2 Thursday, July 11, 1974 University Daily Kansan Kaman Staff Photo Parking and Traffic Board Chairman Phil Frickey, Oberlin Senior Parking Board Chairman . . . From Page One students shouldn't have to pay the same fee because the students usually must park farther away from campus. The geographic location proposal may not be adopted because a judgment on the relative value of housing areas would be difficult to make, he said. "Wherever someone parks, they should pay a fair fee for where they park," Prickey said. SenEx has also asked the board to make recommendations on parking fees. Frickey said that the cost of parking at KU was very expensive compared to other universities and that the board to be very bestat about increasing the cost of parking permits. Frickey said the security and parking budget was a crucial issue that would be dealt with this fall. The parking budget KU Theatre Dedication Features Inge Mementos No, they don't have his baby shoes. But the University of Kansas theatre department certainly has everything else about William Inge. Souvenirs and mementos of Inge will be featured in an exhibit in the KU Experimental Theatre, which will be re-erected at The Inge Memorial Theatre 'tomorrow night.' THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily examination periods. $8 for examinations period. $25 for examination periods. $8 in 6 year. Second class payment posted at Lawyers. $25 in 6 year. Second class payment posted at Lawyers. $25 in 6 year. Second class payment posted at Lawyers. A student paid in student activity fees. Advertised offered to all students without regard to gender. Students are not uncertain these of the University. Students are not uncertain these of the University. BUSINESS STAFF Michael Rieke NEWS STAFF News Advisor ... Susanna Shamek Editor ... Michael Bickel Business Advisor ... McAdam Business Manager Dave Anderson Guests of honor at the dedication ceremony will be Chancellor Archie R. Dykes; inge's sister, Helen Connell; his niece, JoAnne Kirchenmaier from Perrysburg, Ohio; and his nephew, Luther Unger from Oklahoma City. needs to be looked at, he said, to see from what sources money comes and whether it The dedication ceremony will include readings from letters of tribute about Inge. Among the letter-writers were playwright Robert Anderson; former KU Chancellor Franklin Murphy; Ela Kazan; Audrey Wood, Inge's agent; Joan Crawford and Brooks Atkinson, former New York Times drama critic. Parking fines at KU will stay as they until data can be studied to see whether a change is required, Frickey said. The fine is now $5 for most offenses. All of Inge's awards will be displayed at the exhibit, which will also be open during the Saturday performance of "Picnic." Photographs of Inge's sculptures will be displayed, as well as photographs of him at all ages. His most prominent awards displayed will be the Oscar and the Pultitzer Prize. Frickey had the charges from SenXen were extensive and much work would be required. Part of the theatre festival this weekend will be a photographic exhibit and a concoction. FRICKEY SAID that he first became interested in student government when he was in high school. There was a two-year gap between high school and the time Frickey became treasurer of AURH. In 1974, he was elected AURH president. CHUCK WAGON Specializing In Barbecue Steaks, and Sandwiches 843-9844 (RIGHT NEXT TO MOTHER'S) Open 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Daily CLOSED MONDAY (The first business west of Fire Station #3) Also known as the Old Brackett School or Sweeney's Market The North Side Country Shop, previously located at 707 N. Second, has moved to 3938 W. SIXTH He is now one of two summer interns in the office of the Dean of Men. Our New Name Will Be "THE COUNTRY SHOP" We hope to serve you with a better line of antiques, used furniture, collectables, etc. We will continue to have fresh fruits and vegetables. KU Students and Employes Are Always Welcome Frickey is performing two duties for AURH this summer. In addition to the presidency, he is doing residence hall administration and a university association is the link between each residence hall government and the University administration. Frickey is a member of the Administrative Housing office who governs the University residence halls. Herb Altenbernd Peggy Altenbernd Frickey said AURH had a good deal of power in the area of student employment in the residence balls. AURH also coordinates an internal banquet for state legislators. Kansas Growth Studied Project to Determine Future Policies By JOHN CRICHTON Kansan Staff Reporter Kansas is projecting ahead to the year 2000 and beyond to see what impact growth will have on the air, land, higher education, public safety and social services of the state. These are a few of the 18 areas that the Division of Planning and Research in the State Department of Administration is trying to develop a growth policy for Kansas. Under the direction of Herman Lajan, associate professor of political science at the University of Kansas, and Thomas Galloway, assistant director of the division and assistant professor of architecture and design at KU, the newly created division will study, analyze and project what problems Kansas can expect in the future. yesterday. "If we irrigate in western Kansas to the year 2010," Lujan gave as an example, "then we will deplete the water supplies." "We now have some idea of the growth problems of the state," Luijan said He said we needed programs to deal with these problems. Galloway said that the division wasn't making plans, just projections for the benefit of farmers, businessmen, the state government and other citizens. "If people don't like the projections," he said, "then they can plan." Kansas has unique problems, Lujan said, that need unique attention. "We raise questions, probe and come up with some answers." he said. "We are not going to be an over-populated area," Lajai said, "but we still have a chance." This is one situation, he said, that the division is studying closely. Memorial Ceremonies For Warren Continue WASHINGTON (AP)—The body of Earl Warren will lie in state today in the white marble building of the Supreme Court over 95 years as Chief Justice of the United States. Division studies show that population increases are along I-35 and I-70 east of Funeral services for the nation's 14th Chief Justice, who died in a Washington hospital Tuesday night at the age of 83, will be held at Washington Cathedral at noon tomorrow. Manhattan. The economic, social, educational and other factors of that population shift, Lujan said, must be studied. Although he had no previous experience as a judge, he so firmly put his stamp on the nation's highest tribunal that it quickly came to be known as "the Warren court." Warren will be buried tomorrow afternoon in Arlington National Cemetery, a graveyard near Washington. Details of the lying-in-state at the court building were not immediately available. "We have got to be sure that concentration of population does not destroy ecosystems." Warren, a former California governor, was appointed chief justice by the President of the United States. In decision after decision, the court plowed new ground in racial integration, equal voting rights and procedural guarantees for criminal defendants. President Nixon called him "a man to whom the public trust was a sacred trust." Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, who presided over the death of his life "optimized the American dream." It also set out liberal guidelines for dealing with obscenity, outlawed some extra exercises including prayers in public schools and the degree of the government's loyalty apparatus. All this drew criticism as well as praise. "Impeach Earl Warren" bumper stickers appeared under the sponsorship of the John Briar Society and other conservatist groups. By the time Warren retired on June 23, 1969, admirers ranked him with John Kansas is basically in good condition, Lujan said. Land resources are plentiful, water resources are good, and Kansas is economically secure because of the fertile soil he said. Any state that relies heavily on agricultural exports, he added, is well off. The apartments that don't give away gasoline, bicycles or trips to Bermuda. There's no reason to. The quiet luxury of Meadowbrook apartments speaks for itself. Come visit us. Meadowbrook is Apartments • Townhouses • Residences 15th & Crestline B42-4200 a good place to live. The Division of Planning and Research is completing a study that will be released in the near future. Lajan said it would be a citizen's pamphlet called "Kansas 2000," a substantial study detailing growth problems that they have projected. meadowbrook The University of Kansas Theatre Festivals present Office open 'til 8 p.m. "Picnic" by William Inge July 11, 12, 13 Reservations 864-3982 University Theatre ...Murphy Hall 8:00 p.m. Admission: $ ^{5}2^{50} $ - KU Students $ ^{5}1^{50} $ THE WORLD OF WILLIAM INGE A genial six-footer, Warren made over pretenitions of being an intellectual. Over and over again, in questioning attorneys from the bench, he would brush aside fine points of the law and ask a simple question: "Is it fair?" Marshall, the early 19th Century chief justice under whose leadership the court asserted its power as the final arbiter of the Constitution. Cedarwood apartments 75 gallons of gas free. The Cleanest Place in Town 1-2-3-4 bedrooms from $ ^{99}\infty $ All modern conveniences. 2414 Ousdahl 843-1116 "What does the future of Kansas look like?" Lujan asked. The Division, with its 12-member staff, is located in Topeka. Funds for its research come from the state and the Department of Housing and Urban Development. GENE DOANE AGENCY This is the question, he said, that the division is trying to answer. He said they want a viable, highly professional state organization to give data and projections for the needs of Kansas in the coming years, to help create a better place to live. We Write Motorcycle Insurance 843-3012 824 Mass. St. Friday, July 12 Dance and drink to the fabulous sounds of "Magic Transit" The Yuk Down Bring this coupon and beat the cover. Any couple or stag admitted free before 9:00 Admission before 9PM. 19th & Iowa/Hillcrest Shopping Center Cross Over The Bridge to sirloin LAWRENCE KANSAS Finest Eating Place HOME OF THE JUMBO PRAWN SHRIMP To Complement Our Fine Dining Tuesday Through Saturday We Are Featuring BILL HUTTANUS at the Lowry Organ from Jenkins Music Company Our motto is and has always been "There is no substitute for quality in good food." - Private Club Facilities - Shares for Fees for Groups up to 75 People - Accommodations for Wedding Rehearsal Banquets $1\frac{1}{2}$ Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge Phone 843-1431 Open 4:30 Closed Mondays