10 Wednesday, March 24, 1976 University Daily Kansan --- Old houses From page one 1875, is still standing. The farm eventually encompasses 230 acres. Shortly after his arrival in Lawrence, his wife and four children from Harford, CT. Along with farming, Stephens continued his career as an attorney and was elected district judge before 1878. According to his daughter, Kate, and other people, he and Chancellor James Marvin planned the first professional school at the University—the GREEN RECEIVED $25 a year for his services from each of his 13 students, because the University had no funds for his salary. The Board of Regents appointed him dean of the new law school in 1879, and Judge Stephen Hedge had declined the honor. the "law department" was born in 1878 when James Woods Green took charge of the first law classes. Green had come west in 1875 and had married Stephens' daughter, May. Green took charge of the classes after his father-in-law declined the offer. In 1903, the Kansas Legislature appropriated $50,000 for a law school building. On a petition to the Board of Regents from 1906, the legislature approved it, given to the structure, completed in 1906. The naming of the law school began a bitter family argument between Green and Berger. Kate was a professor of Greek at KU and wrote several books on various topics, in- Senate . . . From page one isn't a voting member of the Senate, House said, he isn't subject to the conflict of interests that a StudEx chairman might have. The StudEx chairman is a voting senator and a representative of a particular student constituency, he said. TASHEFF CALLED HIS letter a "horrendous misuse of senate funds," and said that House should have used the official records. Senate Record, to make his comments. She said that Senate funds weren't supposed to be used by Senate officials for their work. Tasheff said House's letter was "purely biased and preudicated." Tasheff said that the existing office of administrative assistant to the treasurer, a full-time nonstudent position, hadn't been used to its capacity. If the treasurer's office was abolished, Tasheff said, the administrative assistant would take on much more of the technical duties the treasurer had performed. NEW SENATORS also will elect a new StudEx chairman tonight, along with Senate representatives to University Council and SenEx. In other business the Senate will consider a resolution urging the formation of a college athletic department. Field House basketball court center circle. The committee will consist of students and representatives from the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation and the University of Oklahoma. KUAC had planned to sell the center circle "K," to the highest bidder when the old court was replaced. Earlier this year, an effort was made to keep the "K," and Chancellor Archie R. Dykes decided in February that the University wouldn't sell it The Senate also will consider a petition, submitted by Tashsef, that would ask the administration to determine a five-year projection of the sources and amounts of money that will be available for the KU Women's Athletic Program. Tashsef said an annual ban was needed the Senate and the Women's Program could plan. The Elections Committee will meet before the Senate meeting at 6:00 in the Oread Room of the Union to appoint students to vacant Senate seats. --- Burt Reynolds Liza Minneilli Gene Hackman "Lucky Lady" PG Eve. 7:30 & 9:35 Sat.-Sun. 2:30 Jack Nicholson 9 Academy Awards Nominations "One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest" R Eve. 7:30 & 9:45 Sat.-Sun. 2:30 4th Week of Laughter "Sherlock Holmes" Smarter Brother" PG Eve. 7:40 & 9:25 Sat.-Sun. 2:10 Telly Savalas & Peter Fonda "Killer Force" PG When he's after you—the world's too small a place to hide Eve. 7:30 & 9:30 Sat.-Sun. 2:00 Double Laughs "Hearts of the West" / Rancho Deluxe" 7:30 Sunset 9:30 Ends Sat. Ends Thursday George C. Scott & Anne Bancroft "The Hindenburg" PG Eve. 7:20 & 9:40 Ends Thurs. cluding "Life in Laurel Town," which was about Lawrence. Local residents knew her for her caustic tongue and vituperative wit. She adored her father and was infuriated by the fact that he didn't care of the credit for the establishment of the law school. SHE OFFERED TO underwrite the cost of replacing a laudatory plaque placed in the school for Green with one acclaiming her deceased father. The two-story red brick building hired by a wide white wooden porch at 743 Indiana also includes a two-story brown building, 1860 or 1861 by Hirium Towne, a local contractor and carpenter. Towne also built Old North College, the first University building in the state, a number of buildings in Lawrence. WHEN QUANTRIL Raided Lawrence in 1863, the house was owned by Emily Hoyt, who operated it as a boarding house. The raiders are said to have spared the house after Hoyt pleaded with them that she was not responsible for the sole source of income. The story goes that her son watched from the cupola as downtown Lawrence burned. But Jaedicke and his wife had been moved by the plight of the Southern slaves. When the Civil War broke out, they decided to buy the factory in the factory and side with the North. He was such a good worker that his boss made him a partner in the factory. The profit Jaidicke made was reinvested in the arsenal. They moved to the free state of Kansas and settled in Leavenworth, where Jadeckie got work at Ft. Leavenworth. A year after Quantrill's raid, the Jaedicks moved to Lawrence and established a hardware business. WHEN PRICE'S ARMY neared the border and threatened Kansas, the couple worked unsparingly for the Union. Working many nights until midnight, they cast bullets in molds to arm the townpeople against the guerrilla bands. After the war, their hardware business prospered and the family moved to the Southern-style house at the corner of Indiana and what was then called Henry Foster House in the faction until 1970, when it was purchased by the Roger Moffet family. The Nachman Aronszajn house at 1015 Tennessee, also made of red brick with a white porch, was built by the first unwhalu mayor of Lawrence, Col. Alarmo Blood, in BLOOD WAS ELECTED mayor by popular vote, but elected officers weren't filled then. Lawrence was a free state town in Texas when she refused to accept the results of the election. Medical Center begins search for new official The screening will be done by Chancellor Archie R. Dykes; Robert Kugel, executive vice chancellor for the Med Center beginning April 1, and Miller. be vacated this month by Merlin I. Olsen, Russell Miller, vice chancellor for Medical Center administration, said he would be considered for the next 30 days. You need math power, no matter what your major. And T1 puts more math power at your fingertips more economically. The KU Medical Center is searching for a hospital administrator to fill the position to oversee all medical activities. Miller said it might take several months. How can TI give you greater value? The answer lies beneath the keyboard. There, major technological advances have enabled the greatest power at lower and lower costs. to fill the position, during which time he will be acting hospital administrator. TI-1200 and TI-1250... real quality in low-cost calculators with replaceable batteries. The TI-1200 gives you percentages at the touch of a key, has an automatic constant in the four basic functions for performing repetitive calculations, full floating decimal, and 8-digit display. You can carry it to class or lab in your laptop briefcase; $12.30* (AC adapter optional). Olsen said his resignation wasn't related to recent controversy and resignations in the cardiothoracic surgery section of the Med Center. OLSEN RESIGNED to accept a position May 1 at the University Colorado Medical Center. Olsen, 35, said he would be executive director for the Colorado medical complex, which comprises three hospitals, each with its own administrator. HE SAID HE HAD been very involved with the Med Center's expansion programs, and he would like to have been here for the openings. Quality you can trust... The TI-1250 does everything the TI-1200 does—plus a full function, four-key memory. You also get a change-sign key...all for $18.95*. (AC adapter optional.) "It's very, very attractive for me and a significant promotion in my career," Olsen said. A crisply styled portable with percent key, full-floating decal, automatic constant in the four basic functions, and an easy-to-read 8-digit display. Olsen leased just before the scheduled dedication May of Orr-Major Hall, the new teaching facility. The new hospital is scheduled for completion in 1978. The T1:1500 ships neatly into packet or purse, operates on rechargeable batteries Texas Instruments electronic calculators. More math power for your money TI-1500. looks great, performance. And it's rechargeable. Why TI calculators are quick and easy to use. TI-2550 II... a versatile powerhouse with memory. All TI calculators described here use algebraic entry. This allows you to key-in a problem just as you would state it, in the same natural manner in which you think. No system is easier to master. This eight-ounce, 8-digit portable percentages automatically, and has as four-key memory system. - Suggested retail price ©1978 Texas instruments incorporated Science keys, too. Reciprocals, squares, square roots, and a reverse to invert fractions and recall next-to-last entry. Automatic constant in all four basic functions and a two-place or full-floating decimal. Rechargeable batteries and AC_. $49.95*$. SR-16-II multifunction scientific calculator. This portable wizard will not only whip through mere arithmetic but also through complex technical problems. Solves sum-of-products or quotient-of- sums without re-entering intermediate results or rewriting the problem for sequential operation. Special function keys include square root, square, reciprocal, raise a displayed number to a power (y)', raise "e" to a power (e'), logs and natural logs. Automatic constant, independent memory, full-floating decimal, and scientific notation. Replaceable batteries (AC adapter optional). $39.95*. SR-50A and SR-51A... slide-rule calculators. The SR-50A solves complex scientific calculations as easily as simple arithmetic. Algebraic entry system with sum of products capability. classical slide-rule calculations—roots, powers, reciprocals, factorials, common and natural logarithms and their inverses, trigonometric (sin, cos, tan) and hyperbolic (sinh, cosh) functions and their inverses—all in full-floating decimal point or in scientific notation. The versatile electronic memory allows data to be stored and retrieved or added to memory... $79.95*$. The SR-51A performs all classical slide rule functions, then goes on to statistical functions. Such as mean, variance, and standard deviation. Factorials, permutations, slope and intercept. Trend line analysis. And there is a random number generator as well as 20 preprogrammed algorithms which allow the machine allows decimal selection of from 0 to 8 places and has three user-accessible memories... $119.95^{*}$. A lasting investment in the future, a TI calculator will not only serve you well as you work toward your degree., but will stay with you as you pursue your career. See them wherever quality calculators are sold. TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATED