Tuesday, February 3, 1976 3 KU budget requests From page one Hayden said after seeing the conditions in Malott that he thought the budget request for Malott was justified and that he considered it a priority item. IN ROBINSON, Wayne Ossness, chairman of the department of health, physical From page one Names . . . retain her own name simply because she didn't like her husband's name Lamber wrote that surnames began to be used in England during the 13th century when more identification than just a Christian name became necessary. Last names identified the person by occupation, location, or father's name. A woman usually was identified by the same surname as her husband, but usually that of housewife and it was most convenient to identify her through her husband. THE PRACTICE of a wife taking her husband's surname is more a matter of tradition than law, according to an article by Julia Lamber published in the Fall 1973 issue of the Washington University Law Review. Lamber wrote, "There is nothing in our English heritage requiring married women to assume their husbands' surnames. Rather, choice, convenience and devotion to a fiction give us this custom. This practice is not invariable nor compelled by law." THE SIMPLEST WAY to retain your maiden name after marriage, Graham said, is to just not change your name, and use the same name as you did before your marriage. Tacha suggested that as further insurance, a woman should write to all her creditors, her bank, the Internal Revenue Service, the State Department of Revenue and the Treasury, with wish to inform them of her intention to retain her maiden name after her marriage. If a woman has already started using her husband's surname and has decided she wants her maiden name back, back are two ways to change names in Kansas. The first is the common law method, in which a woman simply starts using her maiden name again. Through balthicual use, she will become her legal name, Graham said. The problem with this method, Graham said, is that if a name isn't changed through the courts, when a woman turns 65 and applies for social security she may not be able to prove that the wages she earned from her using her husband's name belong to her. TO AVOID THIS, Graham said, a woman can have her name changed through a formal court procedure by petitioning the Douglas County probate court with an order stating her reasons for the change. The woman could also be ordered by the Douglas County Courthouse, she said, adding that a woman can either fill out herself or obtain the help of a lawyer or Legal Aid. Graham said the court then required the petitioner to publish the name change in the legal news, such as that in the Lawrence Journal-World, for at least two weeks. The latter is the best way to change names, she said. She suggested, however, that if a woman couldn't afford the court fees and newspaper ads, she could change them in a common law method and then change it through the courts as soon as she could afford to. IRENE EMMA, professor of Spanish and Portuguese, said she went through the legal procedure of changing her name from her husband's to a surname she chose herself. Emma said she hadn't used a lawyer, but had poked around the law school library and the courthouse until she found name change material. She was also similar to her own. She said the process had cost her about $50 for court fees and newspaper advertising. Wanita Whelle-Einhorn, assistant to the dean of men, handled the problem of a name change after marriage in another way. She and her husband, Robert, both changed their names before their marriage to a married combination of their two last names. Crab lice infest even the nicest people - Special comb included --education and recreation, showed the subcommittee areas he considered the most - Without a prescription at Drug Stores "Gym space is probably the most critical." Osness said. One gym is used for both men's and women's intercollegiate activities, as well as intramural basketball games, Osness said. Lucas said that although the floor and ceiling in Robinson had been repaired, Robinson's dance studio and perceptual motor clinic's still needed repair. plans, two new gyms would be built on Robinson's west side. Osness said that according to expansion LUCAS, in describing Summerfield's Computation Center, said "everything connected with the computer center could almost be classified as makeshift." the center's staff was in six different places in the University and supplies were in Temporary study rooms have been set up in the military science building Annex to accommodate computer science students, be said, and the old refreshment area in Summerfield was changed into a study area. Paul Wolfe, coordinator of the University computation center, told the legislators that The new building would consolidate the center's supplies and staff, he said. Dykes said the lack of space in Summerfield made the School of Business, which is in Summerfield, more difficult to accredit. Woife said the center, used for both student and administrative purposes, was used for all courses. In Watson Paper, Dean of Libraries Jim Rans pointed out cracks and water stains in the wood. "We have to funnel them in and out of this area," he said, "and it gets pretty hectic." Shankel the filled hallway was an indication of inadequate library space. "They have to study where they find a place," Shankel said. Lucas said KU was the only institution under the Board of Regents that had spent all funds allocated to it for library development. He said money taken from other areas had also been used for the upkeep and purchase of books. SHANKEL SAID there was a 21 per cent inflation rate in the cost of books. The budget allotment for the library ($160,000) would be used to keep abreast of that inflation, he said. on the floor of Strong, where visual arts classes and facilities are housed. Dykes said, "This is the best example I know of our students and making use of all available space." 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All of them—even the slowest—now read an average novel in less than two hours. They read an entire issue of Time or Newsweek in 35 minutes. They don't skip or skim. They read every word. They use no machines. Instead, they let the material they're reading determine how fast they read. And mark this well: they actually understand more, remember more, and enjoy more than when they read slowly. That's right! They understand more. They remember more. They enjoy more. You can do the same thing—the place to learn more about it is at a free speed reading lesson. This is the same course President Kennedy had his Joint Chiefs of Staff take. The same one Senators and Congressmen have taken. Come to a Mini-Lesson and find out. It is free to you and you will leave with a better understanding of why it works. Plan to attend a free Mini-Lesson and learn that it is possible to read 3-4-5 times faster, with comparable comprehension. FREE SPEED READING MINI-LESSON TODAY and Daily through Saturday, Feb. 7 7:30 p.m. EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Located in ADVENTURE a bookstore Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th and Iowa Phone 843-6424