6 Thursday, February 9, 1978 University Daily Kansan Senate ... law school project that provides legal aid for inmates at several Kansas prisons. From page one The other untouched bill would have implemented an earlier decision to add an off-campus senator to the Senate. The bill also would allow the off-campus representative's election. BECAUSE THESE two bills and the resolution about officers' salaries were not acted on at last night's meeting, the attention was turned to the attention until late March at the earliest. Leben said no legislation could be considered at the March 1 Senate meeting, which is a joint meeting of the current and former governors who will be elected in next week's elections. Women... The untouched bills will have to be resumbed, Leben said. From page one @ p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p baskethall for the K-UO-Laurin State Basketball baskethall for the K-UO-Laurin State Basketball IT WAS NOT intended, he said, to spell out details. But he could not be told the lawyer was hired before a lawyer was hired. Mike Taraboulo, chairman of the Student Services Committee that drafted legal services, said the legislation was purposefully vague to establish the philosophy of the service. The Senate also passed a resolution that would put a question about reserve student seating at basketball games on the ballot for next week's elections. TITLE IX of the Educational Amendments of 1972 prohibits sex discrimination at federally funded institutions. It specifically requires that members of both sexes" must be provided The Student Senate voted last year to refuse funding for women's athletics beginning in fiscal 1979. The women's department currently has in its budget $63,066 that was allocated by the Senate for fiscal 1978. The University must comply with the provisions of Title IX by July 21 or risk the A mass meeting of women athletes to discuss funding problems and Title IX also was planned by the council last night. The event will take place for Feb. 22 in room 20B, Roberson Gymnasium. Leben, who proposed the bill, said he had been told by an athletic department official that the seating change was being considered. Lewison said she thought Title IX was not ambiguous and that it was clear that equal treatment should be provided. in the discussion of funding, Levinson also said she was concerned with the effects state funding and Title IX would have on decisions about cutting the number of women's teams. Levinson proposed a policy to show support through teamwork for a team that is too small. Because of a lack of funds, field hockey was cut from the women's athletic department last year but received funding for fall from the Student Senate. An announcement last year by Marian Washington, women's athletic director, stated that the women's golf team could be the next team to be dropped. Tracy Spellman, adviser to the council, said she agreed a statement could be published if it was appropriate. Levinson said a statement could be effective as a tool to show the department that athletes cared that a team cut was under consideration. She said this was another way athletes could show their awareness of funding. "Awareness has gotten a lot better and now I think that athletes know that they can The two teams running for student body president and vice president will answer questions from a panel of administrators, faculty and students Sunday at a forum sponsored by the Student Senate. The forum is held in the Forum Room of the Kansas University. Panel to quiz candidates Jill Grubbaum, Senate Elections Committee chairman, said the four-member panel would direct questions of its choosing to the four candidates. The candidates for vice president are David Parris, Manhattan junior, independent, and Reggie Robinson, Salina junior. Standpoint Coalition. The candidates for president are Jane Calacci, Glendale, M. o sophomore, independent, and Mike Harper, Lawrence luop气. Standpoint Coalition. randel members are David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs; Eric Events **TODAY:** The **STUDENT SOCIAL WORKERS** meet at 11:30 in Alceve B of the Kansas Union. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE meets at noon in Alceve C of the Union. AFHE meets at noon in Alceve G of the Union. A FINE ARTS LUNCHCHEON is at noon in the English Room of the Union. CAMPUS MEETS AT 11:30 in E of the Union. THE STATE DEANS OF CONTINUING EDUCATION meet at 5 in the English Room of the Union. ANAFRICAN STUDIES Dinner is at 5:15 in the Curry Room of the Union. KANSAN On Campus TONIGHT! The SUA BOARD meets at 6 in the Governors Room of the Room. ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA meets at 6 in the Big Eight Room of the Union. PHI CHI meets at 6 in the Big Eight Room of the Union. Room of the Union. SUA BRIDGE meets at 6 in 340 parlors A and B of the Union. THE ALL SCHOOLSHIP HALLS COUNCIL Selections Committee meets at 7 in the Pine Room of the Union. SUA RECONGITION is at 7 in the Hawks Nest of the Union. KU Administration meets at 7 in the Governors Room of the Union. MOLEFI KETE ASANTA speaks on "Systematic Nationalism and its Implications for the Black World" at 7:30 in the Forum Room of the Union. The KU SAILING CLUB meets at 7 in the Forum Room of the Union. CATHY COHORO presents a claimer recital at 5 in Swarthout Recital Hall. TOMORROW: THE WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE DAY Luncheon, with an address by columnist Sylvia Porter, will be at noon in the Kansas Room of the Union. The CREATIVE FANTASY CLUB will meet at 7 in Parlors A and C of the Union. We carry Kodak film and darkroom supplies Richards, assistant professor of business; Tedde Tassle, former student body president and Lawrence graduate student, and Chris Wagstaff junior and christopher Wagstaff Kathy Hoggard, director of KU Information Center. will serve as moderator. Grubbaush said each candidate would have an opportunity at the beginning of the forum to brief state his campaign issues and platform. Eberhard said the classification system he would use in his book also considers the probability that witnesses are not telling the truth. Questions from the audience also will be allowed, she said. KU librarian chronicles UFOs The trip, which had been scheduled for March 11-18, needed 88 people signed up by p. m. last Friday to avoid cancellation. The trip ended an afternoon that only about 40 had signed up. Mike Peterson, SUA Travel Service chairman, said last night that an SUA spring break trip to Fort Lauderdale, Fla., had been canceled. Peterson said refunds were be mailed within two weeks to students who had signed the lease. Bv MARY HOENK Reports of unidentified flying objects will be included in a book Eberhart plans to publish as a guide to scientific oddities in North America. SUA cancels trip to Florida George Eberhart, a librarian at the library, has a self-pclaimed "uologist" of science. Staff Writer out it should appeal to librarians and people who are really into this thing," Eberhart "it's going to be far from complete, but it'$s going to be comprehensive," Eberhart The idea for the book evolved from a vast personal file that Eberhart says he has collected for seven years. The plan to assemble the information into book form was accepted by a publisher last month and th book could be available by the summer of 2013. Entries for UFOs in the book will be identified under a system developed by J. Allen Hynek, director of astronomy at Northwestern University in Chicago. The encounters of the first, second and third kind, Eberhart said. "It's not going to be a mass market book, THE INFORMATION Eberhard has gathered from books, magazines and newspapers began with a lifelong interest in science and a special interest in UFO reports, especially from before World War II. A CLOSE ENCOUNTER of the first kind is defined as a sighting at 500 feet or closer. A close encounter of the second kind means traces that a UFO might leave, such as soil depressions. A close encounter of the third kind forms of life is reported. Eberhart said. He said the book, entitled "Geobibliography of Anomalies," would become outdated quickly, but it was possible that he could compile updates to the guide. There is also the possibility of future books based on reports from other continents. Eberhard said the two-volume book would be organized by geographical regions and cities. A few of the incidents that Eberhart is compiling from this region include livestock mutilation in the Midwest that started in 1973 and was reported at the same time as the work of a UFO. The list also includes a UFO report filed in Lawrence and one in Denver. In 2004, a fish fell from the sky in the early 1960s. But he said there were certain UFO sightings that could not be rationally explained as normal phenomena, such as airplanes or hot air balloons. "It's complex because most people assume that UFOs come from outer space, but another theory is that they are from the sun or in another dimension of time," he said. EBERHART SAID classifying UFOs for the book was a particularly complex problem. Attention K. U. Students and Faculty! Join Others during Spring Break In IXTAPA-"Mexico on the Pacific" For $208.00 $298.00 *Includes round trip ticket from Kansas City, Hotel transfers, and seven nights in the Hotel Viva (located directly on the beach) March 10th thru March 17th Enjoy deep-sea fishing, swimming, disco dancing, and exploring another culture. For reservation fees and further information, immediately write or call: Trip Plan, Inc. Attn: Louis Louis 7133 W. 50th Street 928-6242 66204 Tei (913) 381-9200 Want to cut your study time in half? Enroll Now for Evelyn Wood READING DYNAMICS In only seven weeks you can ... Read most material over 1000 words per minute . . . Adapt dynamic methods to all kinds of material . . . Cut your study in half . . . Organize, simplify, remember Tuesday 7:00-9:30 Feb.14,1978 . . . Face exams with confidence New class begins next week: evelyn wood reading dynamics Located in ADVENTURE a bookstore Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa Phone 843-6424 Dollar Days At Dairy Queen Mix or Match Any Day All Day REGULAR CHILI DOG 2 for *1.00 WORLD FAMOUS BANANA SPLIT 2 for *1.00 I QUARTER-POUND ALL BEEF BIG BRAZIER 2 for *1.00 ALL NEW . . . 2545 Iowa St. Open 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. till 12 p.m. Fri. & Sat. Seating 145 AND . . . 1835 Mass. St. Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Drive Thru Service Tool PHONE: 843-3515 843-3588