mod. But, ative and of the THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Surprise under the backboards ers connear the people expensive enderson The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, July 27, 1976 a solid heat the ) tons of See page 3 s used KU not only but also and part produced it would ion and Shawnee ans. pay for pay for d cities herwise obvious million r-heater s by the Vol.86 No.169 Pichler spots business trends in final lecture By SUSAN LYNN staff writer Environmental protection legislation, criticism of federal regulations and the rapid expansion of international trade are three current developments affecting America's future economic stability, Joseph Pichler said last night. Pichler, dean of the Business School, spoke on the "Continuing Revolution of Business" in the last of seven public lectures sponsored by the School of Fine Arts. Pichler cited the re-enactment of legislation protecting the environment as the first of "sophisticated" acts to affect the U.S. economic base. "Now legislation is holding the producer accountable for social costs. The producer is responsible for using up source resources that have been polluted?" he air that has been polluted?" he Increased criticism of federal regulating systems has also developed, Pichler said, and there are too many areas that are being upsetting the balance of free enterprise. “As for now,” he said, “our government has kept its commitment to safeguarding private property owners, keeping peace and security in national policies with those of everyone.” "Congress should remove controls and rely on competition as a regulatory device," he said. "We should let the invisible hand of competence take control." Another development Pichler saw was the rapid expansion of international trade. Russia and China are the largest consumers, he said, that greatly affect our market in the U.S. and allow larger agricultural allotments to be predicted. Pichler traced America's economic process discussing the impact of the land value system, various antimonopolistic measures and the effect of government control in the 1930s. "I cannot overstress the importance of the wealth of the land to the wealth of the people." Through advanced technology, Pichler said, there is an enormous amount of land available. Information at her toetips Staff photo by JAY KOELZER Judy Browder, Tucson, Arizona, senior, answer the lines of the KU information center. The telephone lines at the center are open 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Ronald Reagan's decision to break tradition yesterday and name a running presidential nomination surprised observers but appeared to have no immediate effect on Kansas' three unqualified Republican National Convention delegates. By The Associated Press Reagan move stuns GOP One of the three termed Reagan's selection of Sen. Richard Schweiker, R-Pa., "surprising." The other two said they didn't much about the Pennsylvania Senator. The former California governor told a Los Angeles news conference yesterday that he had chosen Schweller because although he was a Republican, he knew "basic beliefs compatible with my own." SCHWEIKER, who has been publicly a Ford delegate, accepted Reagan's invitation to his running mate if Reagan was Republican presidential nomination. "This bold, unprecedented action dramatizes the leadership, the courage and the openness which Gov. Reagan will bring to the White House," he said. President Ford's campaign manager said a senior assistant, with surprise to President Rigout, had been in touch. The move could help Reagan gain support within the 103-member Pennsylvania delegation, the bulk of which had been counted in President Ford's camp. BASED ON the current AP survey of delegates, if the entire Pennsylvania delegate should line up with Reagan it will vote on the 1.384 needed for nomination. Ragan's camp was hoping Schweicker could help pry votes from Ford in New Jersey and New York as well. Neither of them formally committed to vote for any candidate. Ford won the April 27 primary in Pennsylvania, but those results are not binding on the uncommitted delegate slate elected at the same time. An AP survey shows Ford has 71 delegates in Pennsylvania to Reagan's six. Twenty-five others are uncommitted and one is for Sen. Howard Baker of Tennessee. MARYNELL REECE, Republican national committeewoman and a delegate Information Center knows it all These and other questions have been answered by the KU Information Center, where we work. Have you ever wondered what time the sun was going to rise? Or who was team captain of the Chicago Blackhawks in 1959? The Chicago Blacksun just raced down Jawbak Vibw. The Information Center—sometimes known as 864-3506—is a well-organized information source and its main function is to tell all it knows. CHRIS SIMS, student research assistant, said that it was "one of the few places on campus with a genuine desire to help people and stop passing the buck." Rv ALEXIS WAGNER "If we don't know an answer we give the caller the name a contact person who will kill you." The center's busiest time was during fall enrollment when 60-150 calls an hour come in. In football and basketball game days bring a number of information requests too, he said. The Information Center answers about 10,000 calls a month during the fall and spring semesters and close to 3,000 a month. Tom Kellogg, Tom Kellogg, a staff member, said. *Our primary responsibility is to people who are new to the campus and are having difficulties with it.* SIMS SAID that the fall semester was the most rewarding time because of the openness. "It feels really good to be able to tell a person," Look, this is what you should do. During enrollment the nine staff members study the appendices in the timetable so they can immediately explain it to confused students. The center gathers information from all departments at the University and keeps up-to-date with events. "YOUVE ALWAYS got to be at it—constantly updating information and establishing credibility with the departments." Sims said. To keep all the information in order, the center uses two file cabinets and a roll-o-d card file which lists all the names under which any toxic might be called. Viking's newest pictures show orange Martian sky The walls are lined with corkboard and string dividers. Notices, carefully tacked between the dividers, fall under the categories of August, September, weekly calendar, theatre, flicks, concerts, and lectures and seminars. More general information is found on a bookshell holding copies of "Bartlett Familiar Quotations," The Guinness Book of World Records," The *Joy of Cooking* and "The World Almanac." Alongside these books is a half-egg bottle of amirin. JOHN CARTER, a staff member since March, said that most of the trivia questions were asked on weekends. He said that drunks often called at about two a.m. wanting to know where they could get something to eat or drink. Another frequent question is, "What time will the sun come up?" THOMAS MUTCH, head of the imaging team, said the latest color photos should represent the true colors of Mars. Since the first color photo was made the day after the lander touched the planet, a process much as one fiddles with controls on a color television set to get lifelike tones. Earth's sky looks blue because when sunlight passes through the atmosphere, the blue part of the light carons off and is scattered, which makes it more visible. to the convention, said Reagan's designation of Schweker was "a surprising choice to me. It is not a name I had heard before." Sims said that' during the day most of the callers needed information on such things as getting grades changed or adding and dropping classes. The new photos were beamed back to earth from the Viking lander on Mars. For the first time, the photos showed the Martian sky a pinkish orange—the color scientists had concluded it was even though Vikim's cameras first saw it as blue. pened long ago during some period when the planet was wetter. Sunlight falling on Mars is scattered by dust particles swept aloft by florence Martian winds, James Pollak said. This dust is orange or orange when the atmosphere is dry. A debate over the color of the sky has left scientists hedging slightly; they said it's probably pink when there's a lot of red dust in the air and prayers that the air is filled with oxygen. The striking reddish-brown of the rocky desert area where Vikong landed results from the combining of oxygen in air or water with surface minerals, Alan Binder PASADAEN (AP)—Mars' red color is only skin deep, formed by a veneer of rusted surface material that appears even more vivid in three new color photos than in Viking's first color picture, scientists said yesterday. Reece, along with Calvin Jarnes of Jewell Museum and Alliams of Wichita, have listed themselves as the world's most valuable When the weather is threatening concerned people call asking if warnings are in effect. The center has a weather radio that broadcasts weather records 24 hours a day. The other 31 delegates include 27 who say they will vote for Ford on the first ballot and 14 who say they will not. Between six and eight p.m. is the busiest time on campus to find out what's going on around sample students. KU police department and is aware of campus emergencies. In addition to the short-answer questions, the center also handles some "crisis calls". Carter said that sometimes people called to talk to someone depressed and needed to talk to someone. THE CENTER has a direct line with the THE STAFF IS trained to deal with potential suicides but only occasionally have they had to use this training. The staff must be trained to suicide callers but urges them to get help. It is the same process that causes rust on earth. Some desert areas of our planet have reddish coloring on the rock and soil that forms under a wet surface. On Mars, the rustful happened long Carter said that sometimes men and women called after ending a relationship and wanted to know whether they'd done the right thing. "You tell them that they're not alone, not a deviant." he said. In the meantime, Gov. Robert F. Bennett called for a Ford-Redigan ticket as the top candidate. "In doing so, he has added a liberal to his ticket and in large part wiped out the distinction between his slate and the democratic Carter-Mondale ticket." Dole声. "We let people know that there's nothing wrong with going for help," Sims said. SEN, BOB DOLE, R-Kan., one of the Kansas delegates to next month's GOP convention, termed Reagan's selection "Bald, but in my opinion, an盟军 move." But the co-chairman of the Ford campaign in Kansas, William Palatak, said that it would be "the best time" for the company. Dole was elected as a Ford delegate. Don Concannon, head of the Reagan forces in Kansas, said that while some conservatives might not like the Reagan choice of Schweker, "they would rather have Reagan with Schweiker than Ford with anvbody." 11th hour move to jump up some delegates. " "IM NOT familiar with the senator from Pennsylvania, but I expect I will have an opportunity to read a lot about him in the next couple of days," James said. "I can 'censor' that his choice of Schwekel will deny my consideration of the governor." "I can't see much effect on the outcome which I see asmunification for Ford on the finish line." Williams said he planned to remain uncommitted until the day he votes. He said he would vote against him. James said the announcement of the Reagan claim had no effect on him. Sears said he wasn't worried about Reagan losing southern support for Ford if picketed John B. Commly. He reiterated the offense, and that Reagan wouldn't run with Ford. John Sears, Reagan's campaign manager, told a Washington news conference that "a great number of Ford owners are telling them who he is soint to run with." The Associated Press press of committed or declared delegates showed neither with enough to win the nomination. On Monday the president announced he would attend the convention—separated them. Audio Reader grants allow for expansion By BERNEIL JUHNKE The Audio Reader Radio Service for the blind and physically handicapped will expand operations into southeast Kansas to assist with Rosi Hurwitz, the program's director. Hurwitz said recently the service had received a $100,000 vocational rehabilitation grant from the Department of Education equipment and receivers to expand its broadcasts to Quanah, Independence, She said she hoped Audio Reader would broadcast through the entire state of Kansas within three years. The grant can be renewed for the next two years. It is the second established radio service for the blind and physically handicapped in the United States, she said. The first was in St. Paul, Minn. CURRENTLY, AUDIO Reader covers an 85-mile radius around Lawrence. Hurwitz said the KIND-FM station in Independence had offered Audio Reader free use of its sub-carrier frequency when it's ready to broadcast to southeast Kansas. "It's very unusual for a commercial station to do this," she said. SHE SAID Audio Reader's $100,000 grant would be used to add 500 more receivers to the system. Special receivers, which are needed to listen to the programs, cost $70 apeiphe, and are loaned without charge to blind and illiterate captured people who request them, alia said. Hurwit said part of the grant would be for hospital and nursing home installation. Warm weather hat styles With temperatures reaching 100 degrees yesterday, many sought the comforting shade of a tree or an air-conditioned apartment. Tamia O'Rorke, 1946 Kent, and Nance Meech, 2020 West 27th, both members of the Stinky Cheese Shopwomen softball team at St. Louis University. Programs about health, exercise, aging, drugs and consumerism are broadcast. "Our program is designed to help people lead more productive, independent lives," Hurwitz said. "We can never lose sight of the basic dignity of the individual." "We'll have a new area news coverage when we expand to southeastern Kansas." Hurwitz said. A FEW BOOKS are read to listeners, she said, but the station doesn't try to compete with the Library of Congress' program of tanned books. Hurwitz said they'd like to broadcast from 8 a.m., to 12 midnight on weekdays and on Sunday afternoons. Currently, Audio Reader has hospital installations in three Topeka hospitals: St. Francis, Veterans' Administration and Stormtown-Vail. HURWITZ SAID Audio Reader even when it increases its broadcasting time to 8 a.m. weekly. It now broadcasts 65 hours a week, from 8, a. to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday; and 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. "You just have to turn on the receiver's switch." she said. She said tape cassettes were too difficult for some physically handicapped people to handle and that Audio Reader was much simpler to use. She said "Shoppers' Showcase," in which newspaper ads and price comparisons are read, was among the first programs of its kind in the United States. "We provide experience in the use of broadcasting materials and proper broadcasting techniques, and the students turn provide a valuable service," she said. Bob Hammond, announcer, said many new programs were being planned for longer broadcasting hours, including a mystery hour and an adult reading hour. The selection "Fear of Flying" in one possible selection for the adult hour, he said. Including a newly created administrative assistant position for which Eileen Greenawalt, former administrative assistant to the chancellor, has been hired, there are three full-time and four part-time employees. ACCORDING TO Hurwitz, "The program runs on volunteer power." She said there were about 30 volunteers of all ages during the summer as many as 100 volunteers during the school year. Hurwitz said crowded conditions at the program center would be eased by a mobile home that would be purchased this year with private donations. It will house three students and four staff members of operation. It will be installed outside Suder House, where the program is located. THE SPACE NOW used for broadcasting and programming would become offices and be used for engineering and production areas. The Kansas Legislature allocated $20,000 more than the $45,000 requested by the University for Audio Reader for the 1977 annual, Tom Fish, assistant director, State Sen. Arden Booth said Audio Reader received the increase because it was a worthwhile program that the University should continue to sponsor. Hurwitz said Audio Reader had always struggled financially. The program was financed by the university when it went on the air Oct 11, 1971. In 1973 the state library system funded the program; the University began funding it in 1974. It ran on a $411,000 budget last year.