University Daily Kansan, April 27, 1984 Page 3 CAMPUS AND AREA News briefs from staff and wire reports KU musicians to perform Verdi's 'Requiem' Sunday The KU department of music will perform the Verdi "Requiem" at 3:30 p.m. in Sunday at Hoch Auditorium. The production, which is free and open to the public, will feature several chorus groups, as well as the University Symphony Orchestra. James Ralston, professor of music, will conduct the concert. Four solists from the department of music will also be featured. The four are: soprano Stefanie Humes, Remington, Ind., graduate student; mezzo-soprano Inci Bashar Paige, a former professor of music; tenor Norman Paige, professor of voice; and bass Wayne Kompelen, Minneota, Minn., graduate student. IFC accepts three new fraternities Three fraternities joined the KU Interfraternity Council Wednesday after the IFC General Assembly voted to permit them to join. Art Farmer, IFC adviser, said the three groups had joined IFC as colonies. Each colony must obtain a charter from its national fraternity within three years before becoming a full member in the IFC. Phi Kappa Tau will colonize this fall. The fraternity had a chapter at KU from 1948 to 1972. Farmer said that he wasn't sure why the fraternity disbanded, but that a lack of members may have forced the closing. Everybody Day celebrated Saturday The 10th Annual Everybody Day Festival, sponsored by Headquarters Inc., Lawrence and Douglas County's 24-hour personal crisis center, will be from noon to 5 p.m. tomorrow in South Park. enter, will be from room to 8 p.m. campus. The public is invited to attend the festival. The public is invited to attend the festival. Several groups are scheduled to perform throughout the afternoon, and there will be games, contests and displays. Some of the events include a Latin American drum ensemble at noon; a martial arts demonstration at 1:30 p.m.; the Alfred Packer Memorial Band, a bluegrass group, at 2:30 p.m.; and belly dancers at 3:30 p.m. ON THE RECORD APCO SERVICE STATION, 1010 N. 3rd St., reported an armed robbery of $450 in cash, Lawrence police said. Police said that a man entered the building, told the employee he had a gun and demanded that he give him the money in the cash register. The employee said that he never saw a gun and that the robber fled on foot, according to the police. AN ELECTRIC GUITAR worth $250 was stolen Wednesday from a residence in the 1900 block of East 19th Street, Lawrence police said. Police reports showed that the burglar climbed through a rear window of the house. Police have a description of the burglar, and the case is under investigation, according to police reports. WHERE TO CALL Do you have a news tip or photo idea? If so, call us at 864-4810. If your idea or press release deals with campus or area news, ask for Jeff Taylor, campus editor. For entertainment and On Campus items, check with Christy Fisher, entertainment editor. For sports news, speak with Jeff Cravens, sports editor. For other questions or complaints, ask for Doug Cunningham, editor, or Don Knox, managing editor. The number of the Kansan business office, which handles all advertising, is 864.4358 To the 1984 AGD Pledge Class Congratulations on Initiation We love you! The AGD Actives --the Senate, anticipating the move by Democrats to seek a blanket ban. "That is an absolute ban because we have alternative methods of disposal." NOW OPEN FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH Gag gifts GIFTS UNIQUE In the: Old Market Place Buttons Posters Cards Unique Cards and Gifts Games 745 New Hampshire City, said the policy of the state must be made clear. He objected to the case-by-case basis on which environmental officials must make their determination against land burial. An amendment by Rehorn to adopt an outright ban, giving KDHE power to make exceptions, failed 18-20. "What we did in the committee was not clear enough, was not bold enough and did not conceptualize what we want to do." Rehman said. "He made policy and at the same time, let the secretary deal with contingencies." Open 841-7272 2nd location in Topeka The Senate passed the measure on a united 39-0 tally, but only after Senate Democrats and a handful of Republicans were narrowly defeated in their attempt to pass a bill that had ban on land burial, which Gov. John Carlin had proposed. Mon.-Sat. 10-9 p.m. Sun. 12-5 p.m. "The secretary now may ban land burial, but the secretary three years from now may do what ever they want," he said. Bill limits hazardous waste burial The bill would allow the secretary of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment to forbid the underground burial of hazardous waste on a case-by-case basis if it was deter-mented or alternatives to burial were available. The House had already passed a bill that was a compromise with Carlin's proposal. It would have banned burial except in cases in which a person seeking an exemption could prove that the underground burial would pose no hazards to human life or the environment. TOPEKA — The underground burial of hazardous waste in Kansas was可能 be prohibited in cases where it was determined that other disposal methods were available, under a bill recently passed by the Senate yesterday. Angell said that the bill made state policy clear and that the decisions about land burial needed to be made before officials on a case by-case basis. Rv Staff and Wire Reports 'We're trying to set state policy and at the same time, let the secretary deal with contingencies.' The Senate version of the bill would limit the land burial only for those wastes that cannot be disposed of in any other way. The Senate-approved bill could either be accepted by the House or sent to a conference committee, where differences between the House and Senate versions would be hammered out. After it adopted the land burial bill, the Senate voted 39-0 in favor of a measure that would set up a state superfund to clean up potential hazardous-waste sites across the state. That measure also had been moved to the House, which now consider minor changes made by the Senate. State Sen. Charlie Angell, R-Plains, said nearly all hazardous waste could be disposed of or treated effectively through methods other than land burial, making burial unnecessary in practically all cases. "That is an absolute ban," he told State Sen. Tom Rehorn The Senate removed a part of the bill that would have permitted the secretary of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment to consider economic factors in deciding whether to prohibit land burial in any given case. The secretary now must allow land burial if it is the most economically Carlin had proposed a ban on the underground burial of hazardous wastes to protect against the kinds of problems that occurred at the hazardous waste site near Furley in Sedgwick County. The dump was shut down by Carlin after ground water contamination was discovered in 1980. The removal of the economic factor gives environmental officials even greater flexibility to prohibit land burial on a case-by-case basis. Angel But that was not good enough for Senate Democrats and others who support Carlin's proposal for an open-the-board prohibition on land burial. State Sen. Tom Rehorn, D Kansas You're Invited to a party! 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SATURDAY APRIL 28,1984 Tickets: 60.00 General Admission $5.00 With Any Student ID All Tickets at the Door Dowers Open at 8 AM Show at 11:30AM THE OPERA HOUSE 642 MASSACHUSETTS LAWRENCE, KS For more Information call (913) 843-6366 837 Massachusetts 843-1800 Open 9 to 5:30 Mon.-Sat. Thurs. til 8:30