2 Tuesday, October 9, 1979 University Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN- Capsules From the Kansas Wire Services White's order halts 3 trains WASHINGTON — Supreme Court Justice Byron White yesterday overturned an appeals court ruling that had kept three Amtrak passenger trains running on a frozen river. White's brief order negated the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeal's 11th-hour decision Friday that the Chicago-to-Houston Lone Star, the Chicago-toSeattle North Coast HaWAiata, and the Chicago-toMiami Florida continue their routes until an Oct. 26 hearing for a preliminary injunction could be held. coplan, along with representatives of Minnesota and Nashville, Teenn, had appealed Amtrak's decision to eliminate the rail routes. "We feel it would have been better if we had a chance to be heard," said Kansas Attorney General Robert Stephan. The North Coast Haifaatha was immediately canceled by Antrak only an hour before its scheduled departure from Chicago. The only train that got underway yesterday was the northbound Lone Star. The last of the three to arrive at its final destination was scheduled to be the southbound Knotenberg. Mondale scratches KC visit KANSAS CITY, Mo — Vice President Walter Mondale has canceled plans to speak at a Carter-Mondale fund-raising breakfast her暮来, Democratic 11. Olar, co-chairman of Carter's re-election campaign in Missouri, said Malladez's stop was canceled because President Carter was scheduled to be in Washington on Wednesday. A White House spokesman confirmed the cancellation and said that the two appearances were too close to provide maximum benefit to the unanswered question. Although Monday will skip kansas City, he will attend raising events in St. Louis and in Detroit, Cleveland and Pittsburgh tomorrow. In addition, he will attend a few other events in New York. Airport plane crashes kill 22 Twenty two persons have died this week in airport plane crashes in Greece and Kentucky. A twin-engine Piper Navajo, Comair Flight 444, crashed on takeoff from the Greater Cincinnati Airport in Florence, Ky., killing the pilot and all passengers. A Swissair DC-8 with 154 persons aboard burst into flames and burned on ground at the Athens airport night and fire officials said 14 passengers One passenger on the Swissair flight said there was an "almity crunch," followed immediately by the fire. The plane skidded off the runway. A medical shipment of radioactive material being carried on the plane was safely removed. Swissair officials said the dead included French, Germans and Americans. Farm association trial opens KANSAS CITY, Mo.—The downfall of the bankrupt Progressive Farmers Association was blamed by defense lawyers yesterday on state and federal government intervention and interference by the Missouri Farmers Association. Defense lawyers spent the afternoon refuting arguments raised during the prosecution's opening statement in the U.S. District Court trial of 10 PFA ofA. Defense attorneys called PFA a legitimate attempt to form a farmer's cooperative and said PPA could have rivaled MVA as an effective farm Prosecutors said they would prove that the 10 defendants billed some $11 million from the cooperatives' nearly 7,000 investors. Open arguments were taken late afternoon. The prosecutor's first witness, stand when the trial recalled for the night. Faber is expected to continue testifying today. Court supports coal pipeline CHEYNEYN, Wyo., The U. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld three federal court decisions in favor of a company that wants to build an unenclosed building. In rulings released yesterday, the appeals court upheld decisions made in Kansas and Wyoming ... In the Wyoming case, a U.S. district judge ruled two years ago that under the Pacific Railway Act of 1862, Union Pacific did not gain ownership of subsea surface water resources under the provisions of the Railway Act. Energy Transportation Systems Inc. of Casper, Wyo., had sued the railroad, sought authority to build a 36-inch diameter pipeline from northeastastern Wyoming to southern Utah. in both Kansas cases a U.S. district judge ruled that the railroad sold two sections of land it acquired in the 1862 act, it also sold the subsurface rights. Railroads have generally opposed slurry pipelines, which would compete for the rail's lucrative business of shipping coal to utility plants. United announces flight cutbacks CHICAGO - United Airlines announced yesterday that it would back flight throughout its entire system next month because of rising fuel costs and only affect a "couple of percentage points on trips for the whole system." Some flights within the same cities would be discontinued, but total cutoffs were not planned, he said. Airline officials said details of the reductions would be announced in several weeks. Jurors plead inconvenience ORLAHAM CITY - The judge presiding over the first-degree murder trial of Roger T. Stallard yesterday indonised potential jurors who gave in to the allegations. Stafford, 27, is charged with the shootings of six Sirlino Stuckade workers who were herded into a meat locker and shot in a July 1978 robbery. Police say they suspect the Sheffield, Ala., drifter of committing more than 20 murders outside. Nine persons were excused yesterday. Two persons said they could not imitate a fingerprint on Stuffard's guilt or innocence. The other two said they had already formed an impression on Stuffard's guilt or innocence. District Judge Charles Owens, on the first day of jury selection, initially asked Mr. McCormack whether he was a judge or a solicitor. Another a solicitor who said his income was derived solely from commissions. India mourns Narayan's death NEW DEHILI, India- Tens of thousands of bereaved Indian flocked to the jungle in Jakayrawan Yasharyn yesterday to mourn the death of the 76-year-old He was an independence fighter who later turned to non-violence and ended up becoming the first person to defend indoors from power. The U.S. -educated Naryan died in his sleep yesterday of a heart ailment at his home in the easterly city of Paton. After his death was announced, 50,000 mourners gathered outside the house, the news United News of India reported. Later, with thousands of weeping men, women and children trailing behind, the body was taken to a hall where it was to in state until a state funeral and cremation. Weather... Hundreds of thousands are expected at the funeral, likely to be the largest in India since the death of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru in 1964. The RGO weather predict decreases cloudiness today, with clear skies by afternoon. Winds will be northerly and the high temperature today will be 61 degrees. There will be a chance of a light frost tonight with a low temperature near 36. Tomorrow will be sunny with winds becoming southerly. The high should be near 71. Temperatures will increase Thursday and Friday, with a chance of rain late Friday. WASHINGTON (AP)—The American people—starving for simple truths and spiritual heroes—will miss Pope John Paul II. Pope's visit stirs hearts, debates The tired Pope returned to Rome yesterday from a nine-day tour of Ireland and the United States to the cheers of the crowds in the sun-kinned St. Peter's Square. The pontiff hired he would like to go back some time, but he couldn't find a familiar contact" with the American people. Before leaving the pope had said he neglected his schedule had been limited to Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Des Moines, Iowa, Chicago and Washington and that he would like to return to visit other of the country such as the West and the South. Five hours after his return to the Vatican, the 59-year-old pontiff went by helicopter to Gandalfo Castle to catch up on his rest in the seclusion of the papal estate in the Alban Hills 30 miles south of Rome. A Vatican official said the patron would return tomorrow for his general audience. In his absence, the debates the pope joined on his American tour will rage, almost certainly unabated by his unwieldy enduring arguments in traditional of the Roman Catholic Church. While captivating millions with his love and his soft-spoken charm, the pope stamatically opposed social changes that have challenged traditional practice, if not policy, in the United States. Birth control, divorce and the role of women in his church are touchy issues on which the pope showed no inclination toward change. The ban on birth control is almost certainly the most widely disregarded of the Catholic precepts in the United States. And celibacy is a difficult remedy for many Catholics. An Associated Press-NBC News poll Tuesday, October 9 Humphrey Bogart, IN A LONELY PLACE (1950) Directed by Nicholas Rash, with Hugh phytes and Gloria Gahme, the film depicts a victim who is accused of murder before all of the evidence is in. For more information, visit www.hugheyes.com. Wednesday, October 10 CLOSELY WATCHED TRAINS Directed by Jiri Menzel. Academy Award for Best Foreign Film. Czechoslovakia/subtitles. Directed by Rainer Werner *passbinder*, with Eddie Connolly, Louise Grey and Jeff Snyder on biographical mediation on the act of filmmaking is set at a seaside resort where the crew spend their spare time assuring each other verbally, emotionally, and spiritually. Thursday, October 11 BEWARE OF A HOLY WHORE Directed by Terence Malick, with Anthony Garrison, Stephanie Shepherd, and Linda Manta. Photography by Nastar Amendrode. Plus Maya Jacobs. Set design by Matheus S. Sat. matte in Forum Friday & Saturday. October 12-13 DAYS OF HEAVEN (1970) Midnight Movies EMMANUEL, THE JOYS OF A WOMAN KANSAN Analysis (1978) Directed by Francis Glacobetti, with Sylvia Kristel, RATED X-Positive age ID required for admittance. All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00 admission indicates that 76 percent of the nation's 49 million Catholics believe one can use artificial methods of birth control—the pill, or contraceptive devices—and still be a good mother. This widespread violation may appear minor, but it is symptomatic of a steady erosion in active support of Christianity's oldest church. The ban on divorce is another divisive church dictum that causes quibbles to persist. The court conducted in late September, indicates that 83 percent of all Catholics believe in divorce and that 69 percent of Catholic men are polling showing 53 percent of American Catholics believe that priests should be divorced. But the厚恤 and most volatile issue facing the Catholic Church in the United States is the secondary role accorded women in church activities. U. S. Catholics are evenly split on the question of women priests. Forty-six percent favor a shift in church policy while 48 percent oppose it, a statistically significant marginal margin. Thus, nothing could have been more dramatic within U.S. Catholics circles than the arrest of a man who committed II, by a ranking American man, that he admonished women into all ministries of the church. Many Americans will treasure the small, special moments—his pauses to greet the demanding through, his exuberant embrace and lauded, his embracing love of children. But the affection of the United States feels for the leader of the world's Catholics is not likely to ease the conscience of the young Catholic wife who wants to work a few years in the priesthood. But that of the priest who unapply fell in love, or the man who yearns to become a priest. The Hope Award: For special teachers only. SENIORS Vote for your favorite teacher Monday, October 8 and Tuesday, October 9 Booths from 9:00 am to 3:30 pm Summerfield Kansas Union Wescoe William Balfour Bezaaleel Benjamin Allan Cigler David Dary Allen Ford Miriam Green Frank Gurtler Louis Michel Edward Williams Lee Young Physiology and Cell Biology Architecture and Architectural Engineering Political Science Journalism Business Administration Voice Occupational Therapy Architecture Music History Journalism Journalism HEWLETT Save during our PACKARD Savings Bonanza Your in KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES HEWLETT MD PACKARD 67 The HP67 has **224** fully merged program steps an extra smart card reader. 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