University Daily Kansan, April 3, 1981 Page 9 led the issu the reference it was anker, he had honition to am its ye." nctionence for the republic Robert's glad stated to be used by that if free up book and 3. not a at all "But ere in- re the ouping or next at the 1 do id. Senate decides to fund SCoRMEBE By ROB STROUD Staff Reporter SCOMREBE, a minority student, engineering group, achieved a victory on the last night of Student Senate budget hearings, when Senate reversed a decision to cut their funding and voted a $1,750.07 allocation. Staff Reporter SCoRMEBE's original request was for $7,312, which a Senate committee reduced to $550. The Senate cut the group's funding entirely on Tuesday after learning that the organization had assets totaling about $180,000. SCoRMEBE officers were not at Tuesday's meeting. Last night senators first defeated by +14 vote a motion to reconsider SCCOE. reheard the motion and voted to allow the group a chance to present its request. "We owe it to any student group to present its view if it has a legitimate concern," David Adkins, Senate Executive Committee chairman, told the Senate before it voted to let ScoRMEBE make its presentation Leroy Armstrong, SCORMEB president, told the Senate last night that the entire University profited from his organization. Armstrong said corporations that regularly donated money to his group often decided to make donations to other parts of KU as well. The Senate also decided last night to withhold allocations for the Iranian Student Association until a Finance and Auditing Committee investigation into Nazi hunter to speak Sunday Klarsfeld, a German-born Christian, will speak on "One Woman's Moral Against Nazism" at 8 p.m. in 31 W. Church Hall. The lecture is open to the public. Internationally known Nazi hunter Beate Klarfsfeld, who has worked to uncover Nazi war criminals for the past decade, visited Kansas. Sunday at the University of Kansas. A spokesman for Hillel, the Jewish student organization sponsoring the lecture, said that the resurgence of interest in Judaism in a field w work especially relevant today. "Her work reminds people that the Holocaust really did happen," Ellen Kort, director of Hillel, said. "When Nazism first began in Germany, no one took it seriously. Today, neo-Nazi groups are on the rise again, and it's important that we take them seriously." Neo-Nazi groups have produced people like John Hinkle, the man accused of attempting to assassinate President Reagan, Kort said. Hinkle was briefly a member of a neo-Nazi organization. Another vote produced a 15-15 tie, which Bren Abbott, body vice president, broke by deciding not to fund the investigation until the investigation was completed. alleged misuse of Senate funds was complete. The Senate also voted the following allocations: - Douglas County Rape Victim Support Service, $1,134.40. - MECHA, $250. * Men's Coalition, $225.70. - MECHA, $525. - Men's Condition. $225.00. * Non-Traditional Student Organization. $725. - River City Women's Health Collective. $1,130. - KU Committee on South Africa, 180 - Arab Student Organization, $250. - KU Folk Dance Club, $40 - Hollanoic Society, $232 - KU International Club, $2,719.65. - Chinese Student Association, $542. - Latin American Club, $180. - Latin American Club, $180 * KU India Club, $400 - KU Polish Students Association, $150. - Tau Sigma Dance Ensemble, $891.90. - Thai Student Association, $340. - Nigerian Students Association, $1.85. - University Dance Comapny, $761.44. - Brazil-Portugal Club, $78 - African Student Association, $300. - Templin Hall Black Caucus, $2,00 to help fund a proposed speech at KU by author Alex Haley Two senators get reinstated Two student senators were reinsted Monday by the Student Senate Executive Committee after noticeings they received last week. five senators received suspension notices, but only two, Kevin V. Boltb, engineering senator, and Rick Giles, engineering senator, made appeals to StudEx. Jon L. Frobish, liberal arts and sciences senator, failed to appear before the committee and did not contact Octavio Viveros, Jr. Senate executive secretary, about his suspension. Phebe Hsu, graduate student senator, did not appeal her suspension and resigned her Senate seat yesterday. Failure to appeal a suspension automatically results in removal from the Senate. The committee decided to postpone a decision on the suspension of Edwin P. ACOba, graduate student senator. Veros said ACOba has no理由 because of a family death and was not sure when ACOba would return. WE BUY USED FURNITURE EVERYTHING BUT ICE 6th & Vermont 749-1595 Hours Mon - Fri: 10 - 8 Sat: 10 - 5:30 We need responsive city government now more than ever. 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