University Daily Kansan / Thursday, September 4, 1986 5 Waste Continued from p. 1 The problems cited were in labeling and filing, he said. A later report by the department said that the problems had been tended to and that the situation at KU had improved. A comprehensive safety program will be set up when the new safety officer is chosen, Landgrebe said. The program will provide guidelines for Bus waste disposal throughout the campus. Along with the new disposal program, the University also has applied for a $330,000 federal grant to build a hazardous materials handling complex. The federal grant money would have to be matched by the University. Continued from p.1 requested bus service between the stadium and the Kansas and Burge unions. The committee denied the request because of the promotional purposes of the route. Steve Word, general manager of the Kansas Union bookstores, said that he couldn't speculate how much business went to the Jayhawk Bookstore but that he always considered the store when ordering textbooks. "If I get a request for 300 textbooks, for example, I only order about 200 because I know some students will go to the Jayhawk Bookstore," he said. Muggy said the double-decker bus would serve more than his personal business interests. "The bus is good for the University, not just the Jayhawk Bookstore," he said. "It provides students with an alternative, rather than being captured and herded into the Union (for fee payment) and then walking two floors down to buy books." Muggy plans to charter the bus to groups for $55 an hour. Education Continued from p.1 maintenance worker for Stouffer Place and is using his vacation time to take the classes. Another student, David Alcorn, 1320 Haskell St., is 17 years old and came to the center because he studies better in the one-on-one atmosphere than in the high school, he said. After he gets his General Educational Development, he said, he will move to his own place and find a job. He admits that trying to find a job without a diploma would be stupid. frustrations working in the job. "Watching the success and seeing the self-image improve is my biggest reward." McGuire said. "A lot of students come back to tell us they passed the GED." "But it can also be frustrating when you see a student quit and not come back. There's nothing you can do. Sometimes they're supporting families, but you hate to see them quit." In spite of the occasional dropout, Graham said that the center was booming right now. Continued from p. 1 Iran Executives gave this description of the Pyotr Yemtsov seizure, based on radio contacts they and their monitors had with other ships in the Gulf. An Iranian warship ordered the captain to stop when the freighter was about 30 miles northwest of Dubai. It signaled a threat to open fire, and the Soviet skipper turned his vessel and tried to escape. Rebel destruction of bridge sparks fighting in Sri Lanka United Press International COLOMBO, Sri Lanka — Heavy fighting erupted yesterday between troops and Tamil separatist guerillas on a northwestern island after the rebels blew up a bridge to the mainland, military sources and residents said. Naval vessels surrounded Mannar Island while helicopter gunships pounded guerrilla positions and troops moved on the ground, residents in the town of Mannar on the southern end of the island said by telephone. Telephone links with the island later were cut off. One policeman was reported killed, but other casualty reports were unavailable. The fighting was the first significant battle between government troops and rebels fighting for a separate state for the country's Tamil minority since peace talks between the government and one Tamil group, the Tamil United Liberation Front, ended Aug. 29 without a peace pact. Other Tamil rebel groups have refused to negotiate with the government. Military sources in the capital of Colombo said the rebels were concentrated in and around the town of Mannar and were firing rockets and mortars at government troop positions The fighting erupted after Tamil separatist guerrillas blasted a bridge Tuesday on the 2 mile-long causeway between Kaffrana and the mainland. Mannar residents said. The Sri Lanka-to-India ferry pier is in the town of Talaimannar on the northern tip of the island. The residents said a large number of guerrillas had arrived Tuesday night in boats — presumably from hideouts in the nearby south Indian state of Tamil Nadu — and had asked villagers to leave the area. Some families took shelter in the government hospital, while others moved to open areas, they said. Military sources said they had evidence the guerrillas were poised to step up attacks on the northwestern and northeastern flanks of the island. BURGERS DELIVERED FREE! Featuring the one and only TOMMY BURGER "Under 4 Billion Sold" 3 for $1 only at $5 min. Let It Roll! At The Jaybowl with the K. U. Bowling Team The K.U. Bowling Team is looking for men and women interested in intercollegiate competition. Tryouts start Sept.6 For more information call 843-3545 Level 1 THE KANSAS UNION Call 864-3545 JAYBOWL BOUDU SAVED FROM DROWNING TONIGHT! 7:00 p.m. Coming This Weekend "Kiss of the Spiderwoman and "Harold and Maude" Woodruff Aud. $2.00 with the flip of a disk. Your computer is only as good as its floppy. Interior disks can mean information lost or garbled. And poorly made disk causes wear and tear on delicate computer parts. Maxell makes it easy for your computer to do its job. 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