====PAGE-LEVEL METADATA==== University Daily Kansan Page 0127 from reel: L 2448 (1983-01-17 to 1983-07-29) https://digital.lib.ku.edu/ku-udk/140590 Title: A Skeleton Gets Thinner Summary: Article discusses President Reagan's proposed budget cuts affecting graduate student financial aid programs at KU and nationwide. Category: opinion Subjects: federal budget cuts; student financial aid; higher education funding Named Entities: Reagan, Ronald [president] Confidence: 0.85 Title: Late Teens Old Enough to Drink Summary: Columnist argues that 18-year-olds should be considered old enough to drink, discussing the inconsistency between being old enough to fight in wars but not old enough to consume alcohol. Category: opinion Subjects: drinking age; legal age; alcohol policy Named Entities: Bartel, Matt [columnist] Confidence: 0.85 Title: High Liquor Age Not Answer to Highway Death Problems Summary: Columnist argues that raising the drinking age to 21 would not effectively address highway death problems related to alcohol, suggesting education and enforcement are better solutions. Category: opinion Subjects: drinking age; traffic safety; alcohol policy Named Entities: Bower, John [columnist] Confidence: 0.85 Title: High Age Slows Drunk Drivers Summary: Columnist supports raising the drinking age to 21, arguing it would reduce drunk driving incidents and improve public safety. Category: opinion Subjects: drinking age; traffic safety; alcohol policy Named Entities: Gunn, Jan [columnist] Confidence: 0.85 Title: Letters Policy Summary: The University Daily Kansan's policy for accepting and publishing letters to the editor, including length requirements and submission guidelines. Category: informational content Subjects: newspaper guidelines; editorial policy; letter submissions Confidence: 0.9 Title: [advertisements] Category: advertisements Confidence: 0.9 Note: Descriptive metadata for this item has been generated in part using AI (artificial intelligence) technologies and may be incomplete, misleading, or inaccurate. Please contact the Kenneth Spencer Research Library with specific questions or concerns.