KANSAN The University Daily University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, September 30,1981 Vol.92,No.28 USPS 650-640 JOHN EISELE/Kansan Staff A bird in the hand Nancy Zimmerman holds up a pigeon from a bag that she kept frozen to show the Lawrence City Commission that the pigeons had actually died from Avirol poison. See story page 5. Committee debates fund allocations By MICHAEL ROBINSON Staff Reporter The Student Senate Finance and Auditing Committee returned to the Kansas Union last night and recommended $7.433.27 in allocations for three groups that requested supplemental funding. In the second step of the fall supplemental budget process, the committee began to decide on funding recommendations that it will make before the full Senate in October. For four nights last week, the committee heard requests from the 40 groups. Last night was the first night of discussion on the final recommendations. The committee agreed to make recommendations for all of the groups and then see how much money it had remaining. TONIGHT, the committee will deliberate on the remaining 21 requests totaling about $17,000 in supplemental money. "The committee this year isn't as cut happy as it was last year," said Loren Busy, committee chairman. "There's a lot more concern for the groups' well being." The committee's cuts totaled $12,408. 88. They ranged from cutting KU Crew Club's total request of $3,560, to cutting nothing from the Headquarters request. The final recommendations from the committee may be more because it will review the amount it has to allocate. The funds for supplemental allocations come from money left over from last year and a portion of the Student Activity Fee. mendations to the full Senate on Oct.14, groups may still try to get their allocation changed on the floor of the Senate. When the committee takes its final recom- THE SENATE has final approval of the recommendations at that time. The recommendations for the 19 groups are: KU Geophysical Society, $21.60; Pre-Nursing Club, $97; Pre-Physical Therapy Club, $22; Minority Business Student Council, $299; Undergraduate Business Council, $234; KU Soccer Club, $78.40; KU Women's Soccer Club, $65; KU Crew Club; nothing; Women in Engineering in KU, $252.0; KU-Y $60.50; Headquarters, $3.093.2; Pre-Law Chanery Club, $68; KU Science Fiction Club, $14.90; Music Therapy Student Association, $154; United States Student Association, $134.10; Men's Coalition, $136.25; Sigma Delta Chi, $176.80; Stouffer Neighborhood Association, $345; Microbiology Society, $305. Game's broadcast scrambles schedules Staff Reporter By EILEEN MARKEY Staff Reporter This Saturday's network broadcast of the KU-Arkansas State football game has left the athletic department ringing its cash register with glee, but other University departments have been scrambling to reschedule events as a result of the television coverage. Because kickoff time has been changed from 1:30 p.m. to 11:30 a.m. to accommodate ABC television, residence halls will serve meals and the annual Editors' Day will begin early. The KU Arkansas State game will be the first half of ABC's Saturday afternoon football double-header. The second game will feature Missouri at Mississippi State. BOB MARCUM, KU athletic director, said last night that KU could expect to gross about $80,000 from the game. Marcum said each team appearing would get $40,000 and that MU and KU's money would be shared by Big Eight Conference members and the conference itself. The telecast will be KU's first since 1975. J. J. Wilson, KU's director of housing, said the time switch had not caused too many problems. but he estimated that it would mean a 10 percent attendance decline at Parent's Day. The housing system feeds about 1,800 parents on Parent's Day, Wilson said. "I think it's unfortunate and there are some inconveniences, but we'll work around them the best we can," Wilson said. "There are about 20 or 30 activities, open houses and reception that will be changed." Thompson said. "But basically we're just moving everything up." LINDA THOMPSON, Parent's Day committee change various department activity schedules to changing various department activities. "The there were manneuering problems, but everybody was understanding." Thompson said. "The hardest part will be notifying people of the changes." The time study also caused changes in the annual Kansas Editors' Day. Registration will Thompson and the University Special Events committee met yesterday afternoon to work out scheduling changes. The Special Events Committee met on Friday, Day, Parents Day and Homecoming activities. Residence halls will serve meals at 10 a.m. instead of noon, Thompson said. begin at 8:30 a.m. instead of 9, and the buffet luncheon will be substituted by a box lunch. **EDITORS' DAY** is sponsored by the William Allen White Foundation, a spokesman for the event. The earlier kickoff time will also affect local restaurants. "We'd prefer the game to start at 1:30, but there's not much we can do about it," Mike Sweeney, manager of the Cormacus restaurant at 1801 Massachusetts St., said. "It'll probably have our pre-game lunch business, but we'll have an early dinner." Parents' day was our biggest crowd." Don Bennett, manager of Julies Italian Restaurant at 3216 St. Saul, said the time was around midnight on Sunday. "We'll probably get a strong post-game rush," Bennett said. The earlier kickoff time will not affect police traffic control, a spokesman for the Lawrence Police Department said. "The only change we have is the time element that changes Dalquent said the time element should be in itself and instead it must be On football game days, the department assigns 20 men to 16 different intersections, and Dalquest said the assignments would not be changed. Enrollment decline may not affect University funding, legislators say Weather Today will be mostly clear, becoming partly cloudy in the afternoon, according to the KU Weather Service. The winds shifting from the south to the north. Tonight will be mostly cloudy with a slight chance of rain. The low will be about Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a high in the 70s. The decline in this year's enrollment will not greatly affect any funding decisions by the Kansas Legislature, local lawmakers said yesterday. Legislators will be considering many other factors to decide how much money to give the University, said State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence. By SHARON APPELBAUM Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Usually, the Legislature bases its University funding decisions on the number of full-time equivalency students enrolled. OFFICIALS ARRIVE at that figure by computing the total number of credit hours taken by The total is divided by 15, the number of credit hours that equal a full-time load. For example, if 315,000 credit hours are generated, there are 21,000 FTE students. This year, the University is down 40 FTE students, or 21,007 on the Lawrence campus this fall compared to 21,047 in the fall of 1880, accruing more than 60% of admissions and records released yesterday. Figures came from a head count the office did Monday, which was the 20th day of classes. Each year, the Legislature looks at FTE figures for that day. THE NUMBER of students attending the Lawrence campus stood at 22,105 on Monday, which is 28 fewer students than the 22,133 attending last fall. The Legislature used that formula this year, and Eldredge said, "I will hold for this next session." Solbach, along with State Sen. Jane Eidridge, R-Lawrence, said the Legislature would consider a decline in FTE only if the change were greater than 1.5 percent. However, Solbach said, "It's just a general However, Solbach said, "It's just a general See ENROLLMENT page 5 Suspects may be in country illegally By LILLIAN DAVIS Staff Reporter Immigration and Naturalization Service officials transferred two Iranian men suspected of being in the United States illegally from the Douglas County jail to the Kansas City, Kan, jail yesterday, where they await further INS proceedings. The men, Amir Zerk泪, 24, 232 Pinecone, and Sizash Khagavi, 26, 1600 Kastell Ave., were in the Douglas County jail on charges of disorderly conduct and battery in connection with a clash that occurred between two factions of Iranian students Sept. 12 at the Kansas Union. Jail officials said yesterday that although Zekrigoe and Khagavi had posted their bonds of $2,000,000, they remained in jail as requested by immigration officials until officials arrived yesterday afternoon. The hearing is scheduled to take place over the telephone with an INS special inquiry judge in Denver, Colo., who handles the Kansas City area. An INS bond hearing has been set for today when INS officials will set their own bonds on Zinn and Khagvi, according to the Iranian's attorney, Henri J. Watson of Kansas City, Mo. Watson said the hearing would be conducted over the telephone because the judge only comes to Kansas City once a month and had been there last week. WATSON SAID he planned to ask for a bond see SUSPECTS page 5 Student convicted of bombing paroled after short jail term Staff Reporter By LILLIAN DAVIS Staff Reporter A KU student convicted of exploding a pipe bomb in Naismith Hall Sept. 2 was paroled yesterday by Douglas County District Judge Mike Elwell. Benjamin David Clayman, Overland Park sophomore, was paroled on conditions that he an付 additional $20 in fees and restitutions and is not on hours of service work in the community within 80 days. "Holes in cement walls cannot be replaced like a window or light," Malone said. Mike Malone, Douglas County district attorney, said that the $2 fine was to make up for the loss. Clayman, 19, was sentenced Sept. 23 to a year in jail on charges of disorderly conduct and possession of an incendiar device, and fines $200 for his part in setting off a pipe bomb in a stairwell between the third and fourth floors of Naismith. The bomb blew out a window, knocked several holes in the cinder block walls and threw debris through the window. At the time of sentencing, Elwell granted Clayman a class release that allowed him to return to the university of Kansas when he returned to the job. Ellswed he decided to parole Clayman because he felt Clayman had served sufficient time—three days—and that he had no past record of criminal activity. "He was basically a good kid," Elwell said. The type of community service Clayman will do depends on what organizations can use him, but he is not required to. Elwell also said that his decision had been influenced by letters he had received from family members and friends who felt Clayman had not had malicious intent in mind. Both Elwell and Malone agreed that Clayman had used poor judgment and that the potential for danger had been great, but that there had been no criminal intent in his actions. The other student involved in the incident, Robert Levitt, Overland Park sophomore, is scheduled to be arraigned today in Douglas County District Court. Police alleged that Levitch, 19, made the pipe bomb at his home in Overland Park over the Fourth of July weekend and that Clayman brought it to KU and exploded it. High-level cuts EARL RICHARDSON/Kansan Staff David Coates, Lawrence, a lineman for Kansas Power and Light, cuts wire as he rewires a utility pole at 9th and Tennessee Streets. Coates and a crew from KPL replaced the pole that was knocked over when a car hit the pole.