Friday, March 28, 1986 Nation/World University Daily Kansan 9 • Vintage Wine • Hundreds of Beers • Great Spirits • Champagnes • Vintage Panel confirms suspensions in wake of shanty incident United Press International HANOVER, N.H. — A Dartmouth College panel affirmed suspensions yesterday for 10 students who attacked symbolic anti-apartheid shanties on the campus lawn with sledgehammers. The 10, all members of the conservative Dartmouth Review newspaper, were given 48 hours to leave the Ivy League campus or file an intent to appeal, said Laura Dicovitsky, an administration spokeswoman. Some of those suspended said the college's motivation was to silence the newspaper. The suspensions for the 10 students ranged from one term to three terms. Each term at the college lasts three months. "As of now, they have been suspended," Dicovitsky said. "Technically, they have 48 hours to leave the campus. That's all that's clear now." The Jan. 21 attack on the shanties, built last November by the Dartmouth Community for Divestment to protest the college's $63 million in investments linked to South Africa, sparked a 30-hour sit-in at administrative offices by anti-apartheid activists. The 10 students, plus two other non-Review undergraduates, initially received stiffer suspensions from the college's Committee on Standards last month. Christopher Baldwin, 18, of Hindsale, Ill., one of those suspended, accused the committee of playing political football with the 10 because of their affiliation with the Review. The committee overturned an earlier ruling that found the students guilty of violence, but affirmed rulings that found them guilty of malicious property destruction and disorderly conduct, Décivitisky said. Deborah Stone, the Review's editor-in-chief, also accused the committee of a bias against the independent newspaper, which sparked controversy on the New Hampshire campus for its right-wing lampoons of liberal professors. TWA attendants call replacements unsafe United Press International WASHINGTON - Striking flight attendants, who took their case to Congress and the American public yesterday, accused Trans World Airlines of jeopardizing safety by employing inexperienced replacements. Victoria Frankovich, head of the Independent Federation of Flight Attendants, met with staff members of a House transportation subcommittee to discuss the union's safety concerns. About 6,000 flight attendants struck TWA three weeks ago in a dispute involving wages and work rules. Frankovich told a news conference that rookie flight attendants acted improperly when a Boeing 727 cabin filled with smoke. TWA said the workers were fully trained and performed their duties. Some passengers, however, questioned whether the attendants did all they could to ensure safety. Federal Aviation Administration officials said the 90 passengers and six crew members on a flight from St. Louis to Boston were evacuated Wednesday when an overheated air conditioner billowed smoke as the aircraft taxied at Boston's Logan International Airport. One injury was reported. Frankovich and other union members charged that the replacement flight attendants had failed to recognize the seriousness of the situation and delayed notifyin the pilot of the smoke. They also said the attendants did not know how to operate the rear emergency exit doors. "It demonstrates that the company has failed to fully train and qualify our replacements," said Mary Ellen Miller. The theft of $1,012 in phone services was reported Wednesday by a Lawrence woman, police said. A friend of the woman's daughter used her calling card number to make long distance calls. A radar detector, valued at $300, was stolen between 11:45 p.m. Wednesday and 12:15 a.m. yesterday from a pickup truck in the 100 block of Minnesota Street, police said. On the Record One thousand red bricks, valued at $250, were stolen in December from a storage area on West Campus, KU police said. An equalizer and two speakers, valued together at $180, were stolen between midnight and 8 a.m. Wednesday from a car in the 1200 block of Rhode Island Street, police said. A compact disc player, valued at $300, was stolen between 3 and 4 p.m. Wednesday from a room in Ellsworth Hall. police said. BEFORE YOU BUY, Check the KANSAN. Our advertisers might save you money. Vintage Wine • Hundreds of Beers • Great Spirits • Champagnes • Vintage Wine • Hundreds of Beer Cheers to the Hawks! 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