University Daily Kansan, September 12, 1983 Page 5 ASK continued from p. 1 practically a voluntary position already.' Tallman told the directors. SCOTT SWENSON, on-campus director at KU, receives a salary of $115 a month. Swenson resigned the directorship last week to study the possibility of running for student body president at KU. He will continue to work for ASK until Oct. 1. Tallman and Graves said that, to avoid budget cuts, ASK could also begin comprehensive studies to find other revenue sources. One idea they mentioned was to see whether it was possible to collect dues from summer vacation and representatives from Kansas State said in the article but discovered that it was not feasible. Swenson said that the KU Student Senate dealt with a small summer revenue and only financed essential operations with it. Tallman said that a similar mandatory-refund system had backfired for a Wisconsin student lobby group when the majority of students who paid into the group asked for refunds. HMO "If a referendum were held, and the majority of the students said yes, then all students would pay the approved fee at enrollment the next semester." Graves said. "And, if a person wanted their fee back, they would have to ask for it in writing." GRAVES SAID that another possibility was to look into holding a referendum at the ASK member institutions that would ask students to attend a mandatory annual fee which they would pay. continued from p.1 provide comprehensive care through a personal physician for a fixed monthly rate. An employee who becomes a member of Health Care Plus chooses a primary care physician, usually a family or personal doctor, who is under contract with the HMO. That physician is paid a fixed monthly rate for each member who has chosen him, in exchange for providing comprehensive medical care to those members. THE ARE 24 primary care physicians for Health Care Plus member in Douglas County, Saskatchewan. The primary care physician is responsible for each member's health care; if a hospital stay or the services of a specialist or surgeon are needed. Schmidt said, the HMO must coordinate and pay for them through the primary care physician. The physician, Schmidt said, makes the most money when he sees patients often enough to diagnose problems and treat them before they become expensive, and when he provides and recommends only the treatment necessary for the health of the patient. HMOs are not for everyone, Schmidt said. For instance, if a person is satisfied with his family doctor and his insurance rates, and that doctor is willing to pay the HMO, there would be no incentive to change. continued from p.1 RAPES, ASSAULTS and larcenies also increased from the first six months of last year. Unlike burglaries and robberies, rapes and assaults are crimes that are not always reported, Brothers said. Brothers said 10 rapes had been reported as of June. Last year, eight rapes had been reported. Whether a rape is reported, Brothers said, depends on the victim's opinion of the criminal offense. Brothers said 201 people had been assaulted as of June, compared with 150 through June of 1982. of June, compared with 150 through June of 1882. As with rape, Brothers said, it is difficult to determine whether more assaults have occurred on his brother than these; this them. Brothers said it was possible that all of all of the assaults in the first six months of 1982 were reported. LARCENY, WHICH increased 11.5 percent from the first six months of last year to the first six months of this year, is a catch-all category, Brothers said. "This includes everything from felony embezlement to stealing a pack of bubblegum from a Kwik Shop." Brothers said. "An increase in larceny could mean only that a gas station attendant finally got mad about people driving away without paying for gasoline and decided to report it to the police or that a store owner decided to report shoplifting," he said. David Hornback/SPECIAL TO THE KANSAN Dennis Haywood, a self-employed painter, scrapes paint off a window of a new apartment building at 1200 Ohio St. Trial for quadraplegic Hyatt victim to begin Personnel Students newspaper stories were offered as evidence that a jury drawn from Jackson County would be prejudiced against the defendants, which included Jeffrey Hallmark Cards, in addition to the Hyatt Corp. The presiding judge of Jackson County on Friday denied defense motions to move the trial and the Missouri Court of Appeals refused to order the judge to reverse himself. By United Press International None of the damage awards are supposed to be "punitive," to punish the defendants. A $20 million fund has been set aside for that purpose; it is to be divided among the successful plaintiffs in proportion to their damage awards at the conclusion of about 40 trials. First Meeting, Sept. 13 6:00 p.m. Council Room, Kansas Union Student memberships available for Kansas City Personnel Management Association (PMA) Helps for obtaining employment/internships KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Of more than 200 injured survivors of the skywalk collapse at the Kansas City Hyatt Regency hotel, the woman involved in the tragedy today has the least chance to live a normal life. "I don't think there is any possibility of it been moved," defense attorney Michael Waldeck said yesterday. agree on was whether the defendant owners and operators of the hotel could get a fair shake from a Jackson County jury. In three earlier trials, juries awarded damages of $4 million, $3 million and $2 million to compensate victims for pain and suffering, medical expenses and lost wages. For more information call: Prof. Dury 843-6523 Jeff Price 843-0035 There is little dispute that Sally Firestone, whose crushed spine left her a quadraplieg after the July 17, 1981, disaster that killed 114 people, was not the victim of what WHAT THE LAWYERS and the court could A $ 5,000 TELEPHONE survey and piles of Minsky's Introduces 6 packa beer to go 2228 Iowa "IT'S NOT A HAMBURGER, IT'S A 1/2 LB. 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