University Daliv Kansan, February 4. 1983 Page 5 Rape From page one the chairman can bring the bill up for discussion and vote at his discretion. The motion passed But the committee members failed to agree on a recommendation they could make to the AS SOON AS discussion on the bill began, State Rep. Sandy Duncan, R-Wichita, proposed that the committee recommend passage of the bill to the House. Rep. Vic Miller, D-Topeka, proposed that the committee pass the bill as amended, but the motion failed. The committee also considered amendments to other parts of the bill during the hearing. Matlack proposed that the penalty for patronizing a prostitute be raised to equal the penalty for stealing. The crimes of prostitution and patronizing a prostitute are included in the statute dealing with sex offences. Miller proposed that the crime of adultery be eliminated from the statute. After committee members agreed that cases involving adultery were tried, they voted in favor of Miller's proposal. She also said she would try again to make the penalties for prostitution and patronizing a child. Frey said that the committee would be busy with other business next week, but that he might be able to concentrate. Mattack said later that she thought some of the committee members had voted to eliminate the crime of adultery to keep the bill from passing in the Legislature. Solbach said that he planned to draw up his amendment in written form today. Series From page one degree in accounting are having an easier time finding a job. CINDY KNICELY, college relations representative for Hallmark Cards Inc., said the company was not going through a job freezer nor would it be possible, she said, the job needs are definitely down. Hallmark was planning to hire a few people with accounting and data processing skills, but, she said, these jobs would only be available to the most outstanding job candidates. Michael Wiggins, data processing recruiter for Mutual of Omaha Co., said he was not interviewing any students with fewer than 15 hours of data processing. Even though opportunities in data processing were increasing, Wiggins said, KU students do not have a good enough course background in business-applied data processing to make them competitive candidates with students from other schools. applications of data processing, where jobs are less readily available than data processing jobs with businesses. MUTUAL OF OMAHA will not return to KU. he said, if more business-related data processing courses are not offered, he said. Madaus said that the job market would be slower to respond than the economy. Companies that are experiencing a hiring freeze would need time to reintroduce old business policies and begin He said KU tended to emphasize the scientific Terry Glenn, director of placement for the School of Education, said new teachers would find the Lawrence school district an especially tight market. Opportunities for students qualified to sponsor athletic teams and other extracurricular activities would have an edge in the job market, he said. Henry said job opportunities for liberal arts students are becoming most abundant in the U.S. Many students will be aggravated to learn that student money will pay for printing a pamphlet promoting ideas they might disagree with, Jim Cramer, student body vice president, said. Senators question political financing By SARA KEMPIN But Student Senate cannot legally stop publication of a pamphlet that decries American race relations. Staff Reporter At the Student Senate Executive Committee meeting yesterday, Terry Frederick, Senate treasurer, told the committee that Senate had made a deal with Cain solidarity in last spring's budget hearings. Three hundred dollars of the $1,344 was allocated for printing. HE SAID that Ron Broun, a lawyer who works in the University General Counsel's office, had told him that Senate could not do anything to prevent the group from printing the pamphlet. Tom Berger, graduate student senator, said the pamphlet was in poor taste and did not represent the opinion of the Senate, although it was financed by Senate. Lisa Ashner, student body president, said the rules and regulations of the Senate loosely stated that student money could not be used to finance political or religious groups at the University. "It's not whether we agree or disagree with their politic," she said. "We can't say we're going to fund a Christian group but not a group that's less mainstream." THE PRESENT SENATE rules and regulations state that no money shall be allocated to promote a candidate or an issue in an election or to any corporation, organization or group whose primary purpose is to promote an organized religion or religious philosophy. Frederick said the Senate would require Latin american Solidarity to print a disclaimer in the book. "The disclaimer will state that although the Senate financed the printing of the pamphlet, it does not endorse what is in the pamphlet," he said. The issue about what is and is not a political or religious group comes up periodically when student groups ask Senate to give them money, Ashner said. "It's time to rewrite the rules and regulations so there is a better definition about what constitutes a religious or political group," she said. CINDY TREASTER, Lawrence graduate student and a coordinator of Latin American Solidarity, said she agreed the word "political" was difficult to define. "But if you think that all students have to agree with every group that receives Senate votes, then you're wrong." She said if the Senate decided to change their rules so that they would not finance printing by political groups, Latin American Solidarity would have to follow the policy it decided upon. Ashher said that Frederick would work with the Senate Finance and Auditing Committee to write legislation to clear the rules and regulations. Any legislation approved by the committee will then go to the Senate for consideration, she said. Gas Truckers From page one From page one The number of trucks unloading at New York City's largest produce distribution center was down 17 percent yesterday, but officials said they werewarements were keeping supermarket shelves full. Frank Bacalla, group director at FTD International, in Southfield, Mich., said the strike could cause some shortages in the rose supply for Valentine's Day. "It's an iffy thing," Bacalla said. "We don't know how extensive the strike is at this point." Ohio wholesale florist Greg Ashton said, "The truckers' strike will drive up prices because (some of the roses) will have to be shipped by air." More recently, City Commissioner Don Binns proposed banning shut-offs until after March 15, but that proposal was also dropped because of concerns about its legality. Binns said he saw nothing wrong with KPS discontinuing service to those who were able to attend. "If they are people who can't pay their bills, we need to do something about it," he said. "I don't want to see anybody suffer from the cold." BINNS SAID HE would still like to adopt a no-shut-off policy. question will come up after year after, "he said, Mayor Marci Francisco said that the commis- no shorthand pency "We might as well test it, because I'm sure the sioners had hoped shut-offs could be avoided, and that they saw pitfalls in adopting a shut-off policy. "It was concerned that it would be awkward for the commission to ask the gas company not to shut gas off, if we don't know how we would pay for it," she said. She said that KPS had lost approximately $45,000 last year because of unpaid bills and that part of the loss had to be made up in rate increases. Patti Hackney, assistant to the director for the Public Assistance Coalition of Kansas, said the City Commission should ban gas shut-offs if KPS began disconnecting service. PENCE GARDEN CENTER WEST OPEN 10-6 M thru FRI. 9-6 SAT. 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