7 By BILL MENEZES Staff Reporter Freshmen educate alma maters High school and community college counselors and administrators from across the state heard suggestions and complaints from their former students yesterday at the 31st annual Principal-Counsel-Freshman Conference on Thursday. Conference conference yesterday at the Kansas Union. About 280 counselors from more than 100 high schools and almost 20 community colleges met with students from their first year at the University of Kansas. Carla Rasch, assistant director of admissions, said the student conferences gave students the opportunity to work in school officials helped what aspects of their curriculum helped or hindered their studies. Eldon Huffman, counselor at Labette New garage opens at Med Center Friday, February 22, 1980 The $2.1 million garage which opened Monday, provides 750 new parking spaces, 300 of which are reserved for faculty, staff and employees. Permits for a reserve space cost $3.4. About half of the spaces already have been purchased. A multilevel parking garage opened at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Springfield, Missouri, to end a two-year project to provide more ending space for MKE center employees. Visitors and patients pay 50 cents for the first hour to use the garage and 25 cents for each additional hour. The customer can charge a visitor or patient pay is $2. The garage is on the east side of the Mad Center's Bell Memorial Hospital. The hospital also owns the hospital and the garage. The KU Endowment Association donated $189,563 to the hospital. Overland Photo 4x6 New 35mm Prints "We really believe in it," he said. "It's very helpful." Community College, said the program was useful in helping him counsel students at his school. Dick Patterson, vice principal at Washburn Rural High School in Topeka, said he used much of the information he got from his former students. "What students say about how they were prepared is important to our teachers," he said. "Ours felt they had been pretty well prepared." Patterson said that six of 18 freshmen from Washburn Rural came to the meetings to talk with him and other Washburn Rural administrators. After meeting with students, counselors and administrators heard talks on a number of topics; included KU undergraduates, KU financial aid programs, KU faculty and students, the employment outlook for college graduates and transfers of credit to KU. The talks were presented to the school officials might have a better understanding of the University to give to students at their schools. Rasch said the group attending the conference was the largest ever. The programs were repeated after a luncheon, so that counselors and administrators could attend more than one talk. Financial aid simplified according to KU director By CINDY WHITCOMI Staff Reporter Misunderstanding of college financial aid by high school and college counselors has been lessened this year, Jerry Rogers, director of financial aid, said yesterday. Rogers said a lack of questions during financial aid workshops for high school students was the principal Counselor-Freshman, and Community College conference yesterday was on Wednesday. Uniform application deadlines for all Regents schools this year has made things easier for the counselors. Rogers said. To make things easier for KU, the financial aid office started accepting entrance tests on only the American College or three testing organizations, Rogers said. Aid Administrators has helped counselors wade through the red tape of financing a college education, by holding a counselor workshop every fall. The Kansas Association of State Financial "The association has a workshop every fall for college and high school counselors because the members felt they needed to learn about the facts of financial aid," he said. Rogers gave two presentations on financial aid yesterday for the conference. He said that about 40 people attended the conference and that there were very few questions. "Mostly what I did was to explain the different programs at KU, especially those that involved physical education." The manner in which KU handles the students is one of their major concerns. Each school is one of their major concerns. $ NEED EXTRA CASH $ SELL YOUR OLD GOLD AND DIAMONDS I'm paying top prices for all gold and diamonds, class rings, watches, etc. CALL 842-9737 or 841-7476 STUDENT SENATE POSITIONS AVAILABLE STUDENT SENATE TREASURER - $200.00 per month; 15-20 hours per week. - Keep accounts of student groups funded by Student Senate (about 80) balanced against computer. - Initiate budget transactions with University. - Sign for student group expenditures. University Daily Kansan - Acts as guardian of the budget. STUDENT SENATE EXECUTIVE SECRETARY - Keeps record of all Student Senate legislation. - Records the minutes of all Senate and Student Executive Committee meetings - Researchs issues and gathers information on matters pertaining to or involving Student Seniors - Researchs issues and gathers or involving Student Senate. - $200.00 per month; 20 hours per week. Applications can be picked up in the Student Senate Office, 105B-Kansas Union, and are due February 25, 1980, 5:00 p.m. Paid for by Student Activity Fee 2166 WEST 26TH STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 Gatehouse Phone: 843-6446 AVAILABLE NOW 1&2 Bedrooms Drapes, Carpet, AC, All Appliances, Carports Pool, Conveniently Located, On KU Bus Line. Rents Starts At: $225.00 CALL OR COME BY TODAY Professionally Managed By: GOLD CROWN PROPERTIES, INC. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN- On Campus **TODAY:** THE BIOSOLOG CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the KU CHRISTIAN REAM at 3:30 p.m. for the **DANCE DEPARTMENT ARTS AND HUMANITIES FILM** will be "The Red Balloon" at 9:30 p.m. in 303 Bay Hall and at 2:30 p.m. in the Lippincott basement. There will be a SCIENCE STUDENTS meeting at 1:30 p.m. at 404 Bay Hall and at 2:30 p.m. in Dee Jae Picchier will lecture BUSINESS STUDENTS on Humanities and Business Education at 1:30 p.m. in 112 C Summerfield TONICHT: An OBSERVATORY OPEN HOUSE will be at 7 p.m., 500 Lindley Hall. THE "CACAUSIAN CHALK" PERFORMANCE will be performed at the University Theological Murphy Hall at 8 p.m. THE FREKST STRING QUARTET, a part of the Chamber Music series will be at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Church. THE FREKST STRING will be an INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP meeting at 7 p.m. in the International Room of the Kansas Union. THE HUMANITIES DEPARTMENT will present a lecture by Harold Orel, professor of anthropology, at Giving and Liberals; A Humanistic Dilemma at 8 p.m. in Woolduff Auditorium. SATURDAY: THE BIG EIGHT PANHELLENIC CONFERENCE will be held all day in the Kansas University. A SUMMER DAY, sponsored by the St. Lawrence Catholic Center will be from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center. KANSAS ANTI-DRAFT MUSEUM AND THE FORM ROOM of the Kansas Union. There will be a NATURAL HIS-SEMEETING WITH TWO Kings of of Otters" with Nancy Zucker, 11:30 a.m. and at 1:3 p.m. AT SYMPOSIUM ON IMAGINATION AND AMERICAN PAINTING will be at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. in the Helen Foreman Spencer Museum of Art. At 2 p.m. the Museum's sonnel; Elizabeth Jones, university of Maryland; George Neubert, the Oakland Museum; Wanda Corn, Smithsonian Institution; Robert Rosenburt, New York University. SUNDAY: A MUSEUM OF ART GALLERY TOUR will be given by Stephen Addiss, faculty curator of Oriental Art of "A" Brown's Gallery at Spencer Museum of Art. A CARLILON RECITAL will be given by Albert Gerken at 3 p.m. There will be a KU SYMPHONIC BAND CONCERT at 3:30 in the University in Murray Hall. The speaker, Kathy Hoggard, specializes in legal advice for a local candidate would give interested persons the experience they needed to run their own business. "You can't be expected to win if you run without any experience," she said. Political experience touted by speaker Hoggard was director of the KU information center and assistant to the vice chancellor for student affairs at KU before going to work for Carlin. The best way for anyone to become involved in politics is to begin by working for a candidate, a visiting speaker said last night. She said workers could have a greater effect if they worked for a local rather than a national candidate, because local government does live more than national government does. SPENCER'S MEN'S WEAR BIG and TALL sizes Holiday Square 2917 S. Lagoon Ave. Lagoon, KS 913-257-3108 She said workers did not need any previous experience, and that candidates were always more than ready to welcome their help. "If you think the voter turnout is low, you should see the turnout to work for candidates," she said. THE DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL Those workers who perform important functions, such as organizing groups of people to meet candidates, are the most involved she said. She said workers could perform any of a variety of tasks, from lobbying to organizing letter-writing caimaua. Fri. Feb. 22 & Sat. Feb. 23 DYCHE AUD. (7 pm and 9:30 pm) tickets: $1.25 presented by science fiction club partially funded by student senate Technics Linear-Phase Speaker System Technics SA-101 Clean Power Output Technics SB-P1000 Speakers System Special The SA1-101 receiver generates 18 watts per channel, continuous WA5' power output into alarms, from 40.000 kW with no more than 0.04% total harmonic energy. The maximum load is measured at 1 kW, total harmonic energy is only 0.009%. 2 way linear phase speaker system B' cone wonder with durable voice coprol. 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