2 Thursday, June 21, 1979 Summer Session Kansan THE SUMMER SESSION Capsules From staff and wire reports Uaandan president resigns KAMPAILA, Uganda—President Yufuila Yulfa resigned yesterday and was widely well-received when he lived in New York City. Godfrey Bimina, a 99-year-old former attorney general, was chosen as president by the Uganda National Liberation Front, a group of about 252 entice Lale had failed to maintain political unity in the provincial government that reduced Idi Amin's dictatorship two months ago. The installation of Binaisa, who has been practicing law as an exile for the past five years, left unsettled the future of Million Olde, still Uganda's most prominent legal institution. U.S. to pay costs of treaty WASHINGTON — President Carter won a major victory in Congress yester-day as the House rejected an amendment to the Panama Canal bill in the first But some opponents still vowed to wreck the treaties by defeating the bill in the scheduled vote at noon today. The House rejected 220-209 an amendment that would have required Panama to pay all U.S. costs of implementing the treaties which call for turning the canal over to Panama. Officials estimated the cost would be between $670 million and $2 billion for the implementation. Carter's proposed legislation would establish a U.S.-controlled commission to oversee operation of the canal between now and the year 2000, when Panama was under water. The House voted to close the session for the first time since 1830 so it could hear testimony lt. Gen. Demin McAuliffe, commander of the U.S. Army's Southern Command. McAuliffe testified earlier this year before a House subcommittee that requested Nicaragua's guardian trying to overthrow Nicaraguan President Anaasio Somoza. Court decides children's cases WASHINGTON- Children have no constitutional right to a full adversary hearing to challenge their parent's decision to commit them to a state mental health facility. But the court, in the second of a pair of 6-4 votes, also ruled that children have the right to have a "neutral finder-finder" decide whether their parents or guardians will be involved. The statements came in two related cases from Pennsylvania and Georgia. The justices reversed leaked testimony, and reinstated the court's decision. The evidence previously used in both cases was Conflict Justice Warren E. Burger wrote for the majority, the "neutral factfinder" need not be someone trained in the law, but may be a staff physician at the mental hospital "so long as he or she is free to evaluate independently the child's mental and emotional condition and need for treatment." Carter calls for solar energy WASHINGTON—President Carter climbed on the White House roof yesterday and called on the nation to meet 20 percent of its energy needs with solar power. In a message outlining his solar energy goals for Congress, Carter said true energy security could only come from the development of solar and renewable on the terrace-like roof over the White House Cabinet room and press quarters. Carter dedicated a $20,000 solar-powered water heater for the Water Park. The president also called for the creation of a solar bank to provide interest subsidies to owners and builders of residences and commercial structures where solar equipment is installed. He said a 20 percent tax credit, up to $2,600 per year, would enable users using passive solar design to take advantage of natural warming effects. Trucker dies; protest goes on NEW YORK-An Alabama truck driver blind to yesterday after he was asleep in the tractor-trail rig as violence escalated in the nation-wide crackdown. The president of the American Trucking Association, which represents 18,874 firms operating 600,000 trucks, appealed to President Carter for federal protec- Carter's press secretary, Jody Powell, said the president was considering moves to increase the amount of diesel fuel available to truckers but was not likely to support the trucks' demands for a higher speed limit and standard weight and load regulations. Alabama state troopers said Robert C. Tate of Birmingham was hit and killed by sunfire while he stood in a cot field beside his lack-knuckled truck. Two drivers were injured by gunshots and rocks in Tennessee, three trucks were shot up in Illinois, two in Utah, two in Kentucky and at least one in Penn. Oklahoma drug ring broken OKLAHOMA CITY—Eight persons were arrested late Tuesday in connection with what state and federal agents may say may be one of the biggest cocaine raids An FBI spokesman said officers of the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs and the FBI were still searching for a ninth suspect in connection with an alleged cocaine ring that was an operation of organized crime outside Oklahoma. Agents reportedly bought drugs that came into the state from Las Vegas, New Orleans, Kansas City, Mexico and South America between March 24 and June 18. Police killing called planned TOPEKA-U.S. government attorney James P., Buchke said yesterday he would review the local investigation of the May 31 shooting of Billy Wayne Carter before calling a federal probe into an alleged conspiracy to kill Carter. The Rev. W.A. Chambers, former chairman of the Emporia Human Relations Commission, wrote Bochele saying an Emporia police report indicated police misconduct in the case. Carter was killed by shotgun blasts when law officers went to his residence in Emporia to arrest him on a warrant for disorderly conduct in a tavern incident. Carter, 48, who had a history of mental problems and violence, brandished a knife. After an earlier attempt to arrest Carter failed, a notation on a police report said, "To make affidavits on aggravated assault, so when go back to arrest him, they are able to shoot him if he resists again. May be going to serve him tonight." Weather... It will be sunny today, with the high near 90 degrees. Tonight the low will be in the mid 60s and tomorrow's high will be near 90 degrees. The weekend lows will be in the 60s and the highs will be in the 80s. It should be partly cloudy, with little or no rain expected through Sunday. KANSAN THE SUMMER SESSION (USPS 690-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday during June and July, and may appear elsewhere. Please visit us at www.usps.com or mail resume to USPS 690-640. Submissions by mail are $15 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $35 a year county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid through the activity year. Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 69045 Editor Caroline Trowbridge ... Bruce Wells Campus Editor Business Manager Duncan Butts Duncan Butts Advertising Adviser Chuck Chowins General Manager Rick Musser Hijacked plane returns to NYC NEW YORK (AP)—A Being 727 commanderby the犯戒ed bomber who the FBI said was carrying dynamite returned here today nearly 14 hours after it was hijacked on a flight to Chicago, the Port Authority of New York said. Aboard the plane were the flight's original three-man crew, the hijacker and his atlantic. THE AMERICAN AIRLINES jet, hijacked yesterday afternoon with 136 persons aboard, returned from Chicago and escaped as the passengers were released unharmed. The plane touched down at John F. Kennedy International Airport at 1:30 a.m. EDT and went to an undisclosed area, airport officials said. The hijacker had unsuccessfully demanded freedom for a jailed Serbian national comrade and a safe flight to Peru. Almost five hours after the American Airlines Boeing 727 landed at O'Hare Inc. ABC reporter shot by Nicaraguan soldier President Carter condemned the killing as "an act of barbarism." Nicaragua President Anastasio Somoza said the killing of ABC-TV newsman Bill Stewart was unforgivable. He told a news conference "the individual or individuals responsible for it by action or inaction will receive the full weight of the law." MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP)—A U.S. television correspondent was shot to death by a national guardman at a roadblock in this embattled central American capital ternational Airport, the passengers filed off the plane and got into buses which took them to Amsterdam. In Washington, Carter said: "Journalists seeking to report the news and inform the public are soldiers in no nation's army. When they are made innocent victims of violence and war, all people who cherish their own freedom believe in free debate pay a terrible price." STEWART WAS killed in eastern Managua, where national guard troops had launched an assault against left-wing guerrillas who had held sectors of the capital for more than a week. Troopers at the police station and the caliber machine guns and other automatic weapons fired by Sandista rebels lethal the revolt against Somoza's government. Stewart and his Nicaraguan interpreter, Juan Francisco Espino, were killed execution-style in the government troops. The suspects, who are company themed the AB said. They said Stewart and the interpreter had asked guardmen at a roadblock if they could conduct inquiries. FOUR FEMALE and a male flight attendant also were released, leaving the pilot, co-pilot and flight engineer aboard the plane with the hijacker. James Cefalo of Miami, Fla., the team soundman, said Stewart, who had been in Nicaragua for 10 days, was holding an official press card when he was shot. CEFALO SAID Stewart, 37, had left the crew's van with the interpreter, put up his hands and identified himself as a reporter, who was carrying his knees and shot in the stomach and head. Nicarguar officials said the killings were an isolated incident and they were investigating. The government radio station had been broadcasting messages denouncing "international journalists" as being influenced by left-wing groups. A U.S. State Department spokesman in Washington called the killings shocking. He said, "If preliminary reports by eyewitnesses accurately, both were murdered in cold blood." 843-2931 SAVE - SAVE - SAVE Proudly Serving Lawrence for 15 Years 2340 Alabama Lawrence, Kansas 66044 U. S. Attorney Thomas P. Sullivan in Chicago identified the hijacker as Nikola Kavaja. Kavaja had been free on bond and was on his way back to Chicago to be sentenced for his part in a 1975 bombing at the suburban Chicago home of a Yugoslavian consul to the United States. No one was injured in the bombing. DISCOVER for fantasy fashions featuring Pierre Cardin Lily of France Lingerie Sweet Baby Jane foxy Lady Plain Jane You Babes "We're Different" West of Hours: Kiefs 9:30-7:00 Mon-Fri, Sat 6:00 VISA 841-JANE Thurs 8:30 p.m. LAY-AWAY LSILIVAN SAID Kavajne wanted the release of Stojliko Kajevic, 43, a Serbian Orthodox priest who was previously sentenced to prison. Two other persons were also convicted. Kajevic was being held in the Metropolitan Correction Center, a federal jail in downtown Chicago. Officials there had not been called about the blacking. American spokesman Mary Rose Noel said the crewmembers were in the plane's The plane had taken off from New York's LaGuardia Airport at 11:16 a.m. EDT and the pilot reported the hijacking at 12:29 when the airplane was near Flint, Mich. cockpit and the blazer was in the first class section just behind the cockpit. The jet had landed in Chicago at 1:03 p.m. EDT and parked on a pad at a remote point in the city. During the standoff, people could be seen moving next to the plane, and a large yellow school bus, fire trucks and police cars were parked near by. Two men stood beneath the nose of the plane using communications gear hooked into an intercom system. THE NEAREST RUNWAY was closed, but several unfinished operations continued at O'Keeffe Park. Noel had at first said there were two hjackers demanding to go to Peru—one in the cockpit and one in the cabin. She said there were eight packages allegedly containing explosives. BUT LATER SHE said: "Maybe there isn't a second hijacker... there may be and there may not be. We know that the one will always fall over the plane so there may be only one." The FBI also said it was unsure whether the hijacker acted alone. WHERE IN THE WORLD DO YOU WANT TO GO? "We saw weapons," said Jan Miller, a 28-year-old Yukon, Okla. "President. An older man had two objects in his hands about 9 to 10 inches long. They looked like plastic shampoo bottles." Think about it, listen and win with . . . PRESENTS And Now... after four years of preparation and production A UNIVERSAL RELEASE ALBERTO GRIMALDI KENNEDY HIS FIRST ENGLISH LANGUAGE FILM Fellini's Casanova A Film by FEDERICO FELLIENI byron donald SUTHERLAND President and Executive Director of FEDERICO FELLIENI & MARSHMAL ZAPFON History and Records of FEDERICO FELLIENI & MARSHMAL ZAPFON Production Services by The Crested Stream Friday, June 22 Woodruff Aud 7:00 p.m. $1.50 —No Refreshments Allowed— --- $2.50 OFF Bring this coupon to any participating. Pizza Hut* restaurant and get $2.50 on the regular price of your favorite large pizza. Offer expires 6/27 One coupon per pizza, please. $1.50 OFF Bring this coupon to any participating Pizza Hut* restaurant and get $1.50 on the regular price of your favorite medium pizza. Offer expires 6/27 One coupon per pizza, please