- University Daily Kansan, August 18, 1983 Page Country Club From page 1 activities. They got into a routine not conducive to academic work. We need more activities to get them involved. Ultimately, Aamber said, he hopes the Board of Regents will put the new enrollment schedule on its calendar. He said he wanted the University to open on a Sunday and begin classes following the Tuesday. The change he issued was appropriate for compliment for families moving students to school. "R-State has been on this schedule for a number of years, and it has worked well for them, by what they say. We're really just standing in step with our sister institution," he said. The influx of students means good business for bars and liquor stores. Cutting out three days of the traditional Country Club week could mean a cut in profits. SOME UNIVERSITY officials favor the elimination of Country Club Week, but many Lawrence businessmen look forward to the days students return. "It hurts some," said Brad Nieder, manager of the Waton Wheel, 507 W. 14th St. "The apartment people are here and most of the frats. That helps. But Monday is usually a big one and it was slow. "If this keeps up, it could mean a lot of money — we're talking thousands. honey. We're talking about it. "But when the girls get here, it will help SALES HAVE been slow in the retail liquor business, too. because when the girls are here, the guys will be here, too." "Our business hasn't been very good," said Wilfred Eudley, owner of Skiller's Retail Liquor Store, 1006 Massachusetts St. "We serve students but we are in the low, law period now." Sales are slow for some but looking up for others. "The truck drivers have been talking, 'This week is Country Club Week,' but nothing has happened yet. Maybe by the end of the week, it will pick up," Eudaley said. Schneider, manager of the Kegger, 1610 $\frac{1}{2}$ W. 23rd SI. "But the farts and sorbors help. I'm looking forward to this week. It will be a good one, I think it is too early to tell on the keg orders, but the orders we have now are a good sign." hers. "What hurts is pre-enrollment," said Randy HOWEVER, FOR Green's Fine Wines, business is good. "It is great," Webb said. "I don't know how it could get any better. We could not handle it." He said that he thought the Councy Club Week tradition would continue at KU and that no matter what schedule the University put in place, they would early to see their friends and meet new ones. by protecting Barbie and helping him escape to South America. Barbie From page 1 "We found no indication that it went any higher than that," said Allan Ryan, who directed the Justice Department's investigation. ALL BUT TWO of the officers are dead, and RALY said that to press charges against the remaining two would be useless because the instructions for obstructing justice had long run out. State Department officials said they were satisfied that the report told the whole story and that no inter-agency conspiracy to hide Barbie from the French had occurred. "The real contribution this report makes is setting the record straight as best we can do more than 30 years after the fact," a State Department official said. Bnai P'rith, a Jewish group, called for an investigation into whether Nazi war criminals might have been given similar aid. The report "raised a more frightening question about still other Nazis who may have escaped facing justice for their crimes," said Gerald Kraft, president of the group RYAN DENIED a London Sunday Times story that the release of the Barbie report had been delayed a week because the State Department $ ^{n+1} $ disagreed with the Justice Department's recommendation that the United States should anologize to France. "There was no disagreement that I'm aware of." Ryan said. The Justice Department's report confirmed that the U.S. Army Counter Intelligence Corps hired Barbie in 1947, without knowledge of his alleged war atrocities. No matter how questionable the hiring of a former Nazi officer might have been, the report said, the hiring of Barbie did not amount to knowing use of a war criminal. month, often in cigarettes, coffee or lodging, for his work. THE PICTURE changed in May 1950, when war crimes charges surfaced in France against Barbie, and a group of Army counter intelligence officers decided that Barbie should not be placed in the hands of the French, the report said. Ryan said Barbie had been paid about $100 a The decision apparently was made both to avoid embarrassment of the U.S. intelligence corps through publicity about its use of a former Gestapo official and to keep Barbie from revealing U.S. intelligence activities, including surveillance of French intelligence operations. No new leads in Seurer death Police have found no new leads in the stabbing death of Frank Seurer Sr. father of KU quarterback Frank Seurer, a police officer who was shot and killed in connection been interviewed in connection with the case. A beer deliveryman found the elder Seurer's body about 9:45 a.m. Aug. 2 at his restaurant, Pop's Bar-B-Q, 2214 Yale St. Seurer had been stabbed numerous times, police said. Maj. Ron Olin, assistant chief of the Lawrence Police Department, said robbery was still the dominant theory in the motive of the case. However, he said, police have not been able to determine a clear motive for the stabbing. "We have no suspects and no motive," said Olin. A coroner reported that he found no signs of a struggle. The coroner's report said the only wounds to the body were from stabbing. Olin did not say whether police had a theory about why no struggle apparently occurred during the stabbing. Seurer was 6-feet-4 and 200 pounds. 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