2 Wednesday, November 11. 1970 University Daily Kansan News Capsules By United Press International Florida: Nixon & Ky KEY BISCAYNE—President Nixon plan to meet with South Vietnamese Vice President Ngao Cao Ky when he visits the United States next week to tour military intelligence agencies. The press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said no date has been set for the meeting. "We haven't worked it out yet," he said. Ziegler stressed Ky would be on "private business." Ky was expected to meet with Nixon around Nov. 23 after the talks were held where South Vietnamese troops are in training. Amelia Earhart? Not Me! NEW YORK (UPI) -- Miracle York was the amelia Earhardt, the world famed aviatrix who disappeared in the Pacific in 1927. The white-haired widow called a press conference the day after publication of a book, "Amela Earhart lives!" by Joe Klasma, who was also his candidate to be Miss Earhart if the flier had survived. "I am not a mystery woman." sad Mrs. Bolam, who lives in Leisure Village, a New Jersey retirement community. "I am not Amelia Earhart." Chile: Goals Announced Mrs. Bolam, a former fyer and friend of Miss Earartt's, describes book published by her *poorly* Hill. A poorly documented hoax. She said she would submit to fingerprint tests anytime to prove she was not the woman who lost her phone on a round-the-world flight The book told quite a story. It SANTIAGO-President Salvador Allende's week-on-government Tuesday announced "short-term" goals for reactivating industry, ending unemployment and halting inflation. Economy Minister Pedro Vuskoski said the government had encouraged employers to "redistribute" workers' income to step up consumption levels and improve living standards. N.Y.C.: Britain Vetoes UNITED NATIONS—Britain used its fifth veto in U.N. Treasury night to light up the skies. Asian demands for recognition unless black majority rule is achieved in that colony红旗洲。The 15th nation council voted in favor of an offer to recognize Asia as a single nation, voting no vote and two abstentions. Britain's lone negative vote, however, constituted a veto under Security Council Finland; SALT Progress HELSKINI—The United States expressed satisfaction Tuesday with progress made in negotiations with the Soviet Union on ways to slow down the nuclear missile program. The United States' Strategic Air Lions Limitation Talks continued to be "serious businesslike and cordial" Tuesday's session between Gerard C. Smith and Vladimir S. Semenov, the chief U.S. and Soviet SALT negotiators, lasted one hour, with each participant making 15-minute statements which then had to be interpreted. London: Carriers Crash The British aircraft carrier Ark Royal and a Russian naval aircraft carrier collided on the eastern Mediterranean sea today, a spokesman said Tuesday. Two Soviet sailors were reported missing following the collision and others were confirmed dead. The crew of Ark Royal was "engaged at the time in night flying operations and was showing the appropriate precautionary flags," said the news agency. Calif.: Davis Hearing SAN RAPFAEL . The Marin County Grand Jury Tuesday began hearing testimony linking Black Panther Party scholar Angela Davis to the fatal Aug. 7 shootout at the Marin Court House. Among the witnesses was Gary W. Smith, a former Marin County Police officer in the gunfight that broke out when 19-year-old Jonathan Jackson smuggled guns into the courthouse and tried to free several prisoners on trial. Miss Davis is being held in the Marin County jail for her involvement she purchased of the guns used in the shootout. Easy access to guns is a major reason why violence is American youth off the albums. Dr. Milton S. Eisenhower, founder of the Eisenhower Institute and the Causes and Prevention of Violence, said Tuesday. Eisenhower, speaking at Johns Hopkins University where he was giving a lecture on gun control, said handguns in existence in the United States, and half of all American families own at least one handgun. "Only those who have access to a firearm should be allowed to own handguns," said Eisenhower, younger brother of the late President Dwight D. Eisenhower. Baltimore: Violence lived in Caldwell, N.J., and went to a Catholic boarding school in New York. He lived in Long Island bank and recently to Goya Hall, who died six months ago. At the time of his death they lived in Jamesburg, N.J. Kent: 22nd Arrest KENT, Ohio (UOI)—Roseann Canfora, 20, a former Kent State University coed, surrendered Tuesday on a warrant charging her with rioting during campus activities. Canfora was also arrested by National Guardmen last May. Miss Canfora was the 22nd person taken into custody on charges by a special grand jury which investigated the Kent State disorders. She is the sister of Alan Canfora, 21, who was wounded in campus shooting and also was indicted by the grand jury. "I am a whole person in my own right," she said, adding that he was "an avid reader, retired Air Force Major Joe Gervais, became "obessed with the idea that I will be Amelia" and oldimer fliers" reunion in 1965. Dallas: Oswald's Widow Marina Oswald Porter, widow of presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald, has asked federal judge for $85,000 to pay for the property in the U.S. archives permanently in the U.S. archives. Mrs. Oswald contends the property was worth $85,000 when impounded in 1963 but now is worth $75,000 at the time. The government valued the property at $70,000 and wants to reimburse Mrs. Porter at the 1963 level. Illinois: Students Boycott MADISON—About 50 white students at Madison High School continued to boycott class Tuesday and picket, the day before. The school district boycotted Monday due to an incarceration Friday in which a white student was injured in a fight with several blacks. There was a brief confrontation between white students Tuesday morning but no trouble developed. Capital: Brigades WASHINGTON, D.C.-D Army Secretary Stanley R. Resor announced plans Tuesday to disband four American infantry brigades in Vietnam before the end of the war and to bring them back home to say how many troops would be leaving the war zone Registration of persons who will be at least 18 on Jan. 1, 1971, must begin Nov. 16, Mrs. Elwill M. Shanahan, secretary of state, told county election officials Tuesday that the commissioner will be assigned a commissioner along with a sample voter registration form. Mrs. Shanahan advised election officials to keep a separate registration list for the 18, 19, and 20 years old until a voting age question is decided by the U.S. Supreme Court. A citizen aged 18 to now is under advisement by the high court. Topeka: Vote Registration Teachers Leave Posts in School KANSAS CITY. Mo.UPI)—Teachers at High School lift their posts en mass today after a teacher became involved in an affair with a student, and is off duty in which police used tear gas. alleged that Miss Earhart was captured by the Japanese after she was shot down on Hull Island in 1937, when she was imprisoned in the Imperial Palace compound in Tokyo and was released secretly at the end of the war in return for Allied aid. The Japanese hirono on the Japanese throne. Ross Tucker, the school district's information officer, attempted to break up a scuffle between two girl students before she was removed. FT. BENNING, GA. (Upi) The defense suffered a setback Tuesday when a military judge told that persons who gave secret information to congressional subcommittee may testify in the trial of 1st Lt. William L. Calley, Jr., charged with breaking 102 South Vietnamese civil war. Ruling Pulls Secrets Out Of Testifiers "one of the two judges has be wrong," George W. Latimer, Calley's civilian lawyer, said outside the courtroom. "In good conscience, with a man's life at stake, the most important step is to be honored," said Latimer, who added that Kennedy's decision places on Calley "an additional step in being put on other defendants." The ruling contradicted one made last month by another senator who accused Mr. Lai massacre cases, Col. George R. Robinson, president over the trial of Sgt. David Gutterson, a law enforcement officer that Hebert's subcommittee would have to make its evidence available to the defense before Judge Judge Mitchell against Mitchell. The subcommittee has refused to do it. Kennedy's ruling means that witnesses in the Calley case were treated with respect. Ronald Haebeler, the combat photographer who took pictures of the alleged massacre victims, and Stephen Thompson, who is said to have witnessed the shootings from a distance before Heßert's committee. “It’s a miserable thing to capitalize on Amelia,” said Mrs. Holam. She added the her attestation as part of her examination and “examining the many false immuences and statements to what course should be pursued.” Callley, a 27-year-old junior college student from Miami, is charged with defending two men charged with premeditated murder. Murder charges in prison or death by a fireing squad. Hail is the only capital "A male student got into a fight with the teacher," Tucker said, "and shortly afterward Louis Hurt, represent the American Federation of Teachers, arrived suggested the teachers wak "For the safety of the students and general security, the printers and teachers dismissed classes," Tucker said, pouring into the streets congregated in groups, police bars, and several lights broke out. Tucker estimated only half a dozen of the 70 teachers on the Westport faculty remained on the job. "At 9:45 they left." DAMASCUS, Syria (UPI)—A man with a gun hijacked a Saudi Arabian airliner Tuesday on a flight from Jordan to Saudi Arabia, and flew to Damascus the official Syrian news agency announced. The agency said Syrian authorities released the twine-engine DC3 two hours later and the hijacker for interolation. Hijackings Increasing In Mideast The Syrian news agency said the Saudia plane, carrying 10 passengers to Abu Dhabi at 11:10 a.m. after radioing an invitation to make an intercepted call. Monday an Iranian pune was forced to land in Baghdad, Iraq, by six persons but was later ordered to resume its flight to Iran. It was the second hijack in the Middle East in two days. "After it landed, it turned out that the plane had been forced to change its course by an armed person," the agency said. The agency said the passengers were given lunch at the airport and "all facilities were extended to the plane during the two hours of departure," Damascus Airport. Later it took off at the request of its captain but without the hijacker who was on board. The airport interrogation, the agency said. It said the plane was on a flight from Amman to Tarif in Saudi Arabia but was forced to change course 30 minutes after it left The agency gave no details about the nationality of the hijacker or his motive. She denied any interest in the book, financially or otherwise. Mrs. Bo兰am said she was born Irene O'Crowley in New Jersey, N.J. J "Any amateur investigator could determine conclusively by independent documentary evidence that she was not Amelia," she said. SUA SKI CLUB MEETING Thurs., Nov. 19 7:00 - 8:00 Council Room in the Union Film—"Moby's Flip" Discussion—Thanksgiving & Christmas Trips, Spring Break EVERYONE WELCOME Weaver Discredits Tough Policy Effects WASHINGTON (UP1) — The president to be of the University of Washington is a high government officials were undermining higher education and was repression by unfairly charging that colleges were not tough enough. "They are telling the public that universities could control all this trouble if they just got tough on them." In a conference at an annual meeting of the National Association of Universities and Land Grant College. Dr. John C. Weaver, former president of the University of Missouri, refused to identify the "principal officers of the federal government in mind, but he said they included Democrats as well as Republicans. "This is ridiculous," he said. "Government officials who make that claim are playing politics and doing a great disservice." Weaver, 55, has quit as coach of the Tigers to succeed Dr. Fred H. Harrington, who announced his resignation last spring in the fall after two years at campus which reached a climax in the Aug. 24 bombing of a school. Weaver, a 1936 graduate of Wisconsin, said that "if the University of Wisconsin can't survive, I don't believe higher education as we know it can survive." American colleges, he said, are caught between a cross-fire of violence from the radical left and repression by a punitive public law that aims to protect themselves from destruction from either direction. Kent State State University President Robert I. White, using the first page of a memo to that a special Ohio Grand jury report critical of "general mispermissiveness" at Kent, where four students were guarded by major national guardmen. "I pursued in all its nuance would even involve my university's major universities in America." Dallas Mayor Praises Work Of NAACP DALLAS (UP1) - Erick Jonsson, an uniprogram mayor, said Tuesday that he fully endorsed the National Association for the Football League. "I heartily endorse the work, the program, the plan and the members to renew their membership," said a City Council meeting. Classical Film Series Presents INGMAR BERGMAN'S WED., NOV. 11 WOODRUFF AUD. 7:30 & 9:15 p.m. FILMS 75¢ Due to circumstances quite beyond our control, we have been forced to substitute ingram Bergman's Wild Strawberries for the Magician. We apologize for any disappointment this change of scheduling might have caused. Federal Reserve Board Lowers Discount Rate WASHINGTON (UP1)—The Federal Reserve Board lowered the minimum charge for charges member banks for loans, from 4 per cent to 5% per cent and from 20% to 30% for consumers against expecting any immediate drop in the cost of borrowing. The drop was no surprise to Wall Street analysts, although they had anticipated a half full market for the smaller-than-usual reduction as an attempt to follow the lead of other rates, rather than leading the way toward an easing of tight credit. The key anti- recession measure. The new rate, the first decline more than two years, reflects the economic climate. Occurred in short-term interest rates for Treasury bills and other notes. They agreed with government officials who saw no assurances they would lower discount rate would promote credit for ordinary borrowers. The Great Place To Go For Food & Fun! Plus! 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