Page 2 University Daily Kansan, September 28. 1983 NEWS BRIEFS From United Press International Polish officials charge that Walesa stashed $1 million WARSAW, Poland — In a bitter attack on Lech Walesa, the communist regime charged yesterday that the former Solidarity union leader has $1 million in the West that he wanted to stash away in the Vatican bank with the help of the pope. Walesa denied the allegations. A special 30-minute documentary titled "Money" was shown during the time, which played a tape recording of the conversation between the two. It was released on Sep. 20, 1985. The scratchy recording — littered with four-letter obscenities — suggested that Walesa spoke of $1 million given to him by foreign well-wishers in prizes and gifts. "You know, all in all, it is over one million dollars. Somebody must draw it and place it somewhere. It cannot be brought back to this country." Walesa was heard saying. Guatemala to hold elections early GUATEMALA CITY — The government announced yesterday that it would move forward elections for a Constituent Assembly in an effort to inaugure a popularly elected president in 1985 and end 29 years of military rule. Government spokesman Ramon Zelada Carrillo said Constituent Assembly elections would be announced next month or in November, five or sixth months earlier than originally scheduled. All political groups must be formally registered as parties on the date elections are announced if they want to run candidates, he said. Zelda Carrillo also said Guatemalan chief of state Gen. Oscar Humberta Melja Victores would inaugurate a popularly elected president in May. Dow Iones falls from record heights NEW YORK — The stock market plunged from record heights yesterday with transportation and brokerage issues suffering huge losses after some negative financial news. The Dow Jones industrial average, down 16 points at midsession, skidded 12.80 to 1,147.97. It hit a record 1,260.77 Monday..The Dow Jones transportation average of airlines, railroads and trucks plunged 16.95 to 565.71. The New York Stock Exchange index shed 0.92 to 97.47, and the price of an average share decreased 68 cents. Declines greatly outnumbered increases in recent months. Big Board volume dropped to 81,100,000 shares from the 86,400,000 traded Monday as some investors stepped to the sidelines in confusion. Two surrender after Maze jail break BELFAST, Northern Ireland — A reputed IRA commander and a second terrorist surrendered yesterday to a priest in a farmhouse 30 miles from Maze prison, but half of the 38 convicts who escaped in a mass breakout remained at large. The new arrests brought the number to 19 of the IRA convicts captured since Sunday's jail break which left one guard dead and six others injured and sparked Britain's largest manhunt. Hugh Corey, 27, and Patrick McIntyre, 25, emerged from a farmhouse at Castlewellan after talking to a local priest, and with their hands in the air, surrendered to police who surrounded the area. Suspect arrested in writer's murder LOS ANGELES — A former aerospace worker who had received alcohol rehabilitation counseling from writer Muriel Davidson was arrested yesterday for killing the prominent crime writer and Hollywood executive. Lt. Ron Lewis said Robert Thom, 51, was arrested after witnesses repeated statements he had made to them after Davidson, 59, was shot to death Sunday afternoon or evening at her expensive canyon home above Beverly Hills. Lewis refused to say what Thom told police or witnesses, and would not comment on a possible motive. Lewis said they had known each other for more than a year through an alcoholic rehabilitation center, where Davidson did volunteer counseling. Executed killer's money given away PROVO, Utah — An uncle of executed killer Gary Gilmore testified yesterday that, at Gilmore's request, he gave away about $52,000 of the money paid to him for the murderer's story. "That money was not mine, it was Gary's," said Vern Damico, one of several defendants in a lawsuit claiming the widows of Gilmore's mother, who died in 1926. The widows of Max David Jensen, 24, and Bennie Bushnell, 26, have both wrongful death judgments against Gilmore's estate. But they filed the latest suit claiming the defendants conspired to keep money for Gilmore's life story out of the estate. Florida grocery workers catch thief ORLANDO, Fla. — Four grocery employees and customers formed a posse Monday to chase down a gunman and recover $165 stolen from a store cashier. the chase began after a man with a handgun tucked in his belt handed a cashier a note saying, "Put all the money in a bag." The cashier complied and the man fled on foot. An assistant store manager, a produce clerk and a customer immediately started chasing the man. After a quarter-mile chase, the suspect dashed into some woods. "Nassar Suluki, 19, the produce clerk," he found the man "in some house." While waiting for police to arrive, the suspect tried to escape, store officials said. But Freddie Johnson, another produce clerk who is a weightlifter, jumped on the man and held him for police. WEATHER FACTS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST. 9-28-83 UPI WEATHER FOTOCAST $ \textcircled{1 2} $ Today the weather will be mostly fair across the nation. Locally, today will be fair and warm with a high in the upper 80s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Tonight will be cloudy with a low in the low 60s. Tomorrow will be cloudy and cool with a chance of showers with a high in the upper 70s. Demonstrators demand prisoner releases Christians march to support Soviet Jews By United Press International JERUSALEM — Chanting psalms, releasing balloons of Israel's blue and white national colors and roaring "Let My People Go," 4,000 evangelical Christians marched yesterday in support of Soviet Jews. "We were silent in 1938. We Europeans knew the price of silence. Our dancers did not dare to die. He embassed the sponsoring International Christian Embassy, told the rally. The Christians, from 42 countries, stood for two hours under a fiery sun listening to speakers in one of Jerusalem's largest mosques. Soviet Jews be given exit vips and Jewish "prisoners of Zion" be released. In a separate parade, thousands of Israelis participated in the traditional "Jerusalem March" to the holy city on the Jewish Feast of Succeh. MARCHING WITH THE evangelicals, Alexander Shifrin, 60, of Israel, who has been compared with exiled Soviet dissident Alexander Solonov, charged Moscow runs 2,500 centrenarians, psychiatric camps for 8 million people. "Raise your voice," entreated Shifrin, a former Soviet defense adviser, who was arrested and lost a leg in a Soviet concentration camp. "You struggle for morality." "I come to you as a survivor of the concentration camps in the Soviet Union." The marchers, from Zimbabwe to Australia, carried pictures of Soviet Jewish dissident prisoners Anatoly Shcharansky, Victor Brailovsky and Josef Begun. "Let my people go," they roared. bloody country is not so strong as it would like the world to think." SHIFRIN, WHO RUNS an Israeli research center on Soviet prison camps, accused the Soviets of stopping Jewish emigration and seeking to establishism. "There are eight synagogues for 4 million Jews in all of Russia," he said. Martin Gilbert, a British historian who visited Russia this year, accused Moscow of violating signed accords for reuniting families. "I have seen the pain of a father who said, "Let me with my son." Gilbert said. There are 1,000 such divided families in Russia and Israel, he said, and if the Soviet authorities wish, all could be reunited before next Passover. In the 1970s, Gilbert said, 250,000 Jews were allowed to leave Russia. "The 1980s began the era of no emigration," he said. "We want the world not to forget the cause of the Russian Jews," said Rev Mavdesh Chavda, 37, of the Good News Church in Lauderdale. Christians from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., led off the march behind a black and red banner of a hammer and cycle barbed wire around a Jewish star. Palestinians violate cease-fire in Lebanon By United Press International BEIRUT, Lebanon — Rival Palestinian guerrillas battled with machine guns and mortars in a refugee camp north of Beirut yesterday, violating the two-day old cease-fire, while President Reagan vowed to work with Congress and the United States to keep U.S. Marines in Lebanon or to keep them there more than 18 months. At least 10 people were reported killed and 24 others, including an Italian soldier, were wounded, as the army covered from 22 days of all-out civil war. The government said that its troops came under fire in the Shouf mountains and in Beirut's southern suburbs throughout the day and evening although the cease-fire that began Monday was generally holding. POLITICIANS WRANGLED over how to implement terms of Monday's election. talks among warring factions to forge a more permanent peace. The factions failed to agree on a site for talks. The negotiations had been set for yesterday, but official Beirut radio quoted a military source as saying that they would take place today. No site was announced. With tension still running high, Walid Jumblipt, leader of the Syrian-backed Drusse Moslem rebels, threatened that Lebanese president Amin Gemayel would be assassinated like his brother, and threatened a year ago in a terror bombing. The government said that the shaky cease-fire would allow Beirut International Airport, where U.S. Marines are stationed, to be reopened tomorrow after being closed for more than a month because of factional fighting. A STRAY BULLET wounded an Italian soldier in the multinational peace-keeping force in Beirut, and one sniper was killed when the Lebanese army returned fire, the radio reported. "A victory for Syria would be a victory for Russia," he told reporters later. "I appreciate that the person on the street probably doesn't understand that, but God, a member of Congress ought to understand." Meanwhile, in Washington, House Speaker Thomas O'Neill privately lectured fellow House Democrats about the need to keep Marines in Lebanon and thwart Syria's efforts to divide Lebanon. Reagan sent a letter to Senate and House leaders promising to abide by a compromise worked out to skirt a major confrontation over the authority of Congress and the president under the 1973 War Powers Resolution. Heritage Management Corporation THE COMPROMISE IS a resolution that states the deaths of four Marines in recent fighting in Lebanon subjected the Marine force there to congressional --authorization and allows the Marines to remain for 18 months. A spokesman for Secretary of State George Shultz said that this was the conclusion reached by the foreign ministers of the four nations that now accounted for 4,000 soldiers serving in the multi-national peace-keeping force in Lebanon. The four men met at the United Nations during the fall session of the U.N. General Assembly and Shultz spokesman, John Hughes, said they agreed that a new observer force was to monitor the cease-fire in Lebanon. At the United Nations, the United States, Britain, France and Italy agreed yesterday that any additional peace-keeping forces in Lebanon should come from the United Nations, and not from the four countries. "Those observers, ideally, should be affiliated with the U.N., in some way or other." The first ever INTERNATIONAL OLYMPICS will be held October 17-October 29. Competition will consist of Track, Archery, Table Tennis, Badminton, Volleyball, Bowling, Racquetball and Soccer. For more information contact SPECIAL EVENTS COORDINATOR, 864-3546 or 208 Robinson Center/Debbie Fish. PHIL'S EASTSIDE TAVERN COLD COORS ON TAP 10. A.M.-P. 12. Come Try Our Homemade Burtitos Mexican Music On Jukebox 900 Pennsylvania 843-9681 --- 59c BAGELS 59c Now thru 10-2 Served hot with butter and cream cheese (5 flavors) Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-11 p.m. 1006 Mass. Sunday 12 p.m.-10 p.m. 749-1650 SUNFLOWER Free Parking South of Building --- ROSES ROSES ROSES ROSES ROSES ROSES Beautiful Long Stemmed Roses 749-2912 $12.50 per dozen "Cash & Carry" $14.50 Delivered 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center "Next to Gammons" --- Pyramid Pizza salutes the Jayhawks "Congratulations on the USC victory" HAWKS'SPECIAL $3.00 Off any 3 topping pizza "coupon good tonight only" 842-3232 9/28/83