SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases. See page 3. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. The drawing, in a Plexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecration ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects. Police said they had no suspects. "I don't know why anyone would do something like this," Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. John Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. "This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial," he said. Musgrave, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony he said. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the concession ceremony Monday. Musgrave said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial. "But of course, that's not the case now," Musgrave said. "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank." college professor Musgrave, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whoever took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. "Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." Mmusgrave that foremost in his mind when he said about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the concession ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL, p. 5, col. 1 House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan United Press International WASHINGTON — The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short-term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. But neither deputy press secretary Larry Speakes, Treasury Secretary. raise money, approved an extension only to Dec. 6 The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that tension never have tion's date The night Bec House the sh day, of mon But ing no tension pressi tion tion federa an inc of mon Wolf Creek rehearing o United Press International TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. in an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrately when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued like a cheaper coal-fired plant. Also rejected was a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. The KCC did agree with utility argum formu- tually invest over I Gas & ty Po- together plant missie rate b may be The with I utility cost of The IF YOU COULD HEAR THIS TAPE, William Easley and Jeff Polack, student body and vice president, and their terms next Friday say their greatest accomplishment was to organization" to Student Senate $ \textcircled{c} $1985 Memtek Products encies repro-