2 Tuesday, October 10, 1978 University Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From staff and wire reports Carter to open Mideast talks WASHINGTON—President Carter personally will open the Midwest peace talks beginning here Thursday between the defense and foreign ministers of the United States. Egypt and Israel, a Western mission to be identified, also left open the possibility that the president would meet at the White House with members of the Israeli and American embassies. compassions on the timetable for the withdrawal of Israel forces in the Sinai and the demarcation zones in which Israel, Egypt and United Nations are located. troops whom the State Cyrus R. Vance will head the U.S. delegation at the talks. Moshe Dayan, Israel foreign minister, will head the Israeli delegation, and Kamel Hassan Ali, Egyptian defense minister, and Boutos Ghali, acting foreign minister, will lead the Egyptian delegation. Lebanese cease-fire continuing BEIRUT, Lebanon—President Ellas Sinatra yesterday headed for a meeting with Saudi Arabian leaders to win backing of a Syrian-Christian cease-fire in Lebanon. Authorities said Sarkis decided to drum up Saud support for a permanent trace after three days of intensive talks in Damascus with Syrian President Hafez Assad, which led to the temporary cease-fire Saturday. Sarkis planned ties to Sudan and the United Arab Emirates before returning to Damascus. The right wing "Voice of Lebanon" radio, meanwhile, charged that Syrian troops violated the truce by海岸 the coastal highway just north of the Christians. SECTION 10.2 The radio did not give any casualty count following the alleged shelling, but said seven persons were killed and 17 others wounded Sunday and early yesterday by Syrian snipers. Heroin confiscated in Rome ROME-Police at Rome's Leonardo da Vinci Airport yesterday examined the suitcases of two main men,男 found false compartments filled with $18 in cash. billion, they said, and the men arrived from Kuala Lumpur with the 22 pounds of drugs and were to spend the night in Rome before traveling to Milan, Lausanne, Geneva, and Zurich. "We are very happy," he added. Wallace takes university job BIRMINGHAM, Ala.—Gov. George Wallace, crippled in an assassination attempt in 1972, plans to become involved in rehabilitation work after he leaves office next year, a spokesman said yesterday. other next year, a postgraduate study will be required for a appointment to become director of development for rehabilitation resources at the University of Alabama in Birmingham and for research. His duties are expected to include fund raising, consulting in rehabilitation, working with federal grant agencies and lecturing. A spokesman for the governor said the appointment would become effective Jan. 16, after the next governor is inaugurated. Saudi Arabian king recovering CLEVELAND—Saudi Arabian King Khaled to make satisfactory progress, six days after undergoing open heart surgery at the Cleveland Clinic, died on Wednesday. The 64-year-old king left the clinic's intensive care unit during the weekend. Hospital officials have stopped issuing daily statements on his condition. Khaled underwent a double coronary bypass operation last Tuesday. He underwent heart surgery at the same clinic in 1972. Texas killer to be force-fed HUNTSVILLE, Texas—Texas prison officials said yesterday that David Lee Powell, a criminal who would be forced-fed or fed intravenously if he could keep him alive for five years. rowen, 27, a former University of Texas honors student, entered his 13th day of a hunger strike in an attempt to die of malnutrition. Ron Taylor, Texas Department of Corrections spokesman, said Powell had not eaten any food that had been set in front of his cell on Death Row. Powell's mother confirmed that the fast was started because her son wanted to die. Taylor said Powell's death placed the TDC in an ironic position of keeping a man alive so that he could be killed. *Powell was sentenced Sept. 28 in Austin, Texas, to die by lethal injection for the May 18 shootings of officer Albanese with a Russian-made machine gun.* Jacques Brel dies in Paris PARIS-Jaques Brel, the Belgian who wrote and sang melancholy and poetic songs that brought both joy and tears to the French-speaking world for 70 years. Brel's success spread to the United States with the hit musical based on his songs, "Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris." In 1966, he gave up concerts and his attention to the theater and the movies as an actor and director. His biggest success in the theatre was a He retired at the height of his fame in 1973 and moved into seclusion in the French-owned Marquesas Islands in the South Pacific. Leislator slams Air Force TOPEKA—A state legislator yesterday criticized the U.S. Air Force for allegedly conducting oxidizer transfer operations on a Titan II missile site near Mayfield while the cause of a deadly oxidizer leak in August at another site remains unknown. In a telegram to McConnell Air Force Base and Air Force missile officials, state Rep. Robert Miller, R-Wellington, demanded that the Air Force find and remedy the cause of a leak in a missile silo in Rock that killed two men and caused an evacuation of Rock residents. "Until we are sure that malfunctions in the Titan II system have been corrected and until the Air Force can prove to us oxidizer leaks won't happen, then we will be confident that our mission will continue." KC aroup endorses blockade KANASS CITY, Mo.—The Kansas City People's Energy Project has endorsed a plan to block rail delivery of a reactor vessel to the Wolf Creek Generating Station. The blockade is being planned by a new organization that calls itself the Kansas Natural Guard. Larry Kennan, a project spokesman, said, "The blockade is meant to call attention to the problems that nuclear power presents." He said that radioactive wastes would have to be stored for 20,000 to 30,000 years for complete deactivation and that disposal would be expensive. He also charged that low-level radiation caused cancer and that nuclear power plants created fewer jobs than either conservation or alternative energy. 1984 Olympics to be in L.A. LAUSANNE, Switzerland—The International Olympic Committee gave its final approval yesterday to Los Angeles to stage the 1084 Summer Games by an all-virtual format. The special mail ballot among IOC members, which also drew eight abstentions, approved a decision by the executive board in August, recommending accession of the new president. The granting of the Games to Los Angeles ended months of talks between officials of the city, the IOC and the U.S. Olympic Committee over the drafting of a schedule. Weather ... Skies will be partly cloudy today and winds will be light and variable. The high will be in the mid 48s. The low tonight is predicted to be in the mid 48s. VATICAN CITY (AP) - Roman Catholic cardinals will cast their first ballot for a new pope next Sunday, the Vatican announced yesterday. Cardinals to cast ballots Sunday Albino Luciani, the humble son of a bricklayer from the Dalmate Alps of northeastern Italy. Pope John Paul I, the 638th pope and leader of the world's 700 million Catholics, died of a heart attack Sept. 28 after a reign of 34 days. The congregation of cardinals, running the church in the period between popes, decided that the 111 cardinal-electors would precede the secret conclave Saturday by the Basilica at 10 a.m. (4 a.m. CDT), calling on the Holy Spirit to help them elect a pope. The dean of the College of Cardinals, reflecting widespread sentiment, was quoted as predicting the election will be brief and easy. At 4:30 p.m. (10:30 a.m. CDT) the princes of the church will form a procession, file into the Renaissance splendor of the Sistine Chapel, and pray before them. They begin ballasting the following morning. The conclave procedure will largely be a rerun of the one in August that elected ON SUNDAY MORNING, the cardinals will celebrate Mass in the three chapels in the conclave area. Two rounds of voting are scheduled later that morning, followed by two more in the afternoon. Electron of a pope requires a vote of two-thirds plus one The statement by the dean, Cardinal Carlo Confalonieri, in an interview with the Rome newspaper II Tempo, appeared to indicate that the cardinal-electors have developed a consensus of sorts on the kind of pope they are seeking. THE CARDIADS have had ample time to get to know each other since the death of Pope Paul VI on Aug. 6. The only first-time vote this time will be Cardinal John Wright, the only American member of the Curia, the church's central government. He missed the last papal election because of cataract surgery in the United States. Influential cardinals stressed over the weekend that consideration of age and Senate votes tentative cut in income taxes for 1980s OPEC threatens cutback health will be major factors in the choice of the next pipe. Others like Confalonieri have said the next pipe should have a knowledge of world affairs and diplomacy as well as the fundamental pastoral quality of the late pontiff. WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate voted yesterday to cut personal income taxes by $104 billion between 1980 and 1983 if the federal of spending is held within set limits. VIENNA, Austria (AP)—The OPEC oil cartel threatened yesterday to begin cutting back crude oil supplies to industrialized nations if they do not make it easier for them to sell their gasoline to the business-producing and selling gasoline and other finished petroleum products. The tax cut for 1982 would be allowed only if the budget is balanced in that year. "We can no longer afford to play the role of mere ... suppliers of raw material," said Ali Jaidah, secretary-general of the 13-nation Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. His comments came at an OPEC seminar on downstream operations and were echoed by the oil minister of Kuwait, Alkhalifa al-Sabah. SABAH, THE seminar chairman, said the first way industrialized countries discouraged OPEC nations from making and selling finished products was by imprinting their own labels on technological knowledge that oil countries needed to build refineries and other plants. MOBILE DISCO Then, Sabah said, when OPEC countries try to market the products back in industrialized nations, those governments quotas and prohibitively high tariffs on them. There was no immediate official reaction in the West to the OPEC statements. The West had not responded. "These restrictions and attitudes will not be pacifically accepted by OPEC," Sabah said. "It may not be long before the removal of all countries becomes a condition of sumy of crude oil." --for Men and Women REDKEN II J. Watson's A PRIVATE CLUB 9th & Iowa, Hillcrest Shopping Ctr J. WATSON'S II IS NOT FOR EVERYONE! IF YOU ARE Tired OF THAT SAME OLD DISCO SCENE AND ARE LOOKING FOR A PLEASANT CHANGE—WE MAY HAVE JUST WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING FOR! 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If the tax cuts became effective, they would increase the various income levels in about the same proportion as those in the 1979 reductions. In general, spending in one year could not exceed the previous year's total by more than one percent, plus whatever was needed to offset inflation. By a 62-28 vote-two more than necessary—the Senate invoked Open Monday through Saturday 843-4666 23 W 9th Street CORN'S Studio of Beauty REDKEN hair loros 1017 $ _{1/2} $ Massachusetts Confidence is knowing that your hairstylist cares enough to give you the best. We're open! Give us a call . 841-8276 featuring Valerie, formerly of Gentlemen's Quarters REDKEN Student Store Architecture & Urban Design ART & DRAFTING SUPPLIES Along with our full line of drafting supplies we now stock various art supplies at prices that are the lowest in town. Room 15 Marvin Hall On a 65-22 vote, the Senate upheld the parliamentarian's ruling that, because of other tax reductions already added, there was no room in the budget resolution for the fuel credit. It would cost up to $1.2 billion a year. Water Colors, Acrylics, Oil Points, Design Art Markers, Sketchbooks, Newsprint Pads, X-Rite Knives, Spray Mount, Rubber Cement, Elmer's Glue, Masking B Drafting Tape and much more. Meanwhile, an amendment to Sen. John Heinz, R-PA, that would have given elderly persons a tax credit of up to $75 to help pay them is thrown down because it exceeded the budget. **THAT VOTE** could end any chance of final congressional action this year on such items as the Humphrey-Hawkins full-time law and legislation to control hospital costs. parliamentary limitations that will make it impossible for senators to add non-tax proposals to the tax-cut measure in the closing days of the 95th Congress. DROP BY AND CHECK US OUT ATTENTION! Jewish Students And Faculty TONIGHT, Oct. 10 Kol Nidre Services 7 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Union TOMORROW, Oct. 11 Yom Kipper Services 9 a.m. Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Drive