Happy bedtime! THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Vol. 88, No. 120 Monday April 3,1978 Staff Photo by DONALD WALLER New and Old The span of the new Kansas River Bidge is finished and traffic could begin using it tomorrow, White Whitenth, chairman of the Dougherty County commission, said that the project would be completed in 2018. and Finney and Turupead, consulting engineers for the project. After the bridge is open to traffic, a work order will be issued for Anderson Construction Co., Halton, to begin construction of the bridge. Dental students lose tuition aid By DENISE RUPP Staff Writer Senatorial confusion has cost Kansas strengthening an out-of-state dental bank $1,900 a year. Under the mistaken impression that the state of Kansas was paying the students' tuition, the Kansas Senate voted against a bill that each student $1,300 a year in financial aid. The state pays the dental school, Creighton University in Omaha, $4,500 a year for each of 10 positions in its dental school. That agreement with Creighton was negotiated five years ago because Kansas does not have a dental school. Robert Vining, dean of the Creighton dental school, said that $4,500 was the cost of purchasing the student's admission and that it did not reduce the student's tuition. LAST YEAR the state payed Creighton for each position. Of that amount, $1,900. The senators evidently thought that the $4,500 was paying the students' tuition and that the extra $1,500 was being returned to the students in cash. The Senate voted last month to increase the amount of each payment by $1,800. The Senate considered the situation again last week when State Sen. James Francisco, D-Mulvane, attempted to restore the $1,500 for the students. Francisco's proposal was defeated, and initial students will continue to pay all of their fees. The situation first came to the attention of the Senate last year when a student complained to a legislator that he was not getting as much money back as was another student, State Sen. Wint Winter, R-Ottawa, said last week. Marlin Rein, chief of the Legislature's fiscal staff, said last week that the discrepancy existed because Kansas increased last year both the amount of the payments to Creighton and the amount of the tuition waivers. Under the original contract with Creighton, the state of Kansas payed $4,000 a year for each student. Of that amount, $3,000 went to Creighton for purchase of the position and $1,000 was applied to the student's tuition. negated, students received $1,500 tuition reductions. That agreement went into effect last year, but applied only to the freshman class. Kansas continued to pay only $4,000 a year for each upperclassman already enrolled in the program, and their tuition waivers remained at $1,000. When the new $6,000 contract was Bennett probable recipient of next statue questions By JOHN FISCHER Staff Writer University of Kansas administrators have been forced to make the next move in the battle over the moving of the Jimmy Green statue. John Martin, assistant attorney general, said Friday that KU administrators would he has to ask Gav. Robert F. Bennett to make a decision on whether the stature would be correct. Martin prepared a report Tuesday that stated the statute should not be moved to new Green Hall because it would damage historic property. See STATUE page nine KUAC renews renovation plans By MARY HOENK Staff Writer Staff Writer A VIP seating area, an expanded club area and possibly a new fence are again in the plans for a renovation project in Memorial Stadium as a result of action taken at Friday's meeting of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation board. The board also approved KUAC's budget for fiscal 1978-79, even though expenses are expected to surpass expected revenue by $112,730. In a closed session, the board voted to adopt a budget with a projected income of $5 million. Despite objections from one faculty member and student representatives present, the board also approved use of funds, which could remain from a current $1.8 million renovation project, to finance a chain link fence around the south end of the The expansions for the VIP and Victory Club areas, once part of an original renovation package, are now to be financed through a special Nish,Nish, chairperson of the board, said yesterday. Student protect surfaced last fail and continued until a student ticket surcharge UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Associated Press, United Press International Sadat seeks Israeli compromise Cairo—Egyptian President Anwar Sadat said in an interview published yesterday that he would meet again with Ezer Weizman, Israeli defense minister, within two weeks, but he said that unless Israel compromised, political and military negotiations would not be resumed between the two countries. Israel has requested a resumption of the negotiations. Sadat talks with Weizman on Thursday as being serious in nature. See story page two. Cuban fighting in Angola reported LONDON—According to a story in the London Telegraph yesterday, Cuban soldiers have spearheaded a six-month terror campaign against right-wing guerrillas in northern Angola and attacked hundreds of villages. A Telegraph correspondent said refugees and guerrilla fighters told him that tanks with helicopter support attacked villages; Midjets bombed forests with napalm to force out the defenses. See story page two. Carter proposes Rhodesian talks LAGOS, Nigeria—President Jimmy Carter said in Lagos yesterday that the United States was moving as quickly as possible to convene a peace conference on Rhodesia in response to the urges of black African leaders. Carter leaves Washington to make a brief stopover in Liberia. He then will return to Washington. Weather . . . Lawrence could have scattered thunderstorms today and tonight, according to the National Weather Service. High temperatures will be in the 80s today and in the low 70s tomorrow. Lows tonight will be in the 40s; Skies should be partly cloudy tomorrow. Locally... Higher temperatures have meant less need for heat in University of Kansas buildings, but apparently some radiators continue to pump it out. Faulty valves on some of the older steam radiators may be part of the problem. See story page three. Provocative therapist plays devil's advocate By SUSAN WOODARD Staff Writer A young man walks up through the audience to the gray-haired man at the front "What's your handle?" the gray-haired man, settling into his chair, asks. "Tim," the young man, sitting down, renies. "Ok, Tim," the gray-haired man, pulling his cigarette, says. "What's the problem?" "I'd like to quit smoking," Tim says. The gray-haired man smiles and lights his cigarette. "Oh yeah?" he asks, taking a puff. "What for?" "Take your time," he says, "that's a touchy." Tim pauses and the gray-haired man smiles. "I want to live longer," Tim replies. IT MIGHT HAVE BEEN the beginning of a comedy routine, but it was actually the beginning of a therapy session. Frank Farrelly, who visited KU Saturday, was taken to a therapist for a technique he developed after finding more traditional therapies to be ineffective. "What for?" the gray-haired man says, "What you're about your life? Timothy?" *Reryce is a social worker at Family, Social, Psychotherapy Services in Madison, Wis. His visit was sponsored by the School of Welfare and the KU Psychological Clinic. Farrell says his first provocative therapy session occurred July 11, 1963. Essentially, on that day he gave up and began agreeing that life was hopeless. It was only seconds, Farrell said, before the depressed client was trying to convince Farrell of the truth. "SINCE THEN, Farrell has tried provocative therapy with groups, in particular, on the Internet." patients, the retarded and the criminally beaten, the he had had good results with all those groups. The goals of provocative therapy, according to Farrell, are to help the client to be more assertive, like and care for himself and to be clearer and express himself better to others. "If at some point they aren't laughing or smiling." Farrally said, "then it's not provocative therapy as far as I'm concerned. I don't mean just fling out one of those great provocative one-liners and then whammo!" TREATING PROBLEMS that way takes a good sense of humor. However, Farellly said, it is not enough for the therapist to learn how to treat him; the client also must begin to laugh at himself. "Provocative therapy is playing the devil's advocate with the client," he said. "I say to the client, 'This is what you believe. How do you like it?' By taking their irrational fears very seriously and drawing them out to their logical conclusions, Farrer said, he can tell how ridiculous some of their problems are. While watching Farrelly speak, it is difficult to tell whether he is a social worker or a stand-up comic. After one funny statement, Farrellly turned to a lady in the audience and said flatly, "You like it? You can use it." Yet Farrelly was serious at times. To effectively lampoon a person's problem, he said, one must truly understand the problem and perhaps even have experienced it. "I WANT MY clients to think, 'He knows—he's been there.' " Farrally said. "So many therapists say I understand," and the client thinks. "He doesn't understand." Farrellly stood silent for a moment, staring at nothing in particular. "I want to know," he said. "I want to know." But then the fun was back. "After all," he said. "I've been taught by the nuts themselves—the experts." Farrelly said provocative therapy was so effective it even worked on him. He spoke of an incident that occurred while he was writing his book, "Provocative Therapy." Farrellly said he was having trouble getting started and was complaining about his problem to his students and colleagues. Then a student said to him, "I think you're right to hestate. What if you did go through and write it and it sold only two copies?" "I just about crawled under the chair," he said, and I thought "This is no way to help people." After explaining his therapy for about an hour, Farrell interviewed volunteers from the audience to demonstrate it. He and the volunteer talked for 30 minutes and then each gave his impressions of the interview and answered questions from the audience. The volunteers did not say they thought Farrelly was making fun of them. They said they thought he really understood their problems and them to see their problems more clearly. ONE WOMAN discussed a problem she was facing at the city hall—a fear of driving outside the city limits. After discussing her problem with Farrelly for about 20 minutes, the woman said, "You know, I'm getting so tired of this." "I bet you've been tired of it for a year and a half now. " Fearlessly replied. "yes," the woman said, "but I've never been more tired of it than now." Farrell said that not everyone could be a provocative therapist and that it was not something that could be learned. He said a provocative therapist had to be able to make a person's problem real for them so they could see it for what it was. "I love it," he said. "It's really addictive for me." Comic Therapy Frank Farrelly, a social worker at Family, Social, Psychotherapy Services in Madison, WI, demonstrates prevention strategies for families with children with developmental disabilities. Staff Photo by DONALD WALLER day. Provevocative therapy is a technique that Farellay has been using since 1983 after finding more traditional therapies to be effective.