Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 10, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International Tax cut sought before session ends Ronald Reagan's two top advisers advocated passage of a $39 billion tax cut in Congress's lame-duck session, and Howard Baker, the likely Senate majority leader, agreed yesterday. Reagan's campaign chief of staff, Edwin Meese, and campaign chairman, Sen. Paul Lazart, R-New, said in separate television interviews that Reagan was on the committee. Baker, R-Tenn, said he would work for the bill, but expected House Democrats to stall such action during the session. Meese said Reagan would like the Senate version to pass next year because Congress could modify the bill to meet his specifications. Reagan campaigned on a platform that called for a 10 percent tax cut next year and similar cuts in the next two years. The Senate Finance Committee has approved a one-year, $39 billion plan that has much in common with Reagan's proposal. Egvpt not satisfied with U.S. memo CAIRO, Egypt—Egyptian officials gave little encouragement yesterday about future peace talks with Israel, calling a U.S. document about Palestinian autonomy a non-paper and suggesting that the next Egyptian-Iranian meeting could be canceled. After more than an hour of talks with U.S. negotiator James Leonard, Egyptian State Minister of Foreign Affairs Burca Ghali said he was not satisfied with the Palestinian memorandum Leonard brought to the talk last week. "It is a non-paper, a preparatory paper, a pre-easibility paper," Ghali said. "It is under discussion and which is not the official title of the U.S. government." The memorandum is intended to break the deadlock in talks about the future of the 1.1 million Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. It was first submitted to Israel and Egypt in September but was rederived after the two countries submitted counterproposals last month. But diplomats said there was still a gap between the American and Egyptian positions. WARSAW, Poland—Poland closed its borders to foreign journalists yesterday as the country's largest labor union threatened a nationwide general strike to protest government attempts to rewrite its constitution. Polish labor union threatens to strike The possibility of a general strike on Wednesday was underlined as workers called off their protests and factories, carrying sleeping bags and food for a long time. in Uganda, site of this summer's shipyard tv, two television crews were ordered out of the country. American and Austrian reporters were there for a week to report on the situation. Diplomatic sources said that foreign journalists already in the country had been ordered to report to police visa sections, this morning. A Foreign Ministry spokesman said that only correspondents permanently accredited to work in Poland would be allowed to enter the country. 1. ne government, stepping up its propaganda campaign against labor under conditions, attributed as tools of political pressure and threatened to strike the nation. Union sources said that the nation's largest labor coalition, Solidarity, would call a nationwide strike within 48 hours if the Polish Supreme Court rejects its appeal for complete independence from the government and the Communist Party. The court is expected to announce its decision today. At issue in the court battle is a paragraph in the union's charter reaffirming the supremacy of the Communist Party in Polish affairs. Two weeks ago, a lower court officially recognized the labor coalition, but rewrote its charter to include the controversial paragraph. Thailand threatens to expel refugees BANGKO, Thailand—Thai officials have threatened to drive Cambodian refugees in Thailand to the international aid organizations and cut food shipments in refugee camps. the International Red Cross and the United Children's Fund said last week that they would temporarily reduce the number of personnel feeding the Cambodians. Thailand's National Security Council fears that the Cambodian army, under General Thai, while Cambodia faces a 200-age man Vietnamese occupation force. National Security Council Secretary General Prasong Soonsiri, a squadron leader in the Thai Air Force, told aid officials this weekend that they stopped feeding the Cambodians, Thailand would consider forcing the refugees out of the country. LL Gen. Sen, Kottappahand, chief spokesman for the supreme command, warned that if the food supplies were cut, the international aid agencies need to stop and start distributing vaccines. Government moves would not affect the 150,000 Cambodians in U.N. administered camps inside Thailand. Those affected would be some 300,000 Cambodians in makeshift camp straddles the border and another 200,000 who travel from inside Cambodia to feeding stations inside Thailand, 150 The Red Cross and UNICEF said that food relief would still be handled by smaller private groups and that they were just reducing their operations to meet the needs of the most vulnerable people. Vovager 1 records Saturn's screams PASADENA, Calif.—Data about Saturn gathered by the Voyager 1 spacecraft are not limited to pictures of the planet and its 15 moons. The unmanned space probe also is recording eerie screams that occur when solar winds strike the planet's magnetic field, scientists say yester- The sounds of the sun's charged ions streaming off from the bow shock, the point at which the planet's magnetic field meets energy from the sun—cannot be heard by the human ear. The sensitive instruments on Voyager 1 willick on the sounds. Fred Scarf of the Plasma Wave Experiment said. Scarf played tapes of the bow shock effects of Earth and Jupiter. Earth's in stream effect sounds like a drawn-out shout in a tunnel. The sounds from Earth were also played in slow motion. "Once we got inside the magnetosphere of Jupiter, we heard many sounds, and we expect the same thing on Saturn," 'Scaf' said. Top detectives begin probe in Atlanta "Sometimes it's good for outsiders to come and take a look—I always appreciated that," said Pierce Brooks, former Eugene, Ore., police chief, who solved the famous "Union Field" police murder case as a captain with the Los Angeles Police Department. ATLANTA—Five of the nation's top homicide detectives will begin pooling in the daylight today to try to help solve the cases of 15 slain or missing Atlanta children. In addition to Brooks, the investigators include Detective Charles Nanton, Lt. Colin Moore, Lt. George Mayer, Stanford, Copp, and Set. Al. Smith, Calif. Allanta Public Safety Commissioner Lee Brown said the five detectives would work closely with the supervisors of the 35-man special task force More than 900 volunteers searched south Atlanta's Lakewood neighborhood during the weekend in an unsuccessful attempt to find the bodies of four children who are still missing. As in previous weekend hunts, guns and articles of clothing were found in wooded areas, but detectives said they did not know whether any of the items were present. Dissension seen among Iranians By United Press International Divisions among Iran's leaders were apparent yesterday when a Tehran newspaper, run by a former prime minister, published an article calling the Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghozbaden. Gothzbadze was arrested last week after the release of the 52 American hospital. No new developments indicated that the release of the American hostages was nearing. Today is their 373rd day in captivity. The official Pars news agency, meanwhile, accused the Saudi government of arresting more than 130 supporters of Aayatolah Rubholl Khomeini to prevent an uprising at the Grand Mosque in the city, who seized exactly one year ago yesterday, the date that starts the Islamic new year. Ghotzbadeh warned before this arrest that radical policies in Iran were making the hostages' release more difficult. He was imprisoned Friday in Tehran when allegedly criticizing officials of state radio and television and the militants holding the hostages. A Tehran newspaper, Mizan, which is run by former Prime Minister Mehdi Bazargan, said, "If Gothzbadeh and (former media) chief Mohammad Mahmoud the Iranian minister then so should be two-thirds of the Iranian people under the same charges." BAZARGAN WAS Iran's prime minister in the first day after the revolution that toppled the late shah's regime. Questions concerning the Ghotbadez case were also heard during yesterday's session of the Majlis, the Iranian parliament, Pars reported. "This is like treating a toothache with a punch and a hammer," Mizan said in conversation. Two members of the Majlis said the appointment of new heads to the radio and television networks by the public were to be made in court. The appointments were to One Parliament member asked why the former Iranian ambassador to Scandanavia, Amir Entezam, had been under arrest for more than a year without his case being investigated, Pars said. replace the vacancies created after Ghotzbadeh's speech. IN ACCUSATION of Saudi Arabia, Para quoted a statement by the Islamic Revolutionary Organization of the Arabian Peninsula, that said Saudi authorities had started to arrest the Iranians after demonstrations against Iraq's invasion of western Iran last month and after the subsequent deployment of U.S. radar aircraft to Saudi Arabia. More than 130 people were arrested, including two religious leaders, in the Sharquieth region of eastern Saudi Arabia. Pars said. On Nov. 20, the armed followers of a little-known Islamic cult barricaded themselves inside the mosque with 50,000 pilgrims and held it for two weeks until Saudi troops drove them out. holiest shrine in Islam. It houses the Kaaba, which contains the legendary Black Stone that Gabriel is said to have given to Abraham. According to the Islamic calendar, yesterday was the first anniversary of the Grand Mosque takeover by about 100 Mosmum gunmen. The mosque is the Iran already had started to ration fuel oil and gasoline. While the fighting between Iran and Iraq stretched the resources of both countries, Iran announced rationing of essential goods and services—most immediately sugar and electricity—and said it would raise the price of gasoline for private motorists, in order to raise money for the war effort. 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