Tuesday, February 24.1976 3 Housing examined . . . From page one It costs between $1,355 and $1,500 a year to live in a fraternity. Turyanny, Payment is IN ADDITION; there are pledging fees that cost between $20 and $50, and initiation fees of about $5 to $100. Those are paid only once, usually upon joining the fraternity. Facilities and services provided in fraternities vary from house to house. Turvey said that most houses had phones in every room, study and test files, television rooms, living rooms, cooks who prepare 19 meals, a barbershop, parking lots. Sleeping arrangements vary. Many of the fraternities require their members to do cleaning and maintenance, but some have mails. Turvey said that only a few had laundry facilities. Fraternites have either sleeping dorms or beds in the rooms. Sleeping dorms are large rooms with no furniture except beds. FRATERNITY HOUSE rooms range in size from a capacity of two to four. Desks, chairs and other furnishings may be included. Turvey said that all fraternities elected officers and that the men had almost 90% of the votes. "There's pressure in fraternities to be the center of activities, but you expect that when you join." "One pitfall is that you get so involved in the (Greek) system that you often don't have time to get to know other people," Turvey said. "But you really learn how to deal with people because you're so involved." Sororities The 12 scoratives at KU are similar to fraternities, they select members through rush, or a membership program, offer a course in a specific activity, or members in activities to encourage unity. Privacy is something you have to sacrifice in a sincerity, Jelinek said, but the truth is that the government is very careful. JANE JELINEK, Bluff City junior, said she joined Delta Delta because the use of an e-mail system was new. PAM HORNE, assistant to the dean of women and Panhellenic adviser, said that about 815 women lived in sororities, talking about 3.7 per cent of all students. "It's not just another living group because, ideally, everyone has that group membership in common and when they are together they have certain goals and responsibilities." Harper said. "They have something very special in common with each other," she said. The average annual househall is between $1,170 and $1,346. That doesn't include pledge fees, $15 to $33, or initiation fees that range from $40 to $240, each of which are paid only once. Each sorority has a "correspondence building," it built for the househall only the first year or paid separately. Corporation fees are between $112 and $250 per woman. Between 55 and 80 women live in each sororite. Her said. She said the houses were more like homes than residence halls because they were smaller. Meals in sororites are prepared by cooks, and the cleaning is usually done by maids and janitors. Most sororities have televisions, living rooms, coin-operated or free laundry machines and vending machines. Nearly all are located within a few blocks of campus and have parking space for members' cars. Sororites have rush to select members twice a year, in August and January. Horne said that men weren't allowed past public areas in aoritories during pest control seasons. SCHOLARSHIP HALLS at KU house smaller living groups than Greek houses, and are considerably less expensive, they offer a variety of housing options residents do all the cooking and cleaning. Scholarship halls KU has eight scholarship halls, four for men and four for women, all located just outside the city. east or campus? *parking space is private;* cast there 988 students living in the halls this year, 1.8 percent of KU's total enrollment. About 50 people live in each hall James Barker, Columbus, Kan,Junian, he said he thought the cooperative system was "I hadn't cooked much before this, and I learned the Barke said, "but there have been lots of others." He said he was saving a substantial amount of money, but he also chose a scholarship hall because he came from a town and didn't know many people at KU. LIVING WITH a group sometimes limits privacy, Barker said. Women are allowed in a room. Barker said he dined out sometimes because he didn't like certain meals, and this cost him an extra $15 to $30 each month. Two of the women's scholarship halls, Miller and Watkins, cost $250 a year to live in. Maur Faint, Miller Hall president, said that food wasn't included in their bills. Instead, Miller and Watkins each have seven kitchen, and seven women are assigned to each kitchen. The women must cook as well as a widget, shop and cook the food. FAUST SAID that plan stemmed from the will of Elizabeth M. Watkins, who left money for the hall to the university. Watkins stated that she thought college women should learn how to cook for at least seven people. Faust said that she like scholarship hannu that there probably won't as much private college. It's a big co-operative spirit, but you learn to be assertive and open about how you learn. He said that 400 students usually applied for the 160 to 180 openings in the halls each year. Students living in the halls must maintain a minimum of 12 credits with at least 14 credit hours each semester. Kirk McAlexander, assistant to the dean of men and adviser to the All Scholarship Hall Council, said the average cost to live in a man's hall was $500 a year. He said the women's halls, except Miller and Watkins, cost about $815. RESIDENTS are selected on the basis of their financial need, scholastic ability or potential and their attitudes and goals. McAlexander said. He said that students didn't have to be on scholarship to live in a scholarship hall. Scholarship for the halls work in shifts to residents of the halls work in shifts to prepare the meals, but they can plan their own shifts around classes and activities. "It's really different to get to know someone through working with him, rather than just seeing him at meals," McAlexander said. Like the Greek system, the scholarsap- hall have like dorming doors, or beds in the rooms for several residents. Desks, dressers and dressers and bookcases are also provided. Most of the halls have free lounge facilities, televisions, living rooms, pianos, kitchens and recreation rooms. They also offer a variety of music albums, records and books that can be checked out. (Tomorrow: Advantages and drawbacks of apartment living.) Nonfaculty From page one . . . COPELAND SAID rank should be denoted by the titles of assistant research scientist, associate research scientist and senior research scientist, with each title corresponding to assistant professor, associate professor and professor. and internationally famous after 15 years," he said, "he is still just a research associate and can never be called anything but a research associate." Misconceptions about research associates have interfered with the passage of CDU'd services. "Many people look at research associates and say, 'They'll only be here a short time.' They don't have experience in academic departments," he said. Many research associates of CDUD organizations have been here 15 or 20 years continue to attract outside sponsorship. "If the research community is to survive, there has to be some acknowledgment that these people have a faculty-equivalent status." There are two different sources of funding for research, Copeland said, which further muddles the issue of faculty-equivalent rights. SOME ORGANIZATIONS, such as the Kansas Geological Survey, are almost completely state-funded. However, almost all personnel for the Bureau of Child Research are financed by federal projects. Only personnel supported by state funds are funded by CDTs' proposal. Copeland said because the availability of funds for "outside-sponsored projects" can't be controlled. Faculty-equivalent personnel aren't granted sabbatical. CDUU also is the sole representative. Copeland, Calif. "We would like to see state-funded research associates go through a regular sabbatical committee that would decide who is in charge of the same one that is for faculty members." Copeland said a University policy for vacations had never been spelled out, although each division had an established vacation policy for its personnel. William Hambleton, director of the Geological Survey, said a policy for research associates was needed simply because no policy now exists. You'll have 2 chances to see the "These people have the same level of academic preparation and are selected with the same kind of care as faculty members with whom they work," he relates to such people. "Hambleton said." Gary Burton Quintet one at 7 p.m. and one at 10 p.m. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25 at 737 New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas 841-0817 Now, how often can you see one of the country's top Jazz Vibraphonists, with 19 albums to his credit, in an intimate setting, for only $4, in Lawrence,Ks?! MIDNIGHT MADNESS Tuesday . . . (Tonight!!) 7:00 - ?? Sleeveless Sweaters Values to $20^{00} & $30^{00} Now $14^{90} Outerwear Leathers-Suedes-Trenchcoats Now 30%-50% Off Sport Coats Values to $85^{00} Now $39^{50} to 1/2 Off 3-pc. Suits Reg. $140.00 Now $99^{50} - 1/2 Off Dress Shirts Reg. $16^{10}$ $20^{10}$ Now ½ Off Ski Sweaters Reg. $25⁹⁰..$27⁹⁰ Now $18⁹⁹ Rugby Shirts long & short sleeves Reg. $1895 Now 1/2 Off open thursdays till 8:30 Casual Pants Reg. $20^{90} Now $11^{90} Large Group of Sweaters Shawl-Cardigans-V-Necks Now 30%-50% Off Dress Slacks Values to $30^{00}$ Now $6^{00}$ $19^{50}$ Plus Much, Much More!! this is the largest midnight madness ever - - all of our KC stores have transferred their fall styles to the Lawrence store for one last sale. 920 Mass. Student Senate powers to be transferred tonight The final transfer of Student Senate powers will be at 6:30 tonight in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. The old Senate will meet with the newly elected Senate to turn over the reins of student government. The new officers will then take office and describe their goals for next year, Tasheff and Teddie Tasheff, student body president, told yesterday that the old officers would take an oath to give their reports and elect three holders, give holdover election gives a final chance to senators in the old Senate to serve next year, if they lost in last week's elections, she said. interested in serving on one of the seven standing Senate committees, she said. the new Senate will first elect the Committee of the Senate to interview a student Tasheff said there would be no new legislation introduced tonight. Study in Guadalajara, Mexico THE GUADALAJARA SUMMER GROUP OF THE VERSITY OF ARIZONA PROGRAM will offer July 5-August 13, anthropology, political science, language and literature. Tuition and fees, $195; board room and desk for students of the Guadalajará SUMMER SCHOOL. Office of international Program, University of Arizona. --- KANSAS PREMIERE! SIDE-SPLITTING SEX SPOOFS AND NOSTALGIC TELEVISION CLASSICS: The Sinematic and Cinematic Sides of 1950'S Sociology The 1950's Sex Education Festival This is a series of shorts that may be the most hysterically funny movies ever to play on the Kansas University campus. The titles include: How Much Affection (1956); Doing Do's and Dont's (1954); Is This Lovely (1957); Are You Popular (1952); Are You Ready for Marriage (1955); and Dangling Participie (1959). To describe but two of them: How Much Affection, which might better be titled The Perverse Passion of Petting, is the idyllic story of teen-aged love run amuck. With their entire life ahead they learn that their family's hopes for a future of virtue deserve family-raising are haunted by the specter of unbridled physical love and sex-fueled madness! But with the help of family and friends they arrive at a truly inspirational and heartening solution to The Menace of Premarial Intercourse. Then in Standish Lawder's outrageous Dangling Particle, we see a sixty-five year old matronly high school teacher trying to tell a group of potential pervers that each and every fantasy, no matter how bizarre, is 'perfectly normal.' This film is without doubt one of the most remarkable social documents of its time: a sort of ultimate statement on adolescent frustrations and sexual brainwashing techniques at high school. They are not only the most real and are of equivalent quality, each one specially selected for its ability to evoke whisles of disbelieving laughter! One last film in Part I is the 1950's equivalent of sexual politics — Ronald Reagan's only filmed encounter with Jayne Mansfield! ☆☆☆☆☆☆ PART II 1950'S Television Masterpieces Ozzie and Harriett (1957) Called Father's Night at the Fraternity, this one features the absurd Wally and an incredible musical climax with Ricky pounding out some Gorgeous ★★★★★ BURNS AND ALLEN (1954) Possibly the greatest episode ever made as Grace helps a young sorority girl to be beautiful so she can get a date to the prom! ★★★★★ Elvis Presley on Ed Sullivan (1955) This one is truly unreal. Elvis's first appearance on the Sullivan Show and he was censored from the waist down as he pounded out Love Me ★★★★★ FATHER KNOWS BEST (1956) Stars Robert Young! Kathy runs away from home when she has "adolescent problems" but comes back home in the end when she realizes that when all is said and done, Father Knows Best! FOUR NIGHTS ONLY! THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY & SUNDAY, FEB. 26, 27, 28 & 29; WESCOE AUDITORIUM; COMPLETE SHOWS NIGHTLY AT 7:00 & 9:45 P.M. $1.75 SPON. BY VOLUNTEER CLEARING HOUSE. ---