Page 9 CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, January 28, 1985 Rabin in U.S. to begin talks with Reagan By United Press International WASHINGTON — Israel Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin arrived yesterday for talks with President Obama and other administration officials. An Israeli Embassy spokesman said Rabin arrived early in the morning at Andrews Air Force Base. Rabin, invited to Washington by Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, will be the first Middle Eastern government official to meet with Reagan since the president initially started his second term in office. Israel has announced a three-phase withdrawal operation and plans to complete the first part — a pullout of Israel's territory from Syrian northeast port of Sidon — by Feb 18. Speaking to reporters before leaving aboard an Israeli air force plane, Rabin said he hoped the Lebanese situation would not be the only topic for discussions with the U.S. administration. Israeli media reports said Rabin's talks in Washington were expected to focus on U.S. Israel strategic cooperation and the funding of the Lavi, the Israeli-developed fighter for the 1990's. RABIN, A FORMER army chief of staff, ambassador to Washington and prime minister, is scheduled to meet with Reagan Wednesday. The reports said the U.S. administration had already decided to raise the military portion of the U.S. aid package to Israel for 1986 to $1.8 billion, up $400 million from the current level. The Pentagon said Rabin would meet with Weinberger and Gen. John Vessey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, today. The figure was $300 million short of the $2.1 billion Israel sought to receive in U.S. military aid over each of the next three years. Joan Stone and 4, 5, 6 Speed-Up perform the modern dance "Friends," a dance inspired by Diane Arbus photographs. Michelle Hyde, seated, Prairie Village graduate student, Brenda Berg, left, Quinter senior, Cindy Stone, right, Dodge City sophomore, and Elisabeth Major, Olympia Fields, lll, senior, choreographed and danced to "Friends" yesterday afternoon at Spencer Art Museum's central court. Sioux, U.S. revive battle over land By United Press International DEADWOOD, S.D. — Lawyers for the federal government and a small band of Sioux Indians resume a two-year court battle today to decide whether the Indians must leave their Indian Under Camp in the Black Hills. The case had been delayed two years until a technical dispute over the payment of witnesses was settled. miles southwest of Rapid City in April 1981. The 1978 Indian Religious Freedom Act and an 1868 treaty that issued laws against the Sioux tribe entitled them to the trade. The Indians, led by the American Indian Movement, claimed 160 acres of U.S. Forest Service land about 12 American Indian Movement leader Russell Means lives at the Pine Ridge reservation during the week and spends weekends with 15-20 others living in teespots at the site, the Yellow Thunder Indian Carm ASSISTANT U.S. Attorney Reedassmann said it might be difficult to remember what occurred in court and how he responded, but not say whether the gap would hurt the government's case. "The court has transcripts of prior testimony and I don't think any kind of arguments are needed to refresh the court's memory," Rusmussen said. The Indians had asked for a special use permit allowing them to establish a religious, cultural and educational community on 800 acres of the forest. Forest Service denied the Request under the Indians to vocate the site. The Forest Service subsequently went to court to have the Indians evicted and Yellow Thunder Camp members countered. Classrooms; The Learning Business." NEW YORK — Corporations train and educate nearly 8 million workers a year, spending upwards of $40 billion and posing a significant challenge to traditional education, a report released yesterday by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching said. By United Press International Corporate training rivals college, report says "Clearly, there is an urgent need to understand how this 'third leg' of the nation's total education enterprise both supports and challenges traditional education." Ernest L. Boyer, president of the foundation and former U.S. Commissioner of Education, said in issuing the report. The $40 billion figure approaches the total annual expenditure of all of the nation's four-year and graduate colleges and universities and the 8 million students enrolled in enrollment in those institutions, said Nell Eurlur, author of "Corporate BOYER SAYS THE corporate education and training presents a great challenge to the nation's schools. Eurich, senior consultant to the Academy of Educational Development and a foundation trustee, said the two-year study documented the vastness of corporate involvement in education. "With more than $130 billion being spent annually on public education, it is unacceptable that corporate America is compelled to engage in remedial education and teach the basic skills," he said. Course offerings by firms range from remedial English to the doctoral degree, from short-term intensive training to high-tech research. Increasingly, they overlap with those in the nation's colleges and schools. "Traditional schools and colleges no longer have a monopoly on education," Boyer says in the foreword to the report. "... EURICH'S STUDY shows that corporate learning has become an absolutely essential part of the educational resources of the nation. Corporate courses are developing an academic legitimacy of their own." Corporate learning enterprises include in-house educational programs, new educational and training institutions, and degree-granting institutions. By United Press International Fish deaths not due to spill, nuclear plant officials say A new one, the National Technological University in Fort Collins, Colo., "may be the space-age model for the future," Boyer says. RUSSELLVILLE, Ark. — An accidental spill at a nuclear power plant dumped about 200 gallons of diesel fuel into Lake Dardanelle but was unrelated to a fish kill, Arkansas Power & Light Co. officials said. No radioactive materials were released in the spill at 7 p.m. Friday, and no one was injured, an IL spokesman Charles Kelly said. A thin sheen of No. 2 diesel fuel covered about 35 to 50 acres of the lake's surface at noon Saturday, but winds on the lake had dissipated the slick by Saturday afternoon, Kelly said. "The fuel is not radioactive and does not come in contact with anything on the nuclear side of the plant." Kelly said Saturday. The accident occurred at Arkansas Nuclear One, located at the edge of Lake Dardanelle near Russellville, when workers were filling a fuel tank with water. In 2017, the nuclear reactor buildings and the plant's discharge channel An automatic shutoff valve, which would have turned off the fuel pump when the tank was full, mal- spilled in 600 gallons spilt into the lake before realized what was happening and shut off the pump, Kelly said. But Kelly said large numbers of shad are killed each winter during cold spells when the fish try to swirl into the warm water in the discharge channel and become stuck in the wire mesh barrier in the channel. Fisherman J.O. Brooks of Little Rock said he found the banks of the lake "just covered with dead fish". Saturday. HALF PRICE FOR STUDENTS 3:30 p.m. Sunday 3 February 1985 Crayton-Prairie Theater/Malpah Hall Public & Private KU-K1 and KU-12 tickets. 15 $ & 46 Senior Citizens and Other Students 10 $ & 18 $ (includes dinner) 9 $ & 17 $ (includes dinner) 11 $ & 18 $ (includes dinner) 16 $ & 18 $ (includes dinner) 16 $ & 18 $ (includes dinner) 16 $ & 18 $ (includes dinner) 16 $ & 18 $ (includes dinner) 16 $ & 18 $ (includes dinner) 16 $ & 18 $ (includes dinner) 16 $ & 18 $ (includes dinner) This concert is part of the 1988 University Activity festival, panel funeral was provided by the KU Student Activity Fee (KUACF) and the University Services Committee. 100 THE FIRST PERSON FOR FIRST STUDENT LOANS Getting a good education has never been more important Or more expensive. So if you're in school or thinking of going to college, the First Person to see is Kathy Chumley. Because as The First's student loan manager, Kathy has helped hundreds of students in getting the money that helped them through college and on to a rewarding future. And she can do the same for you — with federally guaranteed loans of up to $2,500 for undergraduates ($5,000 for graduate and professional students) at 8% interest for first-time borrowers. So call Kathy. Or see her at our West 23rd Street office, conveniently located near the KU campus. And apply for a loan of opportunity from The First. It's banking in the First Person. The First THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE South Bank, 1807 West 23rd (913) 843-0152 MEMBER FDIC