14 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Friday, October 13, 1967 Boney gets rough schedule? Sitting on the Sigma Nu staircase, chin resting on his knees, he doesn't look 6-feet-6-inches. But when he unwinds and reaches out to shake your hand, you know Clean laundry valued at $102 was stolen from a student's car, parked in Zone M, yesterday between 8:30 and 10 p.m. Laundry heisted from student's car Alan I. Levene, Wichita freshman, said the clothing was taken while he was in the KU computer center. Levene said he couldn't remember if the car was locked but he did have his name on many of the clothes taken. The laundry included a number of shirts and pairs of pants owned by his roommate, he said. you've found Rodger Bohnenstiehl, Collinsville, Ill., senior, and, incidentally, KU basketball's highest scoring player with a 17-point game average. This season shows every indication of being Rodger's best. But it isn't going to be easy. "This year's basketball schedule is the roughest KU has ever seen," he says. "None of the teams we're coming up against is easy. Every game is going to be hard." Hampered by leg Last year Bohnenstiehl was hampered by a leg injury suffered in the Big Eight Tournament in Kansas City. In April he underwent surgery to remove varicose veins in his right calf. dividually. I've been taking it pretty easy—nothing strenuous—and it looks like I'll be having no problems with the leg at all. "The leg's okay and I don't suppose that it will bother me at all," he said. "Since the practice season doesn't start until Oct. 15, the boys have been working out in- 'Pretty good shape' "As a matter of fact, I guess I'm in pretty good shape all around. Right now I weigh 205— I figure I'd like to play at 200. Unfortunately I lose weight during the season. Last year I was down to 185. But I felt I needed a bit more weight out there on the court and so I've set my goal at 200 pounds." Whether he reaches that particular goal or not is up to his appetite and his housemother's menu, but in any case, when the Jayhawks meet Utah State here Dec. 2 for their first game, chances are that Rodger Bohnensiell will be among the first on the court as KU moves on, hopefully toward its third straight Big Eight championship. Duryea Switches HOLLYWOOD — (UPI)— Dan Duryea was forced to bow out of a role in "Finian's Rainbow" when he accepted a running role in television's "Feyton Place." Strike Up the Band HOLLYWOOD — (UPI) - Britain's famed Scots Guards military band will appear in an action scene for "Anzio" starring Robert Mitchum. Sunday Night Typing Job? We'll do it for you. Typing, Xeroxing, Wake up service Micki's secretarial service 901 Kentucky VI 2-0111 From Russia with scorpions Scorpion flies used to be among the earth's most numerous inhabitants, but that was 280 million years ago. The insects, slightly larger than the common housefly, now make only a few appearances in temperate and tropical climates. How the scorpion fly has developed over this long evolutionary period, and its relationship to other higher insect forms, are being studied by George W. Byers, professor of entomology and assistant curator of the Entomological Museum. The National Science Foundation has made a $15,-000 grant for this research. Byers believes there is much future scientific importance in learning more about the mutations in the fly's anatomy and the specie's longevity. Byers collected live specimens in the Appalachian mountains last summer with a graduate research assistant, J. Randolph Hepburn, of Lawrence. Fossil studies and museum specimens are part of the study, so Byers will go to Moscow and Leningrad next summer where study collections exist. Through this year, he and his assistants will study fossils located near Elmo, in Dickinson County. Also assisting in the research is Elizabeth Gibson, Independence senior in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. For Complete Automobile Insurance Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass. St. Drive a"youngmobile"from Oldsmobile. MARK OF EXCELLENCE