2 Thursday, November 18, 1971 University Daily Kansan Workers Pour First Floor Ceiling WescoeWork Rate Normal Construction work on Wescoe Hall is progressing at a normal rate, according to Keith Lawton. The office has 16 cities, planning and operations. The fair weather conditions have been helpful to the construction work, although about 30 days of scheduling have been lost. These days can be made up with much difficulty, Lawton said. Wescow Hall will take two years to complete and construction is now on the way for a quarter of that the first and last quarter of construction work proceeded much more slowly than the in- Construction rate this winter will depend on weather conditions. The most difficult work during winter weather is laying concrete, filling columns and pouring the slabs, Lawton said. These stages of Wescoe are almost completed. Some phases of construction work cannot be completed under these weather conditions, and these may inhibit progress. Wescoe Hall was planned to augment the humanities with new material once the building is completed. other dispositions can be made, said Francis Heller, vice chancellor The rooms that become available will be assigned by the instructor, which is composed of faculty members and students in the humanities departments and appropriate administrative off- Learned Hall was built with foundations to support more floors. This type of construction work would be less expensive than in department departments in Fowler could then be transferred to Learned. Visual Arts, which includes design, painting sculpturing, and occupational therapy, needs the best facilities. The remodeling of KU Students Plan For Haskell Future During an hour convocation in the Haskell auditorium Tuesday, twelve architecture students organized the interventions of the needs of Haskel. Amid a background of Indian chants, a group of fifth-year architecture students from the University of Kansas presented their findings on the possible Haskell Indian Junior College. The program developed an idea the Indian in his environment or development in todays society. It gave an idea of what the Indian can do to better develop his society. The KU students analyzed the users of the campus and their needs. They focused on the use of computers, faces today such as problems in housing, recreation facilities and a general drawing together the Indian people The KU students presented and explained the allocation of funds to the Haskell projects of Haskell, and explained how the Haskell students fitted into the Fowler would provide these improvements. The fifty-year students explained KU's part in the master plan. They showed that KU only hoped to interpret the ideas of the Indian people and submit 12 plans for approval to the students and staff. The students will be chosen for the archival student to develop in depth From the four plans one will be chosen and submitted to the Bureau of Indian Affairs as the best representing their needs. The architecture students asked the Haskell student body to tell what they as Indians felt were the actual needs of the college. Plans for the new health center at KU are under way. Lawton said that the architect was midway in the final phase of the plans, which should be completed around the first of the year. Student Senate Gives Backing to Prairie Park The Student Senate voted at its last meeting to support the Sierra club in their efforts to Prairie National Park in Kansas. "Designing With Wood," a three-hour seminar of illustrated lectures on the structural properties of wood, will be presented to juniors and seniors in engineering and architecture from 1 p.m. until 4 p.m. in Room 600 of the Kansas Union. The next step in the health center construction will be selling tickets for the event to be paid off by student fees. The plans will then be given to contractors for kids. It is anticipated that the work will begin early by spring. Topics for the seminar will include laminated lumber, moulding wood, pressure treated wood and pressure treated wood. Thirty-minute lectures will be given by various sponsors with a question and answer period Initiated five years ago, the program is designed to develop an integrated structural capabilities of wood and to stimulate their thinking in terms of wood. All interested persons are invited to attend the seminar. Wood Seminar To Be Held This Afternoon The resolution stated that the grasslands in the United States were fast disappearing through urban development, and urban development, a Tallgrass National Park in Kansas would protect the prairie heritage of the United States and would directly benefit the citizens of the country with aesthetic and esthetically, the Sierra Club required support in their efforts to establish a preserve, and therefore, it would be important to interests of the Student Senate at the Sierra Club in its activities. Hackney said he was com- posing a letter to send to state and national representatives to the Department's support of the grasslands park H John Hackney Wichita junior and sponsor of the resolution said he had doubts that the resolution had pass, not because any of the senators would necessarily vote against it, but might think of it as empty rhetoric, like the time the Student Union ported an end to the war in Vietnam. He said he hoped that senate support of the park would carry some. weight in the eventual establishment of it. Research Group Checks Sex Discrimination Cases By MARSHA LIBEER Kansan Staff Writer Some University of Kansas students and personnel have banned together to expose and harass women at KU and women at KU through a Research Committee, a facet of the Commission on the Status of Women. According to Martha Ward, adviser to the Research Committee, the committee's purpose is "not so much to do formal research as to investigate anything relating to the status of women students at KU." The Research Committee was originally a part of the Association for Social Work, which became the Commission on the Status in Women in 1970. Marylyn Solsky, Parris Village senior, heads the committee of eight members. One male, Larry Grady, teaches graduate student, is on the graduate Zimmerman Joined the Research Committee because discrimination hit home. UNIVERSITY RULING allows an out-of-state woman a student to pay in-state tuition if her husband is a faculty member. There is no requirement, as in the case of which the wife is the faculty member and the husband is the student His wife, Karen, is a librarian at the University. A librarian's status is equal to that of an in-terms terms of faculty standing. Zimmerman said, "I've got the fear that most men need to support women in order to support women's movement is for, but aren't forced action until it hits them." The Zimmermans are waiting decision from Atty. Gen. Vern Miller that will determine if he must pay out of-stateation. Use Kansan Classified The Research Committee has both planned and initiated a variety of programs. She explained that the United States Department of Labor had recently published a guide to the Order, which assured equal job opportunities for all person employed or working in government contractors and subcontractors. Colleges and universities are federal contract determine the ratio of men to women in what Miss Solsky termed as "decision-making-positions." One of its projects has been to compile lists of women students and faculty members from every major and department to Data gathered by the Committee showed that there were no positions ranging from the Board of Regents to the vice chan- Other information collected by the Research Committee includes the ratio of men to women governing organizations. THIS YEAR THERE ARE 866 men and 105 women in the Faculty Senate, 56 men and 33 women in the Student Senate, and a combined total of 922 men and 702 women in the University Senate. Karen Keeling, adviser to the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) adopted an Affirmative Law KU adapted an affirmative law HEW forced them to do it. The Department of Labor designated the Department of Health, Education and Welfare for colleges and universities. Mrs. Ward said that through information based on the student Committee she also learned that the university was within the University women directors of agencies under the police chancellor of EVERY UNIVERSITY is required by law to have an AFirmative Action Program on file. Requiring such situations and goals and timetables to correct any mistakes to exist. *Miss Kesseling* She said that failure to comply with the Affirmative Action result in loss of federal funds for research or other programs. "UP TO THE PRESENT TIME," she said, "the women's Equity Action League has filed charges against over 300 colleges and universities as well as filing charges against the KuKu has not yet been charmed." She also said that both the university of Michigan and John Hopkins University funds due to failure to comply with the Affirmative Action Law. A new task of the Research career center is to promote careers aspirations of senior women, as compared to goals set by the same women their fresh- The committee also has tensive plans for a study of ways in which passage of the Equal Amendment would affect Kansas laws. 817 Vermont THURS·FRI·SAT SALE! Entire Stock Buy one pant or top at regular price Get another one at HALF-PRICE! Special Group $3.99 No Refunds or Exchanges Please Junior Class Plans Party at Armory The junior class will sponsor its first class party Friday night at the National Guard Armory. class. People attending the party are asked to bring canned goods or to donate a quarter to the cause. The food will be given to Thankgiving, and Lawrence for Thankgiving, and Joaquin for class president. Eight hundred gallons of beer will be served. Bikales-Weinberg Band and Shine, a folk group will entertain. The junior class party will begin at 8:30 p.m. Admission will be $1 or free for students who have junior class cards. Before the junior class party he board of class officers will sponsor a peep rally. This week the junior class has been sponsoring a canned goods drive in which each living group was asked to participate. The two groups canned goods drive will receive two kegs of beer from the junior UNIVERSITY THEATRE 8:20 Nov. 22 Plus BOZ SCAGGS Plus TIDE Tickets on sale now at: Kief, Grain Exchange, Chosoy Beggar, Temple Slug & North Country Flaire. On sale at box office beginning Nov. 15. Mail Orders — Herston Productions, 804 Louisiana, Lawrence, Ks., 60044 (Money Orders only, no checks.) $4.50 Advance $5.00 at Door 7th & Massachusetts SUPER SOLE from Old Maine Trotters. A heavy duty, lace-to-the-toe oxford. In earthy brown or navy leather. Give a pair a try today. Bunny Black's Royal College Shop Eighty Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street