2 University Daily Kansan Monday, September 24. 1979 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN- Capsules From the kansas's Wire Services Afghanistan's Taraki still alive KABUL, Afghanistan—President Hafzalhullam Amin said yesterday that the ousted prefecture Nur Mohammad Tariak, who was reported killed last week has been released. Amin, who replaced Taraki a week ago as chief executive and leader of the nation's Khali party, said Taraki is in Kabul but not in a hospital, and “a doctor who was in Afghanistan.” "He is alive but definitely felt," said Amin in the first official word about the fate of his predecessor who reportedly had been wounded nine times while fighting in Syria. Spanish general assassinated Moslem rebel sources, who waged a war to oust Tarakar's pro-Soviets regime and are continuing the fight against Amin, said Tuesday that Tarakar had been killed. SAN SEBASTIAN, Spain—Gummen shot and killed the military governor of Guipuzcoa province yesterday as he strolled with his wife on San Sebastian's seaside boardwalk. Police said they believed the assassins were Basque separatist guerrillas. Gen. Lorenzo Gonzalez-Valles Sanchez, 59, was the third Spanish military man murdered in the past three days and the 10th this year. The assassination put new pressure on Premier Adolfo Suarez, already under fire from the leading Spanish generals for failure to stem the European wort's spread. After the Sanchez slaying, Suarez called the joint chiefs of staff into an emergency meeting in Madrid, while police closed the border to France and said they were hunting commanders of the Basque separatist organization, which claimed responsibility for this year's nine previous military assassinations. Nuke accident impact profound PHILADELPHIA - The Three Mile Island nuclear accident drove about 144,000 people from their homes and cost residents near the plant $18.2 million in evacuation expenses and lost wages, according to a survey conducted for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. The study also found that nearly one in five persons living near the disabled reactor has considered moving elsewhere because of their continued fears of nuclear radiation. The independent survey concluded that the nation's worst nuclear accident had profound and adverse economic and social consequences for most people. Details of the survey, which is the first in-depth socio-economic study of the area, were conducted by the University of Madagascar. It was conducted for the NRC by Mountain West Research Institute. Dole to call for missile hearing Uhc: responding to reports that nine military workers near Tuscon, Ariz., did not wear safety helmets thought that Senate hearings would help make the facts of the incidences known. WASHINGTON - Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., announced plan Saturday to call for a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on the safety of Titan II missiles. Dole also told state business leaders in Lake Placid, N.Y., Saturday that they could expect a federal tax cut next year to spur capital investments. Appearing with Rep. Barber Conable, R-N.Y., Dole warned the 68th annual meeting of Associated Industries that President Carter's proposed windfall profits tax on oil companies could result in a dangerous expansion of the federal government. Central Africans celebrate coup BANGU, Central Republic—Jubilant crowds topped a gigantic statue of depressed Emperor Bokasa I yesterday as heavily armed French soldiers locked key roads and weaponised local troops swept up debris from a looting bins that followed Bokasa's bloodless ouster. Bokassa, who seized power in 1966 from David Dacko, and later appointed himself emperor, was ousted late Thursday in a French-backed coup byied At the time of the coup, Bokasa was in Lilya attempting to obtain financing for his tutoring regime in exchange for granting Lilya a military base in the north. The emperor later flew to Paris in his personal jet, but failed to win asylum and was looking for refuge in another country. China, USSR talks to open MOSCOW—A Chinese delegation arrived in Moscow yesterday to open reconciliation talks after two decades of chilies relations between Moscow and Peking. But the sessions will begin against a background of propaganda between the two communist giants. A source close to the negotiations said they would begin tomorrow. The official Chinese news agency Xinhua expressed doubt about Soviet sincerity in trying to settle the two countries' deep-seated disputes. It accused the Soviets of trying to create suspicions over the motives of the Chinese, citing Soviet statements that China had become a "hotbed of war danger." Western diplomatic sources said any lessening of tension between China and Soviet Union would be welcomed in the West because it could increase world peace. The two countries have been feuding since 1956, when animosity was touched off by ideological differences. 20 arrested for gay activity WICHTA—A two-day undercover operation by police at a northwest-side park led to the arrest of yesterday about 20 persons for homosexual activity. The suspects, who ranged from juvenile age up to the 40s, were charged with the municipal offenses of soliciting for immoral purposes and assault. Police sent three officers undercover into Oak Park in response to complaints from area residents who said they had been approached by homeosexuals, said Nina Foster. Reagan farina well in Florida Earlier this month, Reagan picked up strong delegate support in the GOI's strengthholds of Miami, St. Peter's, Fortburg, Lordelauder, Sarasota and Tampa. Toxic weed worries officials INDEPENDENCE M. Mo...Jimson weed, a potentially fatal plant that grows wild in Kansas and Missouri, is causing concern among area law enforcement FORT MYERS, Fla.-Donald Reagan may have the Florida Republican straw ballet for president locked up in November, even though the Lee County GOP caucus last week failed to give the former California governor any delegates. Lee was the last major county to hold a caucus, choosing 42 delegates who will participate in the non-binding vote preferential at the GOP convention. Independence police said two 14-year-old boys and a 15-year-old girl were hospitalized after eating the seeds of the plant last week. The girl was listed in Also last week, Johnson County officials in Kansas reported that two youths had suffered overdoses of the weed. Police said they are worried that some teen-agers do not recognize the dangers of using jison weed as a hallucinogen. Any part of the weed can be fatal if ingested, police said. Health officials said three or four seeds could cause death. An overdose also could cause severe brain damage, hyperactivity, visual and audio障碍. Weather... Today will be warm and warm with temperatures in the mid-80s and southerly winds from 10 to 15 mph, according to the National Weather Service in Washington braces for pope's visit longer than warm temperatures in the upper fujifilm. The extended forecast calls for slightly warmer than normal temperatures in the 8th with a chance of rain on Thursday. Tuesday will be clear to partly cloudy with temperatures in the upper 70s. WASHINGTON (AP)—The nation's capital, which views large gatherings as a way of life, is braced for what promises to be the largest gathering in Mali to be celebrated by Pope John Paul II. THE EXPECTED crowd would be much smaller than the crowd that made up King Jr. decide "I have a Dream" in 1983; it would be bigger than the largest of anti-war demonstrations that followed World War II. Since no pope has ever visited here before, one no knows how many people to expect for the visit of John Paul II Oct. 6-7. But church leaders said they expected from 500,000 to a million people to crowd onto the Capitol Sunday afternoon. And no one is arguing. The Bicentennial in 1978 was a fireworks display, with spectators spread all over a large downtown area including the Mall." The archdiocese of Washington, which includes the District of Columbia and its Maryland suburbs, has about 400,000 students. The school draws from all over the East, providing Catholic and non-Catholic with a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to participate in a Mass celebrated by a pope. As usual with Washington events, the pope's visit has prompted a counter demonstration. The Youth International Association, led by 1,000 people to assemble at Lafayette Park. The trick is where to put them—where to park their cars and bases, where they'll eat, sleep and go to the bathroom, where they'll lie in front of the pipe, where they'll sit to wait see it. said George Berkley, spokesman for the National Parks Service's supervies Mark Events. "We estimated the people we saw it. But the pope promises to attract more people in one place than this." Sports fans have been pacified. The Redskins football game, scheduled to be played the same afternoon at RFK Stadium from the Mall, has been moved to Philadelphia. AS A RESULT, those attending the Mass can park their cars in the stadium parking lot and ride the subway to the Mall. There are several train stations, with shuttle buses going to the Mall. Fifteen hundred priests will go into the crowd to offer Holy Communion to 300,000 worshippers. The two-hour Mass, which will be televised by ABC, start at 3 p.m. Church officials said the altar would be high enough for everyone standing on the Mall to see the "They're calling for abortion rights, the legalization of marijuana and gay rights," a Park spokesman said. pontifit. They insisted also that the sound system would allow everyone along the grassy mite-and-hail mail between the Florida and the Washington Monument to bear. The bill for the event is being split between the Archdiocese of Washington and taxpayers. The pope's visit to the United States begins Oct. 1 in Boston and ends Oct. 7 in Washington. During those six days he also will visit New York, Philadelphia, Des Moines and longest stay will be two days in Chicago and the shortest, a few hours in Des Moines. Handbags · Jewelry Accessories Holiday Plaza 25th & low THE PRICE IS WORTH THE WAIT! Upcoming Weekend Movies— only $1.50 each Malick's Days of Heaven Oct.12 & 13 Brusati's Bread & Chocolate —Oct. 19 & 20 Ashby's Harold & Maude —Oct. 26-27 Romero's Martin —Oct. 26-27 Ritt's Norma Rae —Nov. 16-17 Visconti's The Innocent —Nov. 30-Dec.1 Use Kansan Classified Hardee's. "LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, BREAKFAST IS NOW SERVED! HARDEE'S NEW HOMEMADE BISCUIT BREAKFAST." JOIN US TOMORROW MORNING AT THE HARDEE NEAR YOU.