University Daily Kansan, April 12, 1985 Page 5 Liquor continued from p. 1 houses was being bartered for a variety of other causes, such as pari-mutuel betting on horse and dog races and a proposal to allow voter initiatives to be placed on general election ballots. STATE REP. KENNETH King, R. Leon, tried to win support for pari-mutual leaming in exchange for votes on the liquor proposal. King voted against the liquor resolution. And State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Dawrence, said she would change her no vote on the liquor resolution if the House brought the voter initiative proposal to the floor. If liquor by the drink fails, then a package of drinking bills that were a part of the compromise agreement, including a bill to pay the charge to 21, could face a veto by Gov. John Callip. Carlin had promised to veto the bills if the Legislature failed to pass liquor by the drink. The bills would toughen the state's drunken driving laws and crack down on underage drinkers in addition to raising the drinking age for 3.2 percent beer. Carlin repeated his promise yesterday when he signed one of the bills in the conference compromise package. The bill would provide regulations for liquor by the drink and would go into effect only if the liquor amendment passed the statewide vote. The House action on the liquor resolution caused a setback in the plan to hurry the package of drinking bills through the Legislature's first adjournment, scheduled for tomorrow. Both chambers moved quickly to approve the first items in the package. The House passed the bill to toughen laws against abusive managers at the Senate approved it yesterday morning. The chambers then hurried the other bills through yesterday morning. turn appears to be an unreasoned suggestion." S.Africa continued from p. 1 FRIUAU FPROPOSED amending the resolution to call for the Endowment Association to divest from those companies that do 10 percent of their business in South Africa. Norm Yetman Jr., a member of the SenEx subcommittee that drafted the resolution, asked that Friau's amendment be changed to include any company with more than 1 percent of its business interests in South Africa; either change was accepted by the council. Jack Gaumitz, professor of business and a member of the council, proposed changing the resolution to give a more consistent definition to the meaning of total divestment. He proposed changing the resolution to include divestment from the United States government and governments of other countries since they have ties to South Africa. "IF YOU TALK about total divestment," he said, "you have to talk about the American government's involvement in South Africa." Gaumitz said the Endowment Association's principle interests were in U.S. government securities. Since the United States does business with the South African government, he said, the resolution shouldering financial ties to the U.S. government. The resolution approved by the council calls for divestment only from those companies and banks doing business in South Africa. The council did not pass Gaumnitz' amendment. Many council members agreed with the position of Beatrice Wright, professor of psychology, and Michael Foubert, student senator. WRIGHT AND FOUBERT supported the original resolution calling for total divestment because aparteitied was a moral issue that went beyond determining which companies invested too much or too little in South Africa. Foubert said, "This is a moral issue we are talking about. If we believe that apartheid is wrong, I don't care if you get 10 percent or 1 percent of my salary or scholarship, it is still wrong." Dryur, the only council member to oppose the resolution, said he didn't think divestment was the answer to changing anaparthid. "I want to try to work within the system to get something done," he said, "and I don't mind it." Arafat continued from p.1 Reagan administration and a Jordanian-Palestinian committee as a prelude to the 2008 election. THE JORDANIAN LEADER stressed the importance of encouraging the PLO to enter the peace process, state-run Jordan television reported. Hussein also explained some of the details of his Feb. 11 agreement with Arafat, "which is aimed at achieving a just, comprehensive settlement on the basis of exchanging (israeli-occupied Arab) lands for ArabIsraeli peace." Jordan television said. The Hussein-Arafat agreement called for a Phillips Hussein told the U.S. delegation, which arrived from Cairo for a three-day visit in Jordan, that the United States and the Soviet Union must participate in the peace process with the three other permanent U.N. Security Council members - Britain, France and China. joint peace effort based on U.N. resolutions on the Middle East, although it did not specifically mention U.N. Resolution 242. That resolution calls for Israel to give up Arab lands it seized in the 1967 Arab-Israeli war in exchange for peace and Arab recognition of Israel's right to exist. continued from p.1 University of Oklahoma alumnus briefly unbroken succession of Phillips leaders since "It's not the numbers that make a difference," he said. "Five CEO's (chief executive officers) out of seven says quite a bit about the school. That's really a remarkable correlation in a company of this size to have that number of high executives coming from KU." West said 200 of Phillips 26,000 employees were KU graduates. But he said this proportion was small next to the number of company leaders who came from KU. Over the years, the company's presidents through organizations have influenced felt on campus through organizations. For example, the Adams family donated more than $3 million to help build the Alumni Center, which cost $5 million. IN 1966, THE University's engineering building was named Learned Hall after the company's fourth president. Learned donated $100,000 to establish the K.S. Adams Opportunity Fund, an emergency fund to be used in times of great need. In 1981, Endacott donated money to provide for a retired faculty suite in the alumni center. Endacott the suite enabled faculty retires to continue pursuing their academic disciplines and maintain well as former students and retired colleagues. Many images on campus remind onlookers the connection between Phillips and KU is strong. The address plate of the Adams Alumni Center reads 1266 — the 66 represents the company's trademark. Fred Williams, executive director of the Alumni Association, said the address was one way of preserving in memory the gifts that Phillips had given. THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC PRESENTS THE FIRST ANNUAL JAZZ-D-RAMA JAZZORAMA $1.00 Off for KU students 8:00 p.m. Wednesday, April 17 Kansas Union Ballroom For reservations, call 913-864-3982 Tickets will also be on sale at the door on the night of the performance Featuring The Inspirational Gospel Voices of the University of Kansas John Holmion, director KU Jazz Chair I Ronald C. McCurdy, director KU Jazz Choir II-Thomas G. Lipscomb, director KU Jazz Ensemble III-Mark Auffarth, director KU Jazz Ensemble III-Jay Jackson, director KU Jazz Ensemble I-Ronald C. McCurdy, director KU Jazz Combs I, II-III Thomas G. Lipscomb, director Tickets: $2.50 with KUID $35.0 PUBLIC and other students Advance tickets on sale at the Murphy Hall Box Office CLUB 77 at the Eldrige House 7th and Massachusetts 749-1347 College students come join the fun at the 77! 11 FRIDAY 12th Open from 4 'til 3 a Happy Hour 5% pitchers of beer at 75¢ from 4'til 7 p.m Drinks $1 from 10 'til 11 p.m. Sub sandwiches (Yellow Sub) SATURDAY 13th Open from 5'til 3 a.m. Happy Hour Drinks $1 Pitcher of beer 75¢ from 7'til 9 p.m. LIVE BAND "The Side Effects" from 9 p.m. 'til 12:30 EARN $5-$6 per hour Entertai one of the nation's fastest growing Telemarketing Firms is opening a Lawrence facility on March 15th. We now have immediate openings for 100 part-time phone agents on our evening and weekend shifts NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. BUT GOOD COMMUNICATION SKILLS A MUST We offer: - Advancement Opportunities - Paid Training - Guaranteed hourly wage plus incentives - Pleasant working conditions - Flexible Hours For interview call 841-1200 BIG END $4.75 SMALL END $6.75 FULL SLAB $9.95 (to go only) All dinners served with Tater Curl Fries, Bread and Pickles and choice of Side Orders 719 MASSACHUSETTS SAME NICE PEOPLE * SAME MANAGEMENT * FORMERLY OLD CARPENTER HALL SMOKEHOUSE