University Daily Kansan, February 4. 1981 Page 5 Landlord From nage 1 hammer over the landlords to make improvements. If they refuse to make the improvements they could lose up to $2,000. It would be better to prosecute because of the size of the fine." S巴ach said he thought the revisions of the consumer protection amendment were put in place. "If a landlord驳 any of his listed acts under the current Landlord-tenant Act," Solbach said, "that would make the landlord susceptible to the fine." STATE SEN. Ronald Hein, R-Topeka, said he thought the revisiion of the Consumers Protection Act would be important. AOPi From page 1 "When the Landlord-Temant Act was formed in 1976 or 1976, 'Heli said' was made codify its rights." DISAGREEMENT ABOUT the building plans forced a delay in the construction of the house, according to Dale Glenn of Peters, Williams and Dale Glenn of reference architecture. firm handling the project. "The thing wrong with the consumer protection version is that it is too unilaterally against the landlords. It does not protect the landlord from the destructive tenant." The lot, located on Sigma Nu Place, has been purchased but the house has not been built, Hein said he had heard from landlords in his district that tenants often destroyed an apartment when forced to vacate for not paying the rent. He said that in such cases the landlord would be left holding the bag and rents could increase as a result. "It is going to face some obstacles on the way through." He said. "Because it is so unliterate, it's hard to read." "We're still in the design-development stage," he said. "Construction will start in the spring and we we're hoping to have it completed for January occupancy." McCollum residents had mixed reactions to the proposed AOPi move. "I can't really foresee any problems, because there's such a wide diversity of people here now," Karol Jung, Overland Park junior and hall president, said. TOD MEGREGY, Eldorado junior, said that McColum residents would not be disturbed. In 1968, Gerald Gipp drove a caroloid of students from the Cheyenne reservation in Montana to Lawrence. He wanted to show them the realities of life in the country and undered one of the best Indian schools in the nation. Longtime Haskell supporter now president By PENNI CRABTREE Staff Reporter Fifteen years later Gipp is back, as the first native American president of what is now Hawaii. "I've spent the last four years in Washington working for the Department of Education," he said. "I wanted to get back to the students, to work more closely in an academic atmosphere." GIPP, WHO is one-half Standing Rock Sioux, replaced Wallace E. Galluzzi as president last week. "I was senior adviser for Busby High School, an Indian school," Gipp said. "I knew about Haskell Institute and wanted my students to see what I provided provided a unique opportunity for Indians." Gipp said that he had several projects under Gipp and that he would see them implemented during the next few years. "Right now we're studying the feasibility of turning Haskell into a four-year college," he said. "The Board of Regents is interested, but we're going to take this so slowly." "We are subsidized by the federal government, and we want to make very careful plans before we approach them with the proposal." Gerald Gipp HASKELL BECAME a two-year, fulv- accredited junior college in 1979 and is the only Indian college in the United States built outside a reservation. The school offers two-year degrees in both liberal arts and vocational fields. "Haskell is a fine school, but I think there is a lot of potential for development," Gipp said. "Our immediate concern is in strengthening the college's existing programs, and in improving ties with the community and the University of Kansas." Gipp said that he would like to establish a student and faculty exchange program between Haskell and KU and that he planned to meet with KU officials soon to discuss the project. "I don't think that the past Haskell administrative have worked as closely with KU as they might have," he said. "I'm interested in an application of this method at both schools for any student who is interested." "We've expanded a lot in the past year, and we have some new programs." GIPP SAID one of his goals over the next few years was for Haskell to overcome "some very severe financial restraints." Haskell operates with a federally-funded $4.6 million budget. Gipp叫了budget meager compared to the budgets of many other junior colleges, who provide food and housing for 1,000 Indian students. 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