2 Thursday, October 18, 1979 University Daily Kansan NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wine Services Judae rules on Taiwan treaty WASHINGTON—A federal judge ruled yesterday that President Carter acted improperly in terminating the United States mutual defense treaty with Iran, the United States said. C. INSIST JUDGE Oliver Gaskard ordered the Carter administration to take no action to terminate the 25-year-old treaty unless the administration received approval by two-thirds of the Senate or a majority of both the House and the Separat. 20 other members of Congress. A Carter administration spokesman said the ruling would be appealed. Gass's riting came in a suit brought by Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz. and 27 other members of Congress. When Carter announced in December that he was granting full diplomatic recognition to the People's Republic of China, he also exercised an option in the Taiwan defense treaty allowing either party to terminate the pact on a year's notice. The treaty, in which the United States agreed to come to the aid of Taiwan in the event of an attack by the mainland Chinese, would end Jan. 1, 1800 under Steakhouse killer gets death OKLAHOMA CITY — Roger Dale Stafford was sentenced to death yesterday by a jury that earlier in the day had convicted him of executing six steakhouse workers. He killed them after herding them into a freezer during a $1,300 robbery in July 1978 reporter in July 2015. District Attorney Andrew Coats, who called Stafford "a little man who wanted to be a big man," said the mass murder was "the most frightening story." dissatisfied or incapacitated by the administration of a succinct verbs on the six first-degree murder charges after 45 minutes of deliberation, could have been removed from the consideration of burglars. The jury deliberated for about an hour during the penalty phase of the case. It is up to presiding District Judge Charles Owens to sentence Stafford, a 27-year-old Alabama drifter. The judge has the option of rejecting the jury's recommendation. Hundreds protest energy cost Union members, senior citizens and hundreds of other Americans demonstrate against the oil industry yesterday in an attempt to bring an end to the About 1,000 retired people, many of whom had traveled by bus from Delaware, Pennsylvania to Maryland, joined the protest at the American Water Pollution Control Agency in Washington. Yesterday's demonstration was billed as a grassroots "Campaign for Lower Energy Prices." It was sponsored by the Citizen-Labor Energy Coalition which said there would be protests in more than 100 cities, ranging from "honk-ins" by motorists to marches by odriens挺. However, a spot check showed that the turnout in several areas was smaller than predicted. It had been expected that the demonstration at the petroleum institute would draw more than 2,000 people—twice as many as actually expected. A demonstration said they had anticipated a crowd of 1,000. They got a group of 150 Ford recalls 400,000 Capris WASHINGTON—Ford Motor Co. agree to recall about 400,000 Carpi automobiles because of front seat and gear shift leaks, the National Highway Safety Board said Tuesday. Highway Truck Servicemaintenance Inc. in Houlton, Ontario, fronting a front seat backs could fail in 1971-74 and 1976-78 on which the gear shift level could separate the rear wheel. sugary milk. The decision to recall the cars, the company canceled a public hearing that had been set for today on its initial finding that the Caprius might be unsafe. Last month Ford agreed to recall 1971 and 1972 Capris because of a fault in the beadlock switch. 6 killed in El Salvador battle SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador—Army troops killed at least six first fighters protesters during a four-hour gun battle in a mountain town near the city. It was the second day of fighting after Monday night's overthrow of the rightwing government by members of the military. Only hours before the latest fighting erupted, leaders of the new military government claimed their coup had prevented a popular uprising and "a sea of insurgents." However, sources within three major leftist organizations said Wednesday their groups would not accept the new government and would continue their 2 women charaed with rape Witnesses said the six persons killed belonged to a group that had put up barricades at the town's entrance earlier in the day. The same witnesses leftfits in the town were still in control of the city hall, the church and other buildings. In less than a week two women in Missouri have been charged with rape and sexual assault for allegedly having sex with juvenile boys, and could face prison. The rape charges, according to the Missouri attorney general's office, probably are the first ever against women in Missouri, and definitely are the first against men. now takes wives to the hospital, and the women could be charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor punishment by a maximum six-month sentence. under the new code, the two women, one from Moberly and the other from Mountain Grove, face maximum sentences of 25 years in prison for statuary crimes. Second uake jolts California LOS ANGELES - A quick, sharp earthquake joked a wide area in and around Los Angeles yesterday, rattling windows and dishes and shaking houses. There were shakes in the Rocky Mountains. The seismology station at the University of California at Berkeley said the quake registered 4.1 on the Richter scale. There was no word on where the quake was centered or if it was related to Monday's 6.5 Richter scale quake in the Imperial Valley, 200 miles southeast of Los Angeles. The Richer scale is a measure of ground motion as recorded on seismic data. An earthquake of 4 on the Richter scale can cause moderate damage. Toneka board battles Brown TOPEKA-Topeka Unified School district No. 501 filled a brief in U.S. District Court yesterday upon the reopening of the Brown vs. Board of Education case. The case, decided 25 years ago, outlawed racial segregation in American public schools. A group of eight parents of black children enrolled in the Topoka school system filed an application Aug. 22 to respond the case. The group wants the school district to provide more resources for them. Judge Richard D. Rogers set a Nov. 9 court date for hearing oral arguments on the motion to intervene in the old case. queppa attorneys Gary Sebelius and Charles Henson will argue the case for the school board. The lawyers said the case could not be reopened because the plaintiffs who brought the original suit in 1961 no longer were in the Topesa case and the original stake in the lawsuit. Therefore, they said, there is no legal controversy. Weather The KU Weather Service predicts partly cloudy skies and southerly winds 5-15 mph today with highs in the 78s. There is a slight chance of showers and thunderstorms. Tonight will bring cloudy skies and a slight chance of rain. The low will be 60. Highs will be in the low 70s tomorrow with partly cloudy to mostly cloudy skies. The extended forecast calls for cool temperatures and mostly cloudy weather. Nobel Peace Prize goes to Calcutta nun OSLR, Norway (AP)—Mother Teresa, Uchela Ndembe, of Ethiopia, the Nobel Peace Prize winner. She said she would spend the $100,000 prize on lepers and the destiny to whom she has dedicated her life. "Poverty and hunger and distress also constitute a threat to peace," the Nobel Committee said in citing the sixth woman to win the prize. The Yugoslav-born Roman Catholic kuna- daughter of an Albanian shopkeeper and a citizen of India, said she accepted the wizard "in the name of the poor." Her order, the Mission of Charity, was founded in Calcutta's slums in 1848 when she received a scholarship for $40 and 40 cents in her pocket and special permission from Home to live outside a condo. The order now runs schools, hospitals, youth centers and orphanages in 50 Indian cities and in others around the world, from the Bronx, New York, to Tapaqua, New Mother Teresa, 69, has been nominated for the prize for several years and has often been mentioned as a possible recipient. PRESIDENT CARTER was another nominee for the award for his Midwest peace efforts. He was first nominated for the 1987 Nobel Peace Prize, considered, and was nominated this year. He received a special mention for his efforts in the citation given to the 1978 winners, Prime Minister Menachem Begin of Israel and Egyptian President Awar The hallmark of Mother Teresa's work, the committee said, "has been respect for the individual human being, for his or her dignity and innate value. The loneliest, the most wretched and the most vulnerable without compassion, based on reverence for man." IT WAS NOT known if Mother Teresa would personally accept the award in a ceremony in Oslo on Dec. 10. The presentation is made on the anniversary of the Nobel Prize in Physics Alfred Nobel, who set up the prizes. At age 12, she decided to become a nun and six years later joined the Sisters of Loreto, an Irish order, which sent her to India in 1928 to teach. it was on a train to the northeast India hill retreat of Darjeeling in 1946 that Mother Teresa said she heard her second call, "serve him among the poorest of the poor." Mother Teresa was born August 27, 1910, in Skopje, Yugoslavia. Her original name was Agnes Ganha Bojachju. "If you want to kill me, kill me," she told the priests. "Let them (the inmates) die in peace." WHEN THE SHORT, slight woman opened the mission's "home for the destitute dying" next to a Hindu temple in Kathmandu, three sisters staged a noisy street protest outside. She accepts no direct financial assistance from the Indian government, only an occational gift of land for a new project. "God is our banker, he always provides." These rarely seen classics include a 1931 Mack Sennett short with Bing Gobble, Bob Hope, Pinatina, Betty Grabe, Harpo Mankiewicz and more; an 1924 Bing, George Burnes & Bob Hope, and a Groucho Marx TV show historian Bob Deflores will answer any questions following the films. Thursday, October 18 RARE COMEDY FILMS WITH BOB DEFOLES! She won them over. Directed by France Brusatil, with Niko Manfred and Jean-Marc An Italian. An international film that aims to earn a living which the Italian economy is unable to provide. A bit humiliating, but a great example of cism of two national temperaments. For best British film, subtitles. Directed by Francis Ford Coppola, with Marlon Brando, Al Pacino, James Caan, Diane Keaton, Tallia Simmons, John McAulay, John Marley, & Abe Viggo. Other 1979 Nobel prizes went to : - American Theodore W. Schultz and West Indies native Sir Arthur Lewis, economic science; Friday & Saturday, October 19-20 BREAD AND CHOCOLATE (1972) Sponsored by SUA Films, African Studies, KANU-FM and radio-TV-film. Sunday, October 21 THE GODFATHER Monday, October 22 FAHRENHEIT 451 Directed by Francis Truffaut, with Julie Christie and Oscar Werner, Based on Ray Bradbury's futuristic novel of book burning. - American Herbert C. B. Brown and West German Georg Wittig, chemistry; - Americans Steven Weinberg and Sheldon L. Glashow and Pakistan Abdus Salam, physics; (1966) Weekend shows also in Woodfort at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight and Sun. at 2:00 p.m. unless otherwise specified. Up to 150 admission. No Refreshments. All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7:30 unless otherwise noted, $1.00 admission. American Allan MacLeod Cormack and Britton Godfrey Newbold Houndsfield, medicine. WEEKEND BOWLING SPECIAL .50*/game Now thru Oct. 28 Open Sat. and Sun. 2:00 pm—Close lemon tree 11 w 9th behind weavers low-calorie nutritious natural frozen dessert yogurt cones 45¢ offer good oct.16 to oct.21 no coupons accepted with this offer shades of the R.A.F., the flying fortress, and the red baron . . the classic bomber jacket in 100% leather with wool mouton collar warm yet light weight and flexible . . . perfect for those cool fall days and nights hours hours m-t-w-f-sat 10-6 th 10-9 sun 1-5 922 mass.