Hazardous waste Bill would regulate shipment Inside, p.3 KANSAN WARMER CINDERELLA Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas High, 45. Low, 20. Details on p. 2. Wednesday morning, February 29, 1984 Vol. 94, No.110 (USPS 650-640) Hart is victorious in N.H. primary By United Press International CONCORD, N.H. — Gary Hart, promising to lead "the crusade for this country's future," stunned Democratic front-runner Walter Mondale yesterday with a dramatic upset victory in the New Hampshire primary. The surprise victory shifts the fragile momentum of presidential politics to the Colorado senator's camp, and throws a serious monkeywrench into what has been an unimpeded drive by Mondale for the Democratic presidential nomination. The results buried most of the crowded field, leaving three realistic contenders — Mondale, Hart and Sen. John Glenn of Ohio, who finished third. "This is a massive victory," an elated Hart was obliged to obviously the product of an awful lea of things. "I'm not prepared at this moment to claim the position of front-runner, but I know one thing — we've buried the label 'dark horse.'" Hart said. "What we have is something no other campaign or candidate has, that is the cause and the crusade for this country's future." Mondale admitted defeat to a mob of supporters, telling them that "I won one, and lost one," referring to his victory last week in the Iowa caucuses. He predicted that in the primaries coming up in the next three weeks would defeat Hart... With 95 percent of the total vote report Hart had 37,207 votes or 41 percent; Mon 26,079 or 28 percent; Glenn, 11,235 or 12 per former Sen. George McGovern, 5,328 percent; civil rights activist Jesse Jackson, or 6 percent; Sen Ernst Henshaw, Alan Craisman, 2,043 or 2 per and former Heubin Askason of Florida, 9.1 percent. 1 percent If those percentages hold up, Hart will win delegates to the Democratic National Coin- tion and Mondale eight. A group of conservatives had organize See PRIMARY, p. 5, col. 3 Ashner, Cr By CINDY HOLM Staff Reporter As this semester's candidates wind up the campaigns and begin taking down posters, I present student body president and vice president will begin cleaning out their offices. Cancellor Gene A. Budig added two months to Ashner's and Cramer's terms when he ask them in January to resume their positions until new student body presidential election could be Lisa Ashner, president, and Jim Cramer, vice president, tomorrow will complete the longer presidential term in the Student Senate history. Asher said yesterday that she had accepted the chancellor's request but that her academic College sex bias allowed by court despite funding By United Press International WASHINGTON The Supreme Court refused in a unanimous ruling yesterday to ban sex discrimination from all programs that a college offers merely because its students receive federal financial aid. students receive relevant decision, a setback for women's rights advocates, bars sex discrimination in financial aid programs but holds that federal financial aid to students does not subject all school programs — such as sports, faculty matters and academic activities — to federal anti-discrimination guidelines. lawmakers immediately announced plans to introduce legislation broadening the application of federal laws barring sex discrimination. uniformity. Wills's groups argued that a section of the Education Amendments of 1972, which prohibited sex discrimination "in any education program or any activity receiving federal financial assistance," should apply to institutions whose students receive federal aid. They said federal aid to students constituted indirect aid to the college. The court rejected that argument, finding that the protections against discrimination could be applied to student aid programs at schools whose students got federal financial help, but that the sex discrimination rules could not be imposed on other programs at such institutions. Only Justices Thurgood Marshall and William Brennan sided with women's groups' arguments for a wider application of the discrimination ban. But they went along with the final court decision even though they explained their views separately. The court's decision came in the case of Grove City College, a Presbyterian-affiliated school outside Pittsburgh that refused to sign an anti-discrimination pledge requested by federal education officials. The school said signing the agreement would jeopardize its independence. But John Nitcher, attorney for the Crescent-Engel Neighborhood Association, said last night that the association was considering filing an appeal with the Douglas County District Court to see whether the commission's approval of the expansion violated city codes. If the com- Church gets OK to start building plan By SHARON BODIN Staff Reporter Commissioners vote 4-1; neighborhood may appeal decision In a 4-1 vote last night, the Lawrence City Commission gave the go-ahead for St. Lawrence Catholic Center officials to begin work on designs for a proposed church and expansion of a student center at Crescent and Engel roads. OUTLOOK Tuesday, February 28, 1984 PAGE 9 he sd. lly he so stf ce a ne ed or in nd ht he ve stf is ed oo n. de le e n th re et mt me is il ld 1. of e e > e