Thursday, May 4. 1978 University Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus Events TODAY: LEON FLEISHER, pianist, is giving master classes from 9 to 12:30 and from 2 to 16 in Swarthout Recital Hall. STUDENT SOCIAL WORKERS meet at 11:30 in Alceve B of the Kansas Union. UNIVERSITY COUNCIL meets at 3:30 in 108 Blake. THE DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY is having a graduate student colloquium at 3:30 p.m. in the Oread Room of the Union. CAMPUS CRUSADE meets at 3:30 p.m. in Alceve E of the Union. THE INFERTRATERINITY COUNCIL Executive Committee meets at 4 in Alceve C of the University of Kansas. THE INTERPOLITICAL TEMPORARY Soviet Literature" at 4 in the International Room of the Union. THE STUDENT SENATE PUBLIC RELATIONS COMMITTEE meets at 4:30 in the Governors Room of the Union. TOMORROW; THE SUPPORTIVE EDUCATIONAL SERVICES Annual Student Achievement Day ceremony will be at noon in the Potter Lake area. Chancellor Archi R. Dykes will have an OPEN FORUM at 1:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union. The KU ADVERTISEING CLUB will have its picnic site at 4:15 p.m. in the building on West Campus. TER will be dedicated at 3:15 in front of the building on West Campus. ROBERT FRIERY AUF, k professor of physics and astronomy, will speak on "Aspects of Diffusion in an Electric Field" at 4:30 p.m. in 136 Malott. The PHARMACY AWARDS BANQUET is at 6:30 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. The STUDENTS COMPANY REKITAM will meet at 7 p.m. in Partons B and C at the Union. The STUDENTS COMPANY REKITAM will be at 8 p.m. without Recital Hall. TONIGHT: THE ALL SCHOLARSHIP HALL COUNCIL meets at 6:30 in the Governors Room of the Union. SUA BRIDGE meets at 6:30 in Aparlans B and the Union. PANHELLENIC meets at 7 in Parlor C of the Union. The SENATE LEGAL SERVICES COMMITTEE meets at 7 in the Reed Room of the Union. AN ANTHONY SEEDLER HAIR is at 7 in the Wahut Room of the Kanaan School. HEUETER HAIR is at 7 in the Reed Room of the Union. Council Room of the Union. MECHA meets at 7:30 in the Forum Room of the Union. AAUP meets at 7:30 in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. The KU BALLOONING CLUB meets at 8 in Cork 2 of the Union. THE SUA BOARD meets at 8 in the Governors Room of the Union. JOE UTTERBACK, jazz pianist, presents his doctoral recital at 8 in Swarthout Hall Recital. EJ. COREY, Harvard University professor, is giving Frank B. Dains Memorial lecture on "The Total Synthesis of Erythromorhiol B;" at 8 in Sumnerfield Hall. WASHINGTON (AP)—The use of machines, instead of humans, to sort mail is leading to increases in the number of letters routed to the wrong city and subsequent delays in delivery, the Postal Service said yesterday. cities—often to cities in other parts of the country, Senior Assistant Postmaster General E.V. Dorsey told the Postal Service board. Machines delaying postal service A Postal Service survey of intercity mail handled in 30 facilities found 2.2 percent of mail containing foreign content. "As an example, a letter from New York City to Washington might wind up in Cleveland. You then have to send it from Cleveland. You will be at least one day later," he said. DORSEY W AS asked by a board member, Robert Hardesty, if there were fewer letters sent in the wrong direction before me measuring replaced much of the surface. "Oh, yes," Dorsey replied. He said the missrate is higher now because "mail used to be sorted twice, and that gave you more information errors. Now, you only have one shot at it." Dorsay send the reasons for missent mail and mechanical and human errors and impaired performance. Postal Service delivery standards call for letters to arrive in one, two or three days, depending on the distance they must travel. Mail is delivered by mail carrier with 90 percent of letters are delivered within the service standards, but missent mail is one of the main reasons why some letters are not delivered. The machines have helped the Postal service trim its work force at the same time as new technologies. ELKHART (AP) — Arare May snowstorm piled up to 8 inches of snow across the southwest corner of Kansas yesterday, a day observed nationally as Sun Day. Sun Day brings record snows through Kansas The heaviest snow was measured at Elkhard, where the 8 inches that fell Tuesday and yesterday morning were to be a record for so late in the season. The Kansas snowfall was associated with a storm that dumped up to 17 inches in the southern Rockies and lesser amounts in Oklahoma and Texas. Light snow fell during the morning as far north as Dodge City. Lee Stinson, weather station spokesman at Dodge City, said that the light covering there was the first time in winter there had been any measurable precipitation at Dodge City so late in the spring. Now at Overland Photo Senate ... From page one support of a 10-sport women's athletic program, saying that the bill may be misinterpreted as a willingness to fund the program. Senators opposing the bill were fearful that an expression of support might jeopardize the proposed legal services and that the bill was approved by Chancellor Archie R. Dykes. Jeff Chaney, chairman of the Sports Commission, resolution was not committed to Farkas. "The point the bill is to express what the feelings of the students are and to present them to Marian Washington (director of women's athletics)," he said. "We're saying to her 'Yes, we are interested in the program and seeing it create a 10-sport program,' but we realize this carries no weight.' Chanav said. In response to a request by the KU Athetic Corporation that portions of student seating at football games be rearranged, the team disagreed with any changes in student seating. The results of a telephone poll by the Communications Committee asking students for their opinions regarding the game against basketball games was announced at the meeting. The Seating Committee will meet tonight to discuss the Senate' actions with representatives. Academic Affairs will be working on a new feedback form that should be ready to present to the administration by early fall. He is chairman Regier, Academic Affairs chairman. The poll indicated that almost half the students questioned favor the present seating arrangement at games and would not favor reserved seating. Chanay also announced that Clyde Walker, KU athletic director, will be at an athletic forum to answer questions about seating and other matters at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 10, in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. Craig Templeton, Finance and Auditing chairman, said the committee would work on changes in the Revenue Code that concern the budget process. The poll also showed that a majority of the students were satisfied with the present system of selling tickets and would favor keeping non-students out of student see- Senators also allocated money to two engineering organizations that were not considered during the budget hearings last week. But they submitted their requests too late. Margaret Berlin, Bonner Springs sophomore and chairman of the Communications Committee, said that a random survey of students was conducted over a variety of sites. The University Association for the Advancement of Women Engineers received $12,800 short of their original request. The $800 deletion was for travel expenses. In their committee reports, several chairman announced their plans for the plan. The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics received $350, the full grant. The second bill, which would have required that all senators serve on a Senate committee or board of some kind, was defeated. Templeton said a possible change might be to change the date of the elections from February to late November or early December. The first, which requires that senators sit together according to their constituencies at the first two meetings after each election, was approved by a narrow margin. The Senate also acted on two pieces of legislation concerning its internal agency. He said the move would ease the strain of the budget process, because the added time would allow everyone to be more familiar with Senate proceedings. "LITE TASTES GREAT AND IT'S LESS FILLING. I ALSO LIKE THE EASY-OPENING CAN."