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MERLE NORMAN COSMETIC STUDIOS 9th & New Hampshire 841-5324 Spahr library dedicated in birthday celebration To begin celebrating its 100th anniversary, the KU School of Engineering received a $780,000 addition to the KU Scholarship. Sushil Tahir. By Amy Zamierowski Kansas Stuff writer Kansan staff writer his/her 150 people attended the dedication to honor Charles Sparr and his wife, Mary Jane Sparr, who financed the 7,500-square-foot addition on the west side of the library. "We are delighted we could do this, and we are pleased to think engineering students of the future can benefit from this opportunity. " Charles Sparks said for a long time and you all for as long as I can remember." than you do to me. Chancellor Gene A. Budig said, "Charles Spahr has never said no to his University. He has helped us so many times, on so many projects." Sphar Hall, a two-story brick building south of Learned Hall, opened in 1984 and was named in May 1988. Charles Sphar was chairperson of a fund-raising committee that provided donations from private sources. Sphar Hall. Before Spair Hall was built, engineering books were housed in the Burge Union and Watson Library. Soon after the building was named, Lee Ann Weller, engineering librarian, told Spahr that some of the collection of engineering books would need to be stored in Watson because there was not enough room in Spahr then decided to finance an addition to the engineering library so that books could be kept in one location, and Carl Locke, dean of engineering. Work on the addition began in the fall of 1989. Spahr, who earned a bachelor's of science degree in civil engineering from the University in 1934, is a lifetime trustee of the Kansas University Endowment Association. Spahr is a retired chief executive officer and former chairperson of the board for Standard Oil Co. of Ohio. He was a leader in the construction of the Alaskan oil pipeline. Koch Industries Inc. of Wichita also provided $25,000 to furnish a student library on the library's first floor. The School of Engineering will continue its anniversary celebrations during Engineering Week, Feb. 18-24. Republicans slipping in polls Candidates begin distancing themselves from the president The Associated Press WASHINGTON — With voters angry and their party plummeting in the polls, Republicans who face congressional elections a week from now are running hard — away from their president. "I don't like to go against what the president is saying," said Rep. Tom Tauke, a Republican running for the Senate in Iowa. "But my judgment is that, in this case, the president has a different job than I have." GOP candidates who share Taune's task of getting elected are trying to put as much daylight as possible between themselves and the Republican occupant of the White House. The focal point for conflict is the $496 billion budget package Congress approved this weekend before adjourning to the campaign trail. The five-year deficit reduction bill, which President Bush has said he will sign, includes $137 billion in new taxes and the rest in spending cuts and reduced interest payments on the debt. But that mix isn't sitting well at home, Tauke said in an appearance yesterday on CBS's "Face the Nation" Iowans "certainly aren't interested in sending a whole lot more money to Washington, he In Nebraska, GOP Senate candidate Hal Daub was dead no time in attacking the package. "This new budget will give Nebraskans an idea of how a small country feels being overrun by a larger power," he said. Bush's budget director, Richard Darman, said that the deficit reduction package approved by Congress on Saturday was not popular but was "It's reaggregatable that it's come in the middle of an election," Darman said. "But the president is doing the right thing." John Summa, White House chief of staff, called the tax increase ransom that Bush had to pay to Democrats to get the spending cuts he wanted, conceding that it temporarily had hurt the president's popularity. But making that argument is complicated by Bush's acceptance of both aspects of the five-year, $400 billion budget plan before the 10th Congress left town. for the campaign trail. Democrats moved quickly to tie the knot linking Bush to the deal even tighter. House Majority Leader Richard Gephardt, D.Mo., said that in the wining moments of the congressional session Bush had seemed ambivalent and then angry about the budget package. "The public should not be confused by the president: He was a central player when this budget was written, and it would never have gone forward without his approval of every item in it," hephard said. The comment was a pointed reminder that Bush had abandoned his new-taxes pledge last summer. And Democratic National Committee Chairperson, Ron Brown, also appearing on ABC, pounded home his party's fairness theme. Democrats shaped the tax package to put more of the burden on the wealthy, the only ones who really made out, during the 1980s, he said. Because Democrats have been in the Congress fighting, the middle class ended up better with the new budget, Brown said. Nationalist violence threatens Moldavia The Associated Press MOSCOW — Soviet troops patrolled the streets of southern Moldavia yesterday as negotiators for the Moldavian majority and Gagate minority agreed to restrain police that threatened ethnic violence. "The inter-ethnic conflict in the republic has reached the point where, if it goes any further, there will be bloodshed and the deaths of innocent people," said Konstantin Taushanzhi, chairperson of the civil affairs council in the disputed Komor region, on national television. According to Tass, the official Soviet news agency, negotiators for the Moldavian parliament and the Gagaus governing committee agreed to set up a joint commission to withdraw Moldavian and Gagaus volunteers, some of them armed, from Komrat. The Kremlin sent Interior Ministry troops to keep the peace Saturday, after the Gagaqn declared sovereignty from Moldavia, a largely agricultural republic of 4.3 million people bordering Romania. The Gagauz are a close-knot group of about 150,000 people. They are descendants of Christians who died about 160 years ago to Moldavia from Turkey because of religious persecution. Worried by rising Moldavian nationalism and anger over a law making the Moldavian the republic's official language the Gagauz language, he opposed the republic and began elections for an autonomous government last week. Brigades of Moldavian volunteers, said by various sources to number between 12,000 and 50,000, streamed into the area Thursday and Friday to try to stop the movement toward Gagauz independence. The republic's parliament declared a state of emergency in the southern region Friday. Police blocked roads, and the government banned all public meetings and rallies for two months. Gagaau, youths in turn formed defensive units, aided by some ethnic Russians, who also oppose Moldavian nationalism. USE KANSAN CLASSIFIED ISN'T IT TIME YOU LISTENED TO YOUR LENSES? --lenses to feel less comfortable. A planned schedule of contact lens replacement helps avoid eye irritations and provides you with improved lens comfort and clearer vision. Listen to your lenses, Innovative new pricing structures allow you to replace lenses regularly at no increased costs to you. Over time, protein build-up can cause your contact lenses to feel less comfortable. 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