Page 2 University Daily Kansan, February 13, 1981 --- --- 1. News Briefs From United Press International Military to test equipment in Oman The Pentagon said yesterday that the United States for the first time would send a small mission to the Arabian peninsula to perform exercises with Oman air forces. The U.S. force will be sent to Oman later this month for an exercise to last about two weeks, Pentagon spokesman Mani). Gerry Curry said. Combat Oman, strategically located on the southern entrance to the oil-rich Persian Gulf, is one of three Indian Ocean-Arabian Sea states that last year concluded base agreements with the United States. The other two were the African nations of Kenya and Somalia. Meanwhile, the speaker of Iran's parliament warned the west against supplying arms to Iraq and said that the spread of the Islamic Revolution would halt the flow of oil from the Persian Gulf region in the 1980s, Tehran Radio reported yesterday. Pfc. Garwood awaiting sentencing CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C.-A psychiatrist testifying in the sentencing phase of the court-martial of Marine Pfe. Robert R. Garwood the convicted turncoat yesterday as a seriously deranged man who needed treatment instead of punishment. Dr. David O. Hubbard of Dallas, a consultant to the State Department on hostage and POW affairs, said Garwood, while held prisoner in Vietnam, viewed the Vietnamese "more like brothers than enemies." The wood was stripped of normal emotions during captivity. "At this point where you and I have our minds and our bodies tied neatly together, he sits here and his mind wanders from this room endlessly." Humboldt held the injury. Hubbard added that Garwood has a "serious, internal derangement" manifested in "massive clinical depression." Garwood has not testified in either the trial or the sentencing hearing, but defense lawyers said Capt. Lewis Obin, Garwood's military counsel, would have requested that the jury reconsider his testimony. More fighting reported in Zimbabwe SALIBURSY, Zimbabwe—Prime Minister Robert Mugabe called out warplanes yesterday to smash rebel tanks bearing down on Bukayo and ground troops fought other insurgents entrenched in a black township of Zimbabwe's second largest city. The prime minister said the warplanes were launched against a column of 13 armored vehicles moving in from the northwest after ground troops destroyed three armored personnel carriers and forced other vehicles to withdraw. As the situation worsened around Bulaawyo, the white population got out guns, stored since the end of the bush war that led to Zimbabwe's independence under black rule, and began barricading their horns against possible attack. "This is the big one, this is showdown," one Bulawayo resident said. "The country is on the brink of a civil war." The latest fighting raised the number dead over five days of fighting to at least 57 people. More than 100 others have been reported wounded. Injunction blocks payment of assets DALLAS—A federal judge yesterday granted a temporary injunction to a bank that is returning $20 million in Iranian assets attached to the www.muni.edu/election. U. S. District Judge Robert Porter's ruling prohibits Marine Midland Bank in New York City from transferring to $50 million placed in security on a loan due March 31, 2024. Under the hostage release agreement negotiated by former President Carter, all Iranian assets were to be returned to Iran. EDS is the only American firm to have filed suit and won an attachment order against Iran before the hostages were taken. The firm has argued that the U.S. government has no authority to tamper with the attached funds because Carter had no authority in the Constitution. EDS filed the breach of contract suit in February 1975, inyo before the American hostages were taken. A few months later, Porter attached $20 million in Iranian assets to cover the expense of the disputed computer contract in the event the company won its suit, which it held in May Social Security reforms proposed WASHINGTON-Sen. Lawton Chiles, D-FLA., borrowing from both President Reagan's playbook and from traditional Democratic philosophy, yesterday proposed saving social security by cutting benefits and taxes and by delaying retirements. Chiles, who until the Republican takeover of the Senate was the chairman of the Committee on Aging, represents the state with perhaps the largest percentage of seats. Chiles' Social Security Reform Act would eliminate benefits to students and cut out payments to government workers briefly employed in private It would use some income tax revenues to ease the retirement system's cash problem and would lower payroll taxes. This would be more of a boon to lower income workers than the Reagan's administration's 10 percent across-the-board tax cut. Chiles said. El Salvador power lines bombed SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador—Presumed leftist guerrillas klew up the lower lows later yesterday, the eastern third of the country plunged into a state of civil unrest. CBS said the delegation would be armed with new evidence that show it is unmistakable "that the Cubans, with Soviet sponsorship, are supplying Sinai." In another development, the U.S. State Department has decided to send a delegation to Europe next week to describe U.S. and Israeli role in care of Cuba and Central America. Presumed leftist guerrilla fighting to overthrow the U.S.-backed government blew up an underdetermined number of electrical power line companies. The Marxist-led guerrillas recently have increased bernings of electric machinery as a aim of disrupting factories and other businesses as part of an economic war. In other incidents, presumed leftist guerrillas killed three people and wounded 15 others in two separate attacks on mass transit vehicles. Jenrette's sex life into spotlight COLUMBIA, S.C.-Former Rep. John W. Jennette, apparently trying to diffuse the impact of an article by his estranged wife Rita in Playboy Magazine, said he was afraid she had written about a tryst they had had on the steps of the U.S. Capitol. Jennette, in an interview with a Washington correspondent for the Columbia News paper, said he suggested it and she agreed. "It's something that makes you feel like you're really in touch." "We made love on the Capitol steps" into one night as the House met into the wee hours of the morning, Jennette said. But the former Congressman, convicted in the Abscam investigation, said he begged his wife not to mention the incident in her Playboy article, to be published in the April issue, because he feared it would give people a false impression of Washington. Mrs. Jenrette declined comment, as did Playboy officials. Her article and photographs of her are due to appear in the issue of the magazine that goes on sale next week. "She bares all, and not just in the article," said an executive of the W.F. Hall Printing Co. of Chicago, which prints the magazine. Cabinet shakeup announced in Poland By United Press International Meeting in Gdkans to assess the appointment of Poland's defense minister as the fourth premier in a year, the Solidarity Labor Coalition passed a decree banning strikes by its 10 million members without prior authorization by the national leadership. WARSAW, Poland—Warning that the nation's independence was at stake, new Polish Premier Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski announced a sweeping shakeup yesterday and appealed for a 90-day moratorium on strikes. But it warned that the action did not mean that there would be no new strikes and stressed that it was not in response to Jaruzelski's appeal. Solidarity leader Lech Walesa said the appeal sounded acceptable in principle, but would have to be studied first. Jaruzelski, appointed premier Wednesday while retaining his post as defense minister, dismised six ministers and named Deputy Prime Minister Miczysław Jagielski as an acting prime minister. From the back of financial disaster. Jaruzelski went on national television to announce the government changes and to appeal to the unions for "three full months of work, 90 peaceful days." In a bid to keep the labor movement from getting out of its control, the Solidarity leadership ordered union chapters to seek authorization from the "This time we want to put into order the most basic matters of our economy."be said. However, it warned of "national strike action" as a last resort if current negotiations with the government over a host of labor disputes broke down. national leadership before declaring strikes. It also said branch unions could declare strikes without consulting the national leadership in the event of a "direct attack by authorities on members, experts, or collaborators" of the Solidarity coalition. alarm over the links between the unions and the "anti-socialist" dissidents and maintained that the West was to blame "the Tropian Horse," of the East bloc. But he also subtly upgraded warnings that the unions were pushing their independence too far for Moscow to take. The reference to collaborators was seen as a warning to the government to refrain from acting against Kor, a leading dissident group whose links to Solidarity have alarmed authorities both in Warsaw and Moscow. Contemporary Hair Design For Today's People JODA & FRIENDS "The fate of Poland, for its remaining a sovereign state . . . is the responsibility of all Poles," Jaruzelski warred. Blow-Wave - Now 8.00 - Reg 11.00 * Women's Hair Design Shampoo - Men's Hair Design, Shampoo. - Women's Hair Design, Shampoo. 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