University Daily Kansan, January 28, 1981 Page 5 From page one Law student, agrees with Brandon that the ABA guideline is discriminatory. However, she thinks the rule has even greater implications for students wanting to go to law school. Bailley, who works for the Kansas Insurance Department doing research at the school, said the rule enforcement is a challenge. "No one will be able to go to law school except the independently wealthy," she said. Bailey said she wished she had more energy and ability to deal with her career as a law firm. Bailey, who graduated from Kansas State University in 1979, also refused to say how many hours she worked. She said, however, that she supported herself and her 15-year-old son Chris on what she makes with the insurance department. "I have to go in too many different directions," she said. "I have to work to pay the rent and go to law school. I really wish I had time to take advantage of all the school has to offer." Bailey said she had not had much of a chance to play the role of a traditional mother for Chris. "Iused to feel guilty because I wasn't the den mother for Cub Scouts and that kind of thing," she said. "But I've raised him to be independent and he can pretty much take care of himself." Bailey, who hopes to work with juvenile courts when she graduates, said she chose to go to law school. “It’s a matter of power,” she said. “If you’re not happy with the way things are, you can’t make much of a difference with a Ph.D. in history.” Bailey and the others should have little trouble realizing Uim's dreams if the current hiring team needs to recruit a new director. Women are moving into the traditionally male bastion of law with surprising ease, according to Maggie Cartar, placement director for the KU law school. PLACEMENT OFFICE statistics for the 1979 graduating class show women get jobs in all types of practice and at salaries comparable to those received by men. The average women's starting salary for KU's 1979 law school graduates was $18,732, compared with salary of the salary of $18,590 for women and combined In addition, 1978's 49 female graduates took jobs in nearly every major category according to a report by Carttar. The only exception were jobs with very large prestigious firms. "They still may be meeting with some resistance there," Carttart said. "But we're certainly better off than 10 years ago when KU graduated one female." One KU law school graduate who agrees with Cartar's optimistic outlook for women is Jane Eldridge, a member of the 1977 class and state senator from the 2nd district. ELDRDGE, WHO OPENED her own law in Lawrence in 1978, is ecstatic over what happened to her husband. "I'm delighted," she said. "I have control over my own life. I'm meeting my own demands now, Eldredge, 38, came to Lawrence 10 years ago after her husband Charles had finished graduate school. He is the director of the Spencer Art Museum. She said she entered law school without any notion about what she would do when she grew up. "I had been doing a lot of community organization work and every time I turned around I would be dealing with another legal issue," she said. "My husband is very bright and I had to have interests of my own and a separate identity for our marriage to work. Someone suggested that I go to law school, and so far it's worked out fine." ELRDEDGE SAID SHE STARTed law school two children, two children who were twose and six years old. "I just didn't have the stamina that I used to have," she said. "I made arrangements to go to work in the morning and take classes in the afternoon about the only time I had to study was after 8 a.m." She said she discovered something very quickly. She said she got caught up in the competitive atmosphere and it took a sobering experience to bring her back to reality. "It was during finals for fall semester," she said. "I had just taken a test from a professor I hated. I was walking home crying all the way because I was sure I had failed." "When I got home, Giffy, my son, asked me what was wrong. I told him about the test I had just taken. He looked up at me and said, 'I'm sorry, but can we go and get our Christmas tree now?' That brought back my sense of priority and reality. And, happily, I didn't tell." PAC the report completed by the Blue Ribbon Committee last spring. From page one "There's language in the Blue Ribbon Committee to help you implement it. They have the need to invent new language." If a new freedom of speech policy is to be made, Frigo questioned if it should be done. "If there's a new policy to be made, I think the University Senate is competent to handle it," he said. "I question if this isn't something to be done through University governance." FORMING A Freedom of Expression Committee is typical of the obsession the University has with freedom. There's a certain way to solve problems in advance by forming committees to form rules," he said. "I would judge it this way: The administration continues to be worried about problems that may arise, especially about banners. "They want guidance about what to do, using certain imaginative scenarios. So they try to figure out how to use the tool." "Do you go about regulating behavior by a multitude of rules? Now that's a mistaken approach." For Cole, free speech at KU can be helped mostly by improved judgment. "He's a symbol of the corporate elite who control America, who are trying to dominate the globe through blatant militarism," Nick Paretsky, Lawrence junior, said. Rally From name one PARETSKY, A member of the Kansas Anti-Draft Organization, said his group feared that Reagan's support of unpopular Third World would "give us bogged down in another Vietnam. The rally, sponsored by the KU-Y, also included the Progressive Iranian Student Organization, KU Committee on South Africa, University of Lahore and Karbalaans Anti-Draft Organization. As the rally broke up, one protester looked at the dispersing crowd, crook his head and said, "As long as you don't kill me." Latin American Solidarity led the protest concerning intervention in EL Salvador. "We are particularly protesting U.S. involvement in Central America," a Solidarity spokesman said. "One of our slogans is 'U.S. guns killed U.S. nuns.' The arms aid that we've provided to El Salvador caused the death of 10,000 civilians last year. "The rightist junta is murdering its citizens, and we are participating in that genocide. SEVERAL GROUPS unrelated to Solidarity participated in the protest over intervenience in "For feminists, the Reagan administration poses a serious threat to the gains we've made in America." “It’s important for feminists to take a stand against imperialism,” said Carol Smith who came from Kansas City, Mo. to the rally. “We need to speak out against policies that hurt Third World women, as well as those that affect women here.” Smith and other feminists were at the rally to protest military and economic intervention in Third World countries and to circulate a petition for adoption of the Equal Rights Amendment. THE RALLY attracted a crowd of 50 to 60, many of whom were unsure about the theme of the rally. Iran From page one the chilly sunshine, the hostages disappeared into a sea of hugs, smiles and tears. They then exchanged prolonged greetings in the privacy of the airport terminal. hostages were treated to dinner and a wide-screen television for the Super Bowl. Then, led by fire trucks, police cars and other emergency vehicles, six green and silver buses carrying the hostages and their families creep through the airport from the airport as helicopters hovered above. THE HOSTAGES and their families smiled and waved at the crowd. The crowd was thickest in the village of Highland Falls outside West Bend, where the young children in the fashing motorcade lights came into view. THE EX-HOSTAGES will stay in seclusion with their families at West Point until tomorrow. They then are scheduled to fly to Washington for a motorcade and a White House reception. They will stay with their families at an Arlington, Va., hotel reserved exclusively for their use. Inside the 170-room Thayer Hotel, which was reserved exclusively for the families, the About 250 of the ex-hontages' relatives were welcomed by Washington to greet the restless men there tomorrow. 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