University Daily Kansan Thursday, September 2, 1971 K.U. RELIAMATION CENTER HOURS TUES 12-6 SAT. 9-6 Kansan Photo by ALBERT SWAINSTON Cans and Bottles Await Crushing in Machine Under Stadium Sale of product helps to offset operation costs . . New operating hours go into effect for the KU Rehearsal Committee. The committee student, body, vice president, announced Wednesday that the center will be open from noon to p.m. on Sundays and Thursdays. Reclamation Center Sets New Hours Less than a year old, the reclamation center has enjoyed enormous growth. The center was originally them in a machine and sells the glass and metal to corporations. However, the center has almost 1,000 students outgrown its site beneath Memorial Stadium. Miss Laffin predicted that the machine would move off campus within a year. The new schedule will allow workers time to clear out any backlog of bottles and cans before football games. She said that with public reclamation centers could be used to finance money-making ventures. Companies will pay $20 a ton for the project. Many people connected with the center have suggested that the machine be moved to the city where it will be used for sidization. Their reasoning is that if the city is going to haul its trash into a landfill, they are not recycling for there without mue? trouble she said. It would also eliminate the present lack-of space problem. Funds for the machine come from the Kansas Union vending company. Proceeds from the sale of glass and metal are used to help defray Two students are employed to pick up bottles and cans at various taverns. The only immediate problem, according to Miss Laflin, is need for barrels for residence hall pick-up service. Helping City Is Indian Center Goal The Lawrence Indian Center is a non-profit information office designed and headed by Karl Talwinya, a supervisory in- vice president of Haskell Junior College. The center, presently located at 946 New Hampshire St., was organized for the purpose of helping local residents of the town acquire a variety of public services. Top Names for Lecture Series Kansan Staff Writer By JOHN GOODRICK Korean Staff Writer Sammpl is known as an expert on the Civil War period after a brief conflict, and has written "a number of books relating to the Civil War and This year's roster for the olds lecture series at the University of Kansas, the Humanities Lecture Series, and the distinguished speakers, said Henry L. Snyder, chairman of the lecture series and associate dean of the college. This year's series will include, seven speakers, one of whom is still to be named. The first lecture, entitled "The World of the Theatre," will be given Sept. 1 by Howard Churman, film critic, film producer and director, theatre consultant and author, Churman directed 37 films. He directed for "The Nation" magazine since 1953, Snyder said. He had been film producer and director for Century Fox from 1946 to 1952. D. S. Carne-Ross, a classicist and professor at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee will o October 26, 26. Kenneth Williams professor at the University and professor at California at Berkeley will speak "How a Historian Changes his World." speak November 16 on a topic to be announced he会发布。He will be the poets such as T. S. Elliot and Era Pound, as well as Renaissance poet laurel Abram Kaplan, professor of philosophy at the University of Michigan since 1963, will speak I. His topic is still to be chosen. Kaplan has written many books, his most recent as coauthor of Power and Society Hearing Set In Renz Case A motion in one of two cases concerning the year in which the Rentz apartment scheduled to be heard at 9:30 a.m. Friday in Douglas County has been moved. Kathryn Jeane Kihm, 19, was trapped in a starwell of the apartment building during the fire Sept. 1970. She was a nurse who died on Oct. 14 in the University of Kansas Medical Center. The defendants, the architect and the construction company that built the building, ask in the motion that the plaintiff, the New Hampshire Insurance Co, produce evidence in its case. The motion was filed Every year the selection committee picks an outstanding faculty member on campus to speak, Snyder said. This year's choice is Oswald History, back from professor whom he received from Medieval Russia and Medieval Russian Law. Snyder said Backus had guest-steered in Germany on Russian law and is very active in Slavic language instruction, an instrumental in negotiating with Polish institutions for the exchange students program, and he was involved in building a key figure in building up the university's Soviet and Slavic library and had worked to have it digitized and taught at the University of Kansas. The last scheduled speaker will be Boris Godovskiy, teacher and composer, who is to speak March 7 on "Bringing Opus To Life." departments. Snyder said the speakers would beaker each day at least two days attending a class conducting discussion groups and forums planned by Studer Union Godolvsky is a popularizer of the opera," Snyder said of the head of Godolvsky Opera Institute Incorporated. He said the opera has been in Russian accent and was sure to be a popular figure since he not "Right now I'm trying to get Leon Bernstein; said Snyder as he worked on next year's list, added, "I have hopes." Next year's list of lecturers might be even more impressive, Synder said. The names of Susan Sontag, drama critic, and Hanna Arandt, visiting professor at several universities have already been listed on the BMU Arandt's most recent book "entitled, On Violence." The selection committee, for the speakers appointed by the board of directors of Art and Sciences, George R. Waggoner, is normally made up of 35 percent women. Cancer Drug Test Rejected WASHINGTON (AP) — Proponents of an anticancer drug made from apricot pits received a committee of specialists supported the government's refusal to drug the drug to be tested on humans. Diamonds Watches-gold and silver Tools Cameras Money to Loan MID CITY PAWN legalized its use. only taught, but was a "practitioner of opera." The panel convened by the Food and Drug Administration has found that 75% of them known also as Amygdalum, is unproven in animals, possibly poisonous and inconclusively implicated in the deaths in other countries that have There is presently no access to the drug. There is effect of Ampydalin, the five cancer specialists said. "There is no justification at present for it." The committee of non-FDA scientists was assembled after an outcry last year against the use of a gene-altering allow the dna's testing on humans. 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