√ THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOL.101,NO.71 ANSAS STATE ISTORICAL SOCIETY JPEKA RS 66612 THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS HURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1991 ADVERTISING:864-4358 (USPS 650-640) INSIDE NEWS:864-4810 KU clinic helps 2-year-old adjust to deafness When she was 16 months old Margret Mataele couldn't crawl or talk. After discovering Margret was deaf her mother took her to a KU Speech-Language Hearing clinic, and now Margret is learning total communication. Page 6 Duke announces bid Former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke pledged yesterday to wage an upstart rightwing presidential challenge to President Bush. Page 7 Alleged victim takes stand in Kennedy Smith trial in 3 hours of testimony, William Kennedy Smith's accuser told a jury yesterday that he raped her on the lawn of his family's estate. Science library face more than its share problems 1. SENATE DID NOT HAVE THE AUTHORITY to remove him because the Code of Student Rights and Responsibilities states that the University does not have jurisdiction over off-campus crimes. Fulcher's complaints 3. A RECALL ELECTION is the only way to remove a student body president, according to the Student Senate Election Code. 2. SENATE DENIED due process. 4. THE FACT THAT THE STUDENT RIGHTS COMMITTEE wrote regulations for presidential removal this semester was an admission that removal procedures previously did not exist. Anschutz Science Library, a $1 million high-tech building, has I plagued with problems since it opening in 1989. 2. THE PROCEDURES FOLLOWED BY SENATE were not fully consistent with due process, but Fulcher had an adequate opportunity to present his case. 3. THE CODE NEVER STATES that a recall vote is the exclusive means to remove a student body president. He ended the news conference to his wife, Madeleine, and to meet year-old daughter, Sulome, for first time. 5. THE STUDENT BODY PRESIDENT is an ex-officio (non-voting) member and is elected by the student body. Senate did not have the authority to remove him. 1. BECAUSE THE MOTION TO REMOVE FULCHER did not affect his status as a student, the code does not apply. He hugged and kissed Alex Eft AP correspondent. 4. WRITING REMOVAL PROCEDURES was not an admission of their prior inexistence but an acknowledgement that clarification was needed. "I have a date with a couple of tiful ladies and I'm already very I Anderson said. Judicial Board's response Asked what his last words to his nappers were, he rolled his eyes said simply. "Goodbye." 5. FULCHER DERIVES MANY OF HIS POWERS from Senate and is subject to removal. P4 Anderson free afte six years The Associated Press His release ended a brutal s which Shiite Muslims kept 14 U.S. zings in chains, killed three U.S. and bedeviled two U.S. pre- cies. DAMASCUS, Syria — Jour Terry Anderson, the last U.S. h in Lebanon, to free yester pro-Iranian Islamic radicals. E faith and stubbornness help surprise his nearly seven-year of A joyous Anderson grinned brim- raised his arms and warmly g friend as he entered a confee room at the Syrian Foreign Mini Anderson said sheer determi go him through. "You just do what you have You wake up every day, summ the energy from somewhere when you think you haven't got you get through the day, day afte after day," said Anderson, chie die East correspondent of The Ata Press. "You can't imagine how glad I see you," an emotional Anderson reporters. "I've thought about moment for a long time and not here, and I'm scared to death. I know what to say." Anderson, wearing a white shirt a dark cardigan he received only day from his captors, joked a tight-fitting shoes. He said they his first new pair since he was napped Shortly after Anderson arriv Damascus, he spoke by phone Louis D. Boccardi, AP's preside chief executive Officer. Boccardi insisted that efforts made on his behalf and has 'touched the ground yet.' His appearance was delayed hours. U.N. officials, who have fully negotiated for the release hostages since August, said thought he had been delayed snowstorm in Lebanon. Anderson's kidnappers to Anderson over to Syrian security cials who delivered him to Ambassador Christopher Re Early Classes? Baseball cap, Blue Jeans and a Kansas Sweatshirt. Keith Thorpe / Special to the KANSAN Wednesday, December 4, 1991 / The University Dairy Kansan Holiday Section 1991 Seth Yost, 3, of Lawrence puts change into a kettle while being entertained Salvation Army marks 100 years of bell-ringing as holiday fund-raiser By Ben Grove Special to the Kansan This December marks the hundredth anniversary of the Salvation Army bell-ringing tradition. During the holiday season, students and residents alike will be carrying on the kettle and bell-ringing tradition that started in San Francisco. Sara Colt, Lawrence resident, was a bellringer before she moved to Lawrence three years ago and has continued to do it every year. Colt said it suprised her that adults and professionals were not the biggest contributors. "What amazes me is how many teenagers and college kids put money in," Colt said. "I didn't think they would be so sensitive and as receptive as they were. I thought it would be the opposite." As a bell-ringer last winter, Andrea Sahler, Denver junior, noticed people of varying ages contributing. Someone dropped a $10 bill in her kettle. *I did it when there were a lot of people out* shopping," she said. "A lot of little kids like to drop change in." she said. Capt. George Windham, director of the Salvation Army, estimated that every holiday season about $40,000 is dropped in the kettles in Lawrence, much of it change. The holiday season is the biggest fund-raising time of the year for the Salvation Army, which depends on the kettles and its mail appeal to make up 40 to 50 percent of its annual budget. The kettle money goes directly into a general fund where it is distributed to various programs, including holiday meal programs. Windham estimated that last year about 525 area families got a Christmas meal package due much in part to the money dropped in local kettles. "You'll find a lot of people coming up and contributing are people who have been a recipient of a project at one point or time in their lives," Windham said. "People that can least afford to give are the ones that put the most in." See Bell Ringers on Page 15 (5)