University Daily Kansan Mondav. March 3.1980 5 Anderson support increasing locally 1.1.1.1 Rep. John Anderson, R-III, has never lost an election. And if local support is any indication, he may not this year. Anderson's campaign for the university began barely under way here, but in the week since KU student for Anderson formed, 35 students have volunteered to help his campaign. "It's been fantastic," she said. And Mary Lupe Humphrey, a Lawrence homemaker and chairman of Kansans for Anderson, said yesterday that an adult woman residents had volunteered their services. "It's een tastantac, she said. Kansas' first presidential primary is April 1. Anderson is one of 12 candidates on the GOP ballot. Anderson, 58, a 20-year veteran of Congress, is the first major candidate to announce that he will appear at KU. He will also appear at Woodford Auditorium. His stop will be part of a statewide campaign swing including a speech at Kansas State University that night. In their local campaign efforts, Anderson volunteers have announced that an Anderson for President office will open today in the second floor of a building at 927½ Massachusetts St. They also will have tables in the Kansas Union today, tomorrow and Thursday, handing out Anderson butchers' meals and serving literature and enlisting volunteers. Jeff Miller, Overland Park senior and a coordinator of KU students for Anderson, said workers would increase their efforts after spring break. "Break has definitely come at an awkward time," Miller said. "We'll definitely have more things when we come back." Anderson finished fourth in last Tuesday's New Hampshire primary, winning two delegates after receiving 10 percent of the Republican vote. Local supporters, however, are predicting a second or third place showing in tomorrow's Massachusetts primary. "I think he's going to surprise a lot of people as time goes on," Humphrey said. There are a lot of disenchanted Republicans and independents as well as Republican's. Aluminum recycling drive begins By SUSAN SCHOENMAKER Staff Reporter Two environmental groups announced plans yesterday for a campus-wide aluminum can recycling project, after the University-scale recycling project at Hassinger Hall. The recycling drive will be sponsored jointly by the KU Ecology Club and the Appropriate Technology Resource Center 110% Massachusetts. "We're mostly concerned with not stepping on the jantiers' toes," Hyde said. "We talked to a few jantiers and they didn't. We couldn't be sure they weren't making enough for it to matter. "All we're really interested in is recycling, we're not out to make a whole lot of profits." In about two weeks, 10-9g gallon barrels will be placed in key buildings on campus, according to Carla Hye, KU Ecologgy Club president. She said the project may, run into some resistance from juntors who collect the cans for pocket money. REYNOLDS ALUMINUM CO. of, Lena has agreed to pick up the cans at 23 cents a pound of aluminum. There were 106,464 beverage containers sold on campus and in college halls during January, according to data provided by Recycling, recycling these cups would earn $1,228. The profits would be channelled back into recycling advertising and program expansion. Hyde said. Once the program is affloat financially, she said, members will investigate the possibility of a city-wide recycling center for paper, aluminum and glass. "Right now we're worried about getting this project off the ground," Hydre said. "We have 15 to 18 people who are really gungo here." We have been meeting nearly every week. IT WAS ESTIMATED that 5,300 cans are purchased every day with a possible recycling value of $80. However, about 20 cents more are needed and thus non-recable, according to Hyde. "Eventually, we want all cans on campus to be aluminum," Hyde said. "Right now you don't know what kind of can you're going to get." Hyde said the group planned to work with distributors on changing the policy of stocking steel cans. She said "Hawaiian Punch" was the only brand exclusively distributed in steel cans. Steel cans are identifiable because they have seams. Can collection may present some other problems. "It is fine if people start taking the cans out of the barrels, just so they get recycled," Hyde said. "But if we start going under eventually then we might have to change that." The barrels will tentatively be in the Kansas Union, the Satellite Union, Strong Hall, Wescoe Hall. Alen Field House, the Horton Hall and Gertrude Sellars Pearson Hall. KATHY DOUGHTY, Llagrange, ill., New York. After recovering recycled 96 percent of the energy needed to make new metal from bauxite, three billion pounds of metal are thrown into the ocean. The Department of Budgets has predicted the national deficit of aluminum will be higher than that of oil in 1980. A complete conversion to returnable beverage containers would reduce the demand for energy and soft drink industry by 35 percent. "We want to do the project to recycle, not just to get the money," Doughty said. "Recycling will be essential to our economy in the future." Doughty and her roommate, Vanessa Verkade, Plymouth, Mass., freshman, were the brains behind the campus-wide recycling project. They said an open house at Hassinger's residence hall and project at Hassinger's residence hall. "we became aware of all the waste going on inside the dorm," she said, "but because it is on such a large scale it is hard to cut down. "WE WERE WORKING in a structure that wasn't very flexible. You just can't change attitudes." She said that the recycling project was comparatively easy to implement because "it wasn't really taking or changing anything." The pair took their recycling proposal to the Hashminah Hall government, approved it and supplied boxes and bags. The recycling brings in about 50 a month, according to Verkade. She estimated that about 90 percent of the cans were recycled. "Just because we're in a dorm doesn't mean we're sheltered from real world," Verkade said. Verkade said people should start paying more attention to their environment. "Why continue to waste resources when they can be recycled?" We're already abusing resources too much, we have to start somewhere," she said. Schubert to be lecture subject The life and music of Franz Schubert will be the topics of a lecture by Viennese scholar Eva Badr-Skoda at 3.0pm. Eva Badr-Skoda swishtoot Rial Hall in Murphy Hall. Badura-Skoda is working on a book title "Schubert Studies: Studies on Style and Chronology" to be published by the Cambridge University Press. ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL Born in Munich, Germany, Badura-Sakra was educated in the Austrian cities of Stuttgart and Innsbruck. She has taught at the Stella and Imabach Music School and the Music in Vienna and the Vienna Conservatory of Music. She is currently a student at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario. Wedding Reception? Call The Castle Tea Room 1307 Mass. 843-1151 843-2931 2340 ALABAMA Auto Rental is our business. Foreign & Domestic Parts DON CHICK AUTO PARTS Part Store 1209 East 73rd 841-2390 IF YOU HAVE RENTED A VEHICLE BEFORE, THANKS. IF NOT, PLEASE COMPARE WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER - Free Snow Tires or Front Wheel Drive * Free Pickup and Delivery in Lennox City Limits * Low Prices . . . Start at $7.95 Per Day Plus Mileage - Over 40 Cars, Trucks and Vans to Choose From * We Specialize in Insurance Cars Bass royal college shop eight thirty-seven massachusetts 843-4255 NOTICE TO ALL COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES STUDENTS AND TO ALL STUDENTS TAKING LIBERAL ARTS COURSES. NOTICE: The withdrawal policy of the College states that the period to withdraw from spring semester classes and receive a W instead of a letter grade ends Wednesday, March 5, 1980 at 5:00 p.m. Thereafter, withdrawal petitions must be submitted and approved by the College. To received additional information, please call 864-3661. Trinity Lutheran Hospital Kansas City, Missouri An acute care hospital whose record reads EXCELLENT - CARIOVASCULAR CARE: more than 250 open hours a year. * Cariovascular rehab program - MICROVASCULAR SURGERY: only hospital in do replantations and revascularizations. - MEDICAL SPECIALTIES: psychiatry, ophthalmology; pediatrics, ology, oncology - CANCER CARE: only private hospital in Kansas City area with comprehensive cancer treatment center and an outpatient clinic serving more than 450 outpatients. - PHARM.D.SPECIALIST first private hospital in area to have full-time Pharm. 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