2 Monday, January 21, 1980 University Daily Kansan IVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan × Wire Services UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Bullfight stands fall, kill 147 BORGOTA, Colombia - Five sections of crowded grandstands at the bullring in Sincepcio closed yesterday and hospital officials said at least 147 were injured. Municipal authorities in the northern city said police, firemen and civil defense teams had struggled to rescue persons trapped under debris. Officials said about 3,000 people were in the grandstand sections that fell. Authorities blamed recent heavy rains for the tragedy, and said the ground was cracked. A fire broke out in a section. Witnesses saw the sections collapsed like dominoes in exaggerated fans watching scores of youths and men in the ring evade bullets during a popular gun battle. The Sincelejo hospital was unable to receive all of the injured and many were taken by ambulances and private vehicles to the neighboring towns. The Red Cross provided medical assistance. Pakistan aid before Congress WASHINGTON—Congress will convene its second session of the year today with plans to approve expanded trade with China and aid for Pakistan in recent years. The Carter administration will propose $200 million in aid to Pakistan to bolster that country's defenses. Officials have said the aid will include anti-terrorism efforts, humanitarian assistance and training. The bill to expand U.S. trade with China by granting China relaxed shipping costs is likely to be approved by the House this week and possibly by the Senate. The bill would expand last year's $1.2 billion trade between the two countries to an estimated $5 billion a year by 1985. A final version of the windfall profits tax bill also may be completed by House-Senate conferences. 41 injured in Texas explosion BURKE, Texas - Explosions and 300-foot flames from a gasoline refinery near this Panhandle town yesterday injured at least 41 persons and forced The explosion heavily damaged houses in Phillips, shattered windows four miles away in Borer and was felt as far as away as Pampa, 30 miles to the Jim Ornambm, public information officer at the Phillips Petroleum Co. refinery, said the blast roared through two cracking units used to manufacture petroleum products in New York. Aidw Westbrook, whose mobile home is about a mile and half from the plant, opened a large window on the floor. We opened the door and saw a big ball of fire and black smoke. spotted the door and saw a big log on it and back a shook one. "There are a lot of shook people here. It's just unbelievable." Records point to GSA scandal WASHINGTON-A former government official once accused of receiving bribes was promoted in the mid-80s by the scandal-plagued General Services Administration despite his having been caught earlier falsifying records, according to government files. A GSA personnel file, obtained by The Associated Press, shows that the official, Roger F. Carroll Jr., was named director of quality control at GSA in 1964, although he had been demoted after admitting he doctored government records. Carrall was considered a "satellite" of Robert T. Griffin, GSA's former No. 2 man, now a White House assistant. Griffin had refused to discuss his case. Carroll's personnel file also indicates that in 1961 Michael O'Neill, speaker of the House of Representatives, recommended Carroll for promotion to a job in the U.S. Army. He later became a member of the Army Corps of Engineers. Late last year, the president of a New Jersey paint company testified in federal court that through an intermediary he paid Carroll $100 a month in bribe from 1989 to 1971. Federal officials said they did not prosecute him because the statute of limitations had expired. Carroll, who rose to assistant commissioner for federal supplies before retiring last September, is the highest-ranking GSA official publicly implicated in the scandal that has led to convictions of more than 100 GSA officials and contractors. Japanese hold three as spies TOKYO - Police made an unprecedented search of Japan's self-defense force headquarters yesterday for evidence against a retired major general and two other officials. Police said they seized more than 100 documents and notebooks from the deks and lockers of the two officers, both employees of the defense agency's First I.1. Eckhuis Kashi and Warrant Officer Tsunetoshi Oshima were arrested Friday on suspicion of passing classified information to their former superior, retired Maj. Gen. Yukhisa Miyanaga, who in turn allegedly turned the material over to a Soviet contact. Miyanaga also was arrested. No formal charges have been made against the three men by the Tokyo prosecutors office. Most of the information allegedly passed to the Russians is thought to concern data about the military situation in China and socialist countries. However, the Yomuari Shimun newspaper reported yesterday that Miyagi has forced in Japan the establishment and stationing of U.S. forces in Japan and South Korea was also included. Doctors amputate Tito's left leg BEGLADRA, Yugoslavia - Doctors amputated the left leg. President Josip a yesterday after a circulation blockage japanned his life, the Tanjug The 8-yr-old Yugoslav leader and elder statesman of the non-aligned movement was doing well after the operation, according to a three-sentence statement. Tito's doctors said, "The immediate post-operative course is normal." Belgrade, the Yugoslav capital, was awash with rumors of troop movements, military alerts and other precautions, but the capital appeared calm. Party official supports Carter Some Kansas Democrats are who supporting Sen. Edward M. Kennedy for the party's nomination had complained that Ploper should not campaign for him. TOPEKA—Jim Ploger, executive director of the Kansas Democratic Party for the past year, said yesterday that he went to Iowa last week to campaign for President Carter, with the approval of Gov. John Carlin and state party chairman Larry Benton. antagonism toward the Kremlin, his illness had raised speculation about whether the Nazi would take an eye-Yuanhua warlord to Tian'an tribute. Ployer he believed party officials in Kansas should support Carter because he was the incumbent. Ploger, who financied the trip himself, said Kansas Democrats should not be surprised by his trip. He was a full-time paid coordinator for the 1978 Carter Administration. "If we didn't have an incumbent in the presidential race, it would be different," he said. Correction The headline above the Kansan's Jan. 18 story about the workers at the Stokely Van-Camp plant in Lawrence was incorrect. The workers are not on strike; they have been locked out by the Stokley management because of a contract dispute. The Kansan regrets the error. Weather Weather ... Warner temperatures are expected today with a high in the upper 30s and a southerly wind of 5-15 mph, according to the National Weather Service in New York. Tomorrow's high will be in the low 30s with little or no precipitation through Thursday. Afghan rebels to unite Rv The Associated Press Moslem revolutionaries rejected conciliation with the Marxist Alafghan government yesterday and announced plans to unite rebel factions into a single guerrilla troop in Afghanistan against Soviet troops in Afghanistan, according to an Iranian state radio report. An Afghan Islamic Organization official in Tehran said the revolutionaries would accept offers of negotiation in Kabul or in Kabul or end their attempt to rid Afghanistan of Soviet troops. Tehran Radio reported. Most headquarters in Iran or Pakistan have headquarters in Iran or Pakistan. Discussions are under way, he said, among seven Islamic organizations to form a guerrilla alliance to fight the Soviet Union. It was announced Tuesday by President Brakah Karmal on Dec. 27 and "The Afghan revolutionaries' duty is to expel the Soviet forces from Afghanistan through Jihad, holy war, not through neotizations," the official said. Government leaders in Iran and Pakistan are expressing fears of movements by thousands of Soviet troops near their border in Afghanistan and have run up to 100,000 In an effort to assure the Pakistan government, President Carter said on Thursday that if the United States would be prepared to use military force to protect Heidelberg. He also said he would increase the level of U.S. forces in northern Indian Ocean-Persian Gulf area. are now battling guerrilla units in the Afghan countryside. The United States already has promised to give Pakistan $400 million to improve its defenses, especially along its 1,200-mile border with Afghanistan. Chinese Foreign Minister Huang Haum with Gen. Mohammad Zia Ubai, the head of the UAE's military camp for 6,000 Afghan refugees in Pakistan, has criticized his government's austerity措施。 the camp, 60 miles from the border with Afghanistan, that China also would assist the 438,000 Afghan refugees thought to be in Pakistan. In an apparent conciliation with the rebels, meanwhile, the Afghan government announced it would change its communist-style, all-red national flag, which has been attacked by Afghanistan's fiercely anti-Communist clergy as a symbol of atheism. In April 1978 when the country's first Anti-Communist government came to power in a coup. Details of the discussions between Huang and Zia were not disclosed. It was widely thought that green, the traditional color of Islamic pennants, would be part of the new Flag's color scheme. There were fresh indications over the weekend that Soviet troops would have a tough fight with insurgent forces that have been fighting the Alq汗政府 for 20 years. -KANSAN On Campus TODAY: The GRADUATE WOMEN'S GROUP will meet for lunch from noon to 1:30 p.m. in Cork Room 2 of the Kansas University spring demonstration from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. in Dyche Auditorium. AMNESTY INTERNATIONALS' first meeting of the week is at 9:30 a.m. in Pine Roan of the Union. Carole Ross, piano, will give a FACILITY RECITAL at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. An introduction by Dr. Linda Hood and Center STEM center will be at 7:30 p.m. in the auditorium of the Computer Services Facility. INTRAMURAL-BASKETBALL OF OFFICIALS meeting will be in room 268 in Robinson Gymnasium. TOMORROW, KU COLLEGE BOWL will bring its experience to the CLIENT CLUB will meet at 10am in the Pine Room of the Union. INTRAMURAL MANAGERS will meet at p.m. in Robinson Rock Chalk Revue Auditions for In-Between- Acts-Players Tues. Jan. 22,1980 6:00 PM Big Eight Room—Union For more information call 864-3761 or 841-1190. AVAILABLE NOW 1 & 2 Bedrooms Professionally Managed By: GOLD CROWN PROPERTIES, INC GOLD CROWN PROPERTIES, INC. Drapes, Carpet, AC, All Appliances, Carports, Pool, Conveniently Located, On KU Bus Line. Rents Start At: $225.00 CALL OR COME BY TODAY CLIMB THE LETTERS TO SUCCESS. Success is a long way up. But after having the first step, the second one comes. **NOTE:** A HONEY POT can help you cure your cyst that is helping by providing a helping hand due to its moistness. AIR FORCE Sophomore & junior-approach now for the APRT 2020 Year Program. See you for quality and for a FACP Commission. Call 684.4847 or visit http://www.facp.org/ ROTC Find it in Kansan classified. Sell it, too. Call 864-4358. Gateway to a great way of life. IN MEMORIAM: INNOCENT VICTIMS OF ABORTION Over eight million unborn humans murdered ("termination of pregnancy") since the January 22,1973 U.S. Supreme Court decision permitting abortion on demand. Sail them for Yourself. Mar. 9-16 BAHAMAS Find out more by attending a KU Sail Club Meeting Wed. 7 pm, Union Parlors A & B Everybody welcome, no previous sailing experience necessary. Precision At A Discount. (For students only.) Come by for a special student discount card. It's good for a whole year, and entitles you to 10% off any Command Performance service. Including our precision haircut. Precision haircutting is our technique for cutting the hair in harmony with the way it grows. So as it grows it doesn't lose its shape. Your hair will look as good after five days as it does after five weeks. A precision haircut with shampoo and blow-dry costs just fourteen dollars for guys or girls, less 10% of course. We also offer permanent waves, coloring, froring and conditioning. No appoint- Take advantage of our offer, it's precisely what you need. Command Performance 23rd & Iowa in the South West Plaza M- F: 9-8 Saturday: 9am-5pm Sunday: Noon - 5 Phone: 843-3985