University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 10, 1986 5 Khomeini Continued from p. 1 lives in exile in Paris. Iran specialists say at least two hardline groups of clergymen were witted against each other, each said to be speaking for Islam and the revolution. The hard-liners include such uncompromising figures as Seyyed Mohammad Musavi Khoeinha, 45, who was in charge of militants who occupied the U.S. Embassy in Teberan for 444 days in 1979-80 and held 52 Americans hostage. Other hard-liners are Ayatollah Ali Meshkini, head of the Assembly of Experts which rules on appointments to government posts. There are reports that Ahmad, Khomeini's son, with the help of such hard-line friends as Information Minister Mohammad Mohammad Reyshahi, arranged for the arrest of rival hard-liner Mehdi Hashemi, an aide to Ayatollah Hussein-Ali Montazier, Khomeini's designated successor and trusted friend. million - if any at all, Dubnick said. Continued from p. 1 Shortfall He said KU needed most of the additional tuition money to accommodate the extra students. Ultimately, Dubnick said, students are hurt in the form of fewer classes and possible tuition increases. Local legislators are counting on the windfall from higher state income taxes to ease the financial crunch, but Dubnick said this relief would come too late. In Kansas, an individual's state income tax is based on his adjusted gross income, which is reported on his federal income tax return. Allen Ford, professor of business, said that under the restructured federal income tax system, taxpayers can't exclude some forms of income and they can't claim as many deductions as in the past. This will increase the individual's adjusted gross income, which, in Kansas, means that taxpayers will pay higher state income taxes. Higher state income taxes generate more money for the state, which creates a windfall. State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said the windfall money should be used to lessen the state agencies' budget cuts. "Windfall should go back to the state to relieve budget shortfalls." Bramson said. State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, also advocates using the windfall. WASHINGTON — A national commission headed by former Education Secretary Terrel H. Bell called yesterday for a massive effort to almost double the number of college-educated adults by the turn of the century. The commission also took a sharp slap at members of the Reagan administration and other politicians for trying to cut aid for college students. Bell wants to increase college graduates for the American Association of State Colleges and Universities, which represents 372 four-year campuses that enroll 2.5 million students and award a third of all bachelor degrees. Bell's 22-member panel prepared the report The Associated Press "America has far too many people whose abilities are never awakened," said the 22-member National Commission on the Role and Future of State College and Universities in its 56-page report, "To Secure the Blessings of Liberty." The report echoed "A Nation At Risk" , the 1983 critique of U.S. schools by the National Commission on Excellence in Education, which Bell appointed. It spurred many states to raise graduation standards and boost school budgets. Bell's new report said, "With a high school dropout rate ranging from 25 to 50 percent and with almost 10 percent of our total population functionally illiterate, who can deny that we have a massive population of undereducated people?" Rare wolves to be reintroduced to wild United Press International TACOMA, Wash. — A species of wolf rescued from extinction by a successful breeding program will get a second chance in the wilderness. cessful." said Scott Feierabend, an endangered species specialist for the National Wildlife Federation in Washington. *There will be a lot of people watching and helping to ensure this reintroduction is suc- "This can be a useful and productive model for the release of other predators in the future." he said. In a project that wildlife experts and environmentalists hope will serve as a model for other species, four pairs of red wolves born and raised in captivity are being fawn tomorrow to a remote part of North Carolina for eventual reintroduction into the wild. Warren Parker, an official with the Fish and Wildlife Service in Asheville, N.C., said, "From what I can research, this is the first large mammal effort that's ever been made where we've tried to bring a mammal from the point of extinction, particularly in bringing back a predator." With the wild population at a critical level, a decision was made in the 1970s to capture the remaining animals and preserve the species by breeding them in captivity. The successful breeding of the wolves solved only half of the problem. Wildlife officials also needed to find a place in the wild that would be safe and politically to try to introduce to the wolves. The problem was solved when the Prudential Insurance Co. decided to donate about 118,000 acres of land it owned. The wolves will be fitted with special radio collars to help wildlife specialists keep track of them. Available in January THE BRAND NEW SUNRISE VILLAGE 6th & Lawrence 841-1287 At 6th & Lawrence Ave. 3 bedroom, 1460 sq. ft. townhouses, with private garage. $2\frac{1}{2}$ baths, large master bedroom, washer/dryer hook-up, fireplace, pool, and tennis court, energy efficient, on KU bus route. Nearby shopping conveniences. Stop by the Sunrise Place Office at 9th and Michigan, or call 841-1287. Well, well, well... What's happening at Watkins? November 18, 6:30-10:00 p.m. FIRST AID November 13 and 20, 7:00 -9:00 p.m. FRESH START Smoking Cessation Program November 19,3:00-5:00 p.m. CPR - RACE FOR LIFE 7:00, 9:30 p.m. Coming Tomorrow "Sunset Boulevard" Directed by Rudolph of Choose Me fame, this film noir dreamscape has earned unanimous rare reviews. Kristi Kriestorff stars as an ex-cop who has served time for killing a mobster. Geneviève Bujold plays a weary nurse from an innocent country girl transported to the big city by her criminal husband. Registration Required The Great American Smokeout Tonight "As a KU senior majoring in architecture I recently took the three week Mem-ExSpan course to sharpen and speed my thinking ability. Now I have more confidence and am accomplishing more with less stress. More importantly, Mem-ExSpan has helped me to improve my reading speed and comprehension, technical design work, and test taking ability." Woodruff Aud. Take a day off from smoking • Nov. 20, 1986 For more information, call the Department of Health Education Watkins Memorial Hospital, Student Health Services 843.4455.201.46 Donna Griffin Senior—Univ. of Kansas Want to improve your classroom performance and test taking ability? Raise your GPA? Call today to find out how the three week Mem-ExSpan course can give your college career the acceleration it needs! 843-4455 ext. 46. $2.00 The Advanced Thinking Skills Training Program with a Proven Success Story 2002 Quail Creek Dr. Mem-ExSpan Jan Erland, M.S.—Director Greek Dr. P MEM-EXSPAN Ph.749-5402 John Fogerty — Mike Finnigan George Thorogood and the Delaware Destroyers AND NOW! David Crosby and Stephen Stills BENEFIT CONCERT VETERANS' DAY NOVEMBER 11th 6:30 pm Memorial Hall 600 North 7th Street Kansas City, Kansas Tickets $17.50 at CATS OUTLETS Dial-a-Tick 816/576-7676 Sponsored by: Youth for Vietnam Veterans All profits from the concent will be used for the scholarship fund to benefit the children of Vietnam veterans who were disabled, killed in-action. POW or MIA and will be administered by the Paralyzed Veterans of America. All Allen Field House tickets will be honored for concert attendance. Ticket holders who cannot attend may write to CATS, P.O. Box 3428, Kansas City, Kansas 66103 to request a refund. Please enclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope. Refund requests must be received at CATS before November 11, 1986.