Page 2 University Daily Kansan, October 19, 1982 News Briefs From United Press International 58 draft protesters arrested at Selective Service office WASHINGTON — Police arrested 58 draft protesters in front of the Selective Service System headquarters yesterday, carrying many away on stretches when they refused to walk to police cars. H. K. Brewton, District of Columbia police lieutenant, said that 43 men and 15 women were arrested when they attempted to cross police lines. They were charged with violating police lines, a misdemeasure, and fined $50. He said the demonstrators offered only "passive resistance." Police said that about 200 demonstrators, members of a group called the October 18 Resistance Campaign, marched to draft headquarters as employees arrived for work. They were met by police who had blocked the street in front of the building. One group of demonstrators formed a circle and sang softly, "We're not going to shut it (the Selective Service) down, we're going to make it happen." By mid-morning, only about 100 demonstrators remained on the grassy hill across the street from the building *Selective Service* station. Eleven men have been indicted in federal courts for failing to register, a felony punishable by a fine of up to $10,000 and five years in prison. Four presumed dead as plane sinks NEW YORK - A Colombian cargo plane that floated in the Atlantic Ocean for three days as rescuers searched for four missing men sank yesterday, officials said. A Coast Guard spokesman said no bodies were spotted as the Hercules C-130 slipped under the rough water. The Coast Guard's rescue efforts were immediately called off, he said. Earlier in the day, rescuer ruled out hope the four were alive inside the partly submerged plane because they found that it was being kept afloat by empty fuel tanks on its wings, not by an air bubble inside the craft. Officials said the plane had taken off from the Azores Islands and was headed to Bermuda when its navigational system apparently failed. The plane ran out of fuel and crashed Saturday. Irish teacher shot in front of class BELFAST. Northern Ireland — A gunman shot and seriously wounded a Protestant headmaster in front of his class of terrified children yesterday, two days before the first local assembly elections in Northern Ireland in a decade. The Irish National Liberation Army, a violent splinter group of the outlawed Irish Republican Army, claimed responsibility for the attack. The group had threatened to disruption the election campaign The elections for a revived local assembly — a British plan to build a working relationship between majority Protestants and minority Christians. Police said David Wright, headmaster at an elementary school in the border town of Newry, was wounded seriously in the shooting. Mennonites delay suit against IRS NEWTON — Acting on its lawyers' advice, the General Conference of the Mennonite Church has tentatively decided to hold off on a lawsuit planned against the Internal Revenue Service to protest the collection of tax dollars for war. Church spokesman Vern Treheim said yesterday that the denomination's general board earlier this month decided to hold off on the lawsuit. However, the final decision is to be made in August at the council's trial session in Bethlehem, Pa. The church had wanted to get legal permission for employers to honor the requests of employees who did not want federal taxes withheld from their paychecks and the money to be used for war. Mennonites oppose war. "The main reason (for the delay) was that we were told by our legal counsel that our chances of accomplishing what we had hoped were very slim," Treheim said. Cornell professor wins Nobel Prize ITHACA, N.Y. — Cornell University professor Kenneth G. Wilson, describing what he as a "workaholic who takes a lot of breaks," said himself: "I work 10 hours a day and I'm not happy." "The committee secretary told me I had won and I was astonished," Wilson said. "I was surprised to have won it alone and also surprised because I didn't expect an announcement until next week." Wilson won the honor and the $157,000 tax-free award for developing a mathematic equation to explain the critical point where matter changes from one phase to another. He said he began looking at the "critical point question" in 1985 and made his breakthrough in 1971. He said delay in recognition of this point was his greatest challenge. Wilson, who started solving complicated mathematic equations when he was 8 years old, said he didn't know how he would spend the $157,000. Simmons to give beef equal time TOPEKA - Producers of "The Richards Simmons Show" have offered the beef industry a chance to respond to a consumer advocate who appeared on the program and discouraged overweight people from consuming beef. But Kendall Frazier, spokesman for the Kansas Livestock Association, said there was a chance the beef industry might reject the offer. It had threatened to file a lawsuit against the Simmons show because of concerns over the safety of the cattle. Diane Broughton, the consumer advocate who had appeared on the show, Broughton said that residue from hormone implants cattle receive to improve weight gain was still in the meat when consumers ate it. She said the meat is often so fresh that it's Frazier said the KLA was looking for a representative of the beef industry who was well acquainted with the topic and who would be willing to discuss the issue in a television interview. Charles and Di have row, press says LONDON - Princess Diana and Prince Charles exploded into their first royal fight, several British newspapers reported yesterday, the latest of the "scandals" the press has been carrying latex. Diana "blow her top" in a "blazing row" at Queen Elizabeth's private Scottish estate, Balmoral, and insisted on going home. The couple and baby Prince William went home but Charles flew back last night to get in another day's hunting. Princess Diana grew "bored to tears" with Balmoral after days of incessant rain, several accounts said. She and Charles "had a heated row," one newspaper said. Another quoted an estate worker as saying "there has been terrible friction between the two of them." All Buckingham Palace would say was that Charles and Diana, with their 4-month-old son Prince William, returned to their London home Sunday. Lebanese army moves to maintain peace BEIRUT, Lebanon - Without waiting for an Israeli withdrawal, a Lebanese army unit yesterday moved into the Shouf mountains southeast of Beirut to keep peace between two other armies, the Lebanese militaryologist and leftist Druze Moslem militias. By United Press International The Lebanese army unit moved into the mountains where intense fighting between the Phalangists and Druze Moslems last week reportedly killed 15 people in a fresh threat to Lebanon's fragile peace. The heavy shelling ended only four days ago when Israel moved armored to the front. President Amin Gemayel made a passionate appeal to the U.N. General Assembly for an "immediate and urgent action" of all non-Lebanese forces from Lebanon. In Jerusalem, Prime Minister Menachem Beg told the opening session of the Knesset that President Reagan's plan for a Palestinian home in the West Bank in confederation with Jordan would rob Israel of the peace it hoped to gain by driving Palestinian guerrillas out of Lebanon. Meanwhile in New York, Lebanese GEMAYEL. WHO later flew to Washington for a meeting with President Reagan today, was referring to Israel; 30,000 Syrian and 10,000 PLO forces in Lebanon in the Beka Valley — not to the tri-national peace force he requested. In a 40-minute policy address to Parliament almost free from heckling, Begin said Israel's military victory in Lebanon created a "structure of peace" that has now been averted wars "in the forseable future" between Israel and its Arab foes. BEGIN INDICATED Reagan's proposal for a Palestinian settlement on the West Bank in association with Jordan would create a Soviet satellite state much like the PLO "state within a state" the invasion of Lebanon destroyed. Begin called on Washington to adhere to the 1978 Camp David accords, which call for Palestinian autonomy on the occupied territories. In Nairobi, Kenya, the International Telecommunications Union, under pressure from the United States, put off voting yesterday on an Arab-sponsored resolution to expel Israel from the U.N.-affiliated agency. DELEGATIONS FROM THE United States and other industrialized nations made it clear they would walk out of the conference if the expulsion proposal passed. The United States also said it would keep in place U.N. organization that expects Israel. But a compromise resolution that would criticize Israel yet keep it part of the agency could avert a showdown in a vote planned for today. John Gardner, U.S. delegation head, said the United States would not walk out over a resolution condemning Israel, but might vote against it. Quantrill's grave given military marker By United Press International DOVER, Ohio — In a brief ceremony yesterday, a granite military marker was placed on the 94-year gravestone of William Clarke Quantrill, leader of the rampaging Quantrill's Raiders of the Civil War era. The lone Quantrill descendant located by the Dover Historical Society said he wanted nothing to do with honoring the Confederate Army captain, who history has depicted as a murdering horse thief and tracerous terrorist. BUT QUANTRILL had a defender in the Fourth Street Cemetery yesterday in the person of Mark Dugan, the Raleigh, N.C. history buff who got the government to pay for the ground-level building at the city council to approve its installation. welcome "I'm not saying he was the sweetheart of Sigma Chi," Dugan said. "But he wasn't black. He wasn't white. He was gray." "No women were hurt," Dugan responded. "No women were raped and no women were touched. One child that Those books record that in 1883 Quantrill ranch into Lawrence with a band of 450 men and out leaving 150 burned and 150 to 182 people dead THE PRO-SLAVERY raider has taken "a bum rap" in the history books, Dugan maintained. they never found the body of was supposed to have burned to death in a building. I think it probably happened. But it wasn't on purpose." QUANTRILL WAS a schoolteacher in Ohio and Illinois, a settler in Kansas and a gambler in Utah before the Civil War, when he took up robbing mail coaches and sacking communities and farms of people sympathetic to the Union. He was with rebel forces in 1862 when they captured Independence, Mo. 913. 842.1544 25TH & IOWA-HOLIDAY PLAZA 913.842.1544 8th and Massachusetts (under the big tent) Downtown Lawrence 11 am - 9 pm Daily (weather permitting) October 21,22,23 Directed by: Mia Verde and created by Ed Starke and Cream Stevens. Fri. Oct. 22 Sat. 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