THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Program to entice Med Center graduates to stay in Kansas Vol.86 No.153 The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas Monday, June 28, 1976 See page 3 Satellite union plans hinge on new estimate By SUE WILSON Planning for the proposed satellite union was stalled because the 1965 estimate of卫星 orbit is not correct. Pat Wolfe, Kansas Union administrative assistant, said Friday the new cost study, which is being conducted by the Satellite Network, should be ready sometime next month. If the revised costs go over a $2.5 million limit, those planning the union would have to pay for costs and other recommendations which were approved by the Facilities Advisory Committee last April, said Jon Josserand, student member of the ACLP and the Memorial Corporation Board. The first plans for a second union, drawn Search group to start study Staff photo by JAY KOELZER The search committee to select a vice chancellor for student affairs has been formed and is to meet July 10, the University of Shankel, executive vice chancellor. Shankel said that at the first meeting the committee would begin to study some of the names already recommended for the vacancy. William Balfour announced his resignation as vice chancellor for student affairs in May. The office is to be filled by Aug. 15. in 1968, called for a 40,000-square foot three-level structure northwest of Allen The task force, appointed by the Student Senate last March, used the 1968 blueprints in determining where services should be placed in a new building, Jossner said. The committee members are Donald Alderman, dean of men; Clark Bricker, professor of chemistry; Joseph Berry, professor of physiology and cell biology; Leonard Davis, student affairs secretary; Joan Edwards. University of Kansas alumna; Salvador Gomez, Garden District College graduate; Lawrence junior; Kathy Hoggand, director, KU Information Center; Richard Rrundquist, director, University Counseling Center; Tedde Winters, assistant director; J. J. Willem, director of business. Since 1968, construction costs have risen dramatically, he said, making a completely new estimate by architects and contractors necessary. Bleary-eyed radioman The Memorial Corporation Board authorized spending up to $5,000 for a cost of $12,000. Josserand said the cost analysis would help determine whether leaving the first level of the proposed satellite union unfinished would save enough money or whether new plans or different financing would have to be considered. "We'll know then whether we'll have to scratch again." It is seconded. The Satellite Union Task Force report divided 31,000 square feet among food services, a bookstore, land areas and facilities for banking and postal services and ticket sales. The report endorsed an aggressive foot lower level for future development. Although he could manage only a few hours of sleep, during the night, Dave Redwell, president of the KA Amateur Radio Club, The Kansas Board of Regents approved a satellite union project in June 1966. After four years of study and planning, the project was completed by a student referendum in April, 1920. In 1975, a study released by the College Union Evaluation Systems said 89.9 per cent of the students surveyed wanted a satellite union. kept broadcasting near the end of the 24-hour marathon sponsored by the American Radio Relay League at Wells Overlook Park. The Student Senate Services Committee, which recommended a satellite union, said the west campus area was not conveniently served by the existing Union. This February a second student referendum on the project endorsed the plan to move the university from New York. Costs for the 1970 project were estimated at $1.8 million compared to $2.5 million for the 1960 project. If a cost analysis finds the financing within the $2.5 million limit, the Facilities Advisory Committee, composed of students and faculty, would begin final planning, Burge said. As soon as the figures are in, planners will have to move quickly before construction starts. Local hams join global marathon All parts of the world heard Kansas ham radio operators this weekend when 30 members of the Douglas County Amateur Radio Club broadcast a 24-hour marathon from Wells Overlook Park south of Lawrence. Beginning under sunny skies and stretching into the night, the club broadcast a simulated emergency message which was received by more than 10,000 harm operators as part of their annual nationwide Field Day festivities. The Field Day is a contest sponsored by Women's job roles researched The Doughs County Amateur Radio Club has 40 members licensed to broadcast and 40 more awaiting arrival of their novice members in the Communications Commission. Higher license levels technician, general, advanced and extra. Each level has required oral and written exams based on the number of messages sent in able to send and receive in a given time. The radio operators also use the moon to bounce signals to points on the earth. The pressures foreseen in marriage, motherhood and coping within a male-dominated world are the reasons women account for less than one per cent of dentists, doctors and engineers, according to two University of Kansas researchers. Walter Smith, assistant professor of curriculum and instruction, and Kala Stroup, dean of women, have written a book that encourages women to enter medicine and engineering. Smith and Stroup said they hoped the book would be published by the University of Georgia Foundation as a guide for high school and junior college counselors and teachers. Schumaker said many people who previously had experience with citizens' band radios were joining the band. The harm was real, he said, and he pointed to the area of mobile communications, he said. the american Radio Relay League to see which of its clubs can receive the most direct transmissions, or contacts, from a local radio station. The president of the Douglas County club, said. Another reason for the shortage of women in such areas is that girls are unaware of opportunities and aren't exposed to role models in the science area. Smith and Stroup were cautious in assessing whether most science teachers will use the book. "The contest is used as a way of gauging your performance over a year to year period," Schumaker said. "We had over 1,000 contact with the same amount this year." "The surrogates of the *20s* inspired these in 'these men' are man presently being led, Seth." Each club set up its own broadcasting stations, generators and antennas to begin broadcasting. "I don't know if the book will sell," she said. "Primarily, it will present how-to techniques." Strop said careers in engineering and medicine were well-suited to the wife or mother returning to study after a short absence. The Department of Health, Education and Welfare's Office of Education has found that teachers come to a high school counselor with a case. The science she's told not to worry while boys with the same problem are told that they'd better buckle down, Stroup said. Most students are men, so there is a need to expose girls to women role models, she said. These opportunities are offered in professions in which women are rare: race, dentistry, research, nuclear physics, occupational studies, obstetrics and gynecology. Stroup said. "We a little more flexible than the CB's. We can do a lot more, like fast-scan radio telemetry, and we have more bands to have a wider area of coverage," he said. Bud Waugh, who recently joined the club, said he had no experience with radio and he joined the club for social reasons. But now, when he was hooked on being a harm operator. Research shows that girls with abilities in mathematics and science aren't choosing courses once they do enter, Stroup said. Gearing down demonstrated by women between the ages of 16 and 24 who want to enter an art school would settle for a humanities degree. Strom said. "I can't understand it," Stroup said, "Engineering and medical careers offer the opportunity to have your own hours or work on a part-time basis." Hijackers seize Air France jet, land in Uganda Smith and Stroop's findings indicate "girls believe science is not compatible with a woman's desire to get married and raise children. Workshops for science teachers on science careers are poorly attended and have higher priorities than encouraging women's careers, Smith said. The heart of the ham operat rs communications system is a satellite. Stroup said that parents usually expect three goals of their daughters: to marry, to bear at least two children and to settle comfortably in suburbia. The French consul in Benghazi, who assisted in the negotiations, said none of those aboard the plane had been harmed. He said the hijackers allowed food and drink to be delivered to the aircraft. One of the passengers was a baby, he said. "Parents must tell their daughter that there is more than just one track to follow." Stroup said. "Women have the same nature to achieve as men, except that women think hard about what they achieving, they may hurt someone such as their parents. Men don't think like this." Air France sources said the plane had it airborne for 20 minutes when it was granted permission to land. "We have found that parents and children don't encourage science to girls." Group study. "Even though parents will say that they want their daughter to do whatever she desires," Smith said, "the daughter says that she doesn't pursue a career in areas because her parents don't encourage her." "These jobs are not only conducive to 'raising a family'," Stroup said, "they are also careers with openings everywhere; so you can move directly to a job that easily should her husband be transferred." Airline officials in Athens said nine Americans boarded the plane there. There were conflicting reports about the number of passengers with the figures ranging from 70 to 83. "We beam our signal up to the satellite and it retransmits it around the country and around the world. The only place where we are connected is signal is Antarctica," Schumaker said. The Israeli Transport Ministry reported to TeVak that seven Arabs were known to be inside the building. Entente is on the shores of Lake Victoria is northeast of the Ugandan capital of Kigali The idea for the book originated from Stroup's and Smith's involvement with a 1973 grant by the National Science Foundation. Workshops funded in Wichita, Shawnee Mission, Topeka, Hutchinson and Lawrence were set up to encourage high school girls with high ACT scores in science and science to enter these fields, and to let them know what to expect if they do enter. The workshops also familiarized parents with the idea their daughters can enter non-traditional fields. The club operated two transmitting stations during the contest, including a continuous wave (CW) transmitter. The CW transmitted signals into sound to send and receive messages. The book will stress that women do not sacrifice their feminine identity by entering these areas, and will install self-perception into the girl with science and math abilities, allowing her to make a more stabilized choice in a career, Stroup said. One ailing passenger, believed to be a British woman, was freed in Benghazi, while French and Syrian officials negotiated for several hours with the blackjacks and the plane took on a full load of fuel. "Mostly, it gives you the opportunity and the means to talk to so many different parts of you that you get to learn about different parts of you in the work through your contacts," he said. Radio Israel, which broadcast special newscasts throughout the night, carried a report from Paris saying the French Foreign Ministry had instructed its embassy in Kampala to do everything possible to safeguard the lives of the hostages. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a radical guerrilla group, told a Syrian news agency in Damascus that it was responsible for the hijacking. Air force officials spoke in Spanish and broken English during the negotiations in Benghazi. Libya. "Our total operation uses no commercial power or phone lines to aid transmissions," Schumaker said. "We want to make it seem like an actual emergency, and our transmitters are the only source of communication." The hijacked plane was on a flight from Tel Aviv to Paris yesterday and had made a stopover in Athens when it was commandeered. Hijackers seized an Air France jetliner carrying 265 persons in Athens, forced the plane to land deep into Africa and landed at Entube, a airline officials reported early today. Staff photo Cairo's Middle East News Agency had reported, without attribution, that the hijackers were heading for Khartoum, Sudan or Aden, the capital of South Yemen. Israel radio monitors tracking the plane reported the pilot once said he had been told to land at a small airfield on the border of Uganda and Tanzania. Later they said the pilot was heard notifying another aircraft in that he had been told to fly to Entebbe. Tammy Quick, age 9, explained to an officer from KU police and parking why she and her friends were swimming in Potter Lake on Sunday. Although there is no rule against swimming in the lake, the children were warned to watch out for broken glass and debris. By The Associated Press Khartoum to about 1,375 miles southeast of Bengazi, and Aden is 750 miles farther east. No swimmina? Sudan is a moderate member of the Arab League, while South Yemen is in the radical wing and has granted asylum to Palestinian-backed hikiers in the nast Ben Gurion Airport outside Tel Aviv was placed on alert because of concern the hijackers might order the plane to fly there and have their own demands for the lives of the faraselis aboard. The 257 persons aboard flight 139 included 12 crew members. Bartender's job a challenging mix Bv LEWIS GREGORV the bartending business is more than fixing simple highballs; a bartender must know how to fix such delights as a Freddie Kruger, a Bubba Johnson, and White Spider and Yellow Bird. Staff Writer Run, Jump, Skip and Go Naked, Blue Tail Fly and Prairie Flower are other favorites for the winter. "I know about 100 drinks by memory, but there are probably more than 700 drinks altogether." Chris Black, bartender in Russell's East, 3400 W. 30th, sdi.. "The Harvey Wallbanger was the drink a few years ago that everyone ordered, but last year it was the Tequila Sunrise," Black said. Black admitted that he had to look up some drink recipes, but most he already "You only need to know about 20 different drinks, because there is a lot of combinations," Steve Gasper, manager of the 7th Club, 7th and Massachusetts;安杰斯. Gasper said he didn't mind asking the customer how to fix a drink if he hadn't. "I don't know," he said. "The customer usually feels great when you ask them how to fix a drink, because they like it." "We serve a lot of Flaming Pine," Mothers because we light it on fire and people like the looks of the drink," Gasper said. Gasper said he didn't think it was hard to make drinks, but that some bartenders are like him. The bartenders they talked poor upbing by the students and people in [1]. "We have a lot of student, but they don't up well, we don't. Olafie the piano man, the Ribaygurus." said. "The businessmen are great because they tip well." One bartender who asked not to be identified and the fact that people didn't tip him, was the chef. Hayes said the Rubayay was looking forward to having delegates for the Republican National Convention because of the expected increase in business. Despite the lack of tipping, the bartenders seemed to like their jobs. Black said bartending was the best job that he could find. He graduated with a B.S. in education, but couldn't find a teaching job. "Sob Hills lives up to its name by people thinking they didn't have to pay for good meals." "I wanted to stay in the Lawrence area and teach social studies, but there wasn't a teaching job available," Black said. Gasper said, "When I knew I was going back to school in the masters of business administration program, and needed a job. I interviewed for several jobs and decided to bartender. I didn't know much about bartending, but they trained me to do the job." "I've been working here more than a year and it's the best payin' job I can find," she said. Karen Hidaka, bartender at the Sancor bakery, she thought she had the best job in town. Gasper and Black said they favored liquor by the drink in Kansas. Black said he believed Kansas was losing money because of the liquor law. By The Associated Press Reagan cuts Ford's lead Ronald Reagan cut President Ford's lead to a slim 25 delegates over the weekend as the race for the Republican presidential nomination headed for a convention showdown with 182 uncommitted delegates holding the key. The tally yesterday stood at 1,001 delegates for Ford and 976 for Reagan, according to an Associated Press delegate poll. With only 98 delegates left to be chosen, the outcome of the nomination the outcome apparently resists with the 123 still undecided resists. Ford went into the weekend 16 delegates ahead of Reagan, 894 for the President to 928 for Reagan. But at GOP conventions in four states, Reagan picked up 46 delegates in addition. In addition, two previously uncommitted Wyoming delegates switched to Reagan. The weekend began on a strong note for the President as his well organized forces held firm to win 17 of the 18 delegates chosen early Saturday morning at a Republican state convention in Minnesota. Reagan had hoped to pick up six of the Minnesota delegates, but the Ford people were willing to give him only one after pushing through a rules change guaranteeing them control of the delegate selection. Reagan forces were firmly in control at state conventions Saturday in Montana, New Mexico and Idaho and refused to give Ford's backers even a single delegate. The former California governor swept all 20 delegates chosen in Montana, all 21 selected in New Mexico and four elected in Idaho.