University Daily Kansan, July 6, 1984 NATION AND WORLD Page 2 News briefs from United Press International Philippine investigators seek Aquino exhumation MANILA, Philippines — Investigators yesterday sought permission to exhume Benigno Aquino's remains to verify evidence the opposition leader may have been shot twice, but his family said it would reject the move. Testimony by the former deputy director for technical services of the National Bureau of Investigation, Pedro Solis, raised the possibility that two guns were used in the shooting. Solis, who retired June 30, said he approved the official autopsy report on the former senator after it was conducted. Solis told the commission that metal fragments found in Aquino's jaw did not match the .357 Magnum bullet that communist assassin Roland Galman allegedly used to kill Aquino. "We were not concerned with two bullets," Solis told the board, which is winding up its seven-month probe into the murder. Two physicians, Constantino Nunez and Juanito Billote, said last week Aquo may have been shot twice. Billote, who assisted in the autopsy, said the examination was incomplete due to the "charged atmosphere" surrounding the procedure. Former EPA chief has a 'new dav' WASHINGTON — Former EPA chief Anne Burford declared yesterday that her return to the Reagan administration represented "a new day," and said the environmentalists who keep criticizing her lacked "proportion or perspective." She has not yet been sworn in to chair the National Advisory Committee on Oceans and the Atmosphere, but the post does not require Senate confirmation. In several interviews, Burford has defended her stormy tenure as administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency. She said that "by and large," she would handle the EPA the same way if she had it to do over again, and that the "cause of the controversy has been fully investigated." She went on to insist "there has been no substance found" in allegations that engulfed the EPA in a political firestorm during early 1983, forcing her resignation and the firings or resignations of 20 other top agency officials. Alfonsin fires Argentine generals BUENOS AIRES. Argentina — President Raul Alfonsin purged the top army command yesterday, forcing the army chief of staff, a powerful corus commander and two other generals into retirement. Political officials said Alfonsin's surprise move established his authority over the military, which in recent weeks has been reported to be unhappy about budget cuts and investigations into human abuses by the military government in the 1970s. Some reports said the military was planning a coup. One source said that Gen. Pedro Pablo Mansilla, the fired army commander, had opposed the broadcast of a television documentary on the disappearance of thousands of people in torture camps during the military's so-called "dirty war" against leftist guerrillas from 1976 to 1979. 1 in 5 autos unsafe,says group WASHINGTON — The Center for Auto Safety, a consumer group, charged yesterday that at least one of every five cars on the highway has a defect that the Transportation Department is aware of, but refuses to recall. The center, founded by consumer activist Ralph Nader, released a study of the department's auto safety defect investigation and recall program. The report contends that the department is not enforcing the recall law. The study said that recalls are at a 13-year low under Transportation Secretary Elizabeth Dole, and that she often fails to order a recall if the automobile producer ignores the department's recall requests. Clarence Ditlow, a spokesman for the center, said the 1-in-5 estimate was based on the number of cars that have at least one of the eight major defects cited in the study. King asked JFK to fight for blacks BOSTON — Civil rights leaders, including Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., urged President John F. Kennedy to take firm action and lead a moral crusade on the behalf of blacks, tapes of recorded White House conversations revealed yesterday. King made the comments when he and other civil rights leaders visited Kennedy at the Oval Office in the White House, where the president was present. In a conversation taped nearly a month earlier, A. Philip Randolph, then chief of the railroad porters union, called for Kennedy to lead a civil rights crusade. The tapes, the third and final batch of conversations to be made public, cover a broad range of civil rights issues and events in the 1960s, library officials said. The tapes last nearly $9 \frac{1}{2}$ hours. Painting breaks art auction record LONDON — A revolutionary impressionist painting by 19th century English artist J.M.W. Turner sold for a world-record auction price of nearly $10 million yesterday — $6 million more than its valuation. Turner's "Seascape: Folkestone," from the collection of the late historian Lord Kenneth Clark, was auctioned at Sotheby's to Leggett Brothers, British art dealers, for about $9.95 million. The price set a new world record for the sale of a painting at auction, breaking the previous mark of $6.4 million set in 1980 at Sothebys's in New York for another Turner painting, "Juliet and Her Nurse." "Seascape: Folkestone," is described as a revolutionary work in the impressionist style, because it was painted decades before Impressionism flourished as an art genre in the late 19th century. Hospital turns down transsexuals Netta Barling, spokesman for the test-tube baby team at the Queen Victoria Medical Center in Melbourne, said several times that the baby is very healthy. MELBOURNE, Australia — An Australian medical center has turned down a request from several transsexuals who asked to join a test-tube baby program, a hospital spokesman said yesterday. A Melbourne newspaper said at least six transsexuals — all men who had changed their sex to female through surgery and hormone injections — had asked to take part in the hospital's test-tube fertilization program. Today will be partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of morning thunderstorms. Highs will range in the low to mid 80s. Lows will be in the mid 60s. Winds will blow from the northeast at 5 to 15 mph. Skies tonight will be clear. Tomorrow should be mostly sunny with highs in the low 90s. The lows will range in the 60s and 70s. There is little or no chance of rain. Nationally, temperatures will continue to hit the 100-degree mark and above in the southwest region while showers are expected to develop over the Ohio Valley to the New England region. WEATHER High court narrows exclusionary rule By United Press International WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court, in a triumph for police and the Reagan administration, yesterday created the first major exception in 70 years to a rule that forbids the courtroom use of illegally seized evidence. "I love it." President Reagan promptly proclaimed. But dissenting justicees complained bitterly that the 6-3 landmark ruling completes the Burger court's "determined strangulation" of the so-called exclusionary rule. And a noted defense attorney called it "an end to the rule that was created to help safeguard crime suspects' rights." THE DECISION, handed down as the court wound up its 1983-84 session, was a victory for law enforcement officers, who have long argued that the rule sets criminals free because of legal technicalities. more than a year, the high court created a "good-faith" exception to the exclusionary rule. It allows use at trials of illegally seized evidence if the improper seizure was the result of a judge's mistake. After struggling with the issue for Justice William Brennan, in a blistering dissent, said the decision finishes the "determined strangulation" led by conservative Chief Justice Warren Burger - of the protecting Fourth Amendment rights. The inroad into the exclusionary rule was cause for celebration in the White House and the Justice Department. SUPPORTERS OF the exclusionary rule claim it deters police misconduct by setting strict guidelines to follow in collective evictions. "Once lost, such rights are difficult to recover." he warned They said yesterday's ruling marked yet another step in the court's assault on the positions taken by the court under Burger's liberal Noted defense lawyer Melvin Belli called the action omnip. "The Burger court wants to get rid of all constitutional interpretations by the Warren court. They hate Warren and his interpretations. They have been lying in the brush. They want to go back to the third degree, wipe out appeals and do away with juries," he said. predecessor. Earl Warren. In a related exclusionary rule decision that may have more of an everyday impact on people's lives, the justices vowed 5-4 in a New York case that police may raid a house without a warrant as long as they have a "good faith" belief a judge will issue a warrant later. THEY ALSO ruled, 5-4, that illegal aliens cannot invoke the exclusionary rule to prevent use of illegally obtained statements at civil deportation proceedings. other types of civil administrative proceedings, like hearings on revocation of a liquor license. And, in another case, the court ageed to consider whether use of the exclusionary rule should be barred in In other action, the court: In yet another exclusionary rule case, the justices voted 5-4 to put off until next term a decision on whether public school officials may search a student's personal belongings and use drugs or other illegal substances to bring charges against him. - ruled unanimously in an important handicapped rights case that a Texas school district, and by implication all schools, must provide medical attention needed to allow a disabled child to attend public school - voted 6-3 in another case involving the rights of the handicapped to limit the awarding of lawyers' fees when those filing suits are seeking relief under several statutes. *refused to consider whether a California Boy Scout troop can be forced, under a state anti-discrimination law, to admit a homosexual as a scout leader. Boyds Coinss-Antiques Class Rings Buy Sell Trade 731 Gold Silver-Coinss New Hampshire Antiquess-Watches Lawrence, Kansas 60444 913-842-8773 Classic & Vintage Clothing 11:5 M-Sat. 918% Mass. 841-2451 Summer Hours: 11-5 M.-Sat. 918% Mass. 841-245 The Bierocks are Here Try one for Lunch Open 7 days a week Carol Lee Doughnuts 5 a.m.-6 p.m. - Sportswear - Nightwear - Dresses reduced 30-40-50 and 60% Now— $21.00 Swimwear reduced 20-30-50% Basic 5 Pocket H. I.S. Jeans ★★★★★★★★★ Stop by our showroom and see our complete line of Cash Registers, Computers, and Word Processors DATA MASTER, INC. N.C.R 609 Vermont Lawrence Kansas 66044 Lawrence 913-842-2202 Toneka 913-579-5271 Sales Supply Computers Service Cash Registers southridge comfortable youtment living Southridge Plaza Apts. Enjoy comfortable apartment living at Southridge Plaza. We offer beautiful 1 and 2 bedroom apartments in a variety of floor plans. And a 10 month lease. Pool. Laundry room. We're on the bus line. Water and cable are paid. Close to shopping. Call or drop by today. 1704 West 24th 842-1160 WHITENIGHT'S SUMMER CLEARANCE One time each year we liquidate our inventory of summer clothing. This is an excellent opportunity to freshen your summer wardrobe at very special prices . . . NOW IN PROGRESS SUITS Prime Tropical Weight SOFTS 399.000 Tropical Weight Colour $299 149** Orig. price $149.50 . As Low As 9999 SLACKS Corbin Prime Tropical Orig. price $57. 50 . . . As Low As **51** Orig. price $65 . . . . . SHORT SLEEVE By Sero DRESS SHIRTS 25% OFF SPORT SHORTS By Thomson & Pendleton 20% OFF SPORT COATS Orig. price $165, . . . . As Low As 129°º Orig. price $149, . . . . As Low As 99°º Orig. price $110, . . . . As Low As 74°º SLACKS Dress Washable Orig. price $42.50...Now 3188 Orig. price $42.50 . Now 3 Orig. price $48.50 . Now 3638 SWIMSUITS By Laguna ... 25 % OFF KNITS—ALL COTTON By Cross Creek ... 20 % OFF SPRING JACKETS & ALL COTTON SWEATERS Entire Stock...25 % OFF Stop in . . . help us clear out our seasonal merchandise and get yourself a great deal in the bargain! No Exchanges or Refunds Please* ne men's shop • 839 massachusetts • lawrence, kansas 66044 • 843-5755 1