2 Tuesday, September 23, 1986 / University Daily Kansan News Briefs Blacks upset company service for 177 dead S. African miners EVANDER, South Africa - About 200 black miners, shouting union slogans and tribal chants, disrupted a company-sponsored memorial service yesterday for 177 men killed in a mine fire last week. "We're not going to pray with whites today. We've never been allowed to pray with whites. We'll have our own rites." miners shouted. own Rites,inner's snubbed. Hold clubs and steel rods over their heads,they ran through the outdoor service to times and drowned out sermons by white and black preachers. Hundreds of other workers who came for the service poured out of bleachers and chairs to join the dissidents. After the service, they continued to race around a field near the No.2 shaft of Kinross gold mine until officials from the National Union of Mineworkers calmed them down. ed them to morn. Tshidiso Mothupi, regional union organizer, said the union would hold its own memorial tomorrow at nearby Secunda. Robertson to leave '700 Club' DETROIT — Potential GOP presidential candidate Pat Robertson yesterday announced he was withdrawing as host of the "700 Club" on his Christian Broadcast Network. In his first appearance before a general audience since pledging to seek the Republican nomination if enough supporters back him, Robertson also urged President Reagan to veto congressional sanctions against South Africa. He warned that the sanctions could lead South Africa to depend on the Soviet Union for vital materials. Robertson said he was leaving the "700 Club" show candidates. He said the rules applied only when a campaign was "in full swing" but he did not want anything connected with his potential campaign to hurt the program. because he would be traveling frequently next year. He said it was not because he was in violation of Federal Communications Commission rules that would require CBN to give equal time to other candidates. He said his nationwide closed circuit television appeal for campaign funds Wednesday had raised about $5 million for his potential campaign. Yale protesters occupy building NEW HAVEN, Conn. — Anti-apartheid demonstrators, demanding that Yale University divest all South African holdings, took over a school administration building yesterday for more than an hour before police arrested at least 23 protesters. City and campus police made the arrests after 12 students entered the bursar's office during a peaceful noon protest and vowed to stay to dramatize their demands for total divestiture. The students were inside the administration building for more than an hour when campus police arrested them on disorderly conduct and trespassing charges. City police charged 11 other protesters outside the building with disorderly conduct. The location was the scene last year of numerous arrests of students and supporters who wanted Yale to sell an estimated $400 million of stocks in U.S. companies doing business in racially divided South Africa. Earlier yesterday, about 40 protesters conducted a somber vigil as members of the Yale Corporation arrived for a meeting in Woodbridge Hall. Israel, U.S.S.R. discuss relations UNITED NATIONS — Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze met yesterday in what Peres described as an exploratory session on restoring relations between the two countries. "I am content with the atmospere and the tiny things were handled. There will be further contacts." Peres said following an hour-long meeting with Shevardnadze. Moscow broke off relations with Israel two decades ago after the 1967 Arab-Israeli war. Shevardnadze, leaving the meeting room through another door, refused to comment on the talks. When asked about the chances that relations might be re-established, Peres said, "I did not say so. I said we started to discuss what are the steps necessary for normalization between the Soviet Union and Israel." Yesterday's session marked the first formal meeting of the two leaders, who met briefly one year ago at a diplomatic reception given by President Reagan marking the 40th anniversary of the United Nations. Soviets killed in hijack attempt MOSCOW — Two Soviets, described as "drug addicts," tried to hijack an Aeroflot jetliner on a weekend flight to Siberia, killing two policemen and two passengers before being slain by security forces, Tass said yesterday. Tass, the official Soviet news agency, said the incident ended Saturday night when security police stormed the plane and killed the two gunmen at the Ural mountain town of Ufa, 700 miles east of Moscow. Seventy-six passengers were aboard. The hijackers killed two passengers during the seizure and two policeman during an earlier chase, Tass said in an unusually speedy announcement. In the past, Tass has delayed announcements of hijackings and in some cases has not reported them at all. Tass said the attempt to seize the Aeroflot TU-134 airliner occurred during a midway stop at Ufa. The plane was en route from the Ukraine to Siberia. Tass did not say where the hijackers wanted to go, but most recent hijacking attempts have been by people trying to leave the Soviet Union. Tass said the two hijackers, identified as N.R. Mantsev and S.V. Vagmurzhi, commanded a taxi in Ufa, demanded to be driven to the airport, and killed two. Soviet police officers who chased them. Man pleads not guilty in murder NEW YORK — A former Boston University student yesterday pleaded not guilty to strangling his girlfriend in Central Park. His parents watched as he was charged with murder. Jack Littman, Chambers' lawyer, said he had not ruled out an insanity plea. He then pleaded not guilty to two counts of second-degree murder. He faces a maximum of 15 years to life in prison if convicted. "That's always an option," he said. "Right now the plea is not guilty and the defense is that it was an unfortunate, accidental killing." Robert Chambers, 19, who says he accidentally killed the victim during rough sex play, said only six words during a two-minute arraignment before Justice George Roberts in state Supreme Court in Manhattan. Chambers was indicted Sept. 9 for intentional murder and depraved indifference to human life. Prosecutors said that on the morning of Aug. 26, Chambers stranded prep school graduate Jennifer Dawn Levin, 18, in Central Park behind the Metropolitan Museum of Art. He admitted to killing Levin, but he said it was an accident when she hurt him while they were having sex in the park. 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