University Daily Kansan UVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wire Services Carter hears new treaty plan CAIRO, Egypt - President Carter launched his personal peace mission yesterday angst tipped of thousands of cheering Egyptians. Carter met for 2% hours with President Anwar Sadat after he was given new Ecquation proposals for a treaty with Israel. Shortly after the arrival of the American party, Egyptian Prime Minister Mustafa Khalil presented counterproposals to Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, detailing Egyptian response to U.S. compromise suggestions to break the neocolonial stalemate. There were no immediate details on the new Egyptian proposals. Larrier and Sandat had a discussion of unresolved issues in the treaty negotiations. The two leaders met alone for half an hour and then were joined by two other leaders. Carter will remain in Egypt until tomorrow night, when he flies to Israel for consultations with Menachem Begin, Israeli prime minister. There is a possibility that if an agreement is solidified Vance or another U.S. mediator will remain in the region to wrap up the agreement. Chinese troops return home XU-THE first contingent of Chinese troops has returned home from fighting in Vietnam, and China accused the Vietnamese of shelling its withdrawn forces. XU-XU has been accused by Beijing of China said the first returning troops crossed the Sino-Vietnamese border and were given a heroic welcome at Friendship Pass just north of the border. Ximaida not say how many troops had returned to China or to what units they belonged. It was the first official announcement by Peking that Chinese troops had returned home following its proposal for cease-fire talks with Vietnam. Japanese Foreign Minister Suma Sonoda told a parliamentary committee that Japan was asking China to pull out and asking Vietnam to allow a smooth transition. He said Japan was meeting separately with both sides and relaying the peace conditions demanded by each. Nuke plant security called lax OKLAHOMA CITY—A nuclear scientist testified yesterday in the $1.5 million Karen Lincoln wood damage trial that if a government report on missing children were released, they would be safe. John tontman of San Francisco, who helped develop the atomic bomb and has since said the health dangers of plutonium were greater than once believed, said he would have been dead if the experiment had not been conducted. Referring to an Atomic Energy Commission report that said 300 micrograms of plutonium could not be accounted for at the Kerr-McCarr Cimarron nuclear facility. "To me, that 300 micrograms can be outside that Kerr-McGee plant means the lion by no means has been adequately caged." An important difference is that the milk product was filed by Silkwood's family against Kerr-McGee. The salt alleles that her contamination with plutonium resulted from Silkwood, who worked at the nuclear plant, was killed in a one-car crash Nov. 13, 1974, while driving to a meeting with a union official and a newspaper reporter to discuss allegations about practices at the plant. Documents known to have been in her car have never been recovered. TOPEKA-The Kansas Supreme Court yesterday released an order allowing lawyers to advertise, but restricting them to use "dignified" ads. Kansas lawyers can advertise The order, which was issued Tuesday, goes beyond Kansas Association guidelines to let lawyers advertise over television and radio, in addition to the in The court listed information that may be included in advertisements, as well as what cannot be included. "The information disclosed in such publication or broadcast shall be presented in a dignified manner without the use of drawings, portrayals, dramatizations, slogans, music, lyrics or the use of pictures other than a portrait of the individual lawyer." the rules said. 7th dies from prison explosion SPRINGFIELD, Mo.—An incarcerate severely injured in a Jan. 30 explosion and fire at the hospital farm near Leavenworth became the seventh blast Wednesday. The court's action followed a 1977 U.S. Supreme Court decision that overturned an Arizona rule against lawyer advertising. The federal court left it to the state to decide. Andrew C. Payne, 46, of Cornelia, Ga., died of cardiac arrest at the U.S. Medical Center for Prisoners in Springfield, Mo. Bob Randalph, a spokesman at the center, and yesterday that an autopsy showed that Payne died after pneumonia developed from injuries he suffered in After the explosion in the honor farm maintenance shop, in which six others died, Parker underwent surgeries at the University of Kansas Medical Center. "He had a skull fracture and brain damage and, as a result, the pneumonia developed," Randolph said. TEHRAN, Iran—Revolutionaries fired their automatic weapons into the air yesterday to disperse thousands of women demonstrators who marched on the streets. Iranian women 'fight the veil' He was transferred to Springfield when his condition was believed to be stabilized, said Richard P. Setter, executive assistant to the warden at Parye was serving a five-year sentence for distribution of non-narcotic drugs and would have been liable for parole in April. Baker to seek GOP nomination rne women shouted. "We shall fight the veil," and "Down with Khorneini," when they married on Prime Minister Minette Bazarzani's office. "We've got a lot of good candidates in the Republican fold," Ford said. "I'm going to sit and watch and enjoy it." In the strongest sense of opposition to Islamic leader Ayatollah Ruhabliah Khomeini since he overthrew the shah last month, throngs of women marched through Tehran in defiance of Khomeini's order to cast aside their Western-style clothes and return to their traditional veil, the chador. Khomimi supporters immediately condemned the demonstrations as left-wing inspired. Baker said before the lecture that he had no doubts that President Carter would be the Democratic nominee next year and California Governor Jerry Sanders could take on him. MANHATTAN—Senate minority leader Howard Baker yesterday said he would send the GOP presidential nomination next year but would not call his Baker, R-Tenn, delivered the 44th Annual Landon Lecture at Kansas State University before a crowd of 1,100. During his lecture Baker said he could not support the SALT II treaty in its present form because of what he considered unreasonable concessions to the U.S. One crowd of demonstrators, estimated to be 15,000, staged its demonstrations in front of the prime minister's house after a crowd estimated at more than 100,000 marched to Tehran University for ceremonies marking International Women's Day. Watson Library will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily during spring break. Robinson Gymnasium, Spencer Museum, the Kansas University and all other University buildings will be open regular hours during that time. Today is the last day the University Daily Kansan will publish until March 19. Vacation hours And in New York, former President Gerald R. Ford said he would not seek the Republican nomination for the presidency. Weather... It will be cloudy and cold today with highs in the upper 30s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. There is a chance of snow flurries in the morning. Winds will be from the north at 10 to 15 miles an hour. The mercury will be the teens tonight and climb into the 40s tomorrow, the weather service said. Invasion force advances; Amin vows 'fight to end' NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) -Tanzanian troops and Uganda rebels marched up a highway toward Uganda's capital, Kampala, yesterday and were closing in on a town 25 miles south of the city, Uganda's official radio reported. Western diplomats in Nairobi said a battle may ensue at the town, Mpii, that could decide the fate of Uganda President Idaim Daini's eight-year rule. The Ugandan broadcast was the first confirmation by the beleaguered Amin that the invasion force was nearly at the door-step of his capital. The radio said Amin was not worried about the situation. But he was quoted as exhorting his of- fieers "to be the last to leave a military objective and to fight until the last man." The takeover of Masaka was reported by other sources weeks ago, and Western diplomatic sources in Nairobi said the U.S. force had pushed past Lakata on Tuesday. The Ugandan report said Tanzanian troops had routed small Ugandan units at Masaka, 75 miles southwest of Kampala, and at Lakaya, 59 miles southwest of the The sources here said the new advance was meeting no resistance. They said Aimin's troops would probably make their move at Mipil, a town of 5,000 at about 12:30. They were not on the road. pala and a road leading south toward Ethebge the major international airport on Libya reportedly has been landing large numbers of war supplies for Amir's troops at Entrada The reports that these soldiers arrived in Uganda came from Western diplomats in Nairobi. The Libyan government has denied the reports. 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