X University Daily Kansan, April 6, 1984 Page 3 CAMPUS AND AREA News briefs from staff and wire reports Six students are appointed to be on Senate office staff Six students were appointed this week to the Student Senate office staff, Carla Vogel, student body president, said yesterday. Although their appointments are subject to Senate approval, the Senate voted last week to allow the new staff members to begin working today. The Senate will consider the appointments at its meeting Wednesday. The new staff members are Lynn Anthony, Salina senior, treasurer; Bob Walker, Kansas City, Mo., junior, Student Executive Committee chairman; and Kiesa Harris, Lawrence senior, executive secretary. Ruth Lichtwardt, Lawrence sophomore; Sandra Binyon, Lawrence sophomore; and Pat McQueen, Lawrence junior will serve as administrative secretaries. Court will reconvene today at 9 a.m., and the jury will hear closing arguments and jury instructions before deliberating on the verdict. Deliberations in slander trial are set Jury deliberations in the slander suit filed by a KU professor of anthropology will begin today after being postponed yesterday because closing arguments had still not been made and the judge had not provided jury instructions. The jury heard nine days of testimony in the $1.5 million suit brought by Michael Crawford, the anthropology professor, against two former KKW executives. The lawsuit stemmed in part from allegations made by the two former research assistants, Liz Murray and Nancy Sempolski, in complaints they filed with the University and with several other agencies. A KU student was treated and released from Lawrence Memorial Hospital after suffering a neck injury in a car accident Wednesday at Sixth and Frontier streets. Lawrence police said. Two injured in Sixth Street crashes A 16-year-old Lawrence youth received a citation and a notice to appear in court for inattentive driving and illegal car registration in connection with the accident, police reports showed. Also, in an accident Wednesday at Sixth and Vermont streets, a Lawrence man received head injuries and was listed in satisfactory condition yesterday at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, the hospital nursing supervisor said. ON THE RECORD TWO PISTOLS, a revolver, a television, a stereo, a microwave oven, a high school class ring and cash, together worth $3,345, were stolen Wednesday from a Wakaura Township man's residence, the Douglas County sheriff's department said. The department has a suspect, and the case is under investigation. A CASSETTE RADIO, radar detector and portable stereo, together worth $1,195, were stolen Wednesday from a locked car in the 2300 block of Iowa Street, Lawrence police said. 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, ask for Jeff Taylor, campus editor. For entertainment and On Campus items, check with Christy entertainment editor. For sports news, speak with Jeff Craven, sports editor. For other questions or complaints, ask for Doug Cunningham, editor, or Don Knox, managing editor. the Kansan business office, which handles all advertising, is 864 4358. Applications Are Now Being Accepted for the following boards and positions. Deadline for Applications Elections Committee Chairperson April 9, 5 p.m. KJHK Board April 6, 5 p.m. Kansas University Athletic Corporation April 9, 5 p.m. University Events Committee April 9, 5 p.m. Recreation Advisory Board April 9, 5 p.m. Student Health Advisory Board April 9, 5 p.m. Student Transportation Board April 9, 5 p.m. Student Legal Services Board April 9, 5 p.m. Applications will be available at the Student Senate Boog and Carla paid for by the student activity fee ns will be available at the Student Senate Office, 105B Kansas Union. If you have any questions, feel free to stop by or give us a call, 864-3710. $2 OFF ANY LARGE PIZZA $1 OFF ANY MEDIUM PIZZA not valid with any other offer/expires April 13 MIA's wife calls for U.S. support By STEPHANIE HEARN Staff Reporter CALL 842-0154 HAVE OUR DELICIOUS PIZZA DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR Staff Reporter Zoning decision lets KUEA build planned addition The crowd sat silently Wednesday as Kay Bostijeva told of the pain she had suffered since her husband was shot down over North Vietnam in September 1972. SPEAKING AS PART OF POW/MIA Vietnam Memorial Awareness Week, Bosiljevac told an audience in the Kansas Union Alderson Auditorium of the frustration of trying to find her husband and other Americans who may still be alive in Southeast Asia. n泌荔骇 spoke from the heart, not a note card, as she emphasized the importance of pressuring the North Vietnamese government into counting for the 2.500 American still missing in action in Southeast Asia. The board also granted parking and setback variances to the Lawrence Her husband, Air Force Maj. Michael Boiljevac, has been listed as missing in action since having been shot down. The Kansas University Endowment Association can now add a 12,000-square-foot addition to its present building because the Lawrence Board of Zoning Appeals granted the group a zoning variance last night. MAKE IT Retired Air Force Lt. Gen. John Flyn, who was a prisoner of war for 5 1/2 years after being shot down over The community group plans to buy a former church building at 1501 New Hampshire St., and convert it to a theater. The Endowment Association's planned addition required a variance because it would make the setback from the building to the property line only 6 feet. The minimum allowed is 25 feet. Bosiljevic said that although the Vietnamese had been more willing to talk during the last few years, she didn't think the United States should carry on neutral relations with Vietnam in the United Nations. Flynn said he appreciated the KU students who supported the Vietnam Memorial and like Bosiljevac, stressed the importance of public awareness of the Americans who were still missing. Bosjievek — who is a member of the board of directors of the National League of Families of American Prisoners and Missing in Southeast Asia — said she was among the families who in the spring of 1973 were told by the U.S. government that their husbands, fathers and brothers would be on the next planes leaving from Southeast Asia to the United States. Bodejvieq said that the government had misled the families because no one had gone to the war. Bosjivejac said that President Reagan met a year ago with the families and apologized for the denial of his letter, but the lack of hope that denial created "A DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE agent once told me," said JBijevic, that if he knew whether or not my biband was alive, he could not tell me. Hanoi in 1967, briefly recounted his experiences last night to an audience of about 300 in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union. "The government says, 'We can't talk about live men because that might get them killed.'" By the Kansan Staff Martin Henry, Endowment Association vice president of property management, said that the surrounding property was University of Kansas property — the Endowment Association's site is not University property — and that the association was working closely with KU to draw the site plan. She said that the United States should not normalize relations with a country that at one time had stocked a large American bodies in a warehouse. bargaining power," Bosijevac said. Bosijevac said that she would be at ease if she knew that her husband was dead. BOSILJEVAC SMD that by the time the United States had verified information about the location of the Vietnamese had moved the bodies. "The Vietnamese hold bodies for bargaining power," Bijolev said. But whether her husband is dead or not, she said. "As long as I know some Americans are being held against them in southeast Asia, I'll work to get them out." 842-0154 BREAKFAST SPECIAL 6 a.m.-11 a.m. Old Fashioned Pancakes $ .99 French Toast $ .99 Country Eggs $1.29 Cakes & Eggs $1.19 Cakes & Berries $1.19 French Toast & Berries $1.19 Omelets $1.69 Side Orders of Bacon, Sausage Links, Sausage Patties and Canadian Bacon for .99 Offer expires April 30, 1984 Lawrence Country Kitchen only. Yes, we're up to our delighted noses in lovely roses. And that means good news for YOU—or that special person you choose to delight with a dozen. Carry 'em away at a very special price. $17⁰⁰ per lovely dozen Special only for "Roses Day" SOUTHERN HILLS Floral&Gift 1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center 2228 Iowa 749-2912 TACO BELL TACOS 29¢ ea. no limit Saturday, April 7th Only 1408 West 23rd 10:00 A.M. - 2:00 A.M.