2 Friday, November 6. 1970 University Daily Kansan News Capsules By United Press International Argentina: Spies BUENOS AIRES — The Argentine Foreign Ministry said Thursday night that two Soviet officials had been arrested on espionage charges and given 48 hours to leave the country, according to a statement from Danish Rybakov and Yuri Manturov, both members of the Soviet commercial delegation to Argentina. A Foreign Ministry statement said the two Russians were involved in an investigation after during activities incompatible with their status as members of a foreign diplomatic mission." Chile: Thwarted Coup? SANTIAGO-Marxist President Salvador Altencio promised to give power to the people and said the murder of Fidel Castro in 1976 had been caused by coup. Schneider, commander of Chile's Army, was gunned down on Oct. 21 when he attempted to draw his gun against a plane flying over La Paz, planned to kidnap the officer and issue orders under Schneider's name which could apparently lead to a coup. The police then seized nine municipies under Schneider's name unless Congress voted against the confirmation of Altencio the first elected president in 1958. Canada: Fire Kills 17 MONTREAL—A minor basement fire killed a full old people' home with deadady smoke, killing 17—some of them strapped helplessly in their beds. The institution's owner tried to fight the flames with a hand exterminator and then set them on fire in his arms. It was the fourth such fire in Quebec province in 20 years and the second in the past 11 months. Vatican City: Experiments The Vatican decreed an end to six years of experimenting with Roman Catholic Church worship and the Mass. A document ordering a halt on experiments using new languages in liturgy lay in a continual search for "newer lites or simpler forms." The Vatican's department for Divine Worship earlier had endorsed such sweeping changes in worship as the use of modern languages instead of Latin and some of the stilted language of prayers and readings. R.L.: Governor's Race PROVIDENCE-Election officials said it may be 10 days before the winner of Rhode Island's close gubernatorial contest is decided. Democrat Pete Southerns, who was elected General Herbert F. Desimone, by 2,548 votes with about 7,550 absentee ballots to be tabulated. Those ballots were to have been counted on May 6th and election officials said the process might take 10 days. Los Angeles: King Peter II Members of the Yugoslavian community here were making funeral plans for a man who once was their monarch and died in exile, a paurem. The former King Peter I of Yugoslavia gave his last Tuesday of cardi-respiratory failure. He was 47. A spokesman for the Serbian Orthodox Church in nearby Sarajevo, who was recently by donations made to the "King Peter Fund" by this people, the Serbian people." Born Peter Petrovich in Sarajevo, he was 10 when he was Alexander, who was assassinated in France in 1934. Pennsylvania: Murders WARFORDSBURG—Police said "numerous" suspects had been picked up for questioning in the slayings of two New York City student nurses found shot to death near a building where the victims were identified by their fathers Thursday as June B. Eberlin and Mary Ellen Leenhan, both 19. Autopsies showed they had been dead at least two or three days when they were found by a state highway employee early morning one mile west of the Warfordsburg exit of Interstate 70. Capital: LBJ Gets Blame WASHINGTON, D.C.-A top-level Pentagon review board has blamed wrong political and military decisions by the Johnson administration for many of the difficulties in getting the Iraq war under control. The board's report, based on nearly a year's study, listed as "wrong decisions" to decline war, planning for the invasion of Iraq, and not preparing planned plans. First word of the report appeared in the Army Times, an independent service newspaper, headline: "LBJ and Company blamed for botching war." Missouri: Firemen INDEPENDENCE - A-temporary restraining order has been imposed on 45% hourlyENCE workers who work at job on Thursday and Saturday, and a total of 111,000 virtually without fire protection. The Jackson County Circuit Court issued the back-to-work order on Friday. The county is seeking Local 781 of the International Association of Fighters on Dec. 3. During the brief hours of the strike, only one firefighter was in the hospital. KENT-A Kent State University student indicted on second degree riot charges by a special state grand jury that investigated the spring disorders at the school, surrendered. David O. Adams, 20, of Pittsburg, the 21st grand jury member, was surrendered to sheriff's deputies at nearby Ravenna. He pleaded innocent and was released on $1,000 bond. DETROIT (UPI)—Gov. William G. Milliken was declared the winner of the Michigan gubernatorial race by Sander Levin Thursday after two days spent waiting for Detroit to be uncompromised with pumpenized card ballots. Milken had built up a 150,000- vote plurality over Lewin, a state senator from suburban Berkley, in voting outside Detroit. Ohio: 21st Indictment But neither side was willing to call the race at that point until it was determined whether Levin's forces had turned out a strong Governor's Race Declared Milliken Michigan Winner Milliken met with newsmen later. He called for a bipartisan approach to the state's problems. He supported Democrats-civil-controlled House for at least two years and a Senate for three years. The two parties for four years. Bert Servaas, president of the Curtis Publishing Co., said 200,000 copies of the new edition will be sold at newstands only at a cost of $15. A foulup in the computer竞赛 for which various reasons were turned the counting into a slow, arduous process. Finally, late Friday night the number of Detroit votes showed Milliken with a 68.0% vote lead and only two people outscored him. "This will be a different magazine from the one that died." Servasa said. "This is going to be the old Post, directed at middle America, not in a maudlin or pollyannish way, but in a constructive way." PHILADELPHIA (UPI)—The Saturday Evening Post, a one-time pillar of the American magazine field before it crumbled 20 months ago, will resume publication next June on a quarterly basis and attempt to win readers in "Middle America." The governor and Levin held a brief meeting in Milliken's Lansing office and two hours later Levin conceded the election. "The results are clear that the governor has been elected to a Saturday Evening Post Will Be Resurrected enough vote in heavily Democratic Detroit. 1720 West 23rd Street Servas said the $1 or $2 price will pay the cost of producing the magazine without heavy reliance on advertising. Report Puts Finger On Big Universities "I'm deeply grateful to be given the chance to continue the work," he said. "He also beid, "With the help of so many good people in both parties and every part of this state I know that we can make it happen." WASHINGTON (UPI)—Bip, expensive, coeducational universities in the East that emphasize learning programs are most likely to produce campus disorder, a problem Commission said Thursday. full four-year term of office" Levin said. The first front cover will be done by (who else?) Norman Rockwell. The report was issued without comment by the staff of the university, which was in the Campus Unrest, appointed by President Obama June 13 to inquire into the violence. The findings issued Thursday in a university's general report revealed The 41-page profile of a school mostly likely to suffer from student violence was drawn from a survey of administrators, at 1,800 colleges and universities in all parts of the country. Milliken became governor in Jacques Lecoy, later leader George Romney after Romney became Secretary of Housing and "Urban Develop- Note there had been a steady increase of violence over the past three years, the report prepared by the police said that most recently the greatest increases were in the campuses and still stamatically more incidents than other regions, both in numbers of campuses" and in percentages of the reported. The report said, experienced the lowest percentages of violent Milliken was the only Republican to withstand a Democratic sweep which gave Hillary Clinton office on the statewide ballot. The commission said those replying to its questionnaire were not aware of campus violence, but replied that demands of black students at the university "certain school regulations" "certain internal 'internal' causes of violence." His stronger than-expected leadership, Wayne County was attributed to black voters and Catholics. Milliken has pushed hard for the county's governmental action in his political career and has appalled officers and boards in his 22 months than any governor during the campaign. The report also said "schools with ROTC reported proportionately more incidents than schools without ROTC and incidents on campuses with ROTC of the disruptive or violent type." incidents during the three-year period. Declaring there is a "definite relationship between school size and incidents." the commission reports that enrollments over 10,000 were more often of the moderately and most serious types. Incidents at school with under 10,000 are less likely to occur in the least serious types. The report said that coded school reports that schools had about the same percentage of incidents, but that "incidents at coeducational institutions were disrupted or violent than those at schools with predominantly male students." LADIES ONLY Next week, Monday through Friday, you can get FREE delivery service from the Hole-in-the-Wall Call anytime 4-12 THE HHE in the WALL 843-7685 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10 KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI Municipal Auditorium Music Hall 1319 W. 72ND ST. O'CONNOR'S AVENUE 7:45 PM *OMNISSION* IN PERSON... FROM THE CATHEDRAL OF TOMORROW REX HUMBARD Rex Humbard may also be seen one hour every Sunday in this area on WDAF TV CH-4 - 8:30 A.M. Halloween Ends in Tragedy evelyn wood reading dynamics DETROIT (UPI) — A five-year-old Halloween candy lay in a deep coma Tuesday three days after eating sweets laceed with heroin Officials at Children's Hospital here said Kevin Toston was in critical condition, sweating, breathing heavily and showing no response to stimul. He has been told the state since Tuesday morning. The boy's mother, Mrs. Idea Foster, 31, said Kevin went trick-creating with his older brother Saturday night. When they returned, the children, heeding warnings to VI3-6424 make sure their candy and apples had no racer blades or pins in them, carefully sorting the candy and packaging it, that was improperly wrapped. "Kevin even threw out the apples," Mrs. Foster said. "He thought there might be razor blades in them." On Monday, when Kevin went to spend the day at the house, he some of the candy. In the morning, his relatives in the hospital him. He was taken to the hospital. A Food and Drug Administration analysis of some of the candy he had brought with him showed it contained heroin and quinine in powder form. **lallowen**, "Mrs. Foster said." "It's too dangerous for kids. something's always happening and it's happening to my aby." Skin problems may become a part of the past with a new medicated skin cream, the ointment which can be worn alone or under makeup, contains an exclusive organic sulphide which speeds up the treating acne blemishes without causing it to break out in agents, the manufacturer says. million Why isn't a big company like General Electric doing more to clean up the environment? How much can one company do to clean up the environment? Until the problems of pollution are under control—until its effects are reversed—no company can ever be doing "enough." What follows is a listing of things General Electric is doing to ease environmental problems. Some are as old as twenty-five years. Should we be doing more? Yes, of course. Every company should. These are only a few of the more important ones. But every day sees us take more steps in many more directions. ▶ General Electric is working toward a process that will use bacteria to convert garbage into a high-protein food for cattle. One possible answer to the mounting garbage problem. Modern, pollution-free mass transit from General Electric is carrying more and more commuters into cities without their cars. ▶ GE pioneered the development of nuclear power plants. A nuclear plant makes electricity without making smoke. While there is still the problem of thermal effects, it's being tackled on a site-by-site basis and can be solved. But for now, increasing demands for power can be met without an increasing output of air pollution. ▶ GE has developed a waste-treatment unit to significantly reduce the water pollution from ships and boats. ▶ We have been chosen by the federal government to solve the problem of jet-engine noise for the aviation industry. Our present jet is already quieter than those on the passenger planes of the Sixies, and yet it's nearly three times as powerful. ▶ GE designed and built an undersea habitat called "Tektite." Several teams of scientists have lived in the habitat while studying coral-reef ecology and ocean pollution. ▶ We are designing an earth-resources center that will be a key worldwide survey of the oceans. A first step toward the ultimate control of water pollution. ▶ Our newest airplane engine, for the DC-10, is designed to be smoke-free. Of course, there's more to jet exhaust than just smoke. And our goal is to one day make them run totally clean. General Electric makes high-temperature vortex incinerators for GENERAL the complete combustion of many types of solid waste. Complete combustion drastically reduces the amount of carbon dioxide virtually eliminating air pollutants Why are we running this ad? The problems of the environment are many. And some of the solutions will be difficult and time consuming, but we can see, we're working on them We're running this ad, and others like it, to tell you the things General Electric is doing about the problems of man and his The problems concern us because they concern you. We're a business and you are potential customers and employees. But there's another, more important reason. These problems will affect the future of this country and this planet. We have a stake in that future. As businessmen. And, simply, as people. We invite your comments. Please write to General Electric, 570 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10022. ELECTRIC