Page 2 University Daily Kansan, October 27, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International Iraqi missile kill Iranian civilians BAGHDAD, Iraq—Tebrah Radio said yesterday that Iraqi rocket attacks killed more than 100 civilians. The attacks were on residential areas of Dezful, a military and rail center about 135 miles north of the main battle fronts along the Shatt al-Arab waterway. Fighting along the waterway centered on the port city of Khorramshahr, which has been claimed by both sides for more than two weeks. The attack on Deryal the second time Iraq had its Soviet-made ground-to-ground missiles against the garrison town and its oil facilities. Tehran Radio said seven of the 35-foot missiles hit Devil. The commander of the Revolutionary Guards estimated that more than 100 were killed. The missile attack on Derfal overshadowed the Parliament's debate on the fate of the 52 American hostages. The Parliament will meet again today to discuss the fate of hostages. Speaker Hojaiolaismos Hashemi Ratsfanjani said that a much fuss about the hostages when so many civilians were killed in Derfal. Meanwhile, Luxembourg Foreign Minister Gaston Thorn said Iraq was seeking a cease-fire in the 35-day-old conflict and had asked members of the UN Security Council to intervene. In Luxembourg Thorn said Common Market members would discuss lifting European sanctions against Iran. "If the hostages are released without conditions, I do not see a reason to maintain the sanctions, which were imposed as a consequence of the hostage But as for supplying Iran with weapons, Thorn said, that was for individual governments to decide. Carter, Reagan prepare for debate President Carter and Republican presidential nominee Ronald Reagan spent yesterday preparing for tomorrow's presidential debate in Cleveland. Reagan met with advisers at his rented Middleburg, Va., estate, getting briefings about a wide range of domestic and foreign policy questions that might be asked. He also studied videotapes of the 1976 debates between Carter and Gerald Ford. Carter was at the presidential retreat at Camp David, Md. Aides said he was preparing for the debate the same way he usually prepared for televised debates. Many newspapers issued presidential endorsements yesterday, with the New York Times endorsing Carter and the Detroit News endorsing Reagan. Other major newspapers backing Carter included the Philadelphia Inquirer and the Minnesota Tribune, the Kansas City Star and the Baltimore Sun. Reagan was endorsed by the Indianapolis Star; the Topeka Capital Journal; the Greenville, S.C., News- Piedmont; the Asheville, N.C., Citizen-Times; the Shreveport, La., Times; the Baton Rouge, La., Advocate; the Tulsa Daily World and the Tampa Tribune. PLO bombs injure sixteen in Israel JERUSALEM-Two time sets set by Palestinian guerrilla exploded near Tel Aviv and in Jerusalem yesterday, wounding 16 people, including 13 men. The attacks coincided with the department for Egypt of Israeli President Yitzhak Navon. Navon left for a five-day trip, the first visit by an Israeli citizen to Israel. In Beirut, Lebanon, a spokesman for the Palestine Liberation Organization said the borehole had been planted by PLO members operating in the region. Military officials said the 13 soldiers were among 15 people injured when a bomb exploded at the western exit from Jerusalem. The station had been crowded with soldiers looking for rides back to their bases after the Jewish sabbath. The wounded were rushed to three Jerusalem hospitals. The second bomb exploded at a bus station in the Tel Aviv suburb of Ramat Gan. Israel radio said an Arab man was wounded and an Israeli woman was reported to be in shock after the blast. Police arrested three Arab suspects fleeing from the scene. The blasts came only hours before Navon departed for his historic visit to Egypt. Navon's car passed the scene of the Jerusalem explosion on the way to Jordan. Volunteers to seek Atlanta children ATLANTA—A large volunteer turnout in the search for four missing ATLANTA girls will cover the city in a matter of weeks, a search organizer said yesterday. City Councilman Arthur Langford said that after a volunteer search last weekend, five general areas in the city remained to be searched. "I think we'll have enough people that we can cover those areas in three weeks," he said. Llangford said a decision had been made not to disclose where the search parties would be next weekend, so the killer or killers responsible for the disappearance of 14 black children would not be tipped off about the investigations. During the past 15 months, 10 children have been found dead. All the victims were black and all but two were boys. "We're going back out for the next three weekends, until we've covered the city—the vacant lots, abandoned buildings and old cars where these children's bodies could be hidden," Langford said. "I feel we've done a very thorough job so far." Last weekend, about 3,000 volunteers, including detachments of National Guardmen, worked in teams of 30 to 50, combing the East Lake section of a dam. Most of the team members but searchers turned up a handgun, a safe, some stolen bank money, bags and animal bones that were taken to the state crime laboratory for extra checking. Langford is the head of the United Youth Adult Conference. He made the first call for volunteers more than a week ago. Several hundred responded, and the body of 7-year-old LaTonya Wilson was found Oct. 18 in a wooded area near her home. She had been abducted June 22. Cuban prisoners face U.S. penalties The other 26 prisoners faced charges in Cuba for illegal entry, drug smuggling and distribution of religious literature. At least one had been in jail for over a year. The Americans are scheduled to arrive at Miami's Tamiami Airport at 12:07 CDT, aboard an Air Florida jet chartered by the State Department. FBI agents indicated that each case would be reviewed before a decision would be made about pressing the charges under U.S. laws. MIAMI—At least four of the 30 Americans released from Cuban jails last week will be taken into custody after they arrive in the United States from Cuba, a top official said. The 30 arriving were among 33 prisoners unexpectedly pardoned by Caiman President Fidel Castro Oct. 13. Three chose to stay in Cuba. Two escaped. The prisoners remained at the Combinado del Este jail yesterday, despite their release earlier this week. Wayne Smith of the U.S. Interest Section, a military prison, said he was under arrest. Robert Jordan, public affairs officer at the interest section, said Cuba had refused to allow U.S. officials to interview five Cuban-American prisoners. The recent pardon is only for what Cubans call "single-source" Americans, not dual nationales, Jordan said. Correction Peter Lorenzi, assistant professor of business and a HOPE Award finalist, was incorrectly identified in Friday's Kansan. Iran prolongs hostages debate Iran's Parliament spent less than four hours in secret discussing the 52 American hostages yesterday amid mounting rumors that release of at least some of the captives was imminent. A debate is scheduled to resume today. By United Press International A Parliament spokesman said an open session had been scheduled for Thursday. Parliament sources, reached by telephone from London, said a long, drawn-out debate was likely because members were expected to devote only a couple of days each day to the discussion of the hostess, now in their 39th day of captivity. Just before the Parliament's debate began, CBS News quoted a high-ranking Iranian official at the United Nations as saying there was a 99 per cent chance that 50 of the 32 questions would be released Wednesday or Thursday. However, State Department spokeswoman Amiata Stockman said in Washington, "We are in the same posture as before. We will have nothing to say but because there is nothing to be done and I can't force Parliament announces its decision." U. N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim said on ABC-TV that the United Nations stood ready to serve as a third party between the United States and Iran in working out the release of the hostages. "There is reason for optimism, but we have to be careful and cautious about the exact timing," Waldheim said. Hopes that the Parliament would make a decision about the fate of the hostages before the U.S. election Nov. 4 were dimmed by Speaker Jozef Johaloslaeus Hashem Rafanijan. After the session yesterday he said the outcome the presidential election have to have the effect on Parliament's final decision. "If the United States observes our justified rights and respects our legal demands, the hostages may be released; otherwise, they will remain as they are." In a later interview after a meeting with Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Rafsanjiani said release of the hostages depended upon the United States. The attempt by some Iranian parliamentarians to link the hostage issue with the 36-day-old Persian Gulf conflict raised new questions about what demands the Parliament would present to Washington. Hojiatoleslam Mousavi Khoyeni, 39, chairman of the seven-member parliamentary hostage commission, submitted a secret report containing evidence of an attack Radio said. Parliament secretariat officials refused to discuss the report. T韩ran political sources said that the majority Islamic Republican Party seemed willing to carry on the debate it it made it against party members seeking further delays. Khoyeni said Thursday that any new demands would not be tougher than the four principles laid down last month by Ayatollah Ruhullah down Khomeini—the release of about $8 billion in Iranian assets frozen by President Carter, return of the late shah's wealth, a pledge to drop all legal claims against However, before Khoyni presented his report, radical members tried to suspend the debate, citing the alleged U.S. role in the Iran-Iraq conflict. --- iran, and a promise not to interfere in iranian affairs. The Parliament rejected the motion and decided to hold the debate behind closed doors, a move political analysts saw as a compromise between the radical "no-debate" lobby and the government. The analysts also said secret sessions would reduce publicity for the radicals' political platform. Tehran Radio, however, said the debate was made secret because of the United States' interest. Dezful, a southwest Iranian army garrison town, and in protest of the United States' alleged interference in the fighting between Iran and Iraq. In Wiesbaden, West Germany, U.S. military police tightened security around the Air Force hospital designated to house the hostages if Iran attempts to overthrow the Security measures were mounted to keep the media out, officials said. U. S. officials were irrated at the need of interest, which was brought to the attention of the U.S. The officials said that although the hospital was prepared to receive the medical care, they had no State Department officials, there were no indications a release was imminent. Re-elect Beverly Bradley commissioner Outstanding Progressive Leadership Pul. Adv. Paul for by committee to re-select Be Douglas county commissioner Pol. Afr. 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