8 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Friday, Feb. 14, 1986 Civil rights speaker to talk By Brian Kaberline Staff writer A day of activities on campus marking Minority In Law Day will be capped off tomorrow with a speech by political and civil rights leader Julian Bond. Bond, a state senator from Georgia and a nationally syndicated columnist, will speak in Hoch Auditorium at 7 p.m. The speech, co-sponsored by the Student Senate and the University Lectures Series, was organized by the Black American Law Student Association. Martin Spencer, BALSA president, said yesterday that the speech topic would tie in with the day's theme. "Minorities In Law: A Bridge Between Community and Chaos." "'I feel that he can articulate the issues in society facing minorities today,'" he said. Spencer said he also thought it would be good to see someone who wasn't afraid to take a stand for what he thought was right. Spencer said there also would be three workshops for the day. The workshops will run consecutively at 3 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. They will cover different topics in law. A session on bankruptcy will be led by Benjamin E. Franklin, chief judge of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Kansas, James Tippin, a Kansas City, Mo., tax attorney, will lead a workshop on tax law. A session on non-traditional careers in law will be conducted by J. Oliver Lee Jr., a Wichita attorney, Spencer said. Bond was elected to the Georgia State Legislature, only to find his seat denied because of his position against the Vietnam War. In 1966, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Georgia had violated Bond's freedom of speech and the legislature must seat him. In 1968, Bond was nominated for vice president at the Democratic National Convention, the first black to be nominated. He was forced to withdraw because, at the age of 28, he was too young to qualify. Seat-belt requirement attacked The Associated Press TOPEKA — Requiring the use of seat belts in Kansas would be an unnecessary infringement on people's rights and could be a death sentence for an unlucky few, the State Senate Transportation and Utilities Committee was told today. "This isn't Russia. This isn't China. This isn't Cuba, and I think we should refrain from dictating to people." Rep. Jeff Freeman, R- Burlington, told the panel. Freeman and eight others testify against a bill that would require the use of seat belts in Kansas said they thought seat belt use should be an individual choice. the vehicle where he had been riding was crushed by the impact. Ronald Ford, a Manhattan resident, said he was alive only because he wasn't wearing a seat belt when he was in a one-car accident in December 1984. He said he was thrown from the car. The section of "I don't think this committee has the right to play God with people's lives," Ford said. "If this bill does become law, it would be like passing a death sentence for many people." 'White Train makes U-turn in Kansas city Instead of forcing people to use seat belts, Freeman said, the state should require insurance companies to provide lower premiums for drivers who use seat belts. United Press International AMARILLO, Texas — A "White Train" thought to be carrying nuclear warheads to a South Carolina submarine base was routed back to the Pantex bomb assembly plant Wednesday. The train apparently turned around in the southeast Kansas town of Fredonia. The Department of Energy had the train turn back because rain along its planned route in Georgia made railroad tracks there unsafe. The train also missed a possible confrontation with a small earthquake that rocked the area along the Georgia-South Carolina border yesterday morning. There was no accident or danger to the public, said James Bickel, director of the DOE's Transportation Safeguards Division in Albuquerque, N.M. Bicket said the decision to bring the train back to Pantex was prompted by trouble with tracks in Georgia. "We had questions as to the condition of the track further down the way in Georgia, where there was a bad storm, and the decision was made to turn back," Bickel said. CHECKERS NIGHT OWL SPECIAL the Sanctuary Fri. & Sat. 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