University Daily Kansan, September 16. 1983 Page ! continued from p. 1 "It was like a little deer hunted down and killed by a savage animal," South Korean representative Kun Park said in a speech opening an emergency meeting of the International Civil Aviation Organization in Montreal. If my words appear to be a harsh indictment of the Soviet Union, they are compared to the harsh fate of the 369 victims scattered over the city. JAPAN'S MARITIME SAFETY Agency said a Soviet underwater exploration craft was raised from the sea in the northern Japan Sea near where the Korean airliner was shot down. the agency said red and orange buoys were seen in the water where the Soviet vessel was raised, raising speculation that the Soviets may have found the vessel. The agency called 21 Soviets ships, including a 12,000-ton rescue ship and a killing vessel, were in the area. Officials said the Soviets were searching for a missing aircraft. Japanese police said searchers on the northern Hokkaido coast found the business card of Kathy Brown-Snier. 35. of New York. A U.S. Navy tug, the USS Naragansett, scanned the ocean floor for signs of the airliner's black box, which contains the vital record of the plane's final minutes. SEARCHERS ALSO FOUND pieces of human flesh and wreckage believed to be from the downed airliner. So far, the remains of at least five people have been found. In Montreal, L. Lynn Helms, the head of the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration, told the 33-member aviation council that Moscow must be "strongly condemned for this senseless and irresponsible violation of international law." "The world community has labeled this type of behavior from private individuals and organizations as terrorist action," Helms said. A resolution condemning the Soviets was virtually certain to pass at th Montreal-based U.N. agency. Nation on the council has veto power Montreal-based C.N.A. agency, no faction to Opponent. Park demanded that Moscow "openly apologize to the Republic of Korea, make compensation, punish the criminals behind this act, and guarantee the prevention of a recurrence of this fact." THE UNITED STATES, Japan and other countries have also requested reparations but Moscow has flatly refused to pay compensation for the victims, defending its right to shoot down aircraft that violate its "sacred airspace." In Moscow, international restrictions on air traffic with Moscow inconvenienced many tourists but a U.S. consular official said none were. After president Reagan issued an edict barring passengers to anyone with connecting tickets on Aeroflod flights, Moscow's state-run airline retaliated Wednesday by rejecting all airline tickets issued by U.S. carriers. NATO nations, with the exception of France, Turkey and Greece, began a two-week bovoit of the Soviet airline Aeroflot yesterday. Travel through Russia already was disrupted by a 60-day boycott that the International Federation of Airline Pilots Associations began research done by industry and kept confidential for a period of time because of patent regulations continued from p. 1 Research THE TERMS OF proprietary research and the length of time that it would be classified could be negotiated, Kraft said. However, in contracts for government research, the government decides whether the information should be classified and no negotiation is allowed. James Carothers, University Senate Executive Committee chairman, said, "People expressed the view that we need to be able to distinguish between work that is regularly contracted between industry and work that is to be contracted by the government." Anthony Genova, professor of philosophy, also said he had reservations about the extension period following a year's classification, and about the "relatively insubstantial" clause. Genova said that by not specifying the length of the extension that could be granted, the door was left open for research to be listed as classified indefinitely. Military continued from p. 1 The bill includes $4.8 billion for procurement of the MX missiles, $1.87 billion for 10 more B-1 bombers and $407 million to buy 95 Pershing 2 missiles for deployment in West Germany. The total spending authorized in the bill is $10.5 billion below Reagan's original request. Approval had been expected because military spending bills are traditionally popular with congressmen, many of whom have defense agencies. But because House has never rejected a military bill, SEVERAL CONGRESSMEN, however, warned that they would oppose the nerve gas program authorized in the spending bill when the government had ordered the program was voted on — probably next month. Although the MX program was delayed two weeks in the Senate, mainly Democratic opponents led by Sen. Gary Hart, D-Colo., it was the chemical weapons program — costing less than one-thousandth of the total defense budget — that caused the most controversy. The provision originally was rejected in the House and only passed the Senate when Vice President George Bush cast a tie-breaking vote. PENNYLANE ROLLS BACK PRICES! 1061 W. 2978 St. SOUTHMISS CENTER | 749-1100 CASSETTE $4.99 Record or Cassette! AC/DC Back In Black / Doors Doors Van Morrison — Moondance Buffalo Springfield — Retrospective / Genesis — Abacab Grateful Dead — Workingman's Dead / Joni Mitchell - Blue Jimi Hendrix — Smash Hits / Little Feat — Dixie Chicken / Prince— Controversy on Warner - Elektra - Atlantic Records & Cassettes Plus hundreds more to choose from . . . 749-4211 Mon.-Thurs. 10-8 Fri. 10-10 Sat. 10-8 Sun. 12-6 Close to campus! 817 Vermont Downtown Sale Ends 9/24/83