14 Monday: September 19, 1988 / University Daily Kansan Shauna Norfleet/KANSA Topekena resident David Menninger, left, sells a handmade tie-dyed T-shirt to Alex Elettt, Topekena sophomore in front of Wescone Hall, KU requires Menninger to donate a portion of his sales to charity. Make sale, must donate Campus peddlers required to contribute to charity By James Farquhar Kansan staff writer Not just anybody can set up a card table on Wescoe Beach and sell their wares. In fact, selling is prohibited on campus unless it benefits the University community, according to University Events Committee guidelines. Nevertheless, nearly everyday students sell at Wescoe selling something. According to the guidelines, a "reasonable portion" of the group's profits must go to benefit charitable projects, non-profit organizations or registered student groups This week, David Menninger, a Topeka resident who attended Stanford university in Palo Alto, Calif., hosted a T-shirt for $12 in front of Wesley. "Two dollars of the $12 collected for each shirt is going to the general fund of Headquarters," Menninger said. Headquarters Inc. is a Lawrene-based crisis intervention and referral center. Some of the money not going to Headquarters will reimburse Menniger's investment. The rest will help with his college expenses. "I've invested between $1,500 and $1,700 in the project so far," Menninger said. Ann Everso, chairman of the University Events Committee, said the application process weeded out did not quality to sell on campus. "The applicant must quality and then obtain the signature of the director of the University of Kansas bookstores," Eversole said. "The bookstores have exclusive campus concession rights." History conference to be held at KU By a Kansan reporter At least 300 historians from the University of Kansas to the University of Kansas Thursday through Saturday for the 10th annual Mid-America Conference. coordinator, said about 123 history scholars from 22 states, the district of Columbia and two canadian centers that attended and speak at the conference. W. Stitt Robinson, professor emeritus of history and conference The conference is sponsored by the history departments of KU, the University of Arkansas, Oklahoma State University and Southwest Missouri State University. The first conference was held in 1971, and subsequent conferences took place in 1982 and 1984 at KU. Seven conference sessions will be held during the three-day period, most in the Kansas Union. The registration fee is $10. $3 for GREEK week Calendar Tuesday *Chapter President Leadership Dinner* 6:30 p.m., Adam's Alumni Center **Wednesday** *24-Hour Event begins at noon* In front of Stauffer-Flint Hall Thursday *24-Hour Event ends at noon* *Scavenger Hunt - 3 to 5 p.m.* Pick up info in Rm 105, Burge Union *Chapter Picnics - 6 p.m.* (by groupings) Friday Friday *Three-Legged Kickball - 3:30-8 p.m.* Between Robinson and The Computer Center - "A Day in the Park"-1 p.m.* Lot south of KMART, spectators welcome Saturday Sunday *Lip-Sync & Awards Presentation* 7 p.m., Hoch Auditorium Week-Long Event *Treasures of Traditions* Look for clues in the Kansan Personals. FREE (6 copies) RESUMES University Materials Center 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza 749-5192 If you need abortion or birth control services, we can help. Confidential pregnancy testing • Safe, affordable abortion services • Birth control • Tubal ligation • Gyn exams • Testing and treatment for sexually transmitted diseases. Providing quality health care 4411 West 100th (1355 & Kuwait) Insurance, VISA & MasterCard accepted For information and appointments (913) 345-1400 Tallahassee, FL 1-800-277-1918 Toll Free (except KS) 1-800-227-1918 BORDER BANDIDO 1528 W. 23rd MONDAY MANIA ALL YOU CAN EAT Taco and Salad Bar $2.99 (across from post office) 842. 8861 ORTHODOX CHRISTIANS ON CAMPUS Organizational Meeting Tues., Sept.20,1988,7:00 p.m. Oread Room, Kansas Union For more information call: 841-8518 Evenings or 749-5285 Everyone Welcome! Paid Advertisement A number of things written in the Kansan recently bear correcting and refuting. First of all, Toni Shockley is a victim of the same misinformation that all the rest of us are. The same set of research (Syndor and Associates, '86, '87, and '88) will produce a figure that says 45% of all K.U. students surveyed said they listen to KJHK.I don't believe that Toni has been shown the actual survey; she has seen only "relevant" pieces of it that someone has provided her. Research is like prostitution — once you've paid for it, you can do anything you want with it. We should all remember that the issues here Drew Snider's comments in the September 1 Kansan, if they refer to me, are inaccurate, and they miss the point. I followed the policies and rules for over four years while I worked for KJHK. I am protesting those who have violated them. are not what should or shouldn't be played on KJHK; These are the issues: 1) Is KJHK a student-run, student-programmed station, as it is supposed to be, or have incidents occurred where student control has been usurped against policy and stated rules? 2) Do faculty members have to play by the rules they helped set up, or can they blithely ignore them when it suits their purposes? Finally, could the KJHK sales staff's difficulty be one of a misguided outlook on marketing? Perhaps they have been trying to sell KJHK like one would KLZR, KY102 or The Fox, when clearly KJHK is not any of those and regardless of any format change, never will be. very sincerely yours, Matthew Moore. Committee for the preservation of Wild Life in Lawrence. 7