Wednesday, June 7, 1972 University Summer Kansan 5 the Air ordered airlines ations or air member of Air ations oycott rep. did that there no nounries is, the to any usted in such old, for many serve welcome com- mence of bonds of sid the active ning to n his president halting egss and ff Sokoloff. Kansan Photo by TY BROWN Work Progresses on Murphy Place The construction of the fountain and courtyard at Murphy Hall is well underway. The plaza at Murphy is being financed with money from the city's General Fund. University of Kansas, in honor of his wife. Funds for the project were also contributed by the class of 1938. Dr. Murphy's class, at its graduation in 1954, received $20,000 from the university. If the University could get a strong club organized, Jaworski explained, the club could represent the school in both regions and in community params. Such meets include both team and individual competition. What Jaworski and Mauk envisioned was a series of Now most of the original members are off campus and Jaworski, a sophomore at Otawwa University, plans to enroll at KU next fall, are trying to reorganize the club and increase interest in this fast-growing sport. A KU professor is among 150 founding members of a national Professors for Humphrey movement. If you try parachute jumping once, you'll love it. So promises parachute enthusiast John Jaworski who was on the KU Tuesday trying to reorganize the University Parachute Club. A Parachute Club was started at KU last semester, and Jim Baker, a student from Overland Park, was elected president. KU students went through a training program and made jumps. He is David Daiceff, professor of economics. The group's members will work actively for Humphry on college campuses in college communities, or assistant manager Jack L. Chestnut. Parachute Fan Promotes Jump Club for University Continued from page 1 Senate Research committee. It is not a research committee, but rather, it is an investigator and educational body. If advice is given by an investigator, it is Coalition Agrees . . . Ric Rilcare, Headquarters director, emphasized that volunteers of all ages would be welcomed About 25 per cent of the population. By CONNIE PARISH Kansan Staff Writer Headquarters Soliciting For Summer Volunteers Headquarters, Inc., a drug abuse and personal crisis center, needs at least 20 new volunteer workers this summer. Only 15 volunteers of the 60 member spring staff have remained in Lawrence this summer. interested persons may call 841-2345 for information. Headquartered at 1632 interested individuals will be conducted through June 9. Since Headquarters was organized in 1989, it has served approximately 500 Headquarters services originally were limited largely to drug counseling, but volunteers have also been developed the scope of the program. The training is to familiarize the workers with the pharmacology and the psychiatric drug use and abuse, crisis theory, suicide prevention, first aid and care. Volunteers work ten hours a week on the switchboard or in other areas, after completing a four-week training program. " (4) There should be people on the committee who do understand the technical aspects of research. However, these people should be carefully chosen. It is important that they demonstrate a genuine desire to educate and work with non-scientific people. They should have willingness to seriously and honestly question their own work, the social forces that shape it and the products that they produce. We are extremely concerned that the committee not be dominated or stagnated by the interests involved in the technicalities of research and in the status quo that they are insensitive to the needs of other concerned people. (5) The committee should have approximately equal representation from five major research areas, which neatly deal in research, namely, life sciences, natural sciences and humanities, social science and humanities. Representatives of the departments of sciences. educate themselves and others concerning University research. Girls Staters Warm Up For Upcoming Elections Rival orators of the Federalist and Nationalist parties vied for cheeres at a Girls State political rally Tuesday night. Susie Krehbiel of Olawen她家's primary election Tuesday to become the national nominee for governor. Catherine Strowig of Abilene, daughter of the speaker of the Kansas House, Calvin A. Strowig. Leading the Federalists as their candidate for governor is Fawaz Ulaby, associate professor of electrical engineering and an associate of the remote sensing laboratory of the Center for research, said the Coalition's research efforts must be directed to a very careful study of the micro-environment research projects at KU. State and county candidates were given time to campaign and meet with state representatives were required to remain on their floor in Lewis Hall, where the Girls State delegates are spent among the participants running for state offices were engineering and humanities attended the meeting, and they voiced their opinions about their specific projects. Uuaby took particular issue with a statement printed in a book that suggested the use of the Coalition. The flyer charged that "research done at the remote sensing laboratory of the University of California is attributed to the development of the surveillance and computer techniques used in the automated detection of small particles." The general election was scheduled from 10:30 to 11:30 this morning. Following the election Mr. Miller will address the girls. allowed to carry their campaigns throughout the building. Candidates for lieutenant governor are Alisa Greer of Wichita and Jennifer Kendall of Wichita. Nationalist, Sally Streep of Great Bend, Federalist, and Vicki Ernst of Wichita. Candidates for secretary of state. Governor Robert Docking is officiate at the installation of the winners Thursday night. Candidates for insurance commissioner are Katherine Mann of North City, Federalist, and Lynn Gugler of Abilene, Lincoln State printer candidates are James City, Federalist, and Patty Utecht of Lansing, Nationalist. Attorney general candidates are Debbie Pitts of Wichita, Arkansas City, Federalist, Varschelson of St. Marys, Liberal, Nationalist, Liberal, Nationalist, are running for auditor. Treasurer candidates are Debby Moore of Dresden, Hillary Clinton, Nichol of Hill City, Federalist. Girls Staters Campaign Jill Ann Dolees seeks position at Lt. Gov. Nationalist nominees for the Supreme Court are Sharon Nedlie of Lawrence, Daryl Liewellyn of Lawrence, Daryl Kane of Concordia, Joann Leavenworth and Mary Messenger of Kansas Springs. Arlene Bush of Kansas City and Les Oswald of Hutchinson Ulaby said the statement was erroneous and that the complete texts and reports for all research areas were available to anyone wishing to see them. The Coalition's fyer stated that "research done in the psychology and anthropology departments of universities contributed to the destruction of indigenous Third World Cultures and the imposition of puppet regimes dominated by the United States such as the Thieu-Ku'ring. The Federalist nominees for the Supreme Court are Debra Bunch of Independence, Elizabeth Mitchell of Paola, Garrison of Mutchinson, Alyson Graff of Mutchinson, Frances Garner of Severity, Susan Humel of Geneseo and Kimilee Clogston of Baxter Springs. Felix Moos, professor of anthropology and East Asian studies and co-director of Project Themis, a former research associate at KU, refuted a statement made by the Coalition about that project. "No member of Project Themis has ever worked in Vietnam," Moos said. "The purpose of the project was to try to understand what technology is being used for applications, especially in Microposts." In discussing these particular research questions, we have Ulisy pointed out that by law, classified research could be done at KU and said that for general purposes, the KU departmental professors should be trusted to conduct research were also accessible to interested persons. Mos added that Project Themis was never classified and that the results and findings of the study Ulaby added that if the Department of Medicine needs a specialist to do specific or classified research they would most likely turn to places such as Willow Run Laboratories in California Research Center in Berkeley where grouped andowed to that only about 11 per cent of military research was now done at universities, down nearly 30 percent. Moos said that the University rudely faculty members in good faith were not about research and that no student or faculty member was asked to attend. He questioned whether a single group of people could really determine what was or wasn't good research. Both Moos and Ulaby questioned the practicality of a new program for research projects at KU. Ulaby said it might take as many as 15 specialists in a field to thoroughly understand one project. A spokesman from the microbiology department commented that results of all research at KU were either published or made public, and that it was virtually impossible to find findings from misuse by outside parties if they chose to do so. Several persons attending the meeting questioned the possible misuse of the results of a research project. He will use the award during his sabbatical leave for 1972-73 to do research for a biography of Henry A. Wallace, secretary of agriculture and vice president under President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Wallace died in 1965. Theodore A. Wilson, professor of history, has been awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship for 1972-73. Wilson plans many real interviews to obtain insight into the private life and personal views of Wallace, as his work as a lawyer in New York City helped him understand how KU Prof Gets Guggenheim Thursday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and 2 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. on Sunday. Building Hours Changed For Summer Schedule Watson Library will be open 8 a.m. through Thursday and 8 a.m. on Fridays. The microfilms area will be open 8 a.m. to p.m. 5 a.m. Summer hours of many of the buildings on campus are considerably different from what is during the spring semester. Spooner Art Museum and Dyche Natural History Museum will retain their spring semester hours. During the summer, both classes begin on Monday through Saturday, and 1:30 p.m. to 4:45 p.m. on Sunday. Hours for the Admissions Office and Registrar's Office are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Hours for the closed hour during the noon hour. The Kansas Union, for instance, will open at 7 a.m. and close at 9 p.m. this summer. The University Union basement, will be open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, but will be closed on Saturday. meetings on the KU campus where club members could get training or seven hours of training at their home they jump. This training involves learning how to fall, which way to walk and finding where the rider is. Summer hours for the Law Library in Green Hall are 8 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. Monday through The actual jump would take place at a drop zone at Ottawa. There, rated instructors who have passed written tests, and scored at least 100 free fails take the novice up for his first jump Watkins Hospital is open to emergency cases at any time, but students who want to see a doctor should visit the hospital from 8 a.m. to 4.30 p.m. Monday through Friday, and 8 a.m. to 11.30 a.m. on Saturdays. The first jumps are static line jumps from 3,000 feet. The jumper fails for about 3 seconds and the parachute is opened from the airplane by a parachute line to a hook in the airplane. After six static line jumps, a student advances to 3.000 feet and free falls from 5 to 10 seconds. He then continues up to 6.000 feet and shuts Height and time of free The first jump course, which includes the seven hours of injuries, is a rental, plane ride and jumpmaster fee costs $40. However parachute members of an organized parachute club would have less injury risk. falls increase as the student progresses. Later jumps cost $4 or $4.50 each depending on the height and type of jump. You need never have had a parachute on your back before, Jaworski stated, and the training is not long. "In fact we try to have the student finish the seven hours of training and jump the same day if possible," he added. Further information may be obtained by contacting Mauk or the Parachute Center at 1101 S. Hickory Ave. in Ottawa, or by b-mail to parachutecenter@yahoo.com. Hillcrest Campus Host Of 19 Institutes Over Summer Five summer institutes are currently in session on the KU campus and 14 more will be held before the summer is over. Eve 7:45:9:30 Adult Child 1.50 .75 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER An incredible adventure of the future . . . to save what we abuse today!! Already meeting this week are participants in Sunflower Girl's science course for geoscientists, a workshop on the care and repair of soil samples, and a institute in radiation biophysics and the Kansas Shakespeare team. silent G NOW IN ENGLISH Eve 7:30, 9:30 Mat Daily 3:00 Twilight 2:00 All at 5:00 the Garden of the Finzi-Continis Later institutes will include a bank management clinic a university education workshop and a workshop dealing with economic issues. NOW HOWING Charles Bronson Room Rehearsal, Black Teenage Pageant 2.50 Ursula Andress Omedias 35 words or fewer. 9:00 PAGE Titles / Audio Fragments 2:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium. SMA Film Series, "A Night in Casablanca" 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium. Campus Bulletin Library Study Group: 12:30 p.m., Alcove, amass Union SUA BRIAR Game: 1:30 p.m., Sunflower FOR SALE Western Civ. Notes-Now On Sale There are two ways of looking at it. 1. If you use them, you're at an advantage 2. If you don't Old English-Puuli CROSSED MAKES SHEEEDD SUEDED PUPPIES MALES OR FEMALES $15 C. E GOSEN MCOUTH KANSA 913-798-2600 79 gallon all-glass aquarium complete with fluorescent hood, heater, fitters, gravel, stand and two 18 inch Ovies if desired Call 841-2648-6-13 Michigan St. pat-B-Quse 515 Mich. St. Outdoor st. pat-B-Quse Large- $15.00 Bricket to go-$6.50 SAB st. to beat-$8.55, Bricket Bricket plate=$18.55, Bricket Bricket plate=$18.55, -$3.00 Bricket, $3.00 Bricket, $3.00 Bricket, d to 4 p.m Phone $425- 910 or 613-6090 City Phone 613-6090 Bolomco presents summer overheard in a 70-plus room, old jackets, throughout the old denim jacket, yesterday's clothes at yesterday's prices. Bolomco Used Storm systems and large discounts Theatre equipment and materials Lawrence's lawyer selected of Pro- tessional Entertainment componen- tors 11-Feb-Mon-Sat 11-7-Feb-Mon-Sat 6-12 FATHER'S DAY GIFTS of lasting value From the unique Christian Bookstore, Cross Reference Malls Shopping Center, 711 W. 23rd 6-15 FATHER'S DAY CARDS—Half Price —Where Isee ?????? Cross Reference Malls Shopping Center, 711 W. 23rd. 6-15 HELP WANTED **you're at it a disadvantage.** Either way it comes to the same new Analysis of Worcester, Civilianity Campus, Cambridge Watford 14th 7:27 1969 Great Lakes Mobile Horn-Comp. furn. 2 bedroom-Best offer over $3,200 Call 842-3186 or 843-8585-8 Webster's Mobile Homes Good Job Gabe! Colorado booming @jordan_paul #jordanpaul Dartmouth, bernard $90.00 to 16.0000; Summer Junior $100.00 to 16.0000; Summer jobs-in- stitute $75.00 United, Drawer II, Laporte, Clover United, Drawer II, Laporte, Reponsible couple or single student to live in pleasant air-conditioned house during latter part of summer if desired 842-4088 6-14 TEACHER OPNINGS! Curriculum first with teaching teachers in all fields. 53 California School Placement. 1974 California State University Berkeley. 1947 Oakland. 1926 Berkeley. FOR RENT Apartment for rent in exchange for work. Call 843-7863 6-14 Your Complete Service Tie-downs—Skirting—Parts 3409 W. 61h 842-7700 3409 W. 6th 842-7700 Just West of the Just West of the Drive-In Theatre First day: 20 words or fewer, $1.75 each additional word, $4.25 COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENT. Available now. 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, apartments. AC, pool and laundry. Lower summer rooms. Call +44 822 9010. Call +44 822 9020. Call +44 822 9021. TYPING Typing, IBM electric, pica type, Fast, accurate typing guaranteed, Phone 813-2186. 6-8 Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. 8:30am-12:30pm, prompt, accurate Phone 843-2811. 6:22-6:25 Phone 843-2811. NOTICE WANTED SUMMER GAY LIBERATION Monday through Thursday and brothers. Meets every thursday at 1 PM on the bus at 470 East 25th Street, 641-869-1000. Write Box 234, Louisville, KY. lide needed from K.C., KS to K.U, nd back for morning classes. Will ay. Call 299-3144 6-12 PRESIDENT - Win FREES FREED EXECUTIVE ADMINISTRATIVE PAID TITLING to Imigration, and Banking INSTITUTE WEEKEND INSTITUTE WEEKEND CORPORA- TION SOUTHPORT, NORTH CAROLINA SOUTHPORT, NORTH CAROLINA MISCELLANEOUS EACHERS WANTED Contact southwest teachers Agency, Box 317, Albuquerque, NM 87068 "Our Team" Bordered and a memorial M-7 ATA. STEREO REPAIR, RMS Electronics, Accessories & Tracking Systems, Open Reel Tape Machines and Speakers. Lowest Reliant-Friendly Service. 814-253-7600. Diving Supplies 843-3565 Lawrence, Kansas JAROLD'S Dacor Scuba P.A.D.I. Equip. in Stock Certified Instructor sirloin LAWRENCE KANSAS Female Elder Nei Hot family Food Hamburg-style Superb Service with Complete Menu. Steak Sandwiches, Shrimp, to K.C. Steals Our menu is and has always been TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSUN OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE 0 TO 10 MPH -13.5 RECLINING FRONT SEATS UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL 500 E.23rd 842-0444 LOVE THAT DATSUN Spacious new facilities. Group participation welcome. 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