The University Daily University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas KANSAN Wednesday, March 4, 1981 Vol.91,No.108 USPS 650-640 Developer continues mall battle staff Reporter By DALE WETZEL Staff Reporter If at first you don't succeed, invest more money. Jacobs, Viscasoni and Jacobs is doing just that after the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission deed a setback to JVJ's bid to rezone a south lawrence lot for a shopping mall. "We've got $300,000 invested in this." Don Janson, JV vice president for mail development, said. "We've got a lot of money to invest." THE ENVELOPES contain coupons, clipped from a full-page JVJ advertisement published in the Feb. 22 Lawrence Journal-World. As of March 2, the planning office had received 405 coupons, many with letters and other comments attached; 378 supported JVJ's proposed project. Some of JVL's dollars are already paying indirect dividends, as two plump mama婴经营商分担一部分。 However, the fruits of the Cleveland developer's efforts won't be known for at least two weeks. A March 18 City Commission hearing date set for VJJ's request is "still tentative" according to assistant city manager Mike Wilden. Meanwhile, Richard Zinn, JVJ's Lawrence attorney, is preparing to argue his client's case before the commission. Two weeks earlier, despite an hour-long presentation by Zinn, Jones KU 1982 budget request tied to Regents budget By GENE GEORGE Staff Reporter The University of Kansas won't be helped by the Senate Ways and Means Committee's relaxed attitude toward individual universities' restrictions, according to the committee chairman. the chairman, Paul Hess, R-Wichita, said yesterday that KU's requests for a faculty pay raise, an increase in the operating budget and money to cover increased enrollment were tied to the board of Regents system-wide proposed budget. The committee cut those requests deeply last month. HESS SCHEDULED committee hearings for tomorrow and Friday to consider the individual campuses' requests for next year. After committee action this week, the campuses and Regents budgets will be sent to the governor. Since the individual request, as proposed by Gov. John Carlin, did not entail the large sum of money that the Regents proposal did, Hess said the committee probably would go easy on the cuts. "I suspect that the subcommittee reports certainly will not be higher than the governors recommendation." Hess said. "But don't expect a rubber stamp of the governor's proposal." Hess said all individual requests probably March. 1981 TRAVEL Night life in Old West Kay ranges from classy disheاتures like the Monster to sleazy pool balls full of gin and tonic. The favorites of the college crowd include Captain Tops, Sloppy Joe's, MacMaster and the Bull, all featuring live entertainment. Cover change vary, and the price for a beer is $1, $2 or more for a cocktail. their hearts set on a romantic island dinner at one of the Wine's better restaurants, the Rose Tattoo on Durnal spent the warm atmosphere and fresh seafood. When a bad case of sunburn makes the beach out of the question, Key West offers a variety of interesting and inexpensive tourist attractions. One can tour the exotic house of the lake on the island, or visit the 42 cats that the novelist provided for in his will. The Historic Turtle Kraals, a small but fascinating marine zoo features a 700 foot loggerhead turtle—the world's largest in captivity. Lumberjack, lobster, conch, sea turtles, and many other varieties of fish and marine life (Continued from page 14) Another interesting place to visit is the Key West Castellock Factory, which manufactures and sells all natural wines made with aloe. a tropical plant known for its burn-healing properties.警告 those who are badly sunburned should be aware of this place. From the door, through the glass door, he or she is assaulted by aggressive salespeople who insist on shilting aloe gel after all over the visitor's skin. The castellock factory is sunburn, but all the attention made me feel like a bed for not buying any of their outrageously expensive products. A single bottle of aloe bubble bath all explained in a lively tour by a marine biologist. The author, a recent graduate of the University of Virginia, spent two spring breaks in Key West. A terrific way to wind up any Florida vacation is to spend a day at Disney World in Orlando. A whole day of fun for you will be spent with the most sophisticated student will have a blast. Besides, it really helps back up the long ride back to school. COSTA RICA IS NOT NICARAGUA BY MANFRED WOLF Costa Real may seem somewhat out of the way to students planning their Easter orsum *studies* in a college, but abilities for traveling to this little Central American country open up often from occasional charter flights to low weekday fares on LACSA and other travel companies you should know a few first things. 1. Costa Rica is not Nicaragua Some tourists have been staying away in the mistaken belief that there's trouble in all of paradise; however, the Costa Rican government do not affect Costa Rica which any prides itself on being as different from Nicaragua as possible—democratic, peaceful, or独. homogeneity has something to do with Costa Rica's cultural heritage, which is almost descended from Spanish and more recent European settlers. 2. Costa Rica is not Mexico. Americans often expect to find the discomfort associated with Mexican travel or Neither of the above. Drink the water, eat the lettuce, and don't bother peeling the tomatoes. On score and on others' it's a little like roaming in the woods. The further pleasure is the unabashed enthusiasm for Americans that obtains in Costa Rica - *macho* here means blood, and a blonde woman is *mujaka* in Zacatecas. In Zacatecas or Torreón or Oxaca Most vacations will inevitably be drawn to the spectacular tropical beaches. The Caribbean town of Liwanga, south of mountains and jungle, is very worthwhile but not for swimming. Go south from there to Calcutta for the beach of the country, a short bus ride from San Jose, is Puntarenas, which has a fine beach—though the more adventurous go to Cozumel in Mexico. This has become a favorite meeting place of the young. At all of these and many others, rent cabinos if luxury is desired. You can also visit the county's deserts beaches. Young travelers warning to test the warmth of the Costa Rican should know that dishevelies in and around San Jose welcome singles mainly on the beach, at the playground and at Barco and near the Playboy Club) were favorably mentioned by young Costa Ricans who also said that if *Ivy wanted* to meet someone of the opposite sex they'd go to dance hall, Baju Alonso or Los Milos in Cartagua. It a measure of the modern influence on Costa Rica that there's even a singles club, Club de Solerlo, which is also home to San Jose's only vegetarian restaurant. lesser known excursions out of town are hereby strongly recommended; a bus ride to the old colonial capital of Ajijana, which is surrounded by Heredia, or to the mountain village of Acoza Centrally located San Jose will probably be headquarters despite reservation requirements for five dollars a day at the Pension Nizza, on the western end of the Paseo Colon, or at the pension Goca Rea near the Morazan Park, for a little more. Most Costa Rica live in, and most tourists go to, the Sun Joaquin area, on the island of Isabela. The city is rather plain modern city in a beautiful setting its Sights (National Theatre, Banco Nacional). Amnersand O N T O U R Wilson Pickett PRIVATES NEW YORK And he was timely. "We'll just wait and see," he said. "I have not reported to committee reports. I don't know if ours (KU) are." After seven low-risk years, Picket showed legitimate cheek to say, "Don't call it a comeback. I never left," the dance功架 clown unsure their abilities Muscle Shirts Fame sides. In 1979 everyone opened a rock lake with a soul-and-pink playlist. In 1980 James Brown showed Studio 54 the meaning of life and suddenly everyone looked for grooves and suddenly everyone looked for tickets on the new soul train in town. An incarunt illhearted! Hellay, but Picket commands it on his The spotlight of profitability is restless. Yes, it lanked on Wicker Picket in New York but not in London; get grateful. Not to the fictile market that burdened him in the Seventies, but to the Wicked One, the Midnight Mover of London. The chancelled new showcase called Prize Written. Wicked Picket was all sex and sugar, confident, blatant, hot shot and gracious. Blatant, hot shot and gracious. Pickett showed Private what a classic is something with built-in merit that fashion can not dismiss. Crusising against the idea of mock delirium from his well-horned hand, Pickett did a whole show of greatest his. Pickett sang like he wanted to hear the old stuff as much as he wanted to see here; just saw just rush and command. "In the Midnight Hour" "The women — punk hair and all — get visions 'Green Grass.' "Everybody Needs Somebody to Live." The man beside me starts making moves. Pocket bits start to embody sexual belonging. The woman has him dating women she knows confidence and slog ger. "In the wee hours you need somebody to hold real tight." Picket purrs. No clinical removal Hes not disclosing. You know the address 5789. It right be here at home/All you have to do/s pick up your phone/and dial 5474. 6589. As the simple prescription — the love on their mind — is woman, and you know I want it Pickett's vocal master, engaged driver, musician, and sensibility made a good case here for merging meaning with meaning and swag. Rock and roll's gappy planned obesence dismisses the sense of meaning but Pickett won't be slapped so easily In Pickett's presence, the language of sexuality had content. His style was playful, tough, and mildly cynical, but never vacant. say a lecture tour to college colleges. Reading to students may look closer than mixing it up with Zea Zea on the cover of *The New Yorker* and out to be more one of style. What does a best-selling author do when he has a new book to promote? The usual answer, taking to interviews, interviews, interviews, and talk show appearances, may be fine for Judith Krantz but for a former cult hero like Richard Brutau, a promotion junket seems more appealing, demands something more digustable. As he was introduced, Brantagh, as repleinent in wrinkled blue skin, took the lead and onto the stage smiling beautifully like a giant price. He began the evening by giggling with delight at several of his own jokes and ignoring it I just got off his chair and asked if anyone had requests from the audience. After he stared down an early hedding—farting in the wind he called the interruption "I'm too scared to enter into respectful, if not quite revenge, silence. After offering several dozen readings from his latest book, the author accepted an amazing series of questions from the audience. "Are you trying to make a statement? Have you ever actually done much truss fishing?" and so on. He L. M. Eklund After some ninety books, Braultan still seems locked into the persona of the Stuarts innocent "I don't read contemporary fiction," he told one采访者. "I'm a guerre" His reaction to the 1989 election "I am apolitical," somehow, by now all this seems more irresponsible than innocent. This came into focus after his first encounter with incoherence and then used his old travel narrative (Tacoma, Washington, to Eugene, by war of Meridian, Missouri) to excuse the lapse. There was an element of sadness who left his Montana ranch for a lecture room that squeezed too many miles into too few days and short changed his fans as a result would have been the subject, rather than the subject, a wryly useful Braultan sketch Richard Brautigan UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE David Coursen Von Ende said he "had a good talk" with KU subcommittee chairman Ronald Hein, R-Topke, last week, but Hein gave no indication which programs the subcommittee supported. Echo & the Bunnymen THE LONDON RANBOW pounds to a galloping beat as "walters Terrace" is measured off "Once I like cryingTween I like laughter/Gone on my mind," and then, he sings in Read It in Book 5. KU asked the governor for $5 million more for a 10 percent salary increase and higher classified pay and $12.5 million more for its education and operating budget. What he and the rest of the Bummymen are apparently after in Eighties form for the crossing braintrain vixene of a 1960s city more industrial and vicious than its Sixties psychedelic cousins, but nonetheless full of interesting tone color, idealism and moments that laid too much distance to dream (last night). Multicolored fog, camouflage and melting smothered the stage at The Fashion Show. palm trees stretched toward thousands of stars flickering on the ceiling. Well come to the London Rainbow for Echo and pass the electric Kool Aid Jeff Hays Like the drug-inspired psychic绷 band of the Sixties, the Bunyim make music for the expanded consciousness. A hand to watch and absorb, but not necessarily to dance to, they hinge songs on a remote bar and a wandering lazily aspiring guitar player, only the only element that is really unfamiliar. Plucky haired singer Ian McCallough orchestrates the oround phrase of the line Jur Morrison, yet personally resembles a poet who has spotted poet. Along with deep and formidable vocals, he shares with Morrison a matter of life-and death and rock roll, sometimes taken seriously by critics. In a daze for days," McCallough ex James "Blood" Ulmer THE STONE, SAN FRANCISCO But Carlin cut both requests before sending them onto the Legislature. The committee in effect reduced the amounts more last month by trimming $3 million from the Regents proposal. capacity crowd arrived at the hondescript North Beach club, most in their early to mid-28, wearing black jazz guitars and the tiny dance floor. The only anomaly on the scene was onstage—a 38-year old black jazz guitarist, James "Blood" Burrell, wearing African garb. He stood nearly still to play, and out came a challenging music at once similar to what he found in some inn-present irresects. Ulmer first picked up a guitar at age three, became a professional musician at 17, then hit the road for a tenure with EMI. He played all kinds of bands, R&B and jazz outfits. He eventually hooked up with saxophonist Ornette Coleman, whose composing and playing style (called harmelodic) became a great in-music sensation. He recorded Ulmer's two solo albums, *Tales from the captain Black* (which featured Golenam as player and co-producer) and *Are you glad to be in the america?* at the Stone, Ulmer powered through an hour of music that was as distinctive and rewarding as it was demanding and difficult. Its roots were in rock and pop, but through fiery shoots of rock, RBB and particularly, funk. His充电 helped up series of various musical forms does not seem to have much influence on most people stuff their mind as of "fusion." Ulmer performed with only two sidemen, the brilliant rhythm section of bassist Amin Alin and Calvin Wesson a 19-year-old drumming prodigy. When a number demanded it, Alin and Wesson began an impassioned musical rhythm foundation to support Ulmer's cascading guitar runs. But most of his compositions for call more active, prominent participation by bass and drum, which meant Alin and Wesson were often laying down a surdy melody in the instrument alt forefront with Ulmer. The set was heavy with turbulent instrumentals. Ulmer mixed things up a bunch of songs — but one number Jaz is the Teacher, Funk is the Preacher, and "Are You Glad to be in America," a gliding tone that could probably slip inconceivably into a song. 'g Hess' from the mittee's Carlin's THE COMMITTEE decreased Carlin's proposed 6 percent faculty pay increase to 7 percent and his proposed 6 percent operating budget increase to 5.5 percent. Money to cover increased enrolment this year was eliminated and the committee told universities to manage with what money they had if future increases were minor. The latter song was also one of the few pieces laced with Ullrich's gruff chant-singing, a strange vocal style that echoed the chorus, almost inside of spite itself. Duncan Strauss The committee also voted for a 15 percent increase in tuition for all state university students. The increase would mean KU students, who now pay about 20 percent of the total cost of their education, would pay around 23 percent next year. recutive on what Two other projects KU wants, but probably won't get because the governor didn't recommend them. are $3.6 million for the Haworth Hall project, $900,000 for a feasibility study for a second library. The Haworth Hall expansion would allow the biology department to move from the outdated and cramped conditions at Snow Hall into more modern facilities. The feasibility study would see whether a second library, needed to take the load off Watson Library, could be built near the Military Science Building. "They fix the was." contract 't serve food contract e meat ident to options reasons Residents have the option of a salad bar if they don't like theneat, Wilson said. the rest of the semester. This total of $89.30 a purchase and/or include the layer paper. "There's enough at the salad bar at any hall (so anyone to have a good, balanced diet," he said. The women said that saalids did not provide for all of their nutritional needs. "We complained about paying $10 a month just for mealad. Miller said, "That is not a balanced money." day for Hartman suggested the halls offer their residents optional food contracts. "If you aren't eating the food, then you shouldn't have to pay for it," she said. BOB GREENSPAN/Kansan staff n campus as rays swept into the area. Two girls walk behind are expected to continue with a hard in the mild 40°