6 Monday, March 25, 1991 / University Daily Kansan DISABLED AMERICAN VETERANS Thrift Store--- OPENING SOON DONATIONS NEEDED - Serviceable Clothing - Appliances *Viscountable Clothing *Appliances *Furniture *Misc. Household Goods **FREE PICKUP CALL 749-4900 or** Bring by: 1601 W. 23rd, Suite 116 S/S of Southern Hills Mall between 9 and 4 --excluded women from jobs in potentially hazardous environments because the women might become pregnant and put the fetus at risk. GET ANY REGULAR 6" SUB FOR ONLY $1.99. 1720 W. 23rd St. Offer good at participating stores only. SUBWAY 842-4782 Not good in combination with any other offer. Offer expires 4/30/91 Diet Center Your choice: The weight-loss professionals. Lose 12 pounds in 4 weeks $5900 * *Counseling/Supplement fee $29.95 per week Other fees may apply. First law symposium is a success By Benjamin W. Allen Kensan staff writer The first symposium sponsored by the Kansas Journal of Law and Public Policy turned out exactly as its organizers intended. David Summers, symposium director for the journal, said, "Everything came together perfectly (feelings) and I pleased with the way things went." Speakers discuss environmental policies The symposium, designed to promote an interdisciplinary environment in which to explore the effects of laws on public policy, was conducted Thursday and Friday in Green Hall. "It was a wonderful opportunity to listen to the brightest minds talk about one of the most timely subjects of the day," Summers said. Experts in the fields of international environmental policy, domestic environmental policy and the workplace environment gave a series of talks based on papers to be published in the journal. The talks included question-and answer periods and open discussion of the talks. The symposium, "Environmental Policy: Choices for 1990s," featured speakers ranging from the general counsel of the Environmental Protection Agency to John Kennedy, general counsel of Johnson Controls, a company involved in a rulong of the Supreme Court last week. aurete Manville, law student and editor-in-chief of the journal, said, "As it turned out, the timing could not have been better. "But even if the Supreme Court had not decided the case last week, just to meet and talk one-on-one with one of the principal players of a case before the court would be a tremendous opportunity." Manville said the journal and symposium were designed to promote "Physically, the law school is isolated. and sometimes I think it is mentally, too," she said. "The law impacts people as they live in society." Manville said questionnaires asking for comments on the symposium or suggestions on how to improve it and finding nothing but glowing remarks. Summers said he was looking forward to seeing the first issue of the journal printed. "The only downside were remarks saying that it was a shame more people didn't come to the sessions," she said. Manville said the first issue of the journal would be available by June 1. More than 90 people attended the session that featured Kennedy. "If we do a good job of editing, it will be an excellent journal," he said. Wildcare director Nancy Schwarting releases a red-tailed hawk into the wild, north of Clinton Lake. The hawk was released Saturday from the Wildcare unit after recovering from gunshot wounds to its wings sustained in January. Free bird Student in Wisconsin says woman was raped The Associated Press MADISON, Wis. — A student who said he called police to report a sexual assault on a college fraternity lawn said that about eight peoplehood吓和 watched the woman engaged in sex and did not intervene. "The people were being quiet, they were saying, 'Shhh, let them be,'" said the student, who said he watched the March 10 incident on the lawn of a house in Wisconsin's Chi Phi fraternity at the university of a neighboring fraternity. In an interview with The Associated Press, the student said he called police after the woman and man got up from the lawn. "It didn't seem like she knew what was going on," he said. "I ran up to her after the police arrived and said, 'You're the one who did it?' I taxed a lawyer, she just stared." The student, a member of the Theta Fraternity, spoke to the AP on the condition he not be identified. He said he feared possible retribution from the man involved in the incident. Police said they had not identified the man and had not determined if it was a case of sexual assault. Chi Phi fraternity president Benjamin Schomburg told the AP earlier that several people watched the incident from inside the frat house, where about 209 people were attending a beer party, but that they did not intervene because they did not think it was an assault. The 18-year-old woman told police she was sexually assaulted. The Associated Press "The girl was not resisting at all. She showed absolutely no signs of resisting." Knudsen said. Julie Knudsen, 21, a student, said she was one of seven people from the fraternity party who watched the man and woman for two minutes. CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — Residents of three University of Virginia fraternity houses seized in a drug probe will now pay their rent to the U.S. government, and their rooms to drug searches, authorities said. The student said he decided to call police after watching the woman get up. 11 Virginia students arrested on drug charges "If anyone feels they cannot live within that atmosphere, they can "It just wasn't apparent that it may have been a sexual assault until she was standing on her own all that well. She wasn't speaking." leave," U.S. Marshal Wayne Beaman said of the new regulations. The houses, operated by local chapters of Phi Education, Delta Upsilon and Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternities, were raided late Thursday by federal marshals and local police station. Eleven people were arrested. Justice Department officials said Meanwhile, at a news conference Friday, police displayed a dozen partly filled sandwich bags containing frozen meats and nomenic mushrooms, one bag of LSD the seizure was the first involving college fraternity houses. Beaman said the alumun groups that owned the seizure challenged the seizure in federal court. 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