2 2 Tuesday, October 31, 1978 University Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From staff and wire reports -UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN- West Bank decision defended WASHINGTON—Israelian Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan yesterday said "considerable progress" was being made toward a peace treaty with Egypt. In talking with reporters, Dayan defended Israel's recent decision to increase Jewish settlements on the Gaza Strip. He moved a move that has been approved by the Carter administration. "We don't think the settlements are illegal," Dayann said. "We don't think the settlements are an obstacle to peace. and I myself think that whenever we see Jews settling on the ground without driving away a single Arab, bringing prosperity to the area, becoming farmers, or returning from their homeland, it is very important. 2 Soviet spies get 50 years NEWARK, N.J. — Two Soviet citizens convicted of espionage were sentenced yesterday to 50 years in prison by a federal judge who said the punishment was excessive. U. S. District judge Frederick B. Lacey, allowed the two to remain free under the custody of the Soviet ambassador, pending appeals. The two convicted spies, both former United Nations employees, could have received life terms on three espionage counts. Vladik Enger, 39, and Rudolf Chemyasyv, 43, were convicted Oct. 13 for their part in a nine-month conspiracy to obtain U.S. military secrets, including plans to conduct nuclear weapons tests. Gold sales rise with inflation In something of a modern-day Gold Rush, people are buying gold jewelry and coins in increasing numbers, despite rising prices, as their confidence in the outline on the interaction between interest rates and the purchasing power of the dollar are turning investors to gold and tangible investments like real Market fall called massacre NEW YORK —They're calling it the October Massacre on Wall Street—a devastating market that has the paper value of stocks by over $100 more than two times that of gold. By yesterday afternoon, analysts had begun comparing the decline to other great market debacles of this century—the 1962 showdown between President Kennedy and the steel industry over prices, the decline after the fall of France in the early days of World War II and even the crash of 1929. The recent sell-off hasn't reached crash proportions, but from mid-October through yesterday the Dow Jones industrial average fell more than 11 percent. Even after a brief rally yesterday, the broad tally of all New York Stock Exchange issues still showed three stocks declining for every one that went up. Behind the slide, most analysts agree, have been widespread fears among investors of worsening inflation, and speculation that another bad recession might occur. Hart enters not guilty plea PYHOK, Okin - Glen Leroy Hart pleaded not guilty yesterday in Mayes County District Court to charges killing three Tulsa area Girl Scouts on June 13. Hart was ordered to stand trial on all three counts of first-degree murder beginning Nov. 27. Hart is charged with the murders of Lori Farrer 8, Doria Dense Milner 10, and Michele Guse. 9. The girls were sexually abused and killed during their first marriage. Hart, a convicted rapist, was pursued by authorities for 10 months before his counterstrike Aortl in the rugged Cookson hills. Mail order firm sued for ads WICHTHA—A Philadelphia mail order firm was accused yesterday of deceitful advertising in offering trees, plants, and weight loss plans to women in the United States. The office's consumer fraud division filed the suit against American Consumer Inc. The suit asked for a permanent injunction against alleged deceptive practices. The suit said the company's advertisements did not tell customers that the weight loss plan required dieting and exercise for it to work, and that the trees were too tall to fit into the space. Missouri presents NOW suit An official of the state attorney general's office alleged that NOW's boycott had caused economic hardship to the state of Missouri. The attorney general has estimated the boycott, which he said was joined by 90 other organizations, has cost SL Louis $10 million in convention business and is a costly expense. Unions accused of illegalities WASHINGTON—The National Right to Work Committee yesterday accused the AFL-CIO and its affiliated unions of making nearly $731,000 in illegal contributions to 18 U.S. Senate candidates, including Bill Roy, Kansas Democratic senatorial candidate. However, an official of the Federal Election Commission, the agency that monitors campaign spending, said the contributions did not violate federal Federal campaign financing laws prohibit unions, trade associations or other special interest groups from contributing more than $3,000 to any one Reed Larson, president of the committee, said the AFL-CIO and its member unions had gotten around the $5,000 limit by considering themselves as separate groups. Thus, a candidate could receive $5,000 each from the AFL-CIO and dozens of unions that belong to the federation, Larson said. Typhoon death toll near 200 BINAGBAG, Philippines—The death toll from Typhoon Rita, which hit the main philippine island of Luzon last week, rose to nearly 2002 yesterday and is expected to continue until mid-October. Bulacan is one of seven provinces in the rice-growing central Luzon region. The toll includes 67 persons who died when the government ordered floodgates of a dam opened in Bulacan province. Survivors and local officials charged that the government did not give enough warning before the floodgates were opened. Candidate criticizes treasurer TUPEKA-James Ungerer, Republican candidate for state treasurer, told a news conference yesterday that inefficient management of the treasurer's office by incumbent Democrri Joan Finney had cost Kansas taxpayers nearly $130.00. Ungerer, a state representative from Marysville, said the amount he referred to was in fees paid to four accounting firms to help straighten out the state books in recent years when the treasurer's office and the Division of Accounts and Reports could not reconcile the state books. Finney has argued claimata she was responsible for the backlog on reconciling the office's books in recent years, saying lack of trained personnel and lack of staff were major factors. Weather... It will be clear and cooler today, with a high in the low 80s. Winds will be from the north at 15 mph. The low tonight will be in the upper 30s. The high tomorrow will be near neutral. WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court said yesterday it would decide whether states may require unwed females to attend school or be a nurse before undergoing an abortion. Justices to rule on abortion law A test case from Massachusetts may provide a distinction from a 1978 Supreme Court ruling that banned laws giving parents the right to remove young girls' decisions to have abortions. - Agreed to decide whether a Louisiana woman fired by former Rep. Otto Passman may sue her ex-boss for alleged sexual bias. • Judge Richard Bairley Davis, was legally barred from suing. - Said they would decide whether minors accused of crimes may be questioned by police after asking to consult with their lawyers. The Miranda doctrine Court ruled that the Miranda doctrine protecting criminal suspects extends to youths who want help from probation-offenders. IN A BUSY day on the bench, the justices also: - Left intact a Chicago ordinance that forces car rental companies to pay for their customers' parking tickets. Lawyers for Hertz and Avis told the court that the ordinance would cost their companies millions. - Agreed to decide in a Texas case what administrative safeguards states must provide for parents suspected of child abuse. Texas courts ruled that parents threatened with the loss of a child's must be given an immediate hearing. - Refused to keep secret the Securities and Exchange Commission files on foreign bribes allegedly made by International Telephone and Telegraph Corp. Details of charges against ITT are likely to be made public within the next 30 days. IN THE ANTIHOUSE case, a three-judge federal court in Boston struck down the Massachusetts law after ruling that it unconstitutionally infringed on the privacy of a person. If the parents refused to consent to the abortion, a state judge could allow the abortion if he ruled it was in the minor's best interest. If she was not consent, the abortion would not be allowed. Under the invalidated law, parents always had to be consulted when an unwed minor wanted to abort a fetus in any stage of her pregnancy. States may play a role in protecting the woman's health in the pregnancy's second trimester and may take steps to protect life in the final trimester, the court said. jeans for beans shirts and skirts 1903 1/2 mass. THE SUPREME Court in 1973 legalized abortions, basing its ruling on women's constitutional right of privacy. The decision, which is still controversial, said states could interfere with a woman's choice to have an abortion during the first three months of pregnancy. AFRAID OF CLIPPERS? Relax . . . in the Professional Hands of Travel Plans? make them with us. 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