Thursday, March 30, 1978 University Daily Kansan Pot ... From page one amounts, of course, it could be fatal," she said. said. However, Bill Miller, president of the Lawrence chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, said he did not think there was anyway to tell if the herbicide could be harmful. haruhi said a potential for lung damage existed if the consumer consumed three to five marijuana cigarettes a day for about one month. ONE DEALER said that it was not uncommon for marijuana users to smoke that much marijuana for an extended time. Niel Arę©”, spokesman for the national office of NORML said the organization had filed a law suit in Washington, D.C. against the State Department and several government agencies for the part they played in the spraying of the Mexican fields. the sprains of David Hoover, spokesman for the Drug Enforcement Agency, said that his organization had not been involved in the paraquat spraying. "SPRAYING OF marijuana fields was done on the initiative of the Mexican government," Hoover said. government Armenia said that its organization wanted the government to file an environmental impact statement relating to the herbicide. These statements are needed, Armeson said, when an action is taken that would affect the health of Americans. "The spraying program is an example of the government getting into something without enough foresees," he said. "Users can develop lesions on the lungs and irreversible lung damage. These consequences are ridiculous for a pet crime." A chemist at Pharm Chem Research Foundation in Palo Alto, Calif., said that there was no way to tell if a sample of marijuana had been, preyed with paraput without having it chemically analyzed. He said there was no distinctive color, small or Cooperation tried in seating issue Rv JAKE THOMPSON Staff Writer Student and administration groups working together, should be able to solve the issue of student football and basketball seating, University of Kansas officials say. seating committee, one organized by Mike Harper, student body president, and one to be organized soon by Clyde Walker, men's athletic director, will be working this week and next to examine student Memorial Stadium and Allen Field House. Harper said Tuesday Walker told him that the athletic department would be working with students this year and in coming years to communicate the feelings of students to campus board. Controversy arose recently over possible changes in football seating and over reserve seating and overcrowding in the student section at basketball games. Harper's six-member seating board met for the first time last night. Its purpose, he said, is to learn the problems and to regain jurisdiction over the student seating arrangement. He said he had not been meeting this school year it had no control over the athletic board's decisions Harper said that his committee, technically had the right to determine where students would sit, but that the district public school Corporation had determined it in the past. According to Article IV, section 4.2.5 of the Senate Rules and Regulations, approved by former Chancellor Laurence Chalmers, a Student Senate seating committee determines where students will sit for athletic events. Harper said he thought Chancellor Archie R. Dykes would obey the regulations but refused to oblige actions. Walker's student-seating committee members, including faculty, student and athletic department representatives, are to be chosen Friday, according to Harper. Jerry Waugh, assistant athletic director in charge of operations, said that the committees were needed to develop a compromise between KUAC's need to sell more tickets and the student's need to see sporting events. Waugh said that several suggestions, such as selling half-price tickets in the horseshoe section of the stadium and expanding would be discussed by the committees. Waugh said no action has been taken to cut student seating next year, and that the seating committees would determine what was to be done. "Nothing's been done," he said. "That whole thing was a figment of Steve Leben's imagination." Funding . . . From page one justified. The budget I submitted reflects the money that we need." Levinson was upset at the defeat of the recommendation because women's programs at other Big Eight schools were funded better than those at KU. "WE'RE SIXTH in the Big Eight and less than any school in the big Ten." she said. "You know, I was in it all last year." Levinson said that women athletes look for good college teams, good academic standing of the school and the amount of money in their women's athletic program. She said that if KU couldn't provide the money needed to have a good women's athletics program the athletes would go elsewhere, "Women don't have anywhere to compete after college, like the men's professional teams, so these four years are athletically only opportunity to compete," she said. She said that the women's teams at KU were the best in the region but a funding cut might lead to a downgrading of the quality of training, and a backcut of the number of funded teams. Committee OKs papers' sales The University Events Committee yesterday renewed a request by Roger Martin, co-publisher of Soil Moon, to send the machine be sold on availing machine outside the Kansas Union. The committee also gave approval to another newspaper, to sell its weekly news at the front of the United Public notice is published in affiliation with the Community Mercantile, 700 Maine St., according to Sherree Welch, distribution clerk for the paper. Besides printing work, Welch said, the paper card catalog, local gardening, local supermarket and alternative food stores. The City Moon publishes articles ranging from faculty poetry to satire, according to Martin, who is also an instructor in Eglish. Leben, former student body president, charged in February that Waugh had told him there would be only reserve seating next year at basketball games. Waugh explained yesterday that reserve seating throughout the 16,000-seat field house was just a suggestion to alleviate overcrowding. "Problems arise when a student buys a reserve seat ticket and sits with his crones in the student section, leaving the reserve seats empty," he said. The two committees, he said, would work together so the students would be applauded. and the athletic corporation could remain self-sufficient. Laura Smith, St. Louis, Mo., junior, a member of Harper's committee, said some more reserve seating might be necessary, and not want to do away with the student section. Dan Cono, Leawood junior, said that he want to represent student's opinions on her interest. "We've got the final authority over where we sit, even though the athlete department must be on the floor." AURH Student Positions Summer Interns with AURH These positions will be for June 13 through August 6. Room and board will be provided in J.R.P., and a stipend of $650. A list of intern responsibilities is available with the application at Resident Hall desks and the Dean of Men and Dean of Women offices. AURH asks that applicants consider taking only 3 or 4 hours of Summer school while working as an intern. Interns must be returning residents to the system. Return completed application no later than Friday, March 31, 1978 in the AURH office at 210 McCollum Hall. AURH is an equal opportunity, affirmative action employer. The Aztec calendar reminds you that memorable dining in centuries-old tradition awaits you at the Aztec Inn. We invite you to share our proud heritage. All Meals Served on Piping Hot Dishes Dine in the true Mexican Village "Huts" Mexican and American Food Immediate Carryout Service on Reheatable Trays Home of the Aztec Calendar STOP IN FOR A REAL MEXICAN MEAL taste that would distinguish the sprayed marijuana. 11 a.m. - 10 p.m. Sunday 11 a.m. - 11 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday Closed Monday 807 Vermont 842-9455 Edward and Naomi Rosto invite you to stop in soon. Fox said that the paraguay would destroy only the leaves of living plants. PUTTING A sample of sprayed marijuana in the sun once the leaves have dried is not an accurate test for the existence of the herbicide. Pharm Chem will test marjunia samples for the herbicide for $5. More information on this program is available from Headquarters, 841-2345. Miller said that NORMI was warning all users to stay away from Mexican marriages. jurisprudence lawrence police spokesman have stated that they will enforce all existing marijuana A DEALER who sells large amounts of marijuana in Lawrence said, "I've got good stuff now and I won't buy any more. From the dealer's standpoint, it really has hurt a lot of people. Nobody's buying Mexican and it's the government's fault. Everyone is smoking hash and Colombian now, not Mexican. "People are not going to quit smoking and dealing because it's illegal and the government knows that. The government doesn't have its head on straight about dope." We have everything to match or complement her dress, his formal wear. At prices to suit a student's budget. Stop in or phone today.