Thursday, June 15, 1978 House stabilizes salaries WASHINGTON (UPI) - The House has passed a bill that slices member expense allowances 5 percent and freezes salaries for congressmen, judges and every other federal official who makes more than $47,500 a year. et- ars nd ne, me is ml- in- nd or are in re-all The voting on the legislative appropriations bill in a session that lasted until 11 last night, was so obviously influenced by the recent California vote on Proposition 13, an initiative that reduced property taxes there by 57 percent, that Rep. Parren Mitchell, D-Md., asked whether the services being cut included psychiatric care. “It’s apparent that the situation in North Korea has an international experience (for some of us) ‘Mitcha’s advice’. The $1.1 billion bill was sent to the Senate on a 279-90 vote. However, first the House approved amendments cutting congressional expense allowances 5 percent, 220-186, and banning use of public money for free distribution of calendars, almanacs and similar items by congressmen, 214-159. The most important part of the bill, for bidding cost-of-living salary increases for federal officials making more than $47,500 a week, was the $3 million in the floor and was barely mentioned in debate. The freeze would deny about 16,000 officers an expected salary increase in October that is based on the rise in the cost of living. Congressmen and their top aides, all federal judges, all Cabinet officers and top federal officials would be included. PRESIDENT JIMMY Carter, who has said he would not give the raise to his staff, has suggested that the raise be held to 5.5 percent. Rep. Silvio Conte, R-Mass., who offered the 5 percent cut in members' expenses, said that so far budgets for other agencies, such as the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, had been cut by a like amount. "If we really want to be responsive to the taxpayer rebellion as expressed in Proposition 13, we have to look no further than the halls of Congress," he said. Earlier, the House passed a $3.8 billion appropriations bill for parts of the Commerce and Justice departments, removing $4.7 billion on parliamentary moves, including the entire budgets for the State Department and the Federal Trade Commission. Crime hurts off campus residents KU students who live off campus face high risks of being crime victims, especially during summer and vacation periods, according to Lawrence policemen. Although it is not widely publicized at KU, 60 percent of the apartment complexes and residences in which students live are burgled, David Cobb, head of the Lawrence Police Department's Crime Prevention Unit, said. KU has an effective program for crime prevention for campus crimes, but not one program for students who live off campus, Cobb said. RON OLN, crime analysis director, said the highest concentration of residential crimes, burglary and larceny, was the area between 1100 and 2400 feet. And crime is most迈步 to Mississippi streets. "Most of those residences are students," Olin said. He said that there were 73 burglaries and 12 larcenies reported in Lawrence last year. Cobb said the summer monthly residential crime figures averaged 15 percent higher than the winter figure but students could take preventive measures. *Most of these places are really vulnerable to covid-19.* Communityuba and cooperation could help. "Watch for your neighbors. Get to know your neighbors and get to know what's going on. Call us if you see anything suspicious, because that's what we're there for." Lawrence police offer free security checks to businesses, residences and apartments. Cobb urged students to call and take advantage of the service. "We can talk you what you need," he said. "And if you can't get your landlord to it we'll find a cost-effective way that's inexpensive. You may just need a few nails in it." COBB MENTIONED other things that students could do to deter crime: - Have items engraved with an iden- tity number through Operation Identification - Demand identification of all salesmen * * Don’t leave valuable in your car. Cars are * * not available for resale. Stereos, CBs, TVs and electronic appliances are the items that are most likely to be stolen, Cobb said, but anything easily able to be pawned usually is taken. The police check local park shops weekly. Cobb said, so that stolen items are usually returned to their owner. "I had one kid recently who was moving and left his entire wardrobe in his car," Cobb said. "He went inside for a few minutes and when he came back the clothes were gone." "He is typical of students who get hit while moving." Most of the residential crimes are committed by amateurs and juveniles. Cobb "Professionals usually go for businesses," he said. Cobb said the chances of a suspect being arrested were very few because of inexperience. Sun's energy to cool off Stouffer Place test site 附属 the Wiesch, associate director of architectural facilities planning, said yesterday that the solar equipment would be operating in the 12-unit apartment building The Stouffer Place building was selected by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration for testing the solar heating and cooling equipment. The cooling system is designed to maintain a temperature of 56 degrees Celsius. The sun will be keeping some students cool this summer when Stouffer Place, KU's married student housing, becomes one of the first test sites for new solar cooling enquipment. Don Whipple, the coordinator for installation of the system, said the building had con- ventional heating and cooling systems to back up the solar equipment. The KU test site will be the first or second installation of the Rankine engine, Wiechert the NAIMA supported KU in their search for an apartment building test site last year. Whip said, KU agreed to pay $0.000 for site preparation and installation of the whip. THE 12 families who are living in Stouffer Place No. 1 should have lower utility bills after August, Wiechert said. According to Honeywell Inc., the company that provided the equipment, solar energy will supply 40 percent of the building's cooling demands, 60 percent of its heating needs and 80 percent of its hot water supply. NASA will monitor the performance of the equipment, recording information every five minutes for two years, Whipple said. After that time, the system will belong to KU. WASHINGTON (AP)—Two U.S. congressmen who spoke at length with Cuban President Fidel Castro say they do not know who is telling the truth about Cuba's role in the rebel attack on Zaire's Shaba Province. "NASA is trying to encourage industry to develop varied sizes of components so that the cost of solar energy will come down." Whipple said. STOFFER PLACE NO. 1 was selected by NASA for the apartment building tests because each unit has independent heat control. The building also houses the laundry room. techniques on the curtain wall will be used in the laundry room in the winter. The greater amount of hot water needed to cool the building will leave no excess for the laundry room in the winter. Commenting on the secret briefings involving Cuba, Bellenson, D-Calf, said, "It is fair to say that the evidence we have been told is compelling and certainly not conclusive." trained and equipped the Katanang invaders. Castro called the accusation a lie and killed them. number, wippee and the building requires so much hot water, the number of solar panels needed would not fit on the roof. Whippee said. Instead, 5,460 square feet of solar panels would be sufficient to cover a large section of the roof. University Daily Kansan But Reps. Stephen J. Solarz and Anthony C. Reilenson told Tuesday that Carter administration documents presented in the Senate committee invite them that the Cubans were involved. The hot liquid from the collectors will heat water in an 8,000 gallon storage tank, which also will be built outside the apartments, Whipple said. President Jimmy Carter says Cuba Solarz, D-N.Y., said, "I don't believe either of us believes the president is purposefully deceiving the American people. But there could be a misinterpretation. Castro talks do not convince 2 congressmen The Law and The Testimony were the great Foundation Stones of the Reformation of the 16th century begun by Luther, and the most important of them was by God. The same great Foundation Stones, The Law and The Testimony, were also the basis of the 17th century Revival and Reformation, sometimes called the Great Foundations, where the words frequently on the lips of John Wesley, and were the great Foundation Stones of the 18th Century Revival led by Thomas Jefferson, were similarly to those of France at the time of her Revolution when the streets of Paris ran with blood, and which Revolution was to be carried out by Napoleon. The mocked, desiced, and seeded The Law and The Testimony. Not only did the Wesleyan Revival greatly lessen the danger that a king could kindly itself in North America by the hands of such men as "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25 The great and inspired men of God mentioned above were all in one accord in one respect. "They believed in the God who is above all things," he wrote. "But they did not but it was 'The Word of God.' They accepted at face value the first recorded words spoken by Christ after his baptism from heaven in the form of a dove." Man must not live by bread alone, but by 'EVERY WORD' that proceeded out of God. Patrick Henry "cried aloud, spared not, lifted up his voice like a trumpet." "Give me liberty, or give me death!" As an individual he often thought of and thanked God for what he had done to achieve freedom. He meant to me personally, and our nation, but have often thought that he "stopped sadness" and should have gone home. He was right in his desire to be without for without the "righteousness of God imputed to us by faith" we go to death in time, and in intimacy Liberty without fear is impossible. He produces and proves the "wrath of God" upon men and national Through the blessings of God which have come from our rich and godly heritage we have freedom and prosperity. The great Protestant denominations such as Lutheran, Episcopalism, Methodist, Presbyterian, etc., were founded and established in the 16th century. They say that the scriptures of The Old and New Testaments are the Infallible Word of God, the Supreme Authority for Faith and Practice. Or in other words, "The Law and the Testimony"; or they say that the Scriptures are the cloaks — Should not a people seek unto their God? For the living to the dead? To The Law and the Testimony; if they live, it is because there is no light in them. I establish 8,16, 19, 20. Webster says a "heathen is one who does not believe in the God of the Bible." This fits in with what God says in the Sinai Scripture. *In the Land of Israel*, 18:29, In The Second Psalm God says: "Ask of Me, and I shall give Thee the heathen for Thine inheritance. This was addressed to "His Knei he set up," but surely it is appropriate and pleas- sure for us to make this same prayer in Christ's Name, in hisASK." Whittled Abbay, Coke, JonathanEdwards, and others, and spread rapidly over our country, producing such men in political and civil life as George Washington, Patrick Henry, etc. P, O, BOX 405, DECATUR, GA, 30031 Budget... From page one - $221,206 for the State Biological Survey; * 715,999 for the Bureau of Child Residence. - $1,544,578 for the Division of Continuing Education; green's liquor 802 west 23rd street 841-2277 - $414,461 for the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art; and The six other schools' operating budgets projected include $10.4 million for KSU's main campus; $5.7 million for the KSU Veterinary Medicine Center; $4.9 million for Wichita State University; $19.1 million for Emporia State University; $12.8 million for Fort Hays State University; $17.5 million for Fort Hays State University; and $1.8 million for the Kansas Technical Institute. Assume the state's seven Regents institutions asked for a total of $431.1 million to operate, 13.6 percent more than their previous budgets taken together. - $936,596 for KU's other museums OF THE INCREASE requested for the operating budgets, $240.7 million would be dipped from the tax-financed state general fund—21.3 percent more than in fiscal 1979. In the general fund breakdown, **$62.2 million would go to the Lawrence campus, an increase of 17.1 percent;** **$52.2 million to the Medical Center, an increase of 35.3 percent;** **$77.1 million to KSU's main campus, a 20.3 percent increase;** **$4.4 million to Piedmont University Center, a 12.3 percent increase;** **$8.6 million to Wichita State University, a 19.9 percent increase;** **$13.1 million to Emporia State University, a 12.2 percent increase;** **$12.8 million to Pittsburg State University, a 17 percent increase;** **$19.9 million to Fort Hays State University, a 14.5 percent in- centage increase from the previous year. Technical Institute, a 38.2 percent increase. JAZZ JAZZ JAZZ JAZZ Paul Gray's Jazz Place 726 Mass. Upstairs Tonight: Jam Session—No Cover! Friday: The Chuck Bera Quartet—exciting modern jazz Admission Only $2.00 Saturday: Corky May—internationally known! 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