2 Tuesday, April 14, 1987 / University Daily Kansan Around the World Tutu, clergy urge others to defy new restrictions in South Africa CAPE TOWN, South Africa — Archbishop Desmond Toul and other clergymen urged people at a special prayer service yesterday to defy new limits on speech and assembly. The U.S. ambassador was among 700 people in the congregation. Ambassador Edward Perkins issued a statement saying, "It is sad that a government, which claims to uphold the values of human dignity and which portrays itself as secure and strong, should be so intimidated by the peaceful protestations of its citizens that it declares those protestations to be illegal." Perkins' attendance and his statement represented one of his most vivid gestures since he became the first black U.S. ambassador to South Africa in November. The ambassadors of Canada, Sweden and Austria also attended the ecumenical service dedicated to people detained without charge under a nationwide state of emergency imposed by the white government 10 months ago. Regulations issued Saturday by Police Commissioner Johan Coetzee make it a crime to call for release of detainees by word, action or in writing. Gatherings in support of detainees also are banned. Penalties for breaking the rules range up to a fine of 20,000 rand ($10,000) or 10 years in prison. Shultz, Soviet discuss arms reductions MOSCOW — U.S. Secretary of State George P. Shultz held three rounds of talks yesterday with Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard A. Shewdnadze, taking up the critical issue of nuclear arms reductions at an unscheduled late-night session. There was no immediate word on the outcome. Meanwhile, presidential Chief of Staff Howard H. Baker Jr. said he would not be surprised to see a decision on a ban on shelling. The end of Shulit's three-day visit The Soviet news agency Tass, however, accused Washington of "a fresh cock-and-bull story" of Soviet espionage at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow. The dispatch said the Pentagon came up with the "spy scare" in an effort to undercut the State Department. The meeting was held after a Passover Seder attended by Shultz at the U.S. Embassy with about 40 prominent Jewish "refuseniks," people who have been refused permission to emigrate. Shultz attended the Seder, which recalls Jewish deliverance from slavery under the Egyptian pharaoh, to demonstrate continued U.S. support for Soviet Jews. He told them U.S. citizens were praying for them. Across the Country Texaco files for protection, gains time NEW YORK — Texasco gained ground in its multibillion-dollar legal war with Pennzoil Co. by filing for protection under federal bankruptcy laws, analysts said yesterday. $11 billion judgment won by Pennzoil against Texaco in a 1985 Houston jury decision. In taking the step, Texaco relieved itself of the necessity of posting a potentially debilitating security bond against the roughly This benefited Texaco because the more time it has, the more chance it has of winning a reversal of the decision, and the more time Pennzoil has to wait to get its money, or some part of the award. Hart announces candidacy for president DENVER — Gary Hart, standing coatless before the snow-capped Rocky Mountains, announced his bid for the 1988 Democratic presidential nomination yesterday and promised a return to American ideals and a "presidency you can be proud of." mer Vice President Walter Mondale. The 50-year-old former Colorado senator opened his second presidential candidacy stressing idealism and the power of ideas,themes that almost wrested the 1984 Democratic nomination from for- This time it is Hart who is ahead in the early polls, with the rest of the still-increasing field of candidates bunched far back. "I intend to be a candidate for the presidency of the United States in 1988, and I do so for one single reason: and that is because I love my country," Hart said as he stood in Red Rocks Park for the morning announcement. Population will reach 5 billion, group savs WASHINGTON — The rate at which people are being born is speeding up again, just as the planet's population ages past the 5 billion milestone, a population study group reported yesterday. The Population Reference Bureau, a private organization, cited an easing of strict birth limits in China as a prime reason for the turnaround in population growth. The bureau's new World Population Data Sheet for 1987 estimates that the July 1 population of the world will be 5.026 billion. The United Nations also has projected that the world will pass the 5 billion milestone early in July, while another private study group, The Population Institute, calculated that the event occurred last year. From Kansan wires. Weather From the KANSAN Weather Service LAWRENCE FORECAST Today, clouds continue to increase the chance for rain while east winds are 5-15 mph. Today's high will reach 56 degrees before dropping to the overnight low of 45 degrees. Tomorrow will remain partly cloudy the high near 60 degrees. WEATHER FACT: Snow has only been recorded on this date once, and then it was only a trace. SIGMA PHI EPSILON DELTA DELTA DELTA Sigma Phi Epsilon and Delta Delta Delta would like to congratulate SUPERTEAMS Videoxpress 1447 W.23rd Videoexpress Open 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Daily Phi Delta Theta and Kappa Kappa Gamma on their victories and to thank the following local services for their support: The Flower Shoppe Dillon's businesses for their support: Gammon's In Season Sports Junkyard's Jym Costello's Greenhouse Owen's Flower Shop Royal Crest Lanes Gibson's European Suntanning DELTA DELTA DELTA --for the price of a medium. Dine-in, carry out or delivery COUPONS Aviation Special LIBERTY HALL 642 MASS. 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