The University Daily KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, February 18, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 98 USPS 650-640 DAVE KRAUS/Kansan staff The weather took a turn for the better in Lawrence yesterday, and Colin warm temperatures to play on the gym in South Park. Forbes and Forbes (left) and Shahrid Healdi took advantage of the sunny skies and Hieldari are in the class for four-year-olds at the Hillton Day Care Center Kansas legislators debate speed limit bills the limit to 65, both dependent on Congress taking action first. Hamm said he proposed his version of the bill Col. David Hornbaker, superintendent of the Kansas Highway Patrol, said that about 62 percent of Kansas drivers were complying with 50 55 bis byer uit 4.8 sas kair iear ; 70 red, me, ife, our seed kets New KUAC ticket proposal could triple student prices By REBECCA CHANEY Staff Reporter Student ticket prices for football and basketball games could as much as triple next year if recommendations made by the KU recommendation board ticket committees are approved today. The KUAC board will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the Satellite Union to consider the recommendations. It also will consider proposals to move a KU-MU football game to Arrowhead Stadium and to sell beer in Memorial Stadium or whether KU women's teams will join the NCAA. Steve Leleben, KUAC student board member, said that ticket pricing in past years had been settled at board meetings to keep student ticket prices as low as possible. The committee also has proposed a policy for the board to adopt requiring students to pay half the public price for both football and basketball tickets. THE RECOMMENDATIONS of the ticket committee would allow the board to set policy regarding pricing and let the athletic department work out specific costs. Leben said the proposed pricing policy was unjustified and drastic. Based on this year's public prices, $19 student tickets would cost $31 for a seven-game football season and $15 student tickets would cost $38.50 for a 14-game basketball season. BASED ON NEXT year's prices, which have not been set officially, student tickets could cost $36 for football and $42 for basketball, Leben said. He said that he had met with athletic officials and student board members and that a compromise could be worked out before the board pelt this afternoon. The ticket policy committee, headed by David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, will meet at 2:30 p.m. today, before the board meeting, to finalize its recommendations. Leben said that he met with Bob Marcum, luten director, yesterday, and that the two had agreed to recommend to the committee at the 2:30 meeting that student football tickets be based on one-third the public cost rather than one-half. "That would mean tickets cost about $25," Leen said. "I don't think that's out of line." If adopted, the policy could be put into effect gradually over the next few years. Leben said. AMMLER SAID the recommendations would be made to both meetings today before a decision was made. "But phasing it in doesn't change the problem," he said. "It only lengthens the pain. Let's not accept something we don't think is fair." He wasn't going to take effect for two or three years. He also said he believed some of the information used to back up the committee's recommendation was "unintentionally" misleading. "When you talk about increases, students have to bear their fair share of the load," he said. "But a major reason that student income has declined is that we've paid off our debt that we agreed to finance (the east stadium addition of a 7,000-seat student section). Lo and behold, revenues did decrease, but they were supposed to." Leben said the information did not include student contributions to women's athletics and distorted declining percentages of student contributions to the total athletic department He also said private contributions had increased to more than $1 million a year. KU STUDENT FUNDING for athletics is comparable to other schools in the Big Eight "The athletic department is in a difficult situation, but it is not a desperate situation, but it is serious." Significant increases in funding of women's athletics have to be made, he said. Also, KU's football and basketball recruiting budgets are second to lowest in the Big Eight, and the capital improvements budget is the lowest in the Big Eight. Staff Reporter Bv KAREN SCHLUETER The University Daily Kansas' $1 student activity fee increase request provoked a two-hour Student Senate debate before it was approved last night. Kansan spurs Senate debate The Senate approved the Finance and Auditing Committee's recommendations for seven of 13 agencies. It also deferred a decision on the recompensation to remove the School of Architecture and Urban Design Student Council from the code until tomorrow's meeting. Six remaining recommendations will be considered Thursday when it is taken on the entire recommendations bill. if the Senate approves the bill, it will ask the senator to send the Shankel to increase the $1.10 activity fee by $4.14 million. ission nality w af- isiana time. face in smoke as as a in the coffee beer quote coffee we my at sort on his basket after King, arbage ame an plain at iscopal home he had Fry also answered questions from Steve McMurry, Transportation Board chairman, concerning the Kansan's cash carry-forward account. "We've done things in an effort to keep even with rising costs," Fry said, "but if we raise our rates to our advertisers any more, we'll no longer be competitive." Terri Fry, Kansan business manager, defended the fee increase before the Senate. "The Kansan is a half-a-million-dollar business," Fry said. "Our costs vary from month to month. Cash carry-forward is to maintain our costs." 1 tree student senators voiced opposition to the Kansan's request. The Kansan receives $73,260 and requests its total allocation be $2 from the activity fee. The Kansan now receives $2 from the activity fee. See REVENUE page 3 mission change with times Peter Casparian