University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, January 30, 1990 5 Campaign Continued from p. 1 they had to file a campaign finance statement with the county clerk's office listing contributions. Under the new law, candidates would be notified of each filing deadline and reminded if one was missed. Barbian, Graves, Hayden and Young said they thought the personal expenditure statement was the only document required by the county. Barbian and Young said the contributions they each received totaled less than $50. Graves said he received about $120 for the campaign. Each of the four said he accepted contributions but did not solicit funds or work with committees. However, Jaimes said, if a candidate accepted any contributions, he needed to name a treasurer and file a campaign finance statement. Lewis and Morlan said they thought their statements had been filed by campaign committee members. Lewis said she was out of town from mid-December to mid-January and could not check the filing. She said her committee had received between $800 and $900, which she intends to report this week. Morlan, the only school-board canidate who failed to file, said he thought the statement had been filed before reviewing the review with his committee. Driewulski was the only candidate for city commission to limit his campaign expenditures to the $10 filing fee, exsemplifying him from filing. "It was a personal goal," Dziewulski said. "I was the most cost-effective candidate to run." Under the new law, candidates receiving more than $500 are required to file statements eight days before a primary, eight days before a general election and yearly on Jan. 10. Candidates do not need to file a statement if they notify the commission that total contributions are less than $500. The commission has the authority to levy fines against candidates who miss deadlines and, if a candidate refuses to file, can ask the attorney general to prosecute. Getting candidates to file is the commission's ultimate goal, Will liams said, and prosecution would be a last resort. In the past, prosecution in Kansas has been minimal for this offense. The new law provides a mechanism for enforcement of campaign finance. But the law could be difficult to administer because of staff shortages, Williams said. In Douglas County, Jim Flory district attorney, said he could not remember any case in which a candidate had been prosecuted for failure to file, although he had once been asked to determine whether a candidate was required to file. The commission hired one employee this summer, increasing its staff to six. To keep up with the workload, Williams said the commission should hire two employees this year. "It took us a full year to notify last year's candidates that there were material errors on their reports," Williams said. If the commission staff does not increase by 1992, Williams said, they would have major problems trying to enforce the law. Continued from p. 1 easier was we were across the dateline," Forster said. The team celebrated Christmas one day before the holiday in Kansas. Rand said that before he departed, he had studied to receive a short-wave radio license. Because there were no phones, this skill allowed the team to communicate with people outside the camp. He said he talked to his family twice and was able to talk to the KU short-wave radio station, KOKU, in Learned Hall. Ice The team also talked with people in the Soviet Union, Australia and Canada. Both men said there were few modern conveniences at Upstream B. The researchers slept in tents that were pitched on the snow. Rand said they worked an average of 14 hours each day and would crawl into sleeping bags on the floor of their tents at night. but did not affect their ability to sleep. He said 24 hours of continuous sunlight, which occurs during the Antarctic summer, was strange Rand said the team was trained in cold-weather survival the week before leaving for the campsite. They learned to walk on the ice while being tied to another person. "I never felt that my life was really in danger," Rand said. "I think the most striking thing was that there was ice in every direction. There was no sign of man anywhere." kept at a prison medical facility. ADN did not report whether Rummelsburg had a hospital. Twelve once-mighty Politburo members have been swept up in the anti-corruption campaign. In Parliament, Joseph said 23 officials from the former government were in jail. Honecker. ousted Oct. 18, is accused of leading the country to the brink of economic collapse through mismanagement and the misuse of power for personal enrichment. Joseph said Erich Mitelke, Guenter Mitten and Joachim Hermmann, former Politburo members, also faced trial for treason. Bild, a mass-circulation West German newspaper published in Hamburg, reported last week that Honecker would be arrested and The agency reported that Dr. Peter Althaus, director of the hospital's urology clinic, considered Honecker too ill to be imprisoned. agency ADN reported. Continued from p.1 IF YOU'RE PREGNANT AND YOU NEED HELP NOW... Birthright Honecker NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing and Body Care 820-822 Mass. St. Downtown 841-0100 204 W.13th - Free pregnancy testing call 843-4821 204 W. 13th Hours: M,W, F 1-3 p.m. M-Th. 6-8 p.m. Tues.-Sat. 10-5 Sunday 1-5 10 E. 9th St. 841-3941 --tor Administrative Affairs Sat. 10-12 p.m. Complete BEAUG'S IMPORT AUTO SERVICE Maintenance & Repair - Japanese - Swedish - Germar CALL 842-4320 545 Minnesota STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES ചിത്രങ്ങൾ ചിത്രങ്ങൾ ചിത്രങ്ങൾ EXPERIENCE LEADERSHIP! 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