University Daily Kansan, November 16 1982 Page 3 Candidates trade barbs at last debate By TIM PARKER Staff Reporter Candidates for student body president traded accusations last night in the final debate of the Student Senate election campaign. Senate elections are Wednesday and Thursday. Momentum Coalition student body presidential candidate Kevin Walker charged the Consensus Coalition last night with "falling down on the job," and avoiding the issues in the month-old Senate campaign. Consensus presidential candidate Lisa Ashner, however, accused Momentum of making "fantastic claims" and having questionable priorities. The debate, at the Kansas Union, was sponsored by KJHK radio. "BUDGET CUTS and tuition are our priority issues," said Ashley, Mission junior and chairman of the Student Senate Executive Committee. She labeled beer sales in Memorial Stadium, on which Momentum has centered its campaign, a "minor issue." Walker, St. Louis, Mo., junior, defended his efforts on getting beer into the stadium because "that's what the students want." Ashner also criticized Momentum's claim of ties with Anheuser-Busch Inc. and said officials at the company did not get involved with student political issues. "If my issues are so unthinkable, let me drown in my own tears," he said. WALKER SAID his coalition definitely had talked with Anheuser-Busch officials. Dan Slehler/KANSAN Lisa Ashner, student body presidential candidate on the Consensus Coalition, answered questions at last night's debate, sponsored by radio station KJHK. Behind her are Lee Anne Winfrey, the moderator for the debate, and Kevin Walker, presidential candidate on the Momentum Coalition. Walker labeled the accusations as a form of character assassination and said Consensus was avoiding the issues and dragging the campaign "into the fire." guitar "Anheuser-Busch is not the issue. Getting beer into the stadium is the issue." he said. Walker also charged the Consensus candidates, who have made their Senate experience a priority issue in the campaign, with falling down on the job. He said that Steve McMurry, former coordinator of the campaign, joined with embebbling $20,425 from the campus bus system, was directly responsible to Ashher. "He duped the Senate on a simple scheme," Walker said. WALKER SAID he would keep the situation from recurring by auditing every organization in the Senate and by interviewing the staff, he would ridify him of similar situations. Asher refused to accept blame for the situation and said it was more important to look at how the administration handled the problem. The management had tried through several KU administrations and several Senates, she said. She said the administration had shown its confidence in the present student government by not removing student control. The Consensus Coalition's experience, Ashner said, was one of its most important assets. "EXPERIENCE IS the key when you're dealing with budget cuts, financial aid, the Board of Regents or the Kansas Legislature," she said. "The opposition has no experience of." But Walker said KU students didn't need Consensus' kind of experience. "I will be an employee of the students, not the administration," he said. "Dr. Budig will respect that. I anticipate a wonderful working relationship." TONIGHT! BEER SIGN GIVE-AWAY Bud, Bud Light, Busch, Natural Light and Michelob Signs and Other Items Given Away Throughout The Evening! ASPEN/SNOWMASS - $22900 January 3-8 NUMBER 15 SKIELFT A WEEK'S TREAVER TO THE COORS COLORADO AND A DESCRIPTION TO THE COORS SKIETA The four mountain Aspen Skijoring Complex is the largest in North America. With the best skiing around and right to match, it offers a wide range of our luxury condo and recreational use and use of pool, sauna, and jacuzzi. PACKAGE INCLUDES * Incline Resort in Lower Snowbowl Village * 5 days of Lit Tiki Tour at alpe Beninil, Beninil * Mountain Picnic * Mountain Park on Location Walesa unsure of future work OPTIONS *Discounts on rentals* *Low Cost Air or Party-Bus Transportation* $89.00 COORS SKI TEAM BENEFITS *Corsis Skit Hat* *Skitter Poster* *Skirts With Prints* *Jamboree Party With Plenty of Cold** *Gear* OTHER DESTINATIONS Steamboat, Winter Park, Vail, Crested Butte OUR TURNS ARE FILING FAST, SO CALL SOON FOR BEST SELECTION For information call Summit Tours 749-0132 or (800) 355 0493 For Information Call By United Press International Place a Kansan want ad. Call 864-4358. Over the years an imaginative psychiatry and a receptive judiciary have combined to create the concept of innocence by reason of insanity. Through the compassionate use of their gilded psychoscopes, some psychiatrists have managed to find in misbehaving defendants, whom they always happen to be representing, states of disorder which were temporarily beyond the afflicted's capacity to control. While some of the more irreverent members of the citizenry attribute this adaptability of the psychiatric profession to greed, many recognize it as an expression of a willingness to work. SEVERAL MORE PSYCHIATRISTS COMM TED TO OPPEASEMENT DISCOVER YET ANOTHER PROFITABLE SYNDROME Why, there have been some trials in which a psychiatrist eager "to get ahead" has uncovered a syndrome possessed by the defendant which even impelled that individual to murder. By taking this case into account, the psychiatrist created work for himself where there seemingly was none. Recently some hard-working psychiatrists with initiative discovered yet another profitable syndrome in, considering the disorder, the most unlikely of places. While discussing the foreign language requirements at our colleges and universities, the November 15th issue of Newsweek says: GDANSK, Poland-Lech Wales, the recently released chairman of the banned Solidarity trade union, pledged to honor the ideals behind Solidarity yesterday, but declined to help he would fight for its restoration. Wales insisted no conditions had been attached to his release, but he said he had been briefed on the penal code for more than three hours by a lawmaker, and saw authorities yesterday, he hedged questions about his own future. Hervard even allows undergraduates to "pach out" of its one year foreign-language requirement (if) students can persuade health-clinic psychiatrists to attest to their psychological inability to learn another language. "I are released on a tightrope, underneath which is a prison yard, and this tightrope is greased with some lubricant." Walesa told reporters the morning after he returned to work in 11 months of isolated internment. "I do not intend to fall." "I AM WALEA and will act by Walea standards," he said. "I will do what is possible and what can be accepted." Maybe this country needs only a few more aggressive psychiatrists skilled in the practice of rationalization and committed to appeasement to shake us out of our economic doldrums. William Dann The comments reflected the care with which Waila weighed his words, stressing the need for peace, negotiations and an agreement the people could accept. He did not mention the name "Solidarity." By pursuing his own interest . . . every individual . . . frequently promotes that of the society more effectually than when he really intends to promote it. 2702 W. 24th St. Terrace Adam Smith once said; He said he was looking for "a solution satisfactory to everyone, but never on my knees and never against the spirit of August (1980)," a reference to the historic worker-state accord he signed to end the shipyard strike in Dgansk and establish the East blox's first free trade union. Walesa was freed Saturday after 11 months of interment. His release triggered speculation of an end to Poland's martial law, declared last Dec. 13. The Athens News Agency, in a dispatch from Moscow, said Polish marital law leader Gen Wojciech Poper Antosius Papiropoulos that marital law in Poland would be lifted within the next two months. The two men were in Moscow for the funeral of Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev. "I don't know what I will do or," said the 39-year-old electrician, much stouter but still sporting his mustache. "I have to think it over." seen as a threat to Poland's communist authorities, Solidarity was suspended under martial law WALESA, WHO returned home Sunday night to a tumultuous welcome from supporters, refused to comment on the establishment of new, official trade unions to replace Solidarity. imposed last Dec. 13 and outlawed last month by Parliament. IN A RELATED development, the man who was Walesa's arrest, Jaureskiz, said in a rare interview published in London's Guardian newspaper that Poland's trade unions the working people want them to be. Asked if he would insist on new free unions with the Solidarity name, Walesa said, "I don't know. I have to consider, to check everything." "There is only one proviso clear to anyone who knows how to think in political terms — the labor movement cannot become a screen for destructivism in militant forces,吊到 the very essence of socialism," Jurelski said. Walesa cleared up some of the mystery surrounding his release by saying that he was taken Saturday from his remote interment lodge in southeast Poland to a location outside Warsaw to meet for nearly a day with the nation's prosecutor general. The two discussed marital law. Walesa said he later was driven to Gdansk. FLANKED BY TWO former Solidarity advisers, Walesa said that during his 11 months of interment "I did not sign anything and I didn't give up what I was freed without any obligations." I was released a free man. TV income may be budget solution Television income is expected to offset a $100,000 revenue shortfall for the home football season, according to its budget statement releases recently. Football revenues were $104,834 below estimates made by the athletic department when it planned its budget for this year. However, KU's share of Big Eight Conference TV income is to be $174,000 more than anticipated. Saturday, November 20th. 9:00 a.m. Entry information in room 260 Robinson or City Hall, Lawrence Parks & Recreation Don't Forget the 7th Annual Turkey Trot KU GAMES AGAINST Texas Christian University and the University of Tulsa were regionally televised by CBS. The game with Kansas State University was nationally televised by WTBS, a cable television station based Money from televised games goes to the Big Eight Conference and is divided among all Big Eight schools. Schools that participate in a televised game receive twice as much TV income as non-participating. Boys Clubs Anti-Lice Class Rings Band Ringed Trunks 731 Gold Silver-Ring Co- lumns Hampall-Hampshire Witchery Lewisville, Kansas 918-842-7837 in Atlanta. DELAYED BROADCASTS, including those by Sunflower Cablevision, 644 New Hampshire St., do not generate news, Wilson said. Sid Wilson, sports information director, said other RU football games had been canceled. "The delayed games aren't enough to get wealthy. We don't charge the small networks an arm and a leg because they give us exposure," Wilson said. BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND Jayhawker Senior Portraits starting Nov.29 Yearbook Office 10-4 864-3728 Shootings: 9 a.m.-5 p.m. CALL NOW FOR AN APPOINTMENT! Front Entrance, Main Union $1 sitting fee '83 Jayhawkers for sale $15. You're in Step...