Page 6 University Daily Kansan, November 15, 1982 By DON KNOX Staff Reporter Student Body President David Adkins veted the Student Senate's supplementary budget Friday, saying he could not support a final budget that was "simply not what we had in mind." The budget, which was overwhelmingly passed by the Senate on Nov. 3, would have allocated $17,272 million to the University of Kansas at the University of Kansas. Adkins justified the veto by saying that the chairmen of the Student Senate Committee on Finance and Auditing, Jill Eddy and Loren Bushy, had recommended that the university's elementary budget be under $15,000. "If we have budgetary recommendations," Adkins said, "then we should meet them. To continue to deplete our reserve is not a very good example of long-term planning." AFTER SEVEN nights of budget deliberations, the Finance and Auditing Committee presented to the Senate a budget totaling $14,262. But the Senate voted 29-16 to restore more than $3,000 in financing to the department. In the Services, a Lawrence shelter (for battered and abused women). Busy, who argued against restoring money to WTCs at the Nov. 3 meeting, said he was pleased Adkins vetoed the budget. "We have to be careful in coming under budget," Busby said yesterday. "It is a luxury that we have to keep it down on unaccounted allocations, but when we set a limit, we should follow what we set." Busby said he would recommend that the Senate not finance WTCS in the three supplementary budget bills, which probably will be reviewed at the Wednesday Senate meeting. The $8,100 WTCS request could be sent through Senate as a request to a later meeting, he said. THE SENATE also could vote to override Adkins' veto. Such a vote would require a two-thirds majority. Eddy also said she was glad Adkins vetoed the bill, but said she thought WTCS was "deserving of their money." If Busby's recommendation is passed by the Senate, WTCS would be the third organization to request money outside the formal budget process. The Senate earlier this year gave $5,000 to the KU Forensics Club and is currently considering a alteration from KU's Recreational Services. For Adkins, the veto of the supplementary budget is his second. The student body president vetoed the Senate's budget last spring after the Senate vote to allocate about $485 million for the normal spring budget of $2,800. Adkins, however, accepted the budget after the Senate trimmed the additional requests to about $18,000. "The spring hearings were one of the low points of the year," Adkins said, explaining that he and the couple spent how much money was to be spent. Adkins said yesterday, however, that he would not make any recommendations as to where fur- ther budgets cut should be made. On campus CATHOLIC CENTER WORSHIP will be at 12:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel. TODAY WOMEN ENGINEERS of KU will have a lecture, "Summer Job Opportunities for Women Engineering Students." A.7 p.m., in 1014 Learned Hall. ECKANKAR WILL talk about "The Spiritual Aspects of Fashion and Social Life," at 7:30 p.m. in the Governor's Room of the Kansas Union. TOMORROW LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS Campus Unit will meet at noon at the Satellite Union. LECTURE, "The Music of Carl Preyer, "will be at 1:30 p.m. in 400 Murphvh床. PUBLIC RELATIONS Student Society of America will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the library on Friday, June 14. the Regional Club of the Union KU GUN CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in Conference Room 305 of the Satellite Union. CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST we meet at 7 p. in the Big Eight room ROBERT SIAW, music director and conductor of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, will give a speech. "The Narrator is at 8 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium." Astronauts may make space walk C A P E C A N A V E R A L Fla — astronaut William Leonor — barefoot, chipper and apparently over his motion sickness — was poised yesterday for a delayed $3^{1/2}$-hour walk Bv United Press International space today_with crewmate Joseph Allen Lenoir and Allen planned to step into space shuttle Columbia's open cargo bay at 7:50 a.m. EST to test new $2 million spacesuits and rehearse a 1984 rescue mission for a crippled scientific satellite. The walk is America's first in nine years and the 36th since astronaut Edward White made space history by stepping outside his Gemini 4 capsule in Mission controllers delayed the spacewalk, originally scheduled for December 16. AS THE astronauts prepared to retire about 4:50 p.m. yesterday, spacecraft communicator Brian O'Connor told them the past day had produced three problems in mission training and had aboard the big winged shuttle. urday he was suffering a severely upset stomach. By yesterday afternoon, he was well on his way to recovery from his bout with space-sickness. O'Connor referred to an electrical fire and power failure that briefly knocked out control center consoles Saturday night. It was the only mention to the crew about the incident, which had posed no threat to their safety. Holloway and other officials said the control center fire, which started in a splice between copper and aluminum wire in one of four main power lines, caused the power failure. It produced thick smoke but did no serious damage. THE FAILURE shut down the computer that operates displays on Looking toward a return home tomorrow, Robert Overmyer also replaced a faulty electronics box in Columbia's dashboard to fix one of three video screens he must use to get vital information during re-entry. control center consoles for between 20 minutes and three hours. Holloway said the center lost the ability to send commands to Columbia's computers through two ground tracking stations, although the commands could have gone up from a backup site in Maryland. Voice transmissions still were possible, but were not used because the crew was asleep, he said. WHILE THE astronauts spent their fourth day in orbit, Soviet cosmonauts Anatoly Berezovy and Valentin Lebedev aboard the Salyut 7 space station made space history at 1:11 a.m. yesterday by beating a space endurance record of 184 days, 20 hours, 13 minutes in 1980 by two other monuments. The spacewalk by Allen and Lenoir is the big task on Columbia's fifth flight. In yesterday's telecast, Lenoir held up a sign reading: "Shuttle Deployment by Ace Moving Co. Fast and Courtese service. We Deliver." During their first two days in space, the astronauts flawlessly launched two commercial satellites, proving the capability of a workhorse carrying cargo for hire. KU professors receive awards Several KU professors, including a husband and wife, recently received national and KU teaching awards. The second Chancellors Club Career Teaching Award, worth $5,000, was given to Barbara Craig, professor of French and Italian. Craig, who has taught at the University of Kansas for 35 years, was given the Award. Nov. 6 at the University of Washington upon receiving Luncheon in the Kansas Union. The award was established last year for teachers who have taught at the school. of the department of special education, and his wife, Ann Turnbull, acting associate director of the Bureau of Child Research, were named the 1982 Educators of the Year by the Association for Chartered Citizens of the United States. H. Rutherford Turnbull III, chairman The annual award, given to university teachers of special education, was given to the Turbulls at the institution's convention last week in Dallas. The Turnbulls were cited for their service to educators and for their assistance and support to parents with retarded children. TUESDAY Ladies Night 75$ Drinks 9-1 THURSDAY FREE BEER 'til 11 LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA LAWR We'll • inspect belts and hoses • flush radiator • install new anti-freeze (up to 1 gallon) • pressure test cooling system and test radiator cap COOLING SYSTEM SPECIAL TOYOTA LAWRENCE All Japanese Imports MAZDA LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA 842 2191 Coupons must be presented at time of write-up $24.95 Includes parts and labor (Additional parts and labor extra) $29.95 Electric ignition (included all parts and labor 6 cyl) models slightly higher! 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Call 864-4358 --- HAWK'S NEST 9:00 am-3:30 pm M/F KANSAS UNION LEVEL 2 NOVEMBER SPECIALS MONDAY Chicken Fried Steak Potato Chips 12 oz Fountain Drink 1.80 TUESDAY Chili Dog French Fries 6 oz Shake 1.60 WEDNESDAY Double Cheese Burger French Fries 12 oz Fountain Drink 2.55 THURSDAY B. B.Q. Sandwich Potato Chips 12 oz Fountain Drink 1.90 FRIDAY Fish Sandwich French Fries 12 oz Fountain Drink 1.70 Also featuring our own Bakery Buns.