University Dally Kansan, April 9, 1985 CAMPUS AND AREA Page Concessions all part of new contract By CECILIA MILLS Staff Reporter Spectators at next year's football and basketball games will see a new look as they stand in line for their hot dogs and popcorn. The Athletic Department signed a two-part contract on April 1 with a new concessionaire, Gladieux Corporation, of Toledo, Ohio. Gladieu, a subsidiary of Marriott Corporation, agreed to provide food and drink for the next five years and sell souvenirs and clothing for the next two years at all KU basketball and football games. Lonny Rose, assistant athletic director, said yesterday that Gladiacux would invest $250,000 for immediate Stadium and allen Field House. GLADIEUX WILL spend no less than $133,000 on new concession stands in both places, Rose said. It will spend about $117,000 on new equipment and portable stands. Rose said all the existing stands would be renovated and some new portable and permanent stands would be added. In addition, $50,000 worth of new equipment from food suppliers will be put in. Rose said local organizations would still be allowed to operate the concession stands to raise money. Local groups, including fraternities and universities, volunteer to work in the booths in return for part of the profits. An estimate for next year's concessions income has been set at $121,000, compared with $66,500 for this year's. Employees for the operating of the concessions will be hired locally, but a person will be brought in to take responsibility for the entire operation. THE CONTRACT FOR Gladieux begins on July 1. Its first service will be at the opening football game on Sept. 14. Gladieux also will sell Jayhawk hats, gloves, shirts and sweatshirts as souvenirs next year. The Kansas Union, which has provided concessions for the Athletic Department for the past 25 years, also had submitted a bid for next year's service. City Commission to elect new mayor tonight Bv MIKE GREEN Staff Reporter Swearing in the newly elected city commissioners and selecting a new mayor will be among the first items of business for the Lawrence City Commission at its meeting tonight. The new commission will be officially seated and the oath of office administered to the three commissioners who won election April 2. three are Sandra Praeger, Mike Amyx and Howard Hill. Praeger, who took first in the election, will be the only new face on the commission. Amyx and Hill, who are re-elected, placed second and third. Amyx and Praeger will serve four-year terms because they finished in the top two places in the election. Hill will serve a two-year term. A mayor and a vice-mayor also will be elected by the commissioners at the meeting. The commission elects a mayor every year. In another ceremony, outgoing commissioner Nancy Shontz will be presented with a key to the city. She was defeated in last week's election. The new commission will then will consider on first reading an ordinance that would raise the salaries of city commissioners from $1,049 to $2,040 per year. The request for this item to be placed on the agenda was made last week by Mayor Ernest Angino. Angino said that raising the commissioner's salary to $40 a week would help pay for the car expenses involved in traveling to meetings. In other business, the commission will consider a site plan for an area of antique shops called Frontier Land to provide it with its location, just south of ichabod's Tavern. Liquor committee stymied by club question By United Press International TOPEKA — Both sides of a House- senate conference committee on liquor by the drink say they will not call another bargaining session until the other side makes a new offer on the key issue separating them. That declaration came yesterday after a scheduled meeting of the conference committee was canceled. The six-member negotiating team met in New York on Saturday sides walked away from the meeting after a brief but stormy session. House and Senate negotiators agree the key question blocking progress is whether the current Class B club system should be eliminated if voters approve liquor by the drink. If they do not, it would while House lawmakers say voters ought to decide the question county by county. BOTH THE HOUSE and Senate have passed resolutions calling for a constitutional amendment to legalize liquor by the drink, with counties allowed to decide for themselves whether they want to be wet or dry. House negotiators on the panel want the voters also to decide at a later date if they want to keep the Class B private clubs in their county. Counties that vote dry should be allowed to eliminate the club system if they want, they argue. Head Senate negotiator Edward Reilly Jr. R, Leavenworth, said the rejection of liquor by the drink in some counties should not necessarily mean that private, Class B clubs also would be at risk of elimination. Reilly said he doubted that 27 senators — a two-thirds majority of the 40-member Senate — would support a resolution linked to any proposal dealing with the Class B clubs. He said the club questioned the value in the order-by-the-drink debate until House negotiators raised it. PANEL MEMBER Rep. Robert H. Miller, R-Wellington, said that what Reilly considered side issues, such as the Class B clubs, were necessary ingredients in gaining the 84 votes needed in the 125-member House to pass the proposed amendment. Miller said some of the compromises worked out by the panel, such as allowing Sunday beer sales, had cost House votes already. He said the comprehensive health associates • *feminine pregnancy* • *nutrition abortion services* • *alternative counseling* • *gynecology* Overland Park, KS/913-345-1400 Convenient locations near campus bus route and shopping. Applecroft Apartments Station 1, 1dbm, 2dbm 1741. W 19th, 843-820-2 House of Hupei is Open Daily For Lunch & Dinner 2907 W. 6th DOUBLE FEATURE Rent VCR & Movies /805/1984 /806/1984 Curtis Machine /805/1984 /806/1984 Sun. 11am - 5pm - DUPLEXES * FOUR & SIX APTS ARGO APTS. 11th & Missouri HOUSING TO MEET YOUR NEEDS YOUR NEEDS Offering a variety of living styles - SINGLE FAMILY FEATURING - APARTMENTS ROCKLEDGE APTS the senate agrees to the House resolution, it is likely that other conference committee compromises on increasing penalties for drunken drivers and raising the legal drinking age to 21 would be called off. Kelly said. lost votes could be made up by reaching an agreement on the club issue. Roll Out the Barrel FOUR & SIX AFTS SINGLE FAMILY CALE 842-3175 OPEN WEEKENDS Big Blue Property Management, Inc. Nursing advisors will be available in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union Pre-Nursing Students April 10, 1985 9-12 a.m. & 1-4 p.m. April 11, 1985 9-12 a.m. & 1-4 p.m. KU Microbiology Society presents a - Introduction - "Diagnosis & Treatment of Allergies" Tuesday, April 9, 1985 3—part Symposium on Allergies: 3-5 p.m. Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union - "Food Allergies" FREE— Everyone welcome! funded by GSC & Dept. of Microbiology T-Shirt $1.99 817 Vermont sportswear closeout nothing over $2.99 KU student is killed in weekend accident A KU student was killed in an automobile accident over the weekend. Bruce W. Stallard, 21, was killed Sunday in a two-vehicle accident north of Blaine in Pottawatomie County. Mr. Stallard was an Onaga junior, majoring in music education. Norman Paige, professor of music, said. "We are all very saddened. It's sad when it happens to anyone, but it's very, very sad when it's a young person who's just beginning." Paige said he had given voice lessons to Mr. Stallard during his years at the University and for two summers when Mr. Stallard was in high school. Mr. Stallard was a member of the Congregational Church at Onaga, the Kansas University College Singles, Musk Phi Epsilon music fraternity and the American Choral Directors Association. Survivors include his parents. Wayne M. and Wanda S. Stallard, Onaga; two sisters, Deborah Stallard, Vail, Colo., and Carol S. Olson, Huntington Beach, Calif.; grandmother, Fayla Stallard, maga. Services will be at 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Congregational Church in Onaga. Burial will be in Onaga Cemetery. "Redeeming Centuries of Dishonor" Rennard Strickland True Stories by Tuesday, April 9, 1985 George N. Slay, The Hibernian North America Experience Tuesday, April 9, 1985 "Genocide at law. The Historic Native American Experience" Wednesday, April 10, 1985 "A Different Shade of Nigger. The Contemporary Native American Experience" Friday, April 12, 1985 "Coyote Goes to Law School" The Indian Lawyer and the Future of the Native American Experience All lectures at 7:30 p.m. In the Snail Courtroom, 210 Green Hall The University of Kansas "In every significant respect, homosexuality is a personal tragedy and a social calamity" - ISIS Position on Homosexuality. Coming to KU April 10-12: Dr. Paul Cameron - PhD, University of Colorado (psychology) - Chairperson, Institute for the Scientific Investigation of Sexuality (ISIS) - Researcher, clinician, lecturer - Featured on CBS Evening News, other major network newscasts, AP, UPI, and USA Today Opinion page. Speaking on: HOMOSEXUALITY: EVERYBODY'S PROBLEM Including: Gay Play: society's plague Why gays have no right to "gay rights' Should homosexual acts be criminalized? The homosexual threat to social order AIDS: The risk to them and the risk to you PUBLIC RALLY... Wed., April 10, 12:20 p.m., on the lawn, south of the Kansas Union. PUBLIC LECTURE... Thur., April 11, 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium. Admission $1 PUBLIC LECTURE... Fri., April 12, 7:30 p.m., Kansas Union Ballroom. Admission $1. 1