Page 2 University Daily Kansan, September 15, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International Guidelines set for Polish labor unions WARSAW, Poland—Polish officials outlined guidelines yesterday for the inclusion of labor unions in the national power structure under agreements signed Aug. 31 by the government and striking workers, the official PAP news agency said. After registering with the Warsaw district court "the union is granted legal identity," the agency said. The historic 21-point strike agreement, which ended the August strikes and brought down the government of Edward Gierke, legitimized the unions and pitted them potentially against the historically powerful ruling Polish Communist Party and the Roman Catholic Church. Despite open displays of Catholic devotion by workers during the strikes, the church is no longer the only mass opposition organization, and its leaders are becoming more militant. Catholic intellectuals point to two emerging factions in their church, one advocating active resistance to government policy and the other urging a more moderate stance. Poland's dissident intellectuals and workers have remained firmly united. Poland also remains a permanent might use association with the dissidents as a pretext to clamp down. Workers have not yet settled how they will wield their power. Search for plane crash victims halted WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.—Many of the bodies recovered from the Gulf Stream 20 miles from Freeport, Grand Bahama, where a DC-3 crashed Friday killing all 34 people aboard, were mutilated in shark-infested waters, authorities said yesterday. The Goast Guard found 16 bodies Friday and Saturday but suspended the search for more victims yesterday. A Coast Guard spokesman said there were no arrests. was no chance that the other to people a board could have survived. Autopsies showed that some of the victims had been mangled by sharks. The plane was equipped with life preservers, but none of the passengers were wearing them. The plane crashed while making its final approach to Freeport in a violent thunderstorm. It was carrying passengers to Freeport casinos for a gambling tour. Two Coast Guard cutters and two helicopters conducted a 10-hour search in the Bahraini seas. Eleven bodies were recovered soon after the search began. The captain of one of the cutters, Lt. Susan Moritz, said her crew saw sharks in the dark water, Klan leader arrested in Connecticut SCOTLAND, Conn. — The Imperial Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, Wilkinson, was arrested Saturday for allegedly carrying a loaded weapon. A Connecticut state trooper told Wilkinson was stopped in Scotland, where he was on a road trip to the area last night. He said Wilkinson was on his way to a second rally planned last night. Police said the 38-year-old Wilkinson was first held at a local elementary school, then was transferred to Brooklyn Correctional Center. Wilkinson posted a $1,000 non-surety bond and was released in time to attend the rally last night. The charge of possession of a dangerous weapon in a motor vehicle is a felony. The Klan rally in Scotland Saturday night was the first in Connecticut in more than 70 years. A Superior Court judge had issued the no-weapons order after Wilkinson announced that the grounds of the rally would be patrolled by armed men to protest. Wilkinson earlier had praised the 200 state troopers who patrolled the area to enforce the weapons ban. Union strikes hit Minneapolis Tribune MINNEAPOLIS—The Minneapolis Tribune, hit with a strike by two unions, was published yesterday, but the scaled-down edition was available only to readers who ventured across a picket line into the lobby of the newspaper building. Donald Dwight, publisher of the Minneapolis Star and Trubune, said ab- breviated versions of both papers would be published today. Decisions will be made later at the Minnesota Public Library. The strike was the third against the newspaper in recent years. No negotiations were scheduled in the strike that began Saturday after members of the Twin Cities Newspaper Guild rejected a contract offer that would have made them the third-highest paid journalists in the nation. The 24-page edition of the Sunday Tribune included news, sports and partial classified sections. About 10,000 copies were printed compared with about 5,000 daily newspapers. Also striking the newspaper are members of the Minneapolis-St. Paul Mailers' Union No. 4. Members of other unions, including the Tearwaterers 4 suspects in shooting spree arrested LOS ANGELES—Three teen-agers and one adult were arrested Saturday for stealing a griege last month that left four people dead on a quiet neighborhood街. Police said they would seek to try two 17-year-olds as adults. They were booked on suspicion of murder. Dani Sullivan, deputy chief of the Police Department's West Bureau, said he would need to have the two "shooter" suspects tried as adults because of their similarities. Another 17-year-old and the 47-year-old father of one of the suspects also were arrested on suspicion of involvement in the shootings. They were later indicted. The City Council immediately offered a $25,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the killers. Police established a special "hot line" for information and received hundreds of calls from frightened citizens. The "Sunday Night Killings"," which occurred within a three-block area of west Los Angeles Aug. 24, *buried the city and terrified the residents of the area.* Police said the arrests were triggered by a "congonation" of evidence compiled from various sources, including some calls from concerned constituents. Teacher strikes persist in 8 states A strike by Philadelphia's 22,000 teachers entered its third week yesterday with contract talks at a stalemate. Elsewhere, efforts were bogged down to resolve the issue. Most of the strikes, affecting more than a half-million students nationwide, involved demands for higher wages and job security. The Philadelphia teachers are demanding that teacher layoffs due to declining enrollment be limited to 100. School officials plan to eliminate as many as 350 students. More than 75,000 students were affected by school strikes in Illinois and 75,400 students were affected by strikes in 18 Michigan districts. In Sierra, Ariz, teachers continued their 8-day-old walkout, which has left more than 5,000 students under the supervision of substitutes. WASHINGTON (UPF)—President Carter's campaign manager, Tim Kraft, saying he wanted to protect the campaign from political exploitation; took a leave of absence yesterday to fight "false" charges that he used cocaine in New Orleans three years ago. Carter aide takes leave to fight charges Kraft, 39, who moved from the White House to the Carter-Mondale campaign declared himself "completely innocent" in a statement sent to reporters. THERE WAS no immediate word on a replacement for Kraft, who apparently took the leaf rather than quit so he could stay on the payroll during what might be a lengthy and expensive process of defending himself. president was not involved in the decision because Tim's aim was to try to keep this from being used against the president." His friends said that "basically, the A WHITE House side testified before a federal grand jury investigating Jordan in New York that he had seen the drug in drug in New Orleans, the sources said. A three-judge federal panel named a special prosecutor to investigate the charges, sources said yesterday. Attorney General Benjamin Civletiell asked the panel to act as a result of evidence uncovered during a long investigation that eventually cleared former White House chief of staff Hamilton Jordan of similar charges, said the sources. Kraft, said his friends, stepped aside on his own because just six weeks remain until the election and his defense could be a protracted affair. Carter asked Jordan to stay on during the investigation into his case. "Although I am completely innocent of the charges, I find myself in a very difficult situation and facing a difficult decision," Kraft said in the statement. "I must make every opportunity to clear myself. At the same time, the campaign and my responsibilities there call for my full time and attention. "Most importantly, I have not worked hard for President Carter for the past six years just to become a subject of political controversy in the final six weeks of his re-election campaign. "Therefore, I have concluded that I can best serve the president and avoid political exploitation of the false narrative by taking a leave of absence from the campaign." Carter-Mondale campaign chairman Robert Strauss said he regretted the loss of a "fine young man." He said he had no doubt that Kraft would be vengeful, and he told the press of a special prosecutor "is in no way an indication of guilt or wrong-doing." Kraft said he learned last month of an FBI investigation into whether he had used cocaine "on two occasions within the last few years." He said he had volunteered for an FBI interview and denied the allegations. Campaign law anchors Anderson to candidacy By United Press International SAN FRANCISCO-John Anderson acknowledged yesterday that even if he wanted to end his candidacy, which he emphatically does not, the federal campaign he would force him to in the face of military dollars (for the rest of his life). Anderson made clear that he is in the race to stay, and said he would not feel any remorse if his candidacy, by siphoning votes from President Carter, helped to elect Ronald Reagan president. The independent presidential candidate, in an interview with United Press International, also said he might make public before the election some information about the type of person he would consider for Cabinet posts. The Federal Election Commission has said that Anderson is eligible for millions of dollars in government campaign aid after the election if he wins at least 5 percent of the national popular vote. The amount will vary based on his vote total, but 5 percent would be worth $3.1 million. Fifteen percent of the vote, about what he is getting in the polls, would be worth $2.9 million. If he withdraws a candidate, his vote would almost certainly be less than 5 percent. million from the government as the nominees of the two major parties. Anderson expressed confidence he would be able to borrow millions of dollars to help his financially allying campaign afford badly needed television advertising, now that he can use the promised government payment as collateral. His aides are negotiating loans with several undisclosed banks. Reagan and Carter each get $29.4 But Anderson acknowledged that even if he wanted to withdraw he could not, because he would lose his eligibility for a loan and they needed to repay the expected loans. Some Democrats have hoped that Anderson, faced with politics that showed he had no chance to win with only a few votes until the election, would withdraw. "Given the peculiarities in the federal campaign act and the fact that a new party or independent candidate like myself can only get retroactive analysis I think your analysis is correct," he told a reporter who raised the issue. "It does lock a candidate in. But I want to re-emphasize that I will be locked in, not because I have borrowed money, but because I deeply believe in what I am doing and that I can win the election." "I will not withdraw from this race because I believe I have put together what I know." That's us. And our xerox machines make the best quality copies in the world. For just 4¢ a page. KINKO'S No brag, just fact. And for dissertation copying, blinding, or passport photos, no one else is as fast and good as us. 904 Vermont 843-8019 904 Vermont 843-8015 8-8 Mon-Thur 10-5 Sat 8-6 Fri 12-5 Sun "I will feel very, very good indeed, because the American people will have freely exercised their right, their franchise, their choice in a free election and have brought out many millions of people who would have stayed home. "What good would it do Jimmy Carter to be elected in a two-man race if maybe 40 percent of the American people showed up at the polls? There are no reasons for me to feel badly at what the American people had freely decided to do." Wednesday, September 17 7:00 p.m.Meet at the Robinson Center Pool. All interested in playing please attend. Recreation Services 864-3546 Anderson, asked if he would make public the names of prospective members of his Cabinet before the election, said: "I don't know that I will, other than to perhaps indicate the type of person I might like in my administration. I might mention some names as being typical of the skill, the judgment, the background and expertise I might like to have." Asked how he would the day after the election if he finds Reagan has won because traditionally Democratic votes are lower in Indiana candidacy, the Illinois congressman said: campaign. I am not going to deprive the American people of the opportunity to come out and vote for me on the fourth of November." 9th & Indiana 1720 West 23rd with this coupon Buy Two Tacos Get One Taco Free with this coupon Good Until Sept. 26, 1980 "The Proof is in the Taco" offer not good Wednesdays 5-11 P.M. K. U. Union or 900 Massachusetts 843-1211 Find it in Kansan classified Sell it, too. Call 864-4358. --ques popi ZERCHER PHOTO K. 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