The University Daily University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas KANSAN Wednesday, March 4, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 108 USPS 650-640 Developer continues mall battle By DALE WETZEL Staff Reporter If at first you don't succeed, invest more money. Jacobs, Visciani and Jacobs is doing just after the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission dealt 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 Jones, JV vice president for mall development, said. "We're targeting 250,000 customers." Some of JVL's dollars are already paying indirect dividends, as two plump marmot endorsers have done. 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; 379 supported JVJ's proposed project. 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 Widleen. Meanwhile, Richard Zinn, JVJ's Lawrence attorney, is preparing to argue his client's case 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' committee requests, 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 effort of Regents system-wide proposed budget. The committee cut those requests deeply last month. HESS SCHEDULED committee hearings for the Wednesday and Friday to consider the individual communities. After committee action this week, the campuses' and Regents budgets will be sent to the full Senate in one bill for debate. Since the individual requests, 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 "I suspect that the subcommittee reports certainly will not be higher than the governors recommendation." Hess said. "But don't expect HERE THEY ARE Results of The First Annual Readers Poll At last, we are keeping that promise — here are the results of The First Annual Amplers and Readers Poll Calm down, now. Please hold your applause until all the winners are introduced. The best rock album of 1980, a hands-down no-contest winner, was *The River* by Brian Springwater. Rump up (about half as many songs) was Billy Jack's *Glass House* trailing but with half the tone and length. The Wall by Fine Royd and Emg Glass by Pete Townshend. Best Chemical Albums (nearly a Ga): Perotecto's Greatest Nits and Beekermann's 8th Symphony. Best Jazz Album; Jeff Beck's There & Back sedded out Herb Alpern a Rise by one vote. Among the 8 remaining albums named there was an 8-way tie, including Dee Jonah (in Georgia) and the likes of The Dirty Dozen (in Georgia) and Brian Lennon (in Georgia) by Brian Lennon Gassoon by Slewey Dan Extensions by Manhattan Transfer, and Corsalee by Syrgy Rope. The Beat Gold Album, leading the pack by a week margin; Off the Wall by Michael Jackson. Second —朵咪.Mr.Bye. Ms. The Best Country and Western Album, the Golden Gate Soundtrack, was released in 1980. It is a musical epic set on the beach and is sung with an extraordinary grace. The greatest hits for second time. Best New Songs, sing to Springwater, for "Jungle Heart" followed by Dove's "Whip it and Guests" "Another One吹 the Bone." Top movie choice was Ordinary People, which ranked up greatly one more than The Simpsons Sutton Bank, which had 9 votes more Dan Blackman Man. Also rated The Shaking Forms, Caddyshack, The Stonewall and Allegiant. Best Christmas Blues naturally, new Rewilds’ “Bolaria” to the movie of George J. White the jazz star was Alabama ‘Rise,’ Wes ‘Little,’ “Udle Down” by Diana Rose, followed by George Benson’s “Give Me the Night.” Country & Western ‘Lady,’ by Karen Rogers, then “Driving My Life Away” by Eddie Rabbit and “Looking for Love,” by John Lee. Picture shows Morel Monroe nine times David Holman; second Brooke Vane Robert Redford, then Jack Nelson, Chris Eisenwood and David Burtley each jameson chocolates. Farouche Ravishne Girisha Dhar Jr. Jamee Neume. Training in her wake was many Mary Tyler Moore, Marcia Gorman, Gochelle McGill, Jill Claremont and Sally Sheffield. The Best Recording Artist, no doubt about it, with nearly three times as many votes as any other artist — Springington again. Galloway plays in the distance were Billy Joel, Jackson Brown, Baird Marshman and Pete Townshend. Best Female Recording Artist, with not quite twice as many on number 2, who Pet Denzel. Register 1: Burke Sternhead, followed by Linda Romney; Carly Simon and Donna Summer. oly > 's Broad Street Band will go public, Spring Festival and the & Street Band, followed by Touche Theatre BBD on Sunday, the Closet, all mixed for second place. Assoc. Director, Jesse the Smith, Group Management and Mark S. Branson Board, both of which are in charge of sales, marketing and support for the New York City and New Orleans offices. Send resume to Jesse the Smith, Group Management, 205 Broadway, New York, NY 10026. Best Once-Time TV Special — a first place between Seeded Stretch and Playing for Twin, second place you won by kanye West special, and third place was a three-way tie. Steve Meyer's special. The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour (necally two shows both), and Bendoff on Broadway. Jim Crowley, Hornsby-Greene District, M.J. S.H., Knee Pain, Dallas, 901 Minuteman, South, and Lewisville **Historic Homes in the District:** Home four times the size of Chichester, Macdonald and Palmer, with historic interiors. Each house has four grand dining rooms, Garrison and Taffer, kitchen and living room. Best Station home, Great King Hone a four farm in collegiate; The Scholar's Hone a four farm; The Grand King and Flammerer for third farm. Second place—The Lord of the Rings. Only Firestorm was published in 1980; the others are ancient history. First play. The Elegant Man, with lines as many as poems in The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas. Best Notion Book you've ever read. Biography, Ancestor Gems Get Collaborated. Collected essays. The Real New York. Townhall Writings and the Townhall Anthology. Other job performance based salary. Prior, Nancy Williams and Robbie DangerGeld did for Lisa M., while Bill Cipio and Sage Rosen did for Susan. Burt Hartman Andrew Young scored first place, by Gorilla Steenan, Ralph Marner, Mal Bard (the voice of Buga Bunny, among others). G. Gordon Liddy, Woody Heyes, Vincent Price and Leo Buzziga tied for third place. Who is Lao Busceala? But really, dear readers, we expected great, unusual, off-beat pearls from an informed, intelligent, educated audience like yourselves. What did we get? Top 40 Best sailor Big deal We're going to do this again next year . . . and we're going to keep doing it until you get it right. "We'll just wait and see," he said. "I have not seen the subcommittee reports, I don't know if they are." ss' ;he e's n's Von Ende said he "had a good talk" with KU subcommittee chairman Ronald Hein, R-Topea, last week, but Hein gave no indication which programs the subcommittee supported. KU asked the governor for $8 million more for a 10 percent faculty salary increase and higher classified pay and $12.5 million more for its education and operating budget. ive hat 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. 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. The committee also voted for a 15 percent increase in tuition for all state universities. Money to cover increased enrollment this year was eliminated and the committee told universities to manage with what money they had if future increases were minor. 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. Two other projects KU wants, but probably won't get because the governor don't recommend them, are $4.6 million for the Haworth Hall project, $400,000 for a feasibility study for a second library. 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. The Haworth Hall expansion would allow the biology department to move from the outdated and cramped conditions at Snow Hall into more modern facilities. good contract eat the rest of the semester. This total of $63.30 a mch purchase cate and does not include caterer labor costs. Residents have the option of a salad bar if they don't like the meat, Wilson said. be "There's enough at the salad bar at any hall for anyone to have a good, balanced cheese," he cait be The women said that salads did not provide for all of their nutritional needs. "We complained about paying $70 a month just for salad," Miller said. "That is not a balanced to ons Hartman suggested the halls offer their residents optional food contracts. for "If you aren't eating the food, then you shouldn't have to pay for it," she said. as rals swept into the two. Girls walk behind ced to continue today with a high in the mid 60s. BOB GREENSPANK kansaan talla!