University Daily Kansan, October 28. 1981 Page 3 Walesa predicts strike to be Solidarity's last By United Press International WARSAW, Poland—Solidarity called on its workers yesterday to walk off the job in a nationwide strike today. Its members plastered the capital with giant posters in the biggest concrete Communist government in eight months. In a television interview yesterday, Lech Walesa, Solidarity's leader, called for an end to strikes. "I would really like tomorrow's strike to be our last strike," he said, "and that we could begin pulling the country out of crisis." But yesterday, coal miners in the southern city of Sosnowie called another strike. The workers were protesting an incident in which milk containers filled with poisonous gas were thrown from a car, overcoming at least 27 miners, all of whom are now in the hospital. The bottles were thrown just as miners were leaving the mine at the end of a shift. "We consider it a provocation," a Solidarity spokesman said. Poland's army accused the union of playing with "the fate of the homeland and the紧急Ministry of Defense," apportioned 4,000 patrols the provinces in teams of four or five men in 2,000 villages. Each squads cover two or three villages. Yesterday the 10 million-member union issued its call for a one-hour strike at noon today to protest critical food shortages. The union ignored the members' leaders vow to meet the strike with "appropriate counteraction." TASS, the official Soviet news agency, said Solidarity strikes were blackmail, aimed at undermining the Polish government. The agency repeated the Polish Communist leadership that the strike "could meet with counteraction corresponding to the degree of the threat." The Polish government's Central Committee will meet to make extensive changes in the ruling Politburo at 3 p.m., after two hours after the strike is to end. Yesterday, Walsale went to Zyrdarow, 30 miles from Warsaw, to ask for an end to a 15-day walkout by 12,000 textile workers. He warned that such an attack has harmed the union, the first independent labor group in any Communist nation. "If we are united, we shall win." Walsea said. "I am afraid of local conflicts. If we lose, everyone will lose. This winter will be the worst period. There will be some attempts to split us." KANSAS CITY, Mo.-No., Nancy Kassebau, R-Kan., has drafted a defense budget plan that recommends $1.3 billion more in funding cuts than proposed by President Reagan, but possibly could funnel money out of Kansas and Missouri into Texas. "Hike to the Occasion" SAN BALBALLA-O-RAIMAN F.O. Box 1321, 510044 Lanarkshire, KY 65004 Maineport Municipal District The plan, written by Winslow Wheeler, a legislative assistant to Kassebaum, may be presented to the Senate Budget Committee next week at the earliest. Wheeler said yesterday. By United Press International Kassebaum suggests larger defense cuts KASSEBAUM'S PLAN also recommends shutting down the New York-based Grumman A-6E line in favor of the Vougat A-7, a recommendation Wheeler said was founded on the A-7's lower cost compared to the A-6, which has similar canabilities. "If we're to balance the budget by 1984, we have to take larger cuts from the defense budget than the president had recommended," he "It is a recommendation to reduce '82 outages in the defense budget by $3.3 billion, instead of the current 50 percent," Wheeler said of the proposal, which he said had received considerable positive and negative reaction. "The F-18 has declined in performance from the original design, which was quite modest. The cost of the F-18 has escalated very, very dramatically—to the point where we can't afford it." The Kassebam plan would involve buying 188 Texas-built aircraft in 1982 for $2.45 billion, instead of 180 aircraft craft built elsewhere for $4.5 million. "The F-16 costs half as much and does most of its missions better than the F-15, in our opinion," Wheeler said. Wheeler said Kassebaum's proposal only set a budget ceiling THE CASTLE TEA ROOM "Even if it is passed in the Budget Committee, it would not mean immediate termination of any program," he said. The Armed Forces Committee would have to determine which programs to affect in order to meet the ceiling. shutting down the Missouri-based McDonnell Douglas F-15 line in favor of buying the Fort Worth, Texas-built General Dynamics F-16. It also urged the scrapping of McDonnell's F-18 program in favor of the Grand Prairie, Texas-based Vought Corp.'s A-7 warplane. THE PROPOSAL recommended phone: 843-115 To Mr. Ellison, who looks askance at all expressions of religious belief, the exclusion of every religiously-inspired individual from any concert effort to inhibit the flow of said violence is of greater importance than achieving the goal itself. The phraseology Mr. Ellison uses in categorizing all believers is patently hostile and probably a good measure of his ignorance of the important part that religious institutions have played in, for example, the care of dependent children, this country's struggle to abolish slavery, and the civil rights movement. In the very breath with which this damage has been inflicted, Mr. Ellison acknowledges that questioning, without explanatory material, those of a different persuasion as "sanctimonious" and "self-righteous" he very convincedly assumed the role of bigot. In his superficial discourse on film violence Mr. Ellison proposed an interesting solvent. Even while questioning the sanity of those who enjoy this material, he held that they in combination with "Those of us who do the creating must at some point say that they has got to stop!" By the liberal use of such unethical language did this ibibit of narration prove experiencing the mechanism responsible for the garbage in question and thus hinder an enthusiastic crowd. A MERCIFULLY BRIEF DISPLAY OF BIBLITY On the night of 20th October 2018, Harlan Eilson, whom the University Daily Kansan described as the "author of more than 900 stories and frequent recipient of the Hugo Award from the World Science Fiction Convention", gave the first talk of the KU Humanities Lecture Series. Mr. Eilson, who is a professor to all violence in movies, just the unnessuals that drips of perversion," said that it "was the task of the artist and movie-makers such as him to restrict it in producing and patronizing such films". He evenly tweaked the production of films featuring "the violent exploitation and murder of women" can be controlled, i.e., kept at a tolerable level (1), by whispered requests for restraint to both and by the very agents responsible for their (the films) creation and financial success. At this point Mr. Eilson stated categorically that this "was not a situation for censorship by the Moral Majority and other 'sanclinionious, self-rightheous Bible thumpers who do it in the name of God'." Board proposes housing rate hikes By JANICE GUNN Staff Reporter RPAB voted unanimously in favor of the conversion and for rate increases for the Towers, residence and scholarship halls. The proposals still have to be approved by David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, Chancellor Gene A. Budin and the Regents. 2702 West 24th Street Terrace The conversion of Tower B was the idea of J. J. Wilson, director housing, to attract more students to live in the Towers. A MERCIELLY BRIEF DISPLAY OF BIGOTRY Jayhawk Apartment's Tower B will be converted to an all-women's tower if the Kansas Board of Regents approves it. The board will also Residential Programs Advisory Board. "We think this is a good service to women students," Wilson said. Boyd's Coins-Antiques Class Rings Wine Bar - Gold Gold - Silver Coin 723 New Hampshire 91-842-8772 91-842-8772 THE RENT INCREASE at the Towers would only cover rising utility rates, he said. Other increases would be made because occupancy is down. All an-women's tower would provide more security and probably better conditions in the elevators. he said. AUTO. INS. LOW RATES Discounts for good student, Good driver, Driver training 842 7810 842 7810 10th Street West "We have 70 vacancies here, so obviously we're overpriced," Wilson said. "The rate this year is based on utility rates only." The increases for the scholarship halls were divided into three categories: men's scholarship halls, women's scholarship halls with food service and women's scholarship halls without food service. THE MEN'S HALL contracts would increase $160, women's contracts with food service would increase $142 and men's contracts without food service would increase $63. --bring rent up to the range of $390 to $435 for the two-bedroom apartments. The proposed increase is $25 a month per apartment. The increase would The $63 increase would be for Miller and Watkins scholarship halls. It was the largest percentage increase of any scholarship hall. Give your hair the Magic touch this Halloween at Excalibur CRIMPING WILD BRAIDING & FANTASTIC STYLING The breakdown of the cost increase to each resident for expenses in the 1982-83 school year would be $60 for food, $20 for utilities, $15 for program salaries, $10 for custodial, maintenance and supervision salaries and $55 for materials. 841-7667 2711 W. 6th Suite D Other increases unanimously approved were for the residence and scholarship halls. No decisions were made for rate increases at Stouffer Place. Wilson had proposed a 12 percent increase for one-bedroom apartments and a 36 percent increase for two-bedroom apartments. The residence hall rates would rise 103 percent or $170 a contract next week. The rates will remain the same. PREPARE YOUR COSTUMES FRIGHT NICHT THURSDAY, OCT. 29 It Could Only Happen at . . . THE HAWK --- GENTLEMEN'S QUARTERS NOW! UNIQUE HAIR STYLING FOR MEN & WOMEN 611 West 9th 843-2138 Lawrence, KS 1016 Massachusetts 843-0412 Wednesday Nite JAYHAWK SPECIALS