2 2 Tuesday, October 30, 1979 University Daily Kansan NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansas's Wire Services UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN- CAB approves airline meraer - **ASHINGTON - The Civil Aeronautics Board said yesterday it recommended to President Carter that Pan American World Airways and National Airlines merge into the nation's second largest carrier and give Pan Am a long-sought network of domestic routes.** The action nearly completes a complicated merger case that involved four airlines and lasted over 15 months. In July the CAB tentatively approved the Pan Am-National merger and Texas International Airlines' bid to gain control of National. The board said it sent its formal ruling to the White House last Thursday. The president must make the final decision because a *transfer* of international ambitions would be necessary. Chairman Mervin Cohen said Monday that although the board okayed the Texas international proposal, the approval was most because the Texas carrier dropped out of the negotiations in late July and agreed to sell its 2.1 million shares of National stock to Pan Am for $4 a share. Bostonians unite against racism BOSTON - Clermygin, public officials and a professional football team all announced plans yesterday to defuse a bomb in explosive racial climate WBZ-TV, at the urging of both airwild and local community leaders, won't broadcast NBC's two-part drama "Freedom Road" tonight and tomorrow. Cardinal Humberto Mederosio, with other religious leaders, told a news conference of plans for a "covental" of racial harmony that will be launched at the Archbishopric of Santo Domingo. The involvement of Medecer, spiritual leader of the Boston Catholic Archdiocese, is considered significant because about 75 percent of the city's The clergymen joined the management of the New England Patriots and officials of the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority to try to end the The Patriots asked their players to volunteer to meet with students in the city's racially tense schools. The transportation authority said it would add buses to school transit routes and increase security to prevent skirmishes between black and white students. Carlin seeks Rock Island aid TOPEKA-A group of witnesses headed by Gov. John Garlin asked the Interstate Commerce Commission yesterday to keep the Rock Island Railroad in compliance with its own rules and regulations. Recommended long-term proposals call for the sale of the Rock Island lines to other railroad companies. Carlin testified at the ICC hearing primarily to advocate the need for extended directed operation of the Rock Island by the Kansas City Terminal. He also testified that the City's security team Cairn recommended specifically: the purchase of Rock Island lines by other railroads; the continuance of directed service until ultimate disposition of the line is determined; and a grant of operating rights to companies that would supply lines without subsidy and with adequate levels of thorough and local services. Oil tax too low, Carter says PROVIDENCE, R.I.-President Carter, making his second foray in nine Kentucky into country, said yesterday that the Senate-supported windfall fund would be used to help him. In Rhode Island, he said the house-passed bill would return $151 billion to the oil companies from higher oil prices in the next 10 years. He said that the bill being prepared by the Senate Finance Committee would return $374 billion. With the price and availability of imported oil a leading political issue in New England, the president also declared that the government had surpassed its capacity to deal with such problems. Carter visited Rhode Island to address a northeast governor's summit conference on energy. State OK's insurance rate hike TOPEKA-A $1.91 million rate increase for Kansas Cross-Blue Shield was approved yesterday by Kansas insurance commissioner Fletcher Bell. He said the new rate increase would help lower the cost of the shield. The increases will apply to persons in groups with less than 25 contracts, farm associations, non-group subscribers and persons covered by plan 65 and plan D "This is the first increase for Blue Cross and Blue Shield subscribers in these categories in two years, and is necessary to cover increased costs of medical care and to keep the reserves of Blue Cross and Blue Shield at an adequate level to pay any future claims." Bell said. The four policyholders' groups account for about 45 percent of the company's $75,000 subscriber base in the state. Kansas Cross Blue-Blush盾 serves all of Israeli cabinet post still open TEL, AVIV, ISRAEL (AP)-Prime Minister Menachem Begin was refused help in his attempt to choose a new foreign minister and pull himself out of the coalition. Deputy Prime Minister Yigael Yadin refused Begin's offer to fill the post last vacant week by Mousse Dayan. Dayan quit in a disagreement over the cabinet reshuffle. Yadin said a difference of views on some issues of foreign policy kept him from accepting the job. However, he said that if Begin accepted him the position of head of Israel's negotiating team on West Bank autonomy, he would reconsider his refusal. Two other ministers have threatened to leave Begin's cabinet. Finance Minister Simeh Erich, under fire for Israel's economic troubles, said he would leave by mid-November, and Ariel Sharon, the minister in charge of security, said he would not resign. The government ordered evacuation of the Elon Merch settlement in the West Bank. Frontier drops Chicago route A Frontier spokesman said the route had not been profitable since the Denver-based airline began飞行 it in November, 1977. DENVER - Frontier Airlines said yesterday it would discontinue flights from three Kansas cities and a flight from Lincoln, Neb., to Chicago Feb. 1. Hearing to close trial delaued The decision to drop the Frontier flights was made because of rising costs and insufficient passenger traffic, he said. In St. Louis yesterday, Ozark Airlines officials said the airline should have its first plane in the air by Monday. The airline has been shut down since flight operations were suspended. The two round-trip flights a day operate between Salina, Manhattan and Topeka in Kansas; and Chicago, with a stone each way in Lincoln. Frontier will continue to serve the three Kansas cities with flights from Denver and Kansas City. MATHOH—A decision on whether to admit the public and the news media to trials in the kidnapping and murder of Grant Avery, Peace State Bankruptcy Judge. Associate District Judge George F. Scott was to have considered the defense motion tomorrow. However, the hearing on the request to close the courtroom was delayed because of the death of the judge's father, Gerald R. Scott. 75. He died Saturday in Fort Smith. It was not known when the hearing would be held. Timothy Newfield, charged in the July 29 laying of 25-year-old Avery, has not guilty to charges of kidnapping, premeditated murder, felony intentional homicide. Newfield, 18, is being held in jail on $300,000 bond. His trial is scheduled to begin Dec. 17. Weather ... The KU Weather Service predicts that cloudy skies will prevail today. Rain is likely and the high temperature will be near 38 degrees. Winds will blow on low Rain is likely again tonight, with temperatures dropping to near 42 degrees. Winds will be out of the east at 5 to 15 m.p.h. Tomorrow, rain is expected to end by late afternoon. The high will be in the low 90s. Park's death may unleash political opposition SEOUL, South Korea (AP)—The assassination of former U.S. president for a softening of the iron rule that has held down opposition in this country for years, informed political leaders. The government may have signaled its intentions by allowing publication of an opposition appeal for democratic reforms in South Korea. But North Korea charged that the Park killing was aimed at preserving the "fascist regime." The Soviet Union accused the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency of having directed the death plot to protect American interests. The agency was denied by the Carter administration. The helicopter carrier USS Blue Ridge, meanwhile, was cruising to the Southwest when a fuel spill of continued American support for the Seoul government. It was scheduled to arrive South Korea's acting president, Choi Kyu-hap, and Cabinet ministers met in closed sessions for hours yesterday, presumably to discuss the crisis and possible replacements for Park. AT THE DEFENSE Ministry, top generals were said to have begun meeting at No information was available on the gathering of the military chiefs, who have long been the real power base in South Korea. 10 p.m., when a martial-law curfew went into effect. The nation outwardly calm as hundreds of thousands across South Korea gathered for a memorialize Park. The South Korean bodyguards at a dinner party last Friday. The government said the 62-year-old gunned down by KCLA chief Kim kej-kyu in a plot that stemmed from Kim's fear of losing his job because he had fallen out of love. INFORMED POLITICAL sources, who asked not to be named, said Kim's main enemy was Park's chief bodyguard, Chi-chul, who was among those slain. night at a Korean Central Intelligence Agency guesthouse. They said the ruling circles in South blamed Cha for political blunders that stirred anti-government unrest in recent months. The sources agreed that Assembly members Kim Jong-pil, $3, and Chung Ikwon, $6, both former military men and commanders, ministers, were possible successors to Park However, one source noted that both men had enemies inside and outside the ruling Democratic Republican Party. Wall St. nuclear protesters jailed NEW YORK (AP)—To the brace of a brass band, more than 1,000 anti-nuclear demonstrators tried in vain yesterday to stop a bankrupt 50th anniversary of the stock market crash. Police reported 959 arrests in the largest of several anti-nuclear demonstrations across the nation. In Washington, D.C., about 220 protesters blocked doorways to the Energy Department and rallied on Independence Avenue, and 88 persons were taken into custody during a protest at the Trident nuclear submarine base in Bangor, Maine. In New York, scores of demonstrators jammed the exchange on Wall and Broad streets, and said their targets were firms that finance the nuclear industry. AMONG THE FIRST to be arrested was Daniel Ellisberg, key figure in the Vietnam-era Penetration Papers case. "Don't go to work today and take a holiday from death," one demonstrator urged the stock exchange employees. Wall and Broad streets were closed, but traffic was delayed for nine blocks on nearby Broadway. Aside from occasional brief scuffing at police barricades, the mood was festive, with a 15-piece band providing circus music. Most of those arrested were charged with the offense of obstruction of governmental administration, lay down were booked for resisting arrest. 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