University Daily Kansan, October 19, 1984 Page 5 Watch continued from p. 1 Masden went to the Kansas City School of Watchmaking in 1948, and a year later he Within three years, the Madssad had two sets of twins and had established their own tribal settlements. "I'm about the only one left that will work on a cheap watch," he said. "We're fine." MASDEN WORKS ON watches worth as little as $10 or less or as much as several thousand. He also restores pocket watches and clocks that are older than he is. "Many old ones are coming in now," he said. "They're worn out from being used 100 or 50 years. They're better than the new stuff available now." Primer continued from p. 1 "They'll run until there won't be men to work on them." Behind Masden's counter sits a file cabinet filled with the names of his customers, many of whom have been coming to him for years. Although material is available to make better watches and clocks, Masden said, too much obsolescence is built into today's timepieces. "I'd take it to Masden's first," she said. "He's been doing it too many years to take it somewhere else." Judy Lewis, 2508 Ousdahl Road, said Masden had worked on the first watch she had owned as a teen-ager. She said she was in the store to store if she needed another watch (Xird). congressional ban on aid for those trying to overthrow the Managua government He also said that Reagan's call for an investigation didn't go far enough. "I WANT HIM (Casey) to get out. I think it is a disgraceful situation. I believe that Casey ought to be out, forthwith. And if he does not make it happen then the actions of Mr. Casey," O'Neill said. A White House statement said the administration "has not advocated or condoned political assassination or other attacks on civilians." The statement said U.S. aid to those fighting subversion or totalitarian oppression should "be consistent with American values and carried out so as to win and increase the loyalty and confidence of the civilian population." THE STATEMENT ALSO pointed to a 1981 presidential order saying no U.S. employee or agent "shall engage in, or comprese to engage in, assassination." The order also said, "No agency of the intelligence community shall participate in or request any person to undertake activities forbidden by this order." The primer *n* does not use the word *assiminate*, which uses the word "neutralize" but accentuates it. It also suggests that if a civilian is killed, guerrillas should say the person was a Sandinista informer. consultants who reviewed teacher education programs at all Regents schools. Regents continued from p. 1 The Regents plan for the Center calls for creation of a research branch at the University of Kansas and a service branch at Emporia State. Earlier yesterday afternoon, the Regents Academic Affairs Committee postponed making a recommendation on the Regents plan and directed the Regents Council of Presidents to devise a program for a center should be acceptable to all Regents schools. LAST MONTH, CONSULTANTS said a Center for Excellence of Teaching should be established in the state to provide a place for teacher education research and the dissemination of research findings in Kansas. The Center would have a staff of researchers who teach in schools and be run as a cooperative effort. The committee followed the consultants' advice by recommending discontinuance of 11 KU School of Education graduate degree programs whose enrollments were too small to support a program of sufficient quality or that duplicated other programs. Emploria State has had budget reductions of $1.4 million during the past five years because of declining enrollment. The Kansas Legislature adjusts annual budgets of Judy Hample, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Emporia State, said the cuts would make existing problems worse by further decreasing enrollment. Regents schools according to their enrollments. EMPORIA STATE FACULTY members and students told the Regents committee that they had learned in a newspaper report last Friday of the plan to eliminate the programs. Yesterday they urged the Regents to postpone action. Wendell Lady, Regents chairman, suggested postponing recommendations on the plan until a decision had been reached on the Center for Teaching Excellence. Banquet continued from p.1 described his efforts to form that company as a new approach to drug delivery. "I'm not talking about delivering in trucks," he said he had told his colleagues. When he began to list names of people in pharmaceutical sciences to bring into his company, Zaffaroni said, the list stopped on one name: Higuchi. HIGUCHI WOULD NOT leave the KU, where he had come one year earlier, so Alza set up a research center in Lawrence. Mossberg told the audience about Higuich's years at the University. Pharmaceutical professionals credit Higuchi with founding the discipline of pharmaceutical chemistry. The discipline of drug dosage and study of drug dosage and behavior by applying principles of chemistry and the laws of thermodynamics. Higuchi founded departments of pharmaceutical chemistry at Wisconsin and then at KU in 1967. He retired as department chairman at KU in August 1983 and has continued on a half-time faculty appointment. HE IAS WON virtually every award in his discipline, and the Academy of Pharmaceutical Sciences in 1981 established a Takeru Higuchi Research Prize for development of new concepts applicable to pharmaceutical sciences. Most recently, Higuchi has created Oread Laboratories on West Campus to get University-generated ideas into commercial markets. Oread Laboratories is owned by the Kansas University Endowment Association, an arrangement Higuchi said he suggested so that company profits would return to the University. THAT ARRANGEMENT ALSO includes the new center for Bioanalytical Research financed by the state. The center will provide research to the company, which will seek patents and commercial outlets for new ideas. Profits will support the center's work. Yesterday afternoon, Higuchi said the complementary arrangement would help the University compete in high technology in the next 10 years. An important factor in choosing bioanalysis was the lack of competitive programs already established in that discipline, he said.