6 Thursday, July 27, 1978 University Daily Kansan Primary From page one each mull of the tax levy a property owner will pay every $1,000 of his property assessment. The budget increase, if approved by voters, would be used to finance salary increases, which school board members say are sorry needy if Lawrence is to keep pace with other area communities in its ability to attract high quality personnel. The salary increases would go to teachers, secretaries, custodians, maintenance workers and food service workers (although the job duties, but not to administrative personnel). School board members said they thought the inclusion of salary increases for administrators in the May 9 proposition was a factor in the referendum's defeat and they specifically excluded them in the Aug. 1 referendum question for that reason. In addition to responding to the two referendum questions Tuesday, voters will be deciding on the two major party candidates who will face each other in state representative races in each of the county's three legislative districts Nov. 7. IN THE 43RD District, two Democrats, Fred Stewart and Jim Supica, are attempting to gain their party's nomination so they can run for the Republican John Vosse in the general election. Vogel, 62, is a 18-year veteran of the Kansas Legislature and a graduate of the University of Kansas. A farmer and stockman by trade, Vogel has served on the House Agriculture and Livestock Committee, the House Budget Committee, and Meas Committee. He is disapproved for the Republican Party nomination. Stewart, 39, is a sawmill operator and bounsebler. He is a high school graduate with one year of college experience. Stewart says he is in favor of keeping property taxes at their current level and is opposed to any increase. Supica, 25, will be a second year law student at KU in the fall. A former director of Headquarters Inc., 1602 Massachusetts St., a personal crisis and drug abuse center, Supica has served with a number of social service agencies in the Lawrence area. In the 44th District, Republican Willie L. Amison Jr. and incumbent Democrat Michael Slover are running unopposed for governor nomination for state representative. Glover, 31, is a student in Washburn University's Law School who plans to practice in Lawrence upon his graduation. He has served three terms in the Kansas House and has been a member of the Assessment and Taxation Committee; the Judiciary Committee, the Commercial Financial Institute Committee; and the Medical Committee. He is a subcommittee chairman the Ways and Means Committee. Amison, 30, is an insurance representative for the American General Life Insurance Co. He holds a bachelor's and a master's degree from KU and taught for five years at Pinckney Elementary School, 810 W. Sixth Street. In the 4th District, there are five candidates vying for the seat being vacated by retiring incumbent Republican Lloyd the Young, who has been joined by Taraboubos and John M. Solbach. The --- TARABOULOS, J. is a representative for Reserve Life Insurance Co., 927% Massachusetts St. A former teller at Lawrence National Bank. Tarabouls plans to complete a bachelor's degree in political science at KU in the field of involve himself in university governance as a senior senator and as president of the Association of University Residence Halls. Republicans are Ronald E. Christian, Curtis I. Scroille and Ken Whitight. Sobach, 30, is a practicing attorney. He received his bachelor's degree from Kansas State University, did graduate work at KU and received his law degree from Washburn. While in college he was involved in community-based international and international programs. Christian, 30, is a homebuilder. He is a high school graduate with some college experience and says he thinks that his business needs a prepared him for the legislature. Whitenth, 33, is a practicing attorney in Lawrence. He received his law degree from KU in 1974. He was a legislative intern to the House of Representatives Local Government Committee. He has been a lawsuit attorney for the Legal Aid Office in Lawrence since 1975. Sevilla, 57, is a management consultant. He holds master's degrees from KU and Ohio State University. He has his own business in the federal government and private industry. The only county race in this year's primary is for the Douglas County Commission seat being vacated by retiring incumbent Republican Peter Whitenight. Democrat Walter Cragan and Republican John Suder are unopposed in their efforts to secure their party nomination for the nominating convention, which will face each other in the November election. Cragan, 70, is a former County Commission member who has been retired for the past seven years. For 35 years he was a businessman in Lawrence. He has been active in the local Chamber of Commerce and the Kansas All-Sports Hall of Fame. Suder, 39, is general manager of the American General Insurance Co. and president of Financial Dynamics Inc., a financial planning company that offers KU and has been involved with the Lawrence Park Board, the Lawrence Noon Cosmopolitan Club, the Lawrence Association of Life Underwriters, the Lawrence Noon H Club and the County Extension Council. Royals sail by Mariners on home run KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)—Doug Bird and Steve Mingleton hit two to his tails and Pete LaCoe hit a home run, helping the Kansas City Royals bombard the Mariners 12-3 last night for their 11th victory in 12 games. Bird, 4-4, held the Mariners hitless through six innings. But Bird, a right-hander, who had allowed only two runners on second-inning walks, walked Ruppert Jones and Leon Roberts to open the seventh inning. Then Tom Pacorei doubled to the right-center field wall, driving in both runners. Mingiori took over and retired the next three batters, although Pacekore came around on a groundball and Bob Dodd. Pacekore singled in the ninth inning. volve four training techniques—weight lift force, forearm or pressure training and a strict training FRI. & SAT. NIGHT—12:15 Coach to build weights program The prestige of the Big Eight Conference was one reason that mad' Ron Hubbard leave the University of Fla. do to become a professor doing each at the University of Kansas. Hubbard, 31, was named recently to the newly created coach's position, which will serve all intercollegiate sports programs at KU, emphasizing football. While at Florida, Hubbard held a position similar to his new job at KU. He said yesterday that the conditioning program in UF was "from zero to a real competent program." Kubu said another reason he came to KU was the challenge in starting a weight training program. start Hubbard and KU already had a good start on a conditioning program because of its high level of skill. KU IS NOT behind the eight ball," he said. "They know that the athlete be molded not only physically but mentally. The purpose is to make them more than The high quality of Big Eight athletes, he said, has kent league competition exciting. The goal of the program, Hubbard said, is to teach physical conditioning as an effective skill. Some results will be noticeable immediately, he said, but the full impact of the program would be evident in three to five years. athletes, to make them into student athletes." "The Big Eight has kept a steady level of good football teams, year after year," Hubbard said. "And the strange thing about the Big Eight is that all progressed at the same level, all at once." "Every year there's a host of schools going for the championship. Many pro prospects come out of this league, and many teams get bowl bids." The new conditioning program will in- Hubbard said that his coaching position would cover men's and women's sports but that 90 percent of my job is football where they have the most to do in conditioning." 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