2 Nation/World University Daily Kansan Monday, Sept. 9, 1985 News Briefs 'Miami Vice' wins three. Emmy awards HOLLWWOOD — "Miami Vice," the high-fashion video-styled police series, won three Emmys for its craft work, which establishes it as the new favorite for the more glamorous awards to be presented in a telecast later this month. The NBC series shared honors with "Wallemenberg: A Hero's Story," an NBC mini-series, and "Dance in America," on the Public Broadcasting System, at Saturday night's black-the banquet giving out more than half of the primetime Emmys for the 1984-85 season. The university, which relished its image as a finishing school for Southern gentlemen, decided in July 1884 to open its undergraduate program to women. Women have attended the law school since 1972. NBC and PBS each won 13 Emmys, followed by CBS — the season's ratings leader — with seven and ABC with six. All-male rule ends LEXINGTON, Va. — Washington and Lee University ended a 236-year, all-male tradition yesterday, welcoming freshmen who carried hair curlers and dresses instead of lacrosse sticks and strained ties. The first female undergraduates arrived yesterday to a low-key welcome at the bucolic campus in the Shenandoa. Valley. Killer of prof freed VACAVILLE, Calif. — Theorede Streleski, who budgeoned a Stanford professor to death for beitting his 19 years of trying to earn a doctorate degree, was freed from prison yesterday showing no remorse for his crime. Strelleski, 48, one of California's most publicized killers, said he could not promise he would not kill again and insisted he felt no regret for the killing. He killed Stanford math professor Karel DeLeeuw, his faculty adviser, on Aug. 18, 1978, after planning the murder for eight years. From Kansan wire reports. Plan drafted to divide S. Africa From Kansan wires JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Political scientists sponsored by the government have drafted a plan to divide South Africa into three black areas and a huge white corridor containing the nation's wealth, it was reported yesterday. The black City Press newspaper said the plan would leave 50 percent of the country under at least partial black rule and could be implemented within 18 months if the government accepted it. It said the drawing up of the "super homelands" was intended to end South Africa's isolation and appease the West while leaving the country's. "It is expected to get President Reagan's nod — all the key mineral resources vital to the U.S. economy and its military preparedness would be concentrated in the 'white corridor', '" the newspaper said. mineral, industrial and agricultural wealth under white control. There was no immediate comment from the government on the report. Currently, the 4.9 million white minority rulers 87 percent of the land within South Africa's traditional borders while 22 million blacks are nominally citizens of 10 tribal homelands, four of which have taken "independence" that no other country recognizes. Also in South Africa, President Pietter Botha warned South African businessmen yesterday that it would be "unwite, and even disloyal" for them to meet with black leaders of the outlawed African National Congress. The warning came amid reports that a meeting between white South African business leaders and exiled black nationalist leaders may take place as early as next week, probably in Zambia. Also concerning South Africa, President Reagan intends to announce limited economic sanctions today against South Africa, including a ban on the sale of krugerlands in the United States, in a move to head off more severe sanctions by Congress, administration officials said yesterday. The officials said Reagan was expected to issue an executive order incorporating some aspects of the sanctions bill slated to come before the Senate today. Rapport, an Afrikaaner newspaper which supports the white-minority government, reported yesterday that top South African business people will go to Lusaka, Zambia, for talks with ANC leaders. It said President Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia helped organize the talks, and that Gavin Kelly, head of Anglo American, South Africa's largest mining corporation, will lead the executives. Relly's office has refused comment. Searchers seek evidence for cause of plane crash From Kansan wires MILWAUKEE — Federal investigators using metal detectors sought more evidence yesterday that an engine on a Midwest Express DC-9 lost some parts on takeoff, which caused the jet to crash and explode, killing all 31 people aboard. Jim Burnett, National Transportation Safety Board chairman, said in a news conference late Saturday that searchers found pieces of a jet engine compressor blade on the runway below the path of the airplane, well beyond the point at which the pilot was committed to takeoff. "It's really to early to characterize what we have," said John Drake, head of the safety board investigation team. Officials said it would take several weeks to analyze data recovered from the scene of the Friday crash of Flight 105. Friday Crake said the two Pratt & Whitney engines, found intact and unharmed by fire, and the cockpit voice recorder box, or "black box." flight data recorder. Asked whether heavy rains had hindered the search, Drake said, "I really don't know, but it could have. I'm not sure it's really significant, but we do the best we can under any conditions." U.S.. Soviets to meet United Press International WASHINGTON — The United States and the Soviet Union will hold two days of talks this week on Indochina, Korea and other issues in Asia, the State Department said yesterday. Paul Wolflowitz, assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, will lead a three-member delegation to Moscow for talks Thursday and Friday with Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Kapita, the highest-ranking Soviet specialist on Asia, State Department spokeswoman Anita Stockman said. The Washington Post said Secretary of State George Shultz and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard A. Shevardnadze decided to proceed with the talks during their meeting last month in Helsinki. The talks will be the first on Asia between the superpowers in decades. Korea and Indochina are described by U.S. officials as among areas presenting the danger of escalated violence. The Reagan administration has been seeking talks with the Soviets about Asia since 1981 because of tensions in Indochina caused by the Vietnamese occupation of Cambodia. American officials have said the Soviet Union in recent months has increased its presence in Korea through high-level visits and a supply of MiG-23's to North Korea. The Soviets also have made their largest naval and air base at Cam Ranh Bay, a former American base in South Vietnam. Neo-Nazis' conspiracy trial to begin United Press International SEATTLE — Eleven radical white supremacists accused of robbery and murder in their quest to overthrow the government go on trial today on racketeering charges amid tight security. More than 100 witnesses are expected to be called to testify about how members of "The Order" conspired to violate antirecketeering laws, said Gene Wilson, chief of the criminal division of the U.S. Attorney's office. The trial, expected to last at least three months, will include testimony from 10 group members who pleaded guilty to the charges, Wilson said. A six-member team of prosecutors hopes the proceedings will be the death knell for The Order, a small band of neo-Nazis suspected of robbery and murder in an underground war against the government, Jews and other minorities. A grand jury returned a 21-count indictment April 12 in Seattle, charging the group was responsible for the machine-gun execution of Alan Berg, a Jewish radio talk show host in Denver who baited the white supremacists on the air. But federal prosecutors chose to charge the group under the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, a broadly written conspiracy law that stipulates $25,000 fines and up to 20 years in prison for offenders. Although the indictment alleges the group committed murders and robberies as part of the conspiracy, the U.S. attorney said the trials on those criminal charges should be Trials for the more serious charges which would be pressed by individual states and not by the federal government may be held later. held in the jurisdictions where the crimes occurred. The Order, a violent offshoot of the Aryan Nations Church of Hayden Lake, Idaho, also is known as the Silent Brotherhood and the American Bastion. Four members are accused in the racketeering indictment of killing Idaho resident Walter E. West because he was leaking information about his former colleagues. Germans ask U.S. to leave United Press International BONN, West Germany — Chancellor Helmut Kohl's Christian Democrats yesterday denounced as "betrayal" and "anti-Americanism" an opposition draft strategy paper which seeks the pullout of U.S. troops from West Germany. The 23-page draft strategy paper being considered by the Social Democratic Party's Security Policy Commission also lists as one of its long-term goals the withdrawal of U.S. medium-range nuclear weapons from the country. Other goals include the reliance on purely defensive military doctrines, transformation of the standing army into a militia-dependent force and halving the 15-month military draft obligation. "This plan will make the Bundeswehr (armed forces) and the alliance (NATO) unable to fulfil its mission," Defense Ministry spokesman Col. Horst Prayon said in an interview in Die Welt newspaper. Willy Wimmer, parliamentary strategy expert for Kohl's party, called the opposition paper "betrayal of West Germany's external security" and a sign of "the clear course of the Social Democratis toward anti-Americanism." If adopted, he said, such a plan would "lay the key to the future of Europe in the hands of the Soviet Union." Social Democrat presidium member Horst Ehmke denied the existence of the leaked strategy paper, but copies were circulating in the capital and other party officials confirmed its existence. "There is a paper that has the clear handwriting of (party military expert and former Cabinet minister) Andreas von Buelow," party business manager Wolfgang Clement said. He described the proposal as one of several that would be weighed by the party's Security Policy Commission starting next month. EARN $5-$6 per hour Entertel, one of the nation's fastest growing telemarketing firms, now has openings for 50 part-time phone agents for evenings and weekend shifts. Only enthusiastic and aggressive individuals need apply. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. BUT GOOD COMMUNICATION SKILLS A MUST We offer: - Paid Training - Guaranteed hourly wage plus incentives - Advancement Opportunities - Pleasant working conditions - Flexible Hours For interview call 841-1200 M-F 8:30-5:30 ENTERTEL JAYHAWK FOOTBALL The University of Kansas Athletic Department invites you to bring a friend to the KU vs. Vanderbilt game for Bring your Student Season Football Ticket to receive: -1 Free football ticket to home opener. —Coupon up to $3 off a Pizza Hut pizza. —Free KU bumper sticker. Available at the KUAC Ticket Office in Allen Field House from 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon. Sept. 9-Fri.. Sept. 13 Mon., Sept. 9-Fri., Sept. 13 Catch the Force! Compliments of the KU Athletic Department.