. medical院长 had an opportunity this weekend to visit a patient in need of a doctor on a house call to check on an elderly woman who had fallen into a cave. "You treat the whole family, patients of all ages. The oldest patient in one family was 74 and I saw the youngest born while I was there." Andws said yesterday. ANDREWS EXPERIENCE were part of a "Rural Health Weekend" for about 125 freshman and sophomore medical students from the University of Kansas Medical Center. They spent Thursday through Saturday doing doctors in 86 rural Kansas communities. The program, sponsored by the KU office of health care outreach and continuing education, is designed to give medical students a chance to escape the books and to get some positive experience, according to a recent executive director of learning resources. "These are basic science students and they aren't going to learn to be a doctor in three days. But it is their first opportunity to get away from the classroom grind," he MIKE ATWOOD, Kinsey medical student of North Carolina. "I teach two years all you do is basic sciences in the books, and this provides a chance to get out and use the practical application of what I have learned." Yarmat explained that each student was assigned to a sponsor in a community and that the student accompanied a doctor during rounds and office hours. He said the sponsors, who were usually doctors or hospital administrators, were responsible for finding lodging for the staff and for planning the weekend's activities. Awood said he went on rounds at the hospital with a doctor Friday and Saturday morning. He attended Friday afternoon and attended a pot luck dinner with board board members that Atwood, like most students who participate in the program, is on a scholarship at the College of Health Sciences that supports the rural community in Kauai after graduation. Iran leader offers hope MITZI RATTENNE, Gardner medical student, also went to Council Grove. She said the experience helped her learn more about rural medicine. By The Associated Press Abobassan Bani Sadi, whose apparent abdication in Iran's first presidential election has been taken as an encouraging sign for the American hostages in Tehran, said yesterday that a solution to the crisis does not need in the United States does not needle in Iranian affairs. In a news conference at his campaign headquarters in Tehran, the Iranian finance minister, a close associate of Iranian leader Ayatollah Rohzain Khomihein, also said Ayatollah Rohzain Khomihein should be allowed unrestricted access to Iran if false and distorted reports were sent. "False reports are better than no reports or reports from a long distance," he said, apparently referring to the expulsion of U.S. journalists from Iran on Jan. 18. Unofficial returns reported Bani Sadh had received 75 percent of the votes cast. Official returns were expected today. Iran has 22 million eligible voters. "It has been asked how we are to resolve the U.S. Embassy crisis," Tehran radio quoted Bani Sadr as telling the journalists in a broadcast monitored in London. "THE SOLUTION to the crisis is not wholly up to us," he said, "only a part of it concerns the Iranian government." A solution will be reached, he said when the U.S. government tells Americans and other world citizens that it will "dies from our lack of knowledge about other nations, and when it concludes the right to our people to pursue criminals anywhere in the world." He did not elaborate During his talk with reporters, Bani Sadr did not mention the deposed Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. Islamic militants holding the American hostages for the killing of Bali's al-Qaeda leader, who is living in Panama, be returned to the trial before the Americans are released. sferred from an intensive care unit to an ordinary hospital ward if he remained in satisfactory condition, Tehran radio reported. IN ANOTHER DEVELOPMENT, the son of Iranian leader Aatollah Rubollah Khomeini said his father would be tranon your own resources as well as cooperate with surrounding towns and nearby cities to ensure the best medical care for your patients." "There is no cause for worry, and the spiritual leader is feeling very well," the captain said. He was cast, monitored in London. He said his father had been examined by doctors yesterday and his pulse and blood pressure were normal. He said his home in Qom last Wednesday to a cardiology department in a Tehran hospital for patients described as a minor heart aliment. "I have pretty much decided I want to go to college and get an education for the scholarship program. So this weekend gave me an opportunity to see a rural community and how doctors relate to their patients." Although this was her second rural weekend, she said that each community had its own identity and that the communities supported the hospital. "You have to be a lot more independent as a rural doctor," she said. "You have to rely Yarmat said a similar program for clinical medical students was planned for April. Rattinee said a Counti Grove laboratory technician had explained the difference between rural medicine and city medicine in the case of a patient you see in the big city but it takes longer." 7 Libyans ordered home Seven of 40 KU students from Libya are returning home today after receiving orders from their government last Tuesday, acco- mended by Alashtan, Abbashtan, Tripoli, KU, graduate student. "We'll just obey the orders and find out when we get there," he said. Albashari said yesterday the students would be gone seven to 10 days to attend meetings at two universities in Libya. The meetings are expected to last about three days, he said, but he did not know what they were about. Clark Coan, dean of foreign students, said in the last two or three years Libyan students had been ordered home by their government. "They're usually gone two weeks or less," he said. About 90 of the 4,000 Labyan students studying in the United States were called back to attend this round of meetings, Coan said. Need help? Advertise it in Kansan want ads FOCUS on issues FOCUS on action FOCUS on candidates at our Congressional Meeting Tuesday, Jan.29 Smith Auditorium 7:30 p.m. WOMEN IN COMMUNICATIONS AND P.R.S.S.A present "Entering the Journalism Job Market-'80" seminar Tuesday, January 29 7:00 p.m. 205 Flint Hall There will be speakers from all areas: Broadcast, News, Advertising. Public Relations, Magazine, Photojournalism. FREE ADMISSION-EVERYONE WELCOME