100% CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, April 19. 1985 Page 3 NEWS BRIEFS ASK to attend state meeting The KU chapter of the Associated Students of Kansas plans to send about 20 delegates to the state meeting this weekend at Fort Havsw State University. The purpose of the meeting is to discuss the quality of higher education in Kansas. Students from the six Board of Regents universities and Washburn University in Topeka will review national reports on college reform and begin drafting recommendations to the Regents for university financing. Glickman to talk at Alderson The ASK delegates will elect a new chairman for the state assembly and chairmen for ASK's six standing committees. The University of Kansas chapter has 24 votes in the assembly, one vote for every 1,000 students. Rep. Dan Glickman, D-Kan., is scheduled to speak at 3:30 p.m. today at a meeting of KU Democrats in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union. Glickman, who represents the state's 4th congressional district, will speak about the U.S. Institute of Peace. He plans to answer questions from the audience after the speech, which is free and open to the public. $950 embezzled from S&L Lawrence police said yesterday that $950 had been embezzled from Capitol Federal Savings and Loan Association, 1496 Vermont St., between March 24 and Association officials discovered the money was sent April 11. Police said it had been $2,350. An employee had written the association to say she would not be coming back to work. Bank officials found that 8900 was missing from a bank box and called police. Police said they were trying to find the employee for questioning. Social workers to discuss sex The School of Social Welfare and the Social Work Alumni Society are sponsoring "Social Work Day." today. The schedule for the day includes speakers and workshops focusing on social issues for social workers. Retirement dinner scheduled The events begin with registration at 8 a.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare, plans to speak at 9 a.m. about "Meeting the Unmet Needs: the Social Work Role in Sexual Hurts." Nine KU faculty members and five unclassified staff members who have retired or will soon retire will be honored the annual University retirement day. The retirement dinner, sponsored by the Kansas University Endowment Association, is scheduled for 6 p.m. May 8, in the Kansas Union ballroom. Reservations for the dinner may be made by calling Marian McCorkill, assistant to the president of the Endowment Association, at 864-4201. Beer stolen from area tavern Police are investigating the theft of four cases of beer, with a total value of $108, that were stolen about midnight Wednesday from Uncle Milly's Tavern, 1904 Massachusetts St., Lawrence police said yesterday. Police said that the bartender had left the bar and that when she returned, a customer told her he had chased four men from the cooler area of the bar. They were each carrying a case of beer, the customer said. Police said they had no suspects Weather Today will be mostly cloudy and windy with a 50 percent chance of thundershowers. The high will be in the low 80s. Tonight will be mostly cloudy with a 40 percent chance of thunderstorms and a low around 60 degrees. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of thunderstorms and a high in the 70s. Campus lighting issue still in the dark By JULIE MANGAN Staff Reporter A Student Senate bill to help finance a study on improving campus lighting stirred up controversy Wednesday night among students who believe a promise to improve the lights on campus. The bill asks that $10,000 be allocated for Ronald Helms, director of architectural engineering, to continue a study of campus lighting. Last month, Helms released a study of the relationship between night crime and campus lights. In the report, he suggested that a three-step form a master plan for improving lighting. Action on the bill was postponed until Wednesday's Senate meeting. The bill reached the Senate floor with a favorable motion from the Senate Finance Committee. Compiled from Kansan staff and United Press International reports. Committee AMI EASLEY, STUDENT body president and author of the bill, said earlier this week that the Senate money would pay two research assistants to prepare a proposal this summer that would investigate which parts of campus needed improved lighting. The proposal would suggest ways to phase in new lighting and recommend the best type of lights to install. the best option. The money would come from the Senate unallocated account. The account contains more than $120,000. Jeff Polack, student body vice president, said most candidates running for the Senate last fall promised to try to improve campus lighting. He said he hadn't expected senators to express so much concern over the bill, but expected it to pass when finally brought to a vote. Dou Stallings, graduate senator, opposed the bill during Wednesday night's meeting. He said although he thought campus lighting should be switched off, he included the issue in his campaign for office. STALLINGS SAID STUDENTS should responsibility to provide a safe campus. "I don't think it's something that we as students should be paying for," he said. "I wholeheartedly believe that rape is a terrible thing, but I also wholeheartedly believe that we should't throw away student money." Stallings said. Reza Zoughi, Student Senate Executive Committee chairman, said passing the bill would show administrators that students can be taught improving lighting and safety on campus. "The University would find that we're so desperate for it that we're willing to put up our own money," Zoughi said. "It's $10,000 to take care of that hasn't been done before. It's worth it." Stallings said that he would be more receptive to the proposal if the University indicated that it would be willing to include lightning as a prime objective in its next budget. WITHOUT ASSURANCE FROM the List — but the University might not follow through by installing new lights. Stallings cited recent administrative decisions on the non-revenue sports fee as examples of KU administrators not listening to students. The Senate had approved a $2 increase in the non-revenue sports fee with the stipulation that the Athletic Department comply player's scholarship and team membership. The action resulted from defensive lineman Roderick Timmons' conviction for sexual battery. The charge stemmed from an incident in Jayhawk Towers last spring. Easley vetoed the petition but passed the sports fee increase to Chancellor Gene A. Budig, who approved the measure and sent it to the Board of Regents. THE SENATE THEN rescinded the fee increase, but not before the Regents had placed it on its agenda. On Wednesday night, administrators told the Senate the fee increase would be recommended without Senate approval. Stallings said administrators had not been receptive to the message senators had tried to dispel. I check said that the Senate did not approve the bill to grant $10,000 for the study on campus lighting, any chance for better lighting on campus would be postponed for at least two years because the proposal could not be included in the KU budget until then. Class at sea opens doors to students By KEVIN LEATHERS While their counterparts sit in stuffy classrooms on campus, three KU students are aboard the S.S. Universe this semester --studying as they sail around the world. The students see places like Rio de Janeiro, South Africa, Southeast Asia and China while taking classes in history, political science, economics and other subjects. Nearly 600 students from around the world, including several from the University of Kansas, sail aboard the S.S. Universe each semester in the Semester at Sea program. Two KU students were in the program last semester, and five sailed on the ship a year The program, sponsored by the University of Pittsburgh, allows students to see many of the places they have learned about in the classroom. Bob Minor, a KU associate professor of religious studies, said yesterday that the S.J. University lecturer aboard the S.J. University last month. "AS FAR AS schooling goes, it's relatively pretty expensive," said Minor, who spent 3½ weeks in March arrch the ship lecturing about India. "But it's a unique way to see the world. Most students I have talked to found it to be very worthwhile." The trip, which costs between $8,000 and $9,000 depending upon living arrangements aboard the ship, lasts for 100 days and offers students the opportunity to take three or four classes in addition to a mandatory class that teaches them about each country they visit. Lynne Coulter, Wichita high, sailed on the west coast last spring. She said the trip was enjoyable. "It really was a lot of fun," Coulter said. "It was difficult living from day to day on a ship and continually moving from country to country, but it was enlightening. I'm glad I SALLY SELDIN, ST. Louis junior, was a student aboard the ship last fall and now is a S.U. Universite campus coordinator. She said she has always felt that the thing else, made her $3_{2}$ months enjoyable. "The whole ship was like one big community," Seldin said. "The classes were interesting. But experiencing different parts of the world — especially with other students — was an invaluable part of the whole education." Paige Ruedlinger, New Smyrna Beach, Fla., said she enjoyed her semester on the ship last spring. But she said the seasickness and witnessing the poor conditions in some Third World countries were difficult aspects of the trip. KU and 15 other universities are members of the University Field Service International. Through the organization, faculty and students are offered the opportunity to participate in programs such as Semester at Sea. Hundreds of tattoo designs cover the walls of the waiting room at Ed Turner's tattoo studio. Turner's studio, River Cl ty Tattoo Studio, 107 W. Seventh St., is the first and only establishment of its kind in Lawrence. Tattooist to draw on KC market Staff Reporter By RICK ZAPOROWSKI The new office of a local businessman contains a simple, clean waiting room resembling the office of a dentist or a college administrator. But instead of diplomas, the walls are covered with colorfully drawn dragons, flowers, skulls and women. No nurse announces the appointments. But the next room contains bandages, antipsyptics and needles suitable for repeatedly pricking skin. The office contains one of Lawrence's newest establishments, River City Tattoo Studio, 107 W. 7th St. The studio is run by Ed Turner, a Lawrence resident who has been tattooing for about $2_{1/2}$ years. He worked part time at the studio and when he opened the studio about two weeks ago. Business is booming already, Turner said yesterday. He said he expected it to increase one people heard about Lawrence's first tattoo studio. Most people in Lawrence who want wattos drive to the Kansas City area to get them, he said. TURNER, WHOSE ARMS are decorated to the shoulder with tattoos, said he learned to apply tattoos by hanging around a “There’s no such thing as a school of tattooing.” Turner said. “You either learn from someone who knows how to do it or you teach yourself.” A license isn't needed to apply tattoos, Turner said, but most artists belong to the National Tattoo Association, which sponsors annual conventions for the artists. made tattoos and asking questions. He said tattoo artists didn't require formal training. Turner said the application of tattoos was safe, and people had a very low risk of infection as long as the tattoo artist kept everything clean. Turner shaves and cleans the area to be tattooed and sterilizes all his equipment. A STENCH IS used to trace the pattern on a person's skin before the tattooing starts. The ink seepes into skin through a needle moved rapidly in and out of the "Most people are really apprehensive about it," Turner said. "They think it's going to kill them. They think it's going to hurt more than it does." Turner said most artists made their own needles and used different types for different materials. Turner offers dozens of tattoo designs — some he bought from other artists and some he created himself. He said people could bring their own design or describe something to him. outlining and others are used for shading large areas. "I've done stuff out of postcards, magazines, anything you want me to and that." TURNER SAID HE didn't have any one design that was most popular, although hearts and butterlies generally were popular among women and Harley-Davidson emblems often were requested by bikers. It is possible to have a tattoo removed, Turner said, but most people either learn to live with an unwanted tattoo or cover it with a new one. "You can get your girlfriend's name put on if you want," he said, "but I guarantee you won't be with her the rest of your life." 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