University Daily Kansan, October 12, 1983 Page 5 Lobby continued from d.1 Reaching a consensus among classified personnel from other Regents schools about what demands lobbists should make would not be a problem, Collins said. One of the biggest demands that the lobbying group would make, Collins said, is a percentage pay raise equal to the percentage pay raises requested for unclassified faculty. THE REGENTS HAVE recommended a 7 percent pay increase for unclassified faculty and a 10 percent pay increase for class officers. Collins said cost-of-living pay increases, done on a percentage basis, should be the same for both households. "We will never buy less than a same percentage increase," he said. "It's not fair and it pits one group of employees against another," he said. DAVE LEWIN, director of personnel services, said that the status of merit-pay increases for fiscal year 1985 was unknown. A gubernatorial committee in advocating merit pay and its alternatives, he said. Merit-pay increases would also be an important lobbying issue, he said. Gov. John Carlin did not recommend merit pay increases for fiscal year 2014, and there were increases were frozen because of lack of funds. Sweringen said KU's Classified Senate and representatives from other Regents schools had discussed several alternatives to merit-pay increases last weekend. In lieu of merit-pay increases, he said, "cafeteria-style" benefits might be granted. Tourists in the area include extra vacation time, sick leave when family members were ill, or free parking, he said. Mike Jacobs says he can hear the screams of his mother and sisters every time he guides visitors into the boxcar. The car was one of the thousands the Nazis used during World War II to transport Jews to their deaths in concentration camps. Weather continued from p.1 ties operations, said that classrooms probably won't be heated until after Nov. 1. "It totally depends on the weather," he said. "It will have to be cold for at least a couple of days and look like it's going to stay cold for awhile before we turn it on." ALTHOUGH SNOW in Lawrence still seems far away, it is very much a reality in other parts of the country, and is causing problems as well. The same cold front that turned on the rains in the midwest accounted for up to four inches of snow that coated Colorado's northern and central mountains. Richard Kruse of Odessa, Texas, has been missing in the Colorado mountains since he took off Saturday on a flight from Buffalo, Wyo. Only one search plane was able to carry on the hunt yesterday because of a snowstorm over southern Wyoming. Searchers fear that the cold and snow are reducing Kruse's chances for survival. Snow was also a problem in Fort Carson, Colo. It grounded a helicopter that was to take part in a search for William Stringfellow, 48, an official of the Colorado Highway Department who failed to return from a climbing trip Monday. Hiss loses battle to clear his name By United Press International WASHINGTON — Alger Hiss, convicted of perjury and accused of being a Communist spy during the post-World War II "riad scare," lost his job in 1985 after he was arrested in his 33-year leaked campaign to clear his name. Former Rep. Richard Kelly, convicted in 1981 of bribery for accepting $25,000 from FBI agents posing as Arabs interested in buying influence, was sentenced to his highest court to review his Abscam case. The justices, without explanation or dissents, refused to review either case. They also rejected an appeal by survivors of the 1978 Peoples Temple mass murder-suicide in Jonestown, N.C., on Jan. 23. The organization million on grounds that it withheld crucial information about the cult headed by Jim Jones. HISS, 78, HAD asked the high court to allow him to re-examine key evidence used against Richard Nixon to national prominence as an avid anti-Communist. Hiss served a jail term in the 1950s for his perjury conviction in connection with spy charges levied against him. His case helped propel a young congressman from California named His lawyer said that he was denied a fair trial because the government withheld evidence about the typewriter that Hiss, a former "boy wonder" at the State Department, allegedly used to copy department documents for the Soviets. The justices, issuing a series of orders, also. - Refused to block a new trial in the $1.8 billion dispute over charges that American Telephone & Telegraph illegally tried to shut MCI Communications Corp., out of the long-distance telephone market. A lower court set aside the record antitrust judgment and ordered a new jury to consider what damages the telephone giant owes its rival. - Sidetested a major test of the Newspaper Preservation Act by refusing to review a joint operating agreement between the Seattle Times and the Post-Intelligence. The papers have been operating jointly since last May since a appeals court approved the arrangement. - Agreed to decide whether the Environmental Protection Agency may disclose to the public and business rival the secret test data to determine if the EPA to obtain approval to sell its pesticides. Speakes said the Soviets made no formal request for a recess. However, he said, "threats to disrupt the Geneva talks have consistently been part of Soviet propaganda tactics designed to undercut support for planned U.S. INF deployments in Europe. SO FAR, ONE senior official said, the threat has come in the form of "hints and private indications" from Soviet negotiators in Geneva. Arms continued from p. 1 "The U.S. has made clear that we will stay at the negotiating table in Geneva." The United States, he stressed, "will continue to work for progress" and proceed with distributing Pershing-2 and cruise missiles in the absence of a breakthrough. If the distribution begins, Speakes said, "we will remain at the negotiating table." If an agreement is reached later to limit or eliminate distribution costs, the stand ready to halt distribution of the missiles. A STATE DEPARTMENT official familiar with the pace of both missile negotiations said that the Soviet threat was not a new one and that a nuclear peace demonstrations in Europe next week. "We've been prepared for it," said a senior U.S. official familiar with the latest Soviet move. Speakers said the U.S. and its allies "would not allow the invasion" by Moscow to suspend the negotiations. Joseph Lehm, a spokesman for the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, said negotiators Paul Nitez in the INF talks and retired Gen. Edward Rowney in the START talks were doing "everything possible to see that these opportunities can be combined and to provide opportunities for progress." "A suspension ... would be highly regrettable," he said. REAGAN HAS MADE what his aides describe as significant concessions in both sets of negotiations in an effort to address specific Soviet concerns. Soviet negotiators have called for the inclusion of 162 British and French missiles into the negotiations. Reagan, with the support of European allies, has refused to consider these missiles as part of the NATO deterent forces Reagan has proposed a global limit on warheads atop medium-range missiles and has indicated that the United States would not meet its full distribution of missiles in Europe. But the Soviets rejected any interim proposal that would allow placement of new U.S. missiles in Europe. YULI A. KVITISNSKY, chief Soviet delegate at the Euro-missile talks, reportedly told chief U.S. negotiator Nitze that the new NATO "command of force" formation of U.S. strategic intercontinental capability. According to the officials, Kvitisky told Nokia that two规格 would have to be combined. A ranking Soviet diplomat privately confirmed the Soviet position, saying that the Kremlin did not think that President Reagan was serious about arms control. "Iindeed, we see little hope of getting any agreement as long as Mr. Reagan is in the White House," he said. AN INITIAL 41 western missiles are scheduled to arrive in December — nine Pershing-25 in West Germany and 16 of the sub-sonic cruise rockets in both Britain and Italy. NATO plans deployment of 572 missiles — 108 Pershings and 464 cruise — unless Moscow agrees to elimination of all such weapons in the European theater or a slower distribution of Since the INF talks began on Nov. 30, 1981, the Soviet Union has offered to cut back on its arsenal only if NATO plans to distribute missiles in Europe are canceled and independent British and French nuclear weapons are included in the negotiations. A START, which began June 30, 1982, Moscow has rejected all U.S. proposals, including a one-third cut in strategic nuclear warheads. The Soviets have also rejected President Reagan's call to scrap two older weapons for each new one deployed, which has been termed as a "building-down." Crime continued from p. 1 ULRICH SAID THE grand jury's indictments were sealed at the request of his office. we wanted to afford the individuals who were on trial elsewhere to get the fairest trial possible," he added. U. S. District Judge Joseph Stephens Jr. officially opened the indictments at noon and read them to reporters crowded into the federal courtroom. The indictment named men from Chicago, Kansas City, Ohio, Wisconsin and Nevada and included. Joseph Aiupa, 76; John Philip Cerone, 92; Joseph Lombardo, 54; Anthony Chiavina Sr. 64; Anthony Chiavola Jr., 35; Angelo LaPietra, 52, all of Chicago. Also Carl Angelo DeLuna, 55; Carl James Civella, 73 and Peter Joseph Tamburelou, 51, all of Kansas City; Milton John Rockman, 75, Beachwood, Ohio; Frank Peter Balistriere, 64; Joseph Phillip Balistiere, 43; John Joseph Balistiere, 34, all of Milwaukee, Wis.; and Anthony John Splitores, 45 and Carl Wesley Thomas, 51, all of Las Vegas. By yesterday the FBI had arrested the Chiavolas, LaPietra, Auippa, Cerone and Spliotro, officials of the Justice Department in Washington said. "Kansas has a great Basketball tradition and I hope I can add to it and be successful. Larry 1983-84 STUDENT SEASON BASKETBALL TICKET SALE OCTOBER 10,11,& 12 9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. EAST LOBBY OF ALLEN FIELD HOUSE 1983-84 BASKETBALL SCHEDULE DATE OPPONENT SITE TIME NOVEMBER 1983 1983 HOME 7.30 Wed. 16 EXHIBITION GAME HOUSE Sat. 26 HOUSTON TX 7.30 DECEMBER 1983 ST. LOUIS ST. LOUIS MO 7.30 Met. 3 ST. LOUIS MO 7.30 Sun. 5 JACKSON STATE HOUSE 7.30 Met. 10 JACKSON STATE HOUSE 7.30 Sat. 17 "KENTUCKY" HOUSE 7.30 Met. 12 "KENTUCKY" HOUSE 7.30 Mon. 19 ORA HOBBES HOUSE 7.30 Thurs. 22 CHD STATE HOUSE 7.30 Wed. 16 SUGAR HEAVEN TOURNAMENT NEW ORLEANS LA 7.00 Thurs. 28 6TH HOURS (S WLouisiana, Louisiana Florida) 8.00 JANUARY 1984 FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL Wed. 11 FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL HOUSE 7.30 Met. 14 TEXAS SOUTHERN HOUSE 7.30 Wed. 11 "MISSUURI" HOUSE 7.30 Met. 21 ONA STATE HOUSE 7.30 Wed. 28 ONA STATE HOUSE 7.30 Wed. 28 KANSAST STATE HOUSE 7.30 FEBRIARY 1984 OKLAHOMA NORMAN OKLA HOUSE 7.35 Wed. 1 WICHita STATE HOUSE 7.35 Met. 1 Wichita STATE HOUSE 7.35 Wed. 11 NOWA STATE HOUSE WATER WATER AIRBANK NEB HOUSE 7.35 Met. 19 NERBAKIA HOUSE WATER WATER AIRBANK NEB HOUSE 7.35 Wed. 22 OKLAHOMA HOUSE MONTANA KAN BOULDER COLORADO 8.05 Wed. 22 KANSAST STATE HOUSE MONTANA KAN BOULDER COLORADO 8.05 MARCH 1984 Wed. 3 OKLAHOMA STATE KANSAS CITY MO KEMPER AREA Wed. 3 BIGGOTT TOURNAMENT KANSAS CITY MO KEMPER AREA ALL TIMES -CENTRAL ---DENOTES DOUBLE HEADER STUDENT TICKETS WILL BE SOLD ONLY THESE THREE DAYS! YOU MUST BUY A TICKET ON THESE THREE DAYS TO SEE JAYHAWK BASKETBALL. JOIN THE EXCITEMENT —NEW NATIONALLY KNOWN HEAD COACH LARRY BROWN. —ALL FIVE STARTERS BACK INCLUDING 7 FOOT TRANSFER GREG DREILING. —GREAT HOME SCHEDULE FEATURING —FOOT TRANSFER CHEES BREEHING GREAT HOME SCHEDULE FEATURING KENTUCKY, WICHITA STATE, MISSOURI AND K-STATE. NO SINGLE GAME STUDENT TICKETS SOLD VALUABLE WENDY'S COUPON ON BACK OF TICKET. TICKETS ONLY $22