Visitation policy Alternative plan gets approval Inside, p. 8. KANSAN TOMBSTONE COOLER Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas High. 55. Low. 45. Details on p.2 Vol. 94, No. 141 (USPS 650-640) Libya demands that Britain end embassy siege Friday morning, April 20, 1984 Protesters threaten to seek out revenge on Britons in Libya By United Press International LONDON — Col. Moammar Khadijah demanded yesterday that Britain end a three-day siege of Libya's embassy in London and demonstrators in Tripoli warned that an estimated 8,500 British citizens in Libya were being treated as "prisoners." Khadafy, in an interview broadcast by the British Broadcasting Corp. and NBC News, also made veiled threats against Britons who conditioned He. said that now they were in good condition. But, he said, "Our people are very, very angry and we hope we can control this However, both sides later said they were seeking a peaceful end to the embassy stand-off, which began Tuesday when machine gunfire from the building killed a policewoman and wounded 11 anti-Khadafy protesters. OLIVER MILES, the British ambassador in Tripoli, yesterday met the head of the Libyan Foreign Ministry, Abdulssalam Trakii, JANA, the Libyan news agency, said the two men expressed a "common desire" with this matter through friendly means." In London, a foreign office spokesman said, "The atmosphere was good and both sides emphasized that they were looking for a peaceful solution." In the interview, Khadady blamed Britain for the shooting on Tuesday, which prompted authorities to surround the Libyan Embassy in police sharpshooters and anti-terrorist units. "British police forces and helicopters and armored forces must withdraw immediately and release our people there, nothing else," said Khadafy. The British government had been waiting since Wednesday night for a response to a formal request for permission to enter the UK, but people inside and search for guns and bombs. A FOREIGN OFFICE official talked late Wednesday to the newly appointed chief of the Libyan mission, Mufaft Fuitori, and said Britain "urgently" wanted to know from the Libyan government whether police could enter the building. But the government insisted it could wait out the Libvans. "The police are showing steadiness, patience and resolve," said Leen Britton, the British minister in charge of internal security. There had been rumors that Britain was readying aircraft to fly the Libyan out, but when asked to confirm the rumors, the minister said. "That's news to me." Under international law, embassies are considered sovereign territory, so British police cannot enter the Libyan Embassy without permission from Libya. By midday yesterday, the Libyan government had not responded to Britain's request in exchange for $200 million. The foreign office said Libya was still holding three Britons detained earlier this week, including a British Caledonian Airways manager. IN **TRIPOLI** Libya's capitol, angry Libyans demonstrated outside the British Embassy for nearly two hours yesterday, protesting the siege of the Libyan mission in London and threatening revenge "beyond" against an estimated 6.300 Britons in Libya Several hundred people chanted slogans and shook their fists in the midday-demonstration, which diplomats believed was government-sponsored. Panel appro By CINDY HOLM Staff Reporter The Student Senate University Affairs Committee last night approved a petition asking the Kansas Union Memorial Board to include a restaurant in its planned renovation of the Union The Senate will vote on the petition at its meeting Wednesday. Staff Reporter the committee voted B-7 to accept the petition after Russ Pitacek, Nunemaker senator, presented architectural drawings from Burger King to the president of the company, for a franchise on the third floor of the Union. PTAACK, WHO HAS been negotiating with Burger King and McDonald's since October, said that a fast-food restaurant in the Union would be "a huge success" for Tupper's business by bringing in more students. He also said profits from the restaurant possibly could be used to offset the price of A fast-food restaurant franchise would sign a five-year contract with the Union and would pay for equipment, staffing and other expenses. Discontinuance plan fails Regents review By GRETCHEN DAY Staff Reporter EMPORIA — A section of a KU policy that outlines steps for the administration to take when cutting academic programs is unclear and needs clarification, a Board of Regents committee decided yesterday. After reviewing the policy, the Regents Policy and Procedures Committee voted to send it back to the University of Kansas for revision because the policy did not clearly state who had final authority to dismiss faculty when a program was cut. THE KU DISCONTINUANCE policy was developed after the Regents amended its tenure policy in 1882 to include program or unit education as a reason for dismissing tenured faculty. The Regents requested that all of its six universities draft such a policy. Chancellor Gene A. Budig in February approved the KU policy, and he demanded governance had been desimilar since 1982 Regents policy states that the chancellor should have final authority to dismiss a faculty member. But former KU Chancellor Archie Dykes said that one section of the University's document Sabbatical leaves will take faculty from art of Zen to tales of Chaucer By GRETCHEN DAY Staff Reporter Each year, dozens of tenured KU faculty members dust off their suitcases and leave their Kansas classrooms in search of knowledge. In the next academic year, several faculty on sabbatical are likely to be trapping all fish and catching such topics as Australian common stocks in Hong Kong and slavery in Jamaica. Yesterday, the Board of Regents approved a KU recommendation to grant sabbaticals to 48 ONE OF THOSE faculty members, Stephen Addiss, associate professor of art history, will probably be scouring the temples and museums in Japan next spring to study Zen monk painting. Addiss said he would discuss with Japanese monks and other scholars the meaning of Zen monk paintings, poetry and calligraphy between the years of 1600 and 1925. His research will culminate in a book on the art form. Policies and Procedures) decision shall be final and binding, and the case shall be deemed closed. If, however, the chancellor or the faculty member affected disagrees with that decision, Before they pack their bags, however, faculty members must go through an extensive application process to gain ap- See SABBATICALS, p. 5, col. 1 thought it was clear that the chancellor had final authority. "We have a document we all think we can live with," Cobb said. tional companies be permitted to enter the retirement program, which now is limited to TIAA-CHEF, the Teachers Insurance and College Retirement Equities Fund. The subcommittee is to reconsider its proposal because none of the three recommended companies, Aetna Life Insurance and Annuity National, and Unimmutual, is based in Kansas. REGENT JORDAN HAINES said, "I'd feel better if we had a Kansas-based company as an option. If I were a faculty member, I might why a Kansas company wasn't included." Carol Proffer, a consultant working with the Regents committee, said that the committee had already determined that the only Kansas company that was qualified was Security Benefit Life. But the committee had decided that the other three companies provided better options. The subcommittee is to consider adding a Kansas company as an option, substituting one of the companies for a Kansas company or leaving the proposal as it is. Dykes, who is president and chief executive officer of Security Benefit Life, left the meeting during the discussion of the retirement plan. 1984 OLYMPICS: Also, the Regents Academic Affairs and University Daily Kansan, April 19. 1984 Page 15 Former Jayhawks are in the pack Sanya Owolabi Deon Hogan continued from p. 14 Owaliab has been working out for three hours every day at KU with Hogan and Blutchter, who is working toward competing in the 100 and 200 at the trials. SANYA OWOLABI, triple jump: "David's really coming on strong right now," Owolabi said. Owolabi's best jump last year was 52-11, ovolabi of the trials' qualifying standard of 53-14. He jumped a personal best of 57- 14 in the third trial, jumping jumps in jumpers in the United States that year. "The standard is not that difficult to meet and I hope to have qualified by the Kansas Relays," Owolabi said. "I think he has as good a chance as anybody at the time, but it took me the past against the people I'll be competing with. It depends on who's on that day." "You either have to be among the top people in your event or else you have to have connections," he said. "There's a lot of politics involved." Injuries have cut down on his number of meets the last two years, but he said he was completely healthy now and stronger better than when he made his best jumps. With ideal weather conditions it will take a jump of at least $56\frac{1}{2}$ to qualify for the Olympics, Owolabi said. DEON HOGAN. 400: He said he had had trouble attracting sponsors to help meet expenses because he hadn't competed too often the last two years. Hogan's best time last year was 46.05, short of the trials standard of 46.00, but he ran a personal best of 45.38 at the 1980 Kansas Relays, and he was ranked in the U.S. top ten that year and in 1981.