(2) $ \frac {1}{2} x - 1 > 3 - \frac {3}{2} x $ Friday, January 16, 1987 / University Daily Kansan Around the World U.S.-Soviet arms talks resume; leaders meet at private luncheon GENEVA - Superpower nuclear arms talks resumed yesterday with a luncheon between U.S. delegation head Max Kampelman and his new Soviet counterpart, Yuli Voriontsov. The two delegation leaders met privately at Soviet request, instead of heading a meeting of all three top negotiators from each side, which normally marks the beginning of a round. The talks have been bogged down from the start by disagreement, among other things, over U.S. Strategic Defense Initiative research for a space-based defense against nuclear attack. popularly called Star Wars. U. S. spokesman Terry Shroeder said he had no information on when the next session in the seventh round of arms talks would When Kampelman arrived at the Soviet mission, he and Vorontsov greeted each other warmly in front of him. "Well, what is it? I say what they discuss to discuss." At a news conference later, Atlex Oebukhov, deputy head of the Soviet delegation, said the two men planned to discuss substantive and procedural questions and know each other during the lunch. Siberian cold wave kills 214 Europeans LONDON - A Spanish passenger train derailed on an icy mountainside, oyster beds froze along the coast of France and snow squalls paralyzed much of Europe yesterday in a Siberian cold wave that has killed at least 214 people. New weather-related deaths were reported in France, the Netherlands, Belgium, West Germany and Spain. In the Soviet Union, where the cold siege began more than two weeks ago, troops rescued 1,300 people trapped in the Caucasus Mountains in Soviet Georgia. The troops flew them out in helicopters. So far, the Soviets have blamed 77 deaths on the cold. In Spain, a passenger train derailed on icy tracks and the last car plunged off of a cliff, killing two people and injuring 15. Madrid's temperature fell to 23 degrees — the coldest of the winter — and subway stations were opened as shelters for the homeless. Other reports from Spain said at least three elderly men had frozen to death. The European Economic Community announced that it would make $2.75 million available for emergency aid, such as coal and blankets, to victims of the savage weather. In a coastal town in Normandy, 500 tons of oysters froze and were spoiled, said fishing industry sources. They said the financial loss was $806,000 and the ruined shellfish were thrown into the ocean. Waite says hostage talks are going well BEIRUT, Lebanon — Church of England envoy Terry Waite said yesterday that he was in contact with Muslim fundamentalists holding Westerners hostage in Lebanon and that his efforts to free the canvases were going well. Waite met behind closed doors yesterday with Sheik Muitf Hassan Khaled, the highest spiritual leader of Lebanon's Muslimem Waite, who returned to Beirut on Waite, a special assistant to Robert Runcie, the archbishop of Canterbury, said he was in contact during the night with the Muslim extremist captors, but declined to elaborate on the meeting. Monday to seek the release of foreign hostages, said he was encouraged by his meetings with several prominent Lebanese political and religious leaders. One of those meetings Wednesday was with a vice president of the Shiite Higher Council, Sheik Mohammed Mehdi Shamsdine, a moderate Shiite clergyman, who said he told Waite that kidnappings were immoral in Islamic values and that he had helped Waite's mission "in ways he is not aware of." Waite reiterated his earlier advice to foreigners to stay away from Lebanon. Across the Country Secret Service objects to Hinckley furlough WASHINGTON — The Secret Service said yesterday that it would oppose any more furloughs for presidential assailant John Hinkley Jr., who got a 12-hour pass from a mental hospital Dec. 28 to have lunch with his parents in Virginia. Hinckley was confined indefinitely to the hospital's maximum security ward in June 1981 after he was found not guilty of the shooting by reason of insanity. Hinckley, who shot President Reagan, press secretary James Brady and two law enforcement officers on March 30, 1981, was given his first temporary release from St. Elizabeth's Hospital over Secret Service objections. The hospital allowed Hinkley a furlough Dec. 28 while Reagan was on vacation at his California ranch. Hinckley, 31, was out of the hospital from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. and spent several hours at Prison Fellowship House, a Christian ministry for inmates in Reston, Va. He had lunch with his parents and the group's president. Last February, Hinckley filed a motion in federal court asking for a transfer to a less restrictive ward and privileges to go out into the city one day a month. The court rejected his request. From Kansan wires. WEATHER LAWRENCE FORECAST FROM THE KU WEATHER SERVICE Today will be mostly cloudy with a chance of snow by afternoon. High today will be 23 degrees with a low tonight of 11. There is a greater chance of snow by tonight as a storm to the southwest develops and nub Lawrence. WEEKEND OUTLOOK ...Tomorrow and Sunday will continue to be snowy and cold with accumulation possible tomorrow and flurries ending Sunday. 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