. University Dally Kansan, November 4; 1982 Page 5 Hardage media and supporters when results showed him losing. '1 DUBT THE severance tax will pass during the next legislative session. Sam was always opposed to the severance tax because he would not do everything Carlin said it would. Carlin has made a severance tax on the production of oil and natural gas, estimated to raise about $120 million annually, the center's largest source for finance education and highway construction. Hardage called a severance tax unfair and a deterrent to businesses considering a move to Kansas. But in early October, Hardage said he could support a severance tax agreed on by all sides of the issue, which many interpreted as an attempt to soften his position. ANOTHER AIDE also pinned much of Hardage's loss on the severance tax and Carlin's. intense efforts to persuade voters that opposition to the severance tax was an endorsement of higher property taxes. HARDAGE ALIGNED himself closely with President Reagan, which may have been political suicide in Sedgwick County because of traditional Democratic leanings and heavy layoffs in the ailing aircraft industry, Matthews said. "But you have to give the devil his due — he ran a good campaign. I think we might have been better to have answered the severance tax in language that people could understand." Turning to Shawne County, which includes Topeka, Matthews said a letter Carolin campaign officials distributed to state employees dampened Hardage's chances. The letter warned state workers that Hardage would eliminate their jobs if he was elected. DARRELL DAY, Hardage's press secretary, already was sensing the severance tax's effect on the race when he said late last week that his team initiated underestimated its clout with voters. DESPITE FEELINGS of disappointment, the aides still enjoyed a fewer moment with each other while cleaning up the remnants of that was cut short by Carlin's early victory. One assistant walked around with a deflated Hardage balloon in his mouth, which another side compared to the outcome of Hardage's campaign. the money was necessary to keep the shelter home in operation. "We perhaps should have realized that Carlin would ride the severance tax as the only issue and then could have addressed it earlier," he said. Senate From page one "But early in the campaign, we didn't think it was the only issue facing the state. We thought that leadership . . . was the most important issue." "FOR JANUARY AND February, we don't know where our money is coming from," Failey said, noting that all federal grants to the organization were scheduled to be cut next year. The group once received 70 percent of its financing from the government. "WTCs has the quality," Houston said, "and it has the dire need of an emergency situation." The Senate's approval of funds for WTCS drew sharp criticism from one Senate committee Another volunteer, Pam Houston, told the Senate that if WTCS closed, the only place for battered women to go would be either "the morgues or the hospitals." "I get really irritated when groups that go through the formal budget hearings come back to the Senate and appeal for more funds — and then get them," said Sarahuck, chairman of the Student Senate Committee on Academic Records. "They had their time in court, so to speak. The rest of the Senate budget was approved as recommended by the Finance Committee. DUCKERS SAID SHE thought all groups should be given a chance to appeal the committee's recommendations before the Senate. The groups should also be given notification of the Senate meeting in which final budgetary decisions are made, she said. In other business, the Senate approved a bill that combined the 85 student transportation (ec) programs. David Adkins, student body president and author of the bill, said the bill would make it necessary for the Senate to review the budget of KU on Wheels, the campus bus system. Fall tornado surprises Padre Island; 28 hurt By United Press International PORT ISABEL, Texas—High winds and a stormado hurled across scenic South Padre Island early yesterday morning, injuring at least 28 people, destroying nearly 50 trailer homes and ripping out power and telephone lines, officials said. Authorities the storm bleed in without warning, bringing wind gusts as high as 145 mph. The Coast Guard reported that some campers were aboard the boat to a resort, but a helicopter search allied earlier fears that some people might have been swept out to sea. "WE KNEW THAT there was a northerng in coming and in a 20 to 30 percent chance of showers, but we didn't expect what like this. It could have been any county. County sheriff's nookmate Johnny Castillo. Castillo said that a Coast Guard helicopter from Corpus Christi had surveyed the beach yesterday afternoon and found no debris, so he said that no one was missing as a result of the storm. Coast Guard Chief Petty Officer Bob Sawyer said the storm brought high water at Port Manfield that stranded some campers. "There are a few stranded tourists camped out at the inlet going into Port Mansfield, but they do not require any assistance," Sawyer said. Winds of 91 mph hit the nearby Harlingen airport, where the Confederate Air Force aviation club reported damage to vintage World War II airplanes. CASTILLO SAID 28 injuries were reported after the storm, which hit the island between 12:45 and 1:00 a.m. Child first victim of unusual kidney disease said yesterday 3-month-old Liana Clark, who died last summer, apparently was a victim of hemolytic uremic syndrome — a disease that affects the brain and Argentina, the Netherlands and South Africa. By United Press International Election KIRSON SAID THE incidence of the disease was about 30 times the normal in the Sacramento area and said the outbreak was "definitely of epidemic proportions." But Ian Kirson, a children's kidney specialist who treats children suffering from the sometimes fatal aliment, called for further investigation into the Clark child's case. SACRAMENTO, Calif. — The first confirmed death attributed to a kidney disease a doctor says has reached epidemic proportions in the Sacramento area was confirmed yesterday by doctors. The disease destroys red blood cells, causing acute anemia and kidney failure. But Kirson said that, while the disease is sometimes fatal, the vast majority of victims recover. community. Supporters said it was the first time such a law had been established in the nation. From page one Republicans took their worst battering in governorships, losing nine statehouses to the Democrats. And the day after elections, GOP Gov. Jim Thompson chung to the narrowest of states in Illinois, where television in Illinois, with some soggy uncounted ballots in Chicago delaying a final call. THROUGH THE BAD news on other fronts, Republicans tenaciously held on to their Senate seats, losing only Son. Harrison Schmitt in New Mexico and an open seat in New Jersey. George Wallace Fading from the national political scene were Gee, Edmund G. Brown Jr., defeated for a Senate seat. Republican Mayor Pete Wilson, and Millicent Fenwick, New Jersey's aristocratic pipe-smoking congresswoman beaten for the Senate by Democratic millionaire Frank Lautenberg. Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley had his dream of becoming the nation's first black governor thwarted narrowly by George DeMario, California's Republican attorney general. ENDURING WERE Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts, who easy re-election boosted his presidential candidacy, Democrat John Stennis, the dean of the Senate at 81, and George Wallace, the reformed segregationist who won an unprecedented fourth term as governor of Alabama and picked up 85 percent of the black vote. THE SACRAMENTO County coroner's office KWALITY COMICS' GRAND OPENING Nov. 5th and 8th 107 West 7th 843-7239 Register for Free Door Prizes TAKE A RAINBOW HOME WITH YOU. ACADEMY ANNEXI ECONOMICAL ECONOMICAL RATES OUR SPECIALTY 10 PASSENGERS VAN AVAILABLE 800 WILLIAMS ST. APT 2415 It's specially priced and ready to take home with you right now. You've worked hard all week. So treat yourself to our Friday Flower Bash with a big, bright weekend. Our feature will make it even brighter. Carnations $5.00/dozen Pixies $4.50 a bunch cash & carry Women's Health Care Services P.A. Flower Shoppe 1101 Mass Open 841-0800 8:30-9:30 Jon Getz Lawyer 706 Massachusetts 842-1505 Complete Abortion Services Awake or Asleep • As An Outpatient • Pregnancy Testing • Protein Testing • Surgery to 26 wks LMP 684-5108 AT 5107 E Kellogg / Wichita, Ks 67218 FEATURING ALL DAY,ALL NIGHT,EVERY DAY DRINK SPECIALS OCT. 31st - NOV 5th AND FUNNY MONEY Saturdays & Weekdays out out and save this message! THE SANCTUARY 1401 W.7th THURSDAY 25c Draws BE THERE WHEN THEY BURN THE MORTGAGE NOVEMBER 1.1982 FRIDAY 75c Pitchers Funny-Money Coupons Will Be Given At The Door. This Coupon Is Good Any Time For $1.00 Off Toward Certain Items: 1. Any Food Item Except Chips, Nuts, Etc. 2. Any Dairy Containing Liquor. 3. Any Draft Beer Order. One more fine point: the Pilot Precise Ball Liner doesn't have a big, fat price. It's just a skinny ball. PILOT Precise Ball Liner Ball Liner Only one of these pens is thin enough to draw the line below. It's the extra-fine rolling ball of Pilot's remarkable New Precise Ball Liner Pen. (If you haven't guessed which one it is, look at the top photo again.) But unlike the others, the real beauty of Pilot's Precise Ball Liner is the extra-fine line it puts on paper. It glides smoothly across the page because its glossy finish merely within a needle-like stainless steel collar. A collar that makes the Precise Ball Liner the most durable, trouble-free rolling ball you can buy. PILOT The rolling ball pen that revolutionizes thin writing. It's letter-writer's joy. An artist's dream. A scribble's delight. 28 page 4-color women's calendar EVERYONE NEEDS A CALENDAR SO WHY NOT HAVE THE BEST! $7.95 California Dreaming 1983 Calendars Exciting...Sensual...Tasteful Already a hit throughout Southern California. Not available elsewhere. These 'hot California' endars are full color, high gloss productions featuring Southern California's finest, shot at favorite beach locales. These calendars are highly functional with large writing space We also offer a selection of fifty JW' 12" x 4" awesome posters for your enjoyment. Order From calendar to your California Dreaming Calendar. THIS COULD BE YOU! Windsea Productions is currently searching nationwide for next year's lucky men and women modelling prizes, music prizes, parties. Please check the entry form for complete information on how you could have your California Dream come true. Please enclose a self-addressed stamped envelope. GREAT GIFT IDEA. Christie Claridge $3.50 Miss California/ Miss International SPECIAL OFFER With any order of 2 or more call endorses you receive FREE the California Golden Girls Poster shown Poster also available separately GO FOR IT! GO FOR IT! Women's Calendar $7.95 Men's Calendar $7.95 Golden Girls Posters $3.50 Intent Search Information FREE Total amount enclosed $ Allow 3 to 4 weeks delivery Address MAIL TO: MAIL TO: WINDSEA PRODUCTIONS, INC. 7910 Ivanhoe Ave., Suite 238, La Jolla, CA 92037