16 Wednesday. April 4. 1973 University Daily Kansan Hiahwau Completion Uncertain Hearing Planned for K-10 Dispute By BOB MARCOTTE Kansan Staff Writer A hearing concerning the permanent injunction that has halted improvements on highway K-10 between DeSoto and K-7 since the January Division 1, Johnson County District Court. The court will consider arguments from the Kansas State Highway Commission and administration. The injunction was issued after Brumn filed a petition Aug. 23, 1972 charging that the highway commission had failed to comply with Kansas laws and federal requirements in its process of land acquisition along the K-10 improvement The petition claimed that the commission acted with "gross impropriety and arbitraryness" in its attempted condemnation and acquisition of a section of Brumt's In the petition, Brunn claimed that the attempted condemnation by the commission would deny him access to his property, provide no service road adjacent to the property and would be detrimental use of the property for Brunn's interests. Brum charged that the property was not appraised before negotiations were begun and that he had not been given an offer to sell it. He argued during an inspection of the property. The petition further claimed that the appraiser, who was appointed by the court, had been independently employed by the highway commission on the same project. According to Dale Dugan of the highway commission's production control division, a pavement inundation would be ending the injunction would open the way for further condemnation procedures along the improvement site and possible contracting in time for grading and bridge construction. Surfacing could then be contracted for suring 1974, he said. The project under injunction, according to Dugan, involves 7.5 miles of K-10 from one mile south of DeSoto to the intersection of K-10 and K-7. Initial estimates by the highway commission have put costs for grading and bridging along this section at $6.53 million. The final cost of financing a cost is $3.37 million, Duazan said. The completion date, he said, will depend upon how soon the injunction is lifted and when it is lifted. The section from DeStoe to K-1 is only one of four sections in the total K-10 project, which, according to Dugan, will provide a four-lane, divided, controlled access freeway from 2.3 miles from Lawrence to section K-10 with 1-35 in Johnson County. One 5.1 mile section, from K-7 to 1:35, has been under contract for about three years and probably will be completed this fall, Dugan said. Plans for the two other sections, comprising 11.5 miles of K-10 from 2.5 miles east of Lawrence one mile south of DeOte are being completed, Dugan said, with grading and seeding sections in the sections sheled up to be leet in spring 1974. surfacing contracts totaling $7.69 million will be let in spring, 1975, with the possibility that the Lawrence-DeSoto warden would be open to traffic by October 1975, he said. Combined bridging and surfacing costs have been estimated at $12.4 million for the project. If work is on schedule in both sections. However, Dugan said, unfavorable weather or other unforeseen problems could delay completion dates by as much as a year. Spooner Museum Obtains Famous Photo, Drawing A photograph by Diane Arbus, and a choral by Eastman Johnson, a late 19th century American artist, are the Spooner Art Museum's most recent acquisitions. The Arbus photograph, "Exasperated Boy with a Toy Hand Grenade," is an original signed photograph donated by Sen. and Mrs. John Simpson of Salina. It was on display last month and is in the photography office in the basement of the museum. Arbus has been called the most inventive of 20th century photographers. "I want to photograph what is evil," she once said. "I think what she meant, was not that it was evil, but that it was forbidden, that it had always been too dangerous, too frightening or too only for anyone else to look on, DDoa Arbus, her daughter, has said. "She was determined to reveal what others would have done," she says. The Eastman Johnson Charcoal, "Portrait of a Young Girl," donated by Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pinet, Pinet is an associate professor of business at KU. Johnson lived in a little known period of American artistic history. Art from that period, 1845-75, has been explored only in the last few decades. This period has been considered a dark age of American art, but Johnson did enjoy considerable success. Johnson's famous paintings are "Old Kentucky Home" and "The Wounded Drummer Boy." He also did portraits of John Quincy Adams, and Daniel Webster. SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA BALL OF FIRE directed by Howard Hawks Woodruff CLASSICAL 7:30 flying Sites 9:15 WED Mike Nichols, Jark Nicholson, Candice Bergen, Arthur Gartunkel, Ann Margret and Jules Feilfer MARX BROTHERS Film Society Woodruff 3:30,7:30,9:30 Thurs. Apr. 5 75c NIGHT AT THE OPERA CARNAL KNOWLEDGE HAMLET Directed by Grigori Kozintsev —plus— Part Ten of Captain Marvel Music by Dmitri Shostakovich SPECIAL FILMS Popular Films Woodruff 7:00 & 9:30 April6-7 60c SPECIAL TEAMS Woodruff 7:30 Mon. April 9 75c THINGS TO COME —plus— Episode Nine of Phantom Empire SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA Science Fiction Woodruff 7:30 Tues. April 10 75c Research Unit A Possibility At Med Center The center would provide for both detection and treatment, as well as research of various types of cancerous diseases. The University of Kansas Medical Center is being considered by the National Cancer Institute as a possible location for one of 15 centers to be established by the Institute. The Medical Center has applied to the Institute for $6.2 million that would be used to construct a building, purchase new equipment and hire additional staff members, according to William Rieke, vice president for health affairs at the Medical Center. Announcement of the appointments will begin in June or July, Rieke said, with five, and possibly six locations being named. A 15 member site evaluation team is now appraising the Medical Center to see if such a research center is workable. WANTED: Married Students $2.00 pd. for Two 10-minute Surveys Call 864-3075 or stop by 118 Fraser SUA wants program ideas for next year in the area of minority issues. Contact the SUA office by April 6 with one or no children Contact the SUA office by April 6 if you are interested. Use Kansan Classifieds SUA needs chairmen for next year's activities chairmen are needed now in some of these areas: FILMS: FORUMS: popular film series classical film series special film series film society Super-8 movie workshop publicity featured speakers contemporary issues regional speakers FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS: secretary TRAVEL: FINE ARTS: travel tair publicity summer flights trips ski club PUBLIC RELATIONS: FINE ARTS: exhibits picture lending library small concerts and forums poetry hour life drawing class publicity orientation week chancellor's reception Applications are available in the SUA office Completed applications are due April 6. THE BEATLES/1962-1966 The Only Authorized Collection of THE BERTLES. Love Me Do; Please Please Me; From Me To You; She Loves You! I Want to Hold Your Hand; All My Love; Can't Buy Me Love; A Hard Day's Night; And I Love Her; Eight Days a Week; I Feel Fine; Ticket to Ride; Yesterday; Help; You Get to Hide Your Love; We爱 Bird Has Flower; When Bird Has Flower; Nowhere Man; Michelle; In My Life Girl; Paperback Writer; Eleanor Right; Yellow Submarine. On Apple Records and Tapes. 2 record set THE BEATLES/1967-1970 Strawberry Fields Forever, Penny Lane; Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band; With a Little Help From My Friends; Lucy In The Sky with Diamonds; A Day in The Life; All You Need Is Love; I Am the Wurks; Hello Goodbye; The Fool On the Hill; Magical Mystery Tour; Lady Madonna; Hey Jude; Revolution; Back In The Game; Don't Let Me Down; Don't Get Back; Don't Let Me Down; The Ballad of John & Yoke; Old Brown Shoe; Here Comes the Sun; Come Together; Something; Octopus's Garden; Let It Be; Across the Universe; The Long And Winding Road. $2.99 $2.99 $2.99 $2.99 $2.99 $2.99 $2.99 DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREOS The Malls Shopping Center $2.99 $2.99 $2.99 $2.99 $2.99 $2.99 $2.99 $2.99 $2.99 $2.99 $2.99