? University Daily Kansan 2 Monday, October 15. 1979 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansas's Wire Services Carter leads Florida balloting MIAMI- With two large blocks of votes still to be counted, President Carter held a statewide lead yesterday over Sen. Edward M. Kennedy in Florida's Democratic Party caucuses. Carter backers claimed victory in the first bulletin of the 1980 presidential campaign. but wine Carter seemed certain to emerge with a majority of the elected delegates. Kennedy supported called the senator's showing, 'one of the best.' Still to bealled are ballots for IDB delegates in Dade County, which includes Miami, and for 40 delegate in Palm Beach County. Party officials said a Black leader to blast PLO talks Results from 64 of the state s 67 counties gave Carter 368 delegates, Kennedy 104, a state coteled by organized labor 19 while 27 remained uncommitted. NEW YORK - Veterans should participate in the black civil rights leader, reportedly plans to reproach some other black leaders for their recent meetings with leaders of the Palestinian Liberation Organization. In a speech to be delivered in Kansas City, Mo., today at the annual meeting of the National Catholic Charities, Jordan will call the meetings "sideless" A copy of the speech was obtained by the New York Times and ran in the nayer's Sunday editions. President Carter also is scheduled to address the conference. The speech said, "Black-Jewish relations should not be endangered by ill-considered flirtations with terrorist groups devoted to the extermination of "We've got to recognize that our agenda demands construction of powerful alliances. We don't do it alone. We shouldn't do it alone." Diverted train traveling 65 mph HARVEY, ill. — A recording device retrieved from the demolished locomotive of an Amikrail train shows the train was traveling about 65 mph when it was diverted into a fatal head-on crash with a parked freight train, a federal official said yesterday. William Pugh, head of the investigation for the National Transportation Safety Board, said four teams were looking at separate aspects of the accident that killed two people and injured 44 others Friday night. The crash apparently resulted from a switching error. the train was carrying more than 200 persons, including dozens of college students, in Chicago when it was switched onto the same track as a parked train. KC could lose arena grants KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Two federal grants that city officials were relying on to help finance the reconstruction of Kemper Arena might be in jeopardy now because the city awarded construction and engineering contracts for the job without accepting competitive bids. The Department of Commerce informed city officials last week that it would not waive the requirement of competitive bidding on all contracts of more than However, Mayor Richard Berkley said that the city had received assurances that competitive bids were not required before awarding the construction and building permits. The cost of repairing the damage caused when the arena's roof collapsed June 4 exceeded to exceed $3 million. The city was to receive $50,000 from the Economic Development Administration and $300,000 in federal funds from the Ozarks Regional Com- munity. Castro ends guarded U.S. trip NEW YORK - Cuban President Fidel Castro left New York at dawn yesterday after a busy 77 hour visit seeping cementing his position as leader of the non-aligned nations and meeting Puerto Rican nationalists, U.S. congressmen and American media celebrities. His departure also ended some of the heaviest, most expensive security measures ever taken for a visiting dignitary. The New York City police and the Secret Service kept the four-block area around the U.N.: Cuban Mission where Castro stayed in mid-Manhattan heavily guarded. During the 59-year-old Communist leader's first trip to the United States in 1949, Castro spoke to the United Nation's General Assembly as head of the 59-second session. In an impassioned two-hour speech, he called for a new world economic order and for industrialized nations to participate in a $2 billion-a-year program to help poor countries. Possible PCB source found KANNSA CITY, Mo. The *Environmental Protection Agency* is looking into the possibility that the wastewater there has been producing waste of all the toxic chemical PCBs. An EPA spokeswoman has confirmed that an electrical transformer on the ground floor of the post office's main building is being investigated as the cause. The inquiry also is related to an investigation into Radium Petroleum Co. of Independence, Mo., and Deffenbach Disposal Service of Shawnee, which are involved in the mining activities. The Independence company has been named in a suit filed by the EPA with seven alleged violations of federal regulations. The suit is seeking $131,000 in damages. One of the primary sources of PCB, polychlorinated biphenyl, is transformers, where it is used as a cooling oil. Its manufacture has been banned by the government since it was discovered that PCB did not break down in the environment. 3-year-old dies despite Laetrile The youngest died Friday evening in Tijuana, Mexico, where his parents took him to continue Laetrie treatments of defiance of a Massachusetts court order. The cause of Chad's death was not announced, nor was there any official announcement on an autopsy. HARON - Leukemia victim Chad Green is dead at the age of three, but the legal ramifications of his parents' fight to treat him with Lactoferil still are to be resolved. Should the Greens return to Massachusetts, they would be taken before Volterra for sentencing on the civil contempt of court finding. They could be tried, before another judge, for criminal contempt if prosecutors decided to proceed with that action. His parents, Gerald and Diana Green, were found in civil contempt of probable early this year by Judge Guy Volterra, and there was a hint finding of probable wrongdoing. processives in the city and they doubted any criminal charges could be brought against the Greens in Massachusetts because of Chad's death. He died his third day in the hospital, according to a news release from the Greens. New rates could hurt housing WASHINGTON — a time bomb is set to go off in the early 1980s that could send the coat of bombs sky high and the detonator may be the new surge of high-pressure gas. Once the market opens up again, probabilty in 1981 and no later than 1982 buyers will come flying in1, said Ken Kerin, an economist for the National Bank. Ironically, the rapidly rising interest rates were designed to cut inflation and the excessive credit that had infected most markets, including housing. Expertss that as mortgages became too expensive for most people, and specially dried up for others, the pressure for housing would increase until However, in Atlanta yesterday, Vendal G. Gravelie, the president of the National Homebuilder's Association and said that interest roses and the tight growth of real estate were the main drivers. Weather... The National Weather Service in Topeka has predicted cloudy skies for Monday, with highs in the low 70s and lows in the 40s. Winds will be out of the south at 10 to 15 km/h. The extended forecast calls for cloudy skies and a chance of showers for Wednesday, and highs in the 68s for Thursday. BANGOK, Thailand (AP) - Carpain planes flirted tons of food and other relief supplies yesterday to Phnom Penh for Cambodia's starving people, but organizers of the emergency international airlift they feared a famine might not be averted. Airlift attempts to avert famine The Cambodian government gave the goahead for the relief program Saturday, and it got under way even though formal agreement has been held up over the government's insistence that no food should be given to the followers of depreciated Presti Pa. On the Thai-Cambodia border, meanwhile, a mortar attack from the Cambodian army shot and injured 12 others in a camp on Thai territory. The soldiers said they were unarmed, but land-locked Vietnamese and Cambodian government forces continue to battle Pol Pot's guerrillas in the Cambodian countryside. Cambodian government were believed responsible. Thirty nations have pledged more than $110 million to the relief effort, coordinated by the US Embassy in France and Emergency Fund. Two planes carried 35 tons of food into Phnom Penh yesterday, but officials of the international agencies said that no more aid was available. In a new estimate, UNICEF spokesman Jacques Danais said 165,000 tons of food would be needed over the next six months to avert a famine. scheduled to be sent in by sea by the end of the month. A number of relief operations that could help reach that goal are still in planning stages, but more than 10,000 tons of food are The funds committed to the airlift include an initial pledge of $7 million and eventually as much as $30 million from the United States. Jayhawk's this Wednesday don't miss a night with The changing estimates of how much relief is needed—a figure that has risen from 700 tons a day—face the difficulties and groups are facing with a reluctant attitude. 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