2 Tuesday, June 5, 1973 University Daily Kansan Kansan Staff Photo by PR15 BRANDSTED Line of Duty This Kansas high school junior gives a left-handed salute in a formation at American Legion Boys State, which opened Sunday. Dykes Mulls Tenure In Visit to Campus The incoming chancellor of the University of Kansas says that being "tenured in" is no excuse. Faculty exchange programs, earlier retirement and part-time employment are possible solutions to the problem of tenure, Mr. Dykes said in a Monday night interview. Exchange programs with faculty of other universities, Dykes said, provides the opportunity for self-renewal in a new environment. Such an exchange program can be a viable alternative to the inflexibility that tenure may cause. "Earlier retirement, a solution in some private universities, is not practical for a state university and probably wouldn't work in this situation." Dykes said. "One method that we use at the University of Tennessee is what we refer to as 'teach and internship.' Under this type of program, graduate students are brought in during part-time basis and the University then has a chance to evaluate the teacher's potential. Dykes said that any solution would be a combination of the many options that the faculty would be called upon to determine. In addition, the faculty administrators and students, he said. "Percentages are deceptive and can lead to gross oversimplification of the problem. Dykes said "For example, because 76 percent of university is on tenure does not mean that James Brown, 22, a Haskell Indian Junior College student, has been found not guilty of the murder of Jake Garcia, 19, a former Haskell student. Jury Acquits Haskell Man Brown was brought to trial on a second—degree murder charge, later amended to one of voluntary manslaughter. On May 31, the jury brought in the verdict of not guilty Garcia was stabbed Jan. 24 in the 2100 block of Massachusetts Street and pronounced dead on arrival at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Brown was found in his dormitory room at Haskell and told police that Garcia and another Haskell student, Terry Beaver, of Oklahoma City, had beaten him with their belts. Campus Parking Fine System To Change in Fall Semester Major revisions in campus parking requirements will be instituted in the fall menu. Lt. Edwin Fenstemaker, head of the Security and Parking Department, said the new regulations would be published in a pamphlet to be issued Aug. 26. Fenstemaker noted that one of the changes would stabilize the present, "inadequate" fine system. Fines now are assessed on a graduated scale. There is no penalty for failing to meet the second costs $2, the third $4, the fourth ticket and succeeding tickets $16. Other changes in policy will subject visitors to stricter regulations along yellow curbs. Fenstemaker said such violations were inexusable because yellow curbs were nationally recognized as no-parking areas. THE NEW regulation will establish a single fine amount, which will remain the same regardless of the number of tickets issued to the same vehicle. Also, vehicles with five or more unpaid tickets will be subject to removal from campus and impoundment until back fines are paid, he said. Fensterman make he and his staff would continue to make extensive surveys of the students. He said the basic rationale behind present methods is "to make necessary space available for persons who run the University and to allow them to be reasonably close to where they attend classes." PRESENTLY, THE KU campus has more than 5,000 parking spaces available. The department registers about 4,000 vehicles. Even with the excessive spaces in O' zone (south of Robinson Gymnasium) and V park (north of Memorial Stadium) as many as 450 tickets for violations each day. This has resulted in more than 4,000 unpaid fines to date. Students holding unpaid tickets are not permitted to re-enroll, graduate or transfer credits. Faculty and staff members can lose their parking privileges and be subject to other university discipline for the same offense. The Security and Parking Department employs 10 full-time officers and 25 to 40 students on a part-time basis to help issue tickets and operate the traffic stations. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 83rd Year, No. 144 Telephones Newsroom: 844-6410 Advertising/Circulation: 844-6358 Published Monday through Friday during the fall and spring semesters and Monday through Friday during the winter semester, examination periods. Mail subscription rates are &a$4 per student at $a$4. Academic requirements are &b$4644. Accommodations, goods, services and employment codes. All students without regard to color, creed or national origin may be required of necessary by the University of Kansas or the State Board of Education. new staff! Moraine Dodd, dothr. Zainal (dobh) associate manager, Khalifa (khalifa) associate manager, Cameran college. Rita Haugger, chief Writer, Michael Koch, chief Executive officer, Chuck Goodell, classified manager, Jack Mitchell, matrimonial assistant manager, Jack Mitchell, matrimonial assistant manager, Jack Mitchell, matrimonial assistant manager, Jack Mitchell, matrimonio EXPLAINING the major difficulty involved in handling campus traffic, Fenstemaker said, "We do have ample parking, but not at the front door." Current parking regulations will remain unchanged until the new ones are issued for the 1972-74 school term beginning in late August. All-self propelled vehicles owned by faculty, staff or students that are operated on campus must be registered with the Parking and Traffic Office. Archie Reese Dykes The University of Kansas, like other universities, is suffering from severe financial constraints at the present time, Dykes said. Sertious deficiencies are reflected by shortages in the necessary materials and acquisitions and despatched materials every department has 67 per cent of its members on tenure." "The major challenge," Dykes said, "is to maintain existing programs at the present state and to respond to new needs as they develop. In a Mindy monastery in Brazil Ame Kalso护著 her life-long studies of the relationship of posture and respiration. Observing the elegant posture and respiration of their bare feet in the earth and found that the heel invariably sank to a lower level than the foot, she has been inspired to meet with this principle. For ten years she developed and refined her designs. She tested these designs on young children and more. Every nuance of their growth out of her intense involvement. She was guided by anecdotes from her students as she shoe themselves. The leading physicians and anthropological clinics in Denmark and other countries have been awarded patients in every jen country. Shoes, sandals, sabots and boots for men and women from $23.50 to $48 Brochure available. 022 W, 48th KANSAS CITY, MO. 64112 B18 531 0082 To meet this challenge the University community must work as a team to articulate the role of the University to the people." Dykes interprets his leadership role as a catalyst for creating an environment where research can move forward and constant examination of issues can occur. Such a candidate should make it possible for students and faculty to take decision-making process of the university. "inadequate resources to go forward may explain low faculty morale, if it is low," Dykes said "inadequate participation in the university is another explanation." Dykes said that he had not sensed that morale was necessarily low. "There are problems," he said, "but I have sensed confident optimism." Siren Test Set Today Testing of the disaster siren warning system in Lawrence is scheduled for noon today if the weather is clear. A one-minute blast on the air raid siren will be followed by a short period of a noise warning signal. The test was postponed from Monday because of the weather. 10% OFF Any Item in the Store with Coupon India prints Tea sets China Rugs Wood carvings Candles Earrings Pottery Baskets Swords Cookware Much, much m HAAS IMPORTS 1029 Mass. Offer Good through July 1 Selling your bike? Advertise in the Kansan. Call 864-4358. "If I could get my hands on my first grade teacher now, I'd break her chalk." It all began in the first grade. The old "run", Spot, run" method But don't blame your first-grade teacher. It wasn't her fault. It was the system she had to teach. You have to读 it out loud! Word by word. And that's the way it was when you became a second grader. Where your teacher asked you to read silently. But you still said every word to yourself. If you're an average reader, you’re prob- You probably stopped reading out loud. But you still said every word to yourself. If you’re an average reader, you’re probably reading that way now. Which means you read only as fast as you talk. About 250 to 300 words a minute. Not when the average student has approximately 8 hours of required reading for every day of classes. And since the amount of time in a day is not about to increase, your reading speed will have to. In order to handle it all, The Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics course can help. With training, you be able to see groups of words. To read between 1,000 and 3,000 words per minute. Depending on how difficult* the material is At any rate, we guarantee at least three time your reading speed, or we'll refund you entire tuition. (88.4% of everyone who takes the course accomplishes this.) Do so waste time thinking about whom to blame. Come a free introductory free workshop on the basics of lighting on the spat. It takes about an hour to find out how you can reduce your study time. And it ought to be worth an hour of your To save thousands. Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Come to our hardest week weaker on worms. Monday through Friday, June 4-8, 7:30-8:30 p.m. at the Reading Dynamics Institute Hillcrest Shopping Center Ninth and Iowa NEW CLASSES BEGIN JUNE 11 and 12 For more information call 843-6424