Page 2 University Daily Kansan, July 13, 1981 ... --- News Briefs From United Press International LONDON-Hundreds of youth battled police in the industrial center of Leicester and violence flared in other cities yesterday, the 10th day of widespread urban rioting in Britain. Urban rioting continues in Britain Police in Leicester call for reinforcements from far away as London, police to the south, to back up their own force of 600 men who were battling the drug menace. A police spokesman said the youths, blacks and whites, were still prowling the streets early this morning. One officer was hospitalized Forty miles away in Derby police said a gang of 200 youth gathered in the centre of the city and began smashing shop windows and then marched toward a black sidewalk. The evening looked as if it might have passed without any major outbreaks of violence but trouble began as bars closed and young people drifted into the streets, police said. "This was not a race riot," a Yorkshire police spokesman said of clashes in Leeds, Bradford and Halifax. It was the ninth straight night of rioting in Britain but the first in Leeds, Bradford and Halifax where high concentrations of mainly Asian immigrants work in traditional mill town industries. Bani-Sadr vows to return to power ANKARA, Turkey—Iran's ousted President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr and the son of the late shah said in separate tape-recorded messages released yesterday that they would fight to end the present regime in Iran. The independent Turkish newspaper Hurriyet said Bani-Sadr, hiding somewhere inside Iran, promised to return to power and "fight until a true Islamic republic is established." The message from the late shah's son, Cyrus Reza Pahlavi, 20, claimed his father's army was still intact. 'rahali's message was recorded on cassettes in Egypt and distributed in Iran by opponents of Ayatollah Ruhailah Khomeini's Islamic government. and contributed in Iran by opponents of Ayatollah Ruhbilah Khomeini's Islamic government. Hurrytet said the message from Pahlavi, who declared himself king of Iran last year, promised retribution against those who aided the present regime. "The shah's army will put a final end to all this. It will show its real power in the near future," Pahlavi said. Hamad's message was the second since he was fired by Khomeini and went into hiding. "Most of those who are governing Iran have no relation with Islam," the message said. "I don't think our religious leader Khomeini is supporting these despots. But I am waiting to see when he will become aware of these actions around him." he said. "I am in Iran and waiting." Bani-Sadr said. "I shall resume work for my country in the near future." Salvador killings blamed on army SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador—In his sharpest denunciation of military brutality since he took office, acting Archbishop Arturo Rivers Y Damas yesterday accused the army of killing 27 civilians in cold blood and of beating up nuns. Calling it a crime against the principles of the church, Rivera Y Damas said army troops ransacked the main church in the provincial capital of Chalateango and beat up an unspecified number of nuns in the adjacent convent last Tuesday. Rivera Y Damas said he would travel to Chalatenango, 42 miles north of San Salvador and the scene of some of El Salvador's worst fighting, to settle the matter. In his sermon in the Cathedral of San Salvador, the acting archbishop said 131 civilians were killed last week in political assassinations. nations. He said 76 of the victims were killed by unidentified people. The corpses 'showed signs of torture and death' he said. "twenty-seven people were killed by the army after be dragged from their homes," he said. Ultra-rightist death squads, allegedly made up of off-duty and retired members of the country's security forces, were believed responsible for most of last week's assassinations. The archbishop's charges were the strongest made by the church against the military since the Dec. 2 rape and murder of three U.S. nuns and a Catholic social worker. Six national guardsmen have been jailed in connection with that case. Rivera Y Damas became acting archbishop 15 months ago after Archbishop Oscar A. Romer was assassinated by a rightist gunman in March 1980. U.N. to discuss Viets in Cambodia NEW YORK—Secretary of Sate Alexander M. Haig Jr. returned yesterday from an economic meeting in the Caribbean and prepared to lead the U.S. delegation to a United Nations conference this week on the Vietnamese occupation of Cambodia. The purpose of the one-day conference in Nassau, the Bahamas, was to draft a program of economic assistance and development for the Caribbean and Central America on behalf of industrialized nations. This afternoon, Haig will address the U.N. conference in his first appearance before the assembly. The U.N. meeting on Cambodia is a reflection of the concern of Western and many non-signed nations about the 200,000 Vietnamese troops occupying that nation since late 1978. Neither Vietnam nor the Soviet Union are attending the session. The Soviet Union is spending up to $6 million a day to support Hanoi's floundering economy and its military operations in Cambodia. U. S. analysts said Hanoi could expect some international economic assistance if it withdrew its troops from Cambodia. Otherwise, they warned that Vietnam would remain in international isolation and its economy would worsen. Paraquat use reportedly proposed "The DEA fears political fallout in the two worst states and rules out the DEA's efforts to logistical problem." Time said. "If the DEA gets its way, the first state will be hit." NEW YORK—The federal Drug Enforcement Agency proposes to spray marijuana fields in four southern states with the lethal herbicide paraquat, Time magazine reported yesterday. The DEA denied the report. The DEA is quietly planning a paragua spraying program involving Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina, but not California, Oregon or Hawaii, the top marjuana producers, Time said. He added, however, that states are not bound by that law, and the federal government would be unable to stop state governments from spraying paraguat. Robert Feldkamp, DEA public affairs director, said the report was untrue. Feldkamp said yesterday that federal law prohibits federal agencies from spraying paraquit in the United States and the DEA had no plans to try to change the law. Country singer undergoes surgery and one of the options under study."1 Parasitic causes vomiting and hemorrhaging when smoked in heavy doses. Feldkamp said the DEA was working with 10 states on ways to wipe out their marijuana fields, and "paraqat is one of the options under study." Officials at Memphis' Methodist Hospital continued to lst Lewis' condition as critical, but the singer's girlfriend said he had improved since undergoing surgery on his stomach Friday night. MEMPHIS, Tenn.—Country-rock singer Jerry Lee Lewis battled for us as he played the national hit "Johnny Cash," visited him in the intensive care unit at a Memphis hospital. Lewis, a vowel pianist known for such rock 'n' roll standards as "WHOLE Lot of Shaking Goin' On" and "Great Balls of Fire," underwent surgery to clear up infections and abscesses near an area of his stomach that had ruptured. "It's an hour to hour thing, but he's really trying it to stay in there and stay alive," K. K. Jones, Lewis 'girlfriend.' "It's a miracle." Area grocers watch for effects of fruit fly raid By LIBA PROCTOR Staff Reporter Lawrence produce sales personnel are unsure what effect the American fruit fly infestation in California on local produce supplies and supplies. Only California garden and backyard produce have been affected by the Medifles so far. Commercial produce supplies have not yet decreased because the infestation has not affected commercial farm fields. "THEERE SHOULDN'T be a problem since they are going to allow spraying." Ron Jefries, Kroger produce department employee, said. "We haven't heard from our suppliers yet. We are relying on what we hear on the news." The Medfiles lay eggs in fruits such as apples, peaches, cherries and citrus fruits. These eggs hatch and spoil the fruit. Had California Governor Edmund Brown, Jr. not compiled with a U.S. Department of Agriculture order for areas affected area, that department threatened a nationwide quarantine of some 200 types of California produce. In an effort to keep the infestation of Medlites from spreading to commercial plants, the pesticide malathion will begin Tulare in a three-county area in California. Last week Governor Brown implemented a plan to spray and strip trees with "host" fruits. However, the Agriculture Department did not find the plan adequate, and Friday Agriculture Secretary John Block threatened a quarantine of all fruit grown in California. THE POSSIBILITY of a quarantine has not yet been ruled out. Dave Palermo, broker for producer of Stiff and Company, Kansas City, Kan. He assists company in spraying he foresaw no problem getting supplies for his wholesale customers. Stitt and Company supplies produce toilets. Lawrence wholesale produces company However, the effect will be felt nationwide if a warrantie is instituted. California is the largest farm state and grows one-half of the nation's produce. Three well-known science fiction writers will highlight the fifth annual Intensive English Institute on the subject of Science Fiction that begins today. Class features sci-fi writers By JOE BIRNEY Staff Reporter Gordon Dickson, author of "Dorsall," has been a freelance science fiction writer for 30 years. He will speak tonight in the Forum Room of the University and will be the guest lecturer for the first week of the three-week course. Guest lecturer for the following week will be Frederick Pohl, author of "The Space Merchants," "Gateway," "JEM" and many other science fiction books. He is president of Science Fiction Writers America and has been writing since 1989. Theodore Sturgeon will be the final guest lecturer. Along with being the author of "More Than Human," he has written screenplays for the former director of "The Shire." In those screenplays, "Shore Leave," was produced into an episode for the series. James E. Gunn, professor of English and director of the course, said he expected about 13 people to participate in this intensive science fiction course. which is designed to provide teachers with a better science fiction novel. He said that teachers could then be their own courses of further study. Gunn, along with Stephen Goldman, associate professor of English, will conduct the course. Background into the development of science fiction will be Gunn's topic, and Goldman will analyze specific science fiction works. **STUDENTS ENROLLED in the course were given a list of 25 to 30 books before the course began. Considerate timelist will be spent discussing these books.** At the end of the first week of the course, July 17 to 19, the Campbell Award conference will be held. Discussions about the teaching and making of science fiction will follow the presentation of the John W. Campbell Award. The Campbell award will go to the author of the best science fiction novel of the year. Announcement of the winner will be at a dinner to be held 6 p.m. Friday in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union. Family Dentistry Dr. Edward A.Manda Gunn said the course was added because of the recent popularity of science fiction. The world that people know today is not a science fiction is the world of today, he said. Monday - Saturday 330 Maine 841-1400 Tie In With Us Recreation Services Intramural Table Tennis & Badminton Tournament . Entries accepted until 5 p.m. July 16 in 208 Robinson. Play begins Saturday, July 18 at 10 a.m. Wednesday July 15 7:00 p.m. $1.00 Woodruff Auditorium No Refreshments Allowed Monday July 13 7:00 p.m. $1.00 YOU COULD WIN A TRIP TO: The Golden Gate Bridge$1006.00 of Gold Records*A Swiss Credit Ounce of Gold*A Gold Watch*A Golden Opportunity Shopping Spree*or Other Golden Prizes from KLZR LISTEN FOR REGISTRATION LOCATIONS!