University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 11. 1973 3 F & A Council. (Continued from page 1) Workers received $210 this year. The organization indicated that it planned to spend the money to pay registration fees for a national convention of the National Federation of Student Social Workers March 15 in Topeka. The senate treasurer's office reported no record of any expenditure from the group's account Tuesday. --scheduled to appear before the Finance and Auditing committee tonight in the Oread room of the Kansas Union at the times requested. A group has requested is shown in parentheses. The organization has requested $655 for next year. The Slavic Club was allocated $400 for this year. The group originally planned to bring two Russian poets to the Slavic Festival, but the poets were unable to attend. CLUB OFFICIALS said they then spend the money to help pay expenses for the performance of the Lijubiana Dance Troupe which performed at KU Feb. 18. Senate records show no expenditures by the club to this date, however. The Slavic Club has requested $395 for next year. The KU Fencing Team has requested $1,600 for next year, the same amount as they were allocated for this year. The team also received a third prize, most likely for travel, equipment and entry fees. OF travel; equipment and end fees. THE FOLLOWING organizations are 6:30, Reclamation Center ($514); 7:10, Sailing Club ($1,810); 7:20, SCORMEE ($8,045; $1,845); 7:40, Fencing Team ($1,600); 7:50, Volleyball Team ($1,600; $3,320); 8:KU Federation of Student Social Workers ($655); 9, Jayhawk Volleyball Club ($60,48); 9:20, Tsa Tanigma Supportive Educational Services ($15,330), 10,Student Senate (amount undetermined). Group Allocation Spend(s) (a) Reclamation Center $5,300.00 $28.00 SCORMEBRE $1,615.00 $25.15 Freshwater $4,000.00 $20.87 Steam Club (c) $300.00 (a) Security Club $1,850.00 $300.14 School of Student Education $210.00 Social Workers Club 210.00 Social Club 68.50 Tam Sigma 600.00 83.77 Educational Services $1,787.60 75.75 Student Senate 675.00 (a) At Feb. 28, 1995, unable to obtain exact expenditure information on that all funds had been spent but no billing received. (b) Group indicated that all funds would be spent in early 1996. College Assembly Tables 2 Pearson Amendments Two amendments which would make the Pearson Integrated Humanities program alternatives for speech and Western Civilization requirements in the Bachelor of arts degree were tabled by the College Assembly Tuesday. The assembly, which now is debating the A requirement, also postponed debate on the Bill 390. 2 KU Students In Washington For Law Meet Two University of Kansas law students, will represent the Midwest in the International Law Moot Court Competition this week in Washington, D.C. Richard Walker, Lower Burrell, first-year law student, James McNish, Topoka second-year law student, will participate in the law competition, which consists of court arguments on a hypothetical case involving international relations. The competition, began Monday, and will continue through Thursday. Walker and McNish won first place in a Midwestern regional contest at the University of Iowa last month. In a tournament with teams from six other regions. The Washington competition will be judged by persons with international experience. The KU students began preparing for the competition in October when a legal problem was distributed to schools across the country. This year's problem was a case in which two hypothetical nations disputed a national jurisdiction over fishing rights. The situation is similar to one that exists between Peru and the United States. Supreme Court William Douglas and members of the International Court of Justice. The Hague are included in the list of judges. The Court is a member of Association of International Law Societies. Rush Talk Planned An orientation meeting for all girls interested in fall rush will be at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union. To be eligible for fall rash, a girl must have completed one semester of college before taking her first year. New information will be presented on the changes in rush procedure, according to Pam Troup, Fairborn, Ohio, junior and Patholonic president. Registration for rush begins April 13 in the Deam of Women. There is a $5 fee. Civilization requirements until April 17. If passed, the amendments would be in contradiction to the decision reached by the governing board on March 13. At that time, it voted not to allow Pearson courses to take place in the city of Phnom Penh requirements in English, humanities, speech and Western Civilization. The tabled amendments were introduced by Ed Rolfs, Junction City freshman, in an effort to reinstate the program to the position it held before the March 13 decision. To remove a motion from tabling, a two-thirds vote is required. Rofls said that he did not believe that he could muster the required vote. "We had been advised by the vice chancellor of academic affairs, the dean of the college, the chancellor, the Board of Regents and members of the state statute to work and work within the system," Rolls said. "Look where it got us." In other business, the assembly defeated an amendment introduced by Walter Crockett, professor of psychology, which requires language requirements from 16 to 10 hours. The group also returned the proposed changes in the Western Civilization requirement to the educational policy and procedures committee for development of a suitable grading system for the comprehensive examination. Rock Seminar To Start Today A Friday concert by the rock band Steere will highlight a week-long rock music seminar. Sessions will be at 11:30 a.m. today and Friday in 102 Murphy. The seminar is an outgrowth of a class entitled "Introduction to Jazz," taught by Frank Tirro, visiting lecturer in music history. Participants in the seminar are attempting to understand and appreciate rock music and to correlate it with jazz, said Brandon Sophnore and sophomore and chairman of the seminar. At the Monday session of the seminar, Ault discussed the history of rock music with about 260 students. She outlined its origins in the late 19th century and related it to other types of music. Jim Babcock, Chanute senior, will lecture on the poetry of rock lyrics today. Babcock has played in a rock band and is studying rock lyrics in two classes. "We had a weird enthusiastic group of kids waiting to know how and when rock'n roll would be played." A panel of instrumentalists will demonstrate rock techniques today. SANDLER of Boston cuts peep-holes and open braidwork into this 3-tone leather clog with cork sole. Brown or white leather 2nd floor $22 STREET MASSACHUSETTS THE RED AND THE WHITE directed by Miklos Jansco April 18 LA CHINOISE by GODARD Film Society Woodruff 3:30, 7:30, 9:30 Thurs., April 12 75c THE DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL —PLUS— Episode Ten of Phantom Empire Science Fiction Woodruff 7:30 Tues., April 17 75c Popular Films Woodruff 7:00, 9:30 April 13 & 14 60c AUS SMIE AUS SMIE AUS SMIE AUS SMIE AUS ATTENTION!! Come in and register . . . Try Your Luck! Try Your Luck! We're giving away a $25.00 gift certificate each April Saturday afternoon . . . Come in, register today . . . You may be this week's lucky winner. at the back of the Town Shop KU Commission on the Status of Women EXPANDING HUMAN AWARENESS WARREN FARRELL Wednesday, April 11th 7:30 p.m. Forum Room-Union presented by Panhellenic RUSH ORIENTATION For Fall Rush... Thursday, April 12 Sunflower Room in the Student Union at 7:00 p.m. SORORITY RUSH REGISTRATION WILL BEGIN ON FRIDAY, APRIL 13 IN THE DEAN OF WOMEN'S OFFICE, 220 STRONG HALL For information call 864-3552 SALE Use Kansan Classifieds Most books 5° to 15° Starts Monday April 9. running daily 1:00-4:00 p.m. at THE EMPORIUM Student Union The ESS Heil Air Motion Transformer embodies the first new principle in sound propagation in fifty years. From the turn of the century "talking machines" through todays component systems have been created by the direct push of a diaphragm surface setting air into motion. The movement to the diaphragm surface is always as great as that of the air if sets into motion and this holds true for cones, electrostatic panels, piezoelectric crystals, traveling wave transducers and even ionized air devices which have an ionized cloud moving "forward and backward" just like a paper cone. The ESS Heil Air Motion Transformer is a revolutionary departure from these concepts. It is five times more effective in air movement and accelerates transducers design light years ahead. The ESS Heil Air Motion Transformer had no "piston" surface, no voice coil, no elastic suspension devices, no significant mass, no "forward-backward" motion, and no resonances. It surmounts all the motional and elastic restrictions inherent in conventional transducers and achieves a level of performance that finally approaches theoretical perfection. TRULY THE FIRST MAJOR BREAKTHROUGH IN LOUDSPEAKER TECHNOLOGY. HEARING IS BELIEVING. STOP IN AND LISTEN TO THE ENTIRE ESS LINE. 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