Wednesday, October 12, 1977 7 Sabbatical plans on slate University Daily Kansan Two compromise proposals for a new University of Kansas sabbatical policy will be considered at tomorrow's Faculty Council meeting. Both proposals provide a mechanism for selecting proposed sabbaticals to be reviews by the University Committee on Sabbatical Vices (UCSL), which awards the sabbaticals. The first proposal, developed by Mike Davis, University general counsel, would allow each of the 11 members of UCSI to vote for the candidate for each sabbatical leave available. If there were 50 sabbaticals available, for example, each committee member could vote yes on 50 of the sabbatical proposals received by the committee. Each proposal that received six or more votes would then qualify for further comments. THE OTHER PROPOSAL, developed by a FacEx member, would allow each UCSL member to vote yes on an unlimited amount of proposals, allowing more sabbatical proposals to receive committee consideration than under Davis' proposal. The proposals are the result of a meeting two weeks ago between FacEc and administrators. The differences arising from the administration's rejection of the first proposed proposal are discussed. Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, explained in a letter to William Westbeke, Fac2c chairman, that the rejected sabbatical plan was incompatible with Kansas and Regents guidelines, which specify that sabbaticals should be granted strictly on merit. Davis' proposal attempts to provide a definition of the Regents' merit-only provisions. According to the proposal, any applicant who receives a certificate at least six yes votes is mortorious. The plan would have allowed some sabbatical grants to be made on grounds other than merit, such as length of service at the University and the length of time without a sabbatical. Current Regents policy also states that sabbatical leaves cannot be awarded to $900 scale stolen from Malott A scale valued at $800 was stolen from a locked cabinet in a second floor hallway in Malet Hall sometime between Saturday and Sunday. The University of Kansas police said yesterday. Monday morning, University of Kansas police said yesterday. Police said entry into the cabinet was gained by forcing two large metal doors off At KU, approximately 50 sabbaticals are awarded each year. more than four per cent of the equivalent full-time faculty at the University. Douglas County will lose about $282,750 in usual revenue next year when land around the Clinton Lake project can no longer be built. The Army Corp of Engineers project manager. Clinton rents lost to county TODAY: GARY GRAFFMAN, artist-in-residence in piano, will conduct master classes from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and from 2:15 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. ANIMAL STORY HOUR will present the FACULTY FORUM, "Festivals and Community Survival in Kansas," at 1:45 p.m. in History in Dyche Hall. John Janzen, associate professor of anthropology, will present the FACULTY FORUM, "Festivals and Community Survival in Kansas," at 1:45 p.m. on Orcad Ave. An OPEN AIR LECTURE, "Jesus Was Not A Great Moral Teacher," will be presented at 12:30 p.m. in front of Wescoe Hall. The ASTRONOMY lecture will have an open house beginning at 2:30 p.m. in Lindley Hall. KU FRIEBEE CLUB will meet at 5 p.m. in front of Allen Field House. KANSAN On Campus Davis and Shankel have been invited to marrow's meeting to discuss the new proposal. Since 1972, when the corps bought the land, the property has been leased to farmers, Counts said, and Douglas County received 75 per cent of the rent the farmers paid the corps. This year the county will receive more than $300,000 from the rents. Events A $350 calculator, missing from a classroom in Snow Hall since Friday, was reported stolen yesterday. The calculator had been attached to a portable frame locked to a desk in the classroom. Police said a key was used in the theft. their hinges. Damage to the cabinet was estimated at $100. TONIGHT: ALBERT GERKEN will present a carillon recital at 7 p.m. KU DAMES will sponsor a fall fashion show at 7 a.m. the University's Winnipeg Room. Andrez Munk's Unit Fashion ARTS class presents a department of Slavic languages and literatures at 7:30 p.m. in room 803 of Bailey Hall. Edward Laet, a professor of English, presents at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recall Hall. The English department will sponsor a lecture by Thomas Seck of Indiana University. FROM "CLEVER HANDS" to Berbal Apes: From CLEVER HANDS' to Berbal Apes: At 8 p.m. in the Union's Forum Room. The scale, an analytical balance, measures amounts to one-tenth of a milligram. Police said it could be used to adjust medical drugs. There are no suspects in the theft. KU police also are investigating two other burglars from campus buildings. TOMORROW: An OPEN AIR LECTURE, "Jesus Christ: An Alternative to Religion", will be presented at 12:30 p.m. in front of meet at 3:30 p.m. in 108 Blake Hall. GERMAN CLUB will meet to hear Jim Schmidt present, "Peter Bruegel's Painting of Dutch Proverbs", at 3:45 p.m. in 4067 Wescah House SUA DUPLIE BRIDGE CAMP SAILING CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in The Union's Parlor. KU ORIENTEERING CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Walnut Room. PAUL EHRHLICH of Stanford University will present, "The Race Bomb", the series at 8 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. Fiddler will speak on, "AFTER THE MODERN MOVEMENT", at 8:30 p.m. in 3140 Wescah House. PHILOSOPHY CLUB will met with Stephen Parker, professor of Vladimir Nabokov in the Union's Governor's Room. "But because the lake is getting nearer to completion, the land won't be available for construction." Two rooms in Murphy Hall also were broken into and four headrests valued at $120 each. That means that beginning next year the county will receive only the 75 cents an inch in taxes the corps will pay for each of the acres of the Clinton project—about $17,250. THE CLINTON project is four miles southwest of Lawrence. Beginning next year, Counts said, any leasing done on the property will be by the Kansas Fish and Game Commission on areas designated as wildlife areas. "The county will more than make up for those with the increased construction and growth." But this leasing will be done only on a sharecropping basis, he said, so there will be no rent payments. Farmers leasing land to the state may take advantage to leave a portion of their crops for wildlife. plus looney favorites OGDEN EDSL MUSICAL COMEDY TROUPE Fri. and Sat., October 14 and 15 All for only: '2.50 general admission '2.00 7th Spirit members The clown prince soon will appear at KU when canceling last year for personal reasons. The Lawrence Opera House Where else can you have a kickin' good time? 7th & Mass. 843-6276 George Carlin is to perform Tickets for the George Carlin concert Oct. 28 in Hoch Auditorium go on sale today in the SUA box office. Seats are $6 and $7 reserved. SUA also is sponsoring a bus tour to Lincoln, Nehalem or the Oct 28 Crosey, Stilla and Sharon. Mark Woodman, special events coordinator for SUA, said no opening act had been scheduled and he was doubtful there would be one. The trip will cost $2 for round-trip transportation and refreshments. There are Woodman said tickets also were still available for the homecoming weekend Approximately 4,500 tickets have been sold for the Beach Boys concert Friday in Woodman said he be hope to sell 10,000 tickets for the Beach Concert and 3,000 tickets for the SoundSphere concert. technical equipment." Woodman also said about 2,100 tickets for the Woodman Shiprehearsal and Jerry Walker concert Saturday night in Hock Audiotournament. There are 86 in advance and $7 the day of the show. Soviet space mission failure Allen Field' House, Woodman said. Tickets are $8 and $7 for the reserved seats. When the Soyuz 23 space mission failed to achieve a linkup with an orbiting lab in October of last year, Tass indicated the crew was not to blame and equipment was at fault. As of last night, there was no word on the blame lay for the latest linkup failure. Newspapers and television carried only brief accounts of the return to earth of the aircraft commander, Lt. Col. Vladimir Kovalevich. Kovalevich, Ryumin. They made a soft landing yesterday in Soviet Central Asia following conditions were officially as good. MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet press played down the disappointing Sputz, 25 space mission, reporting yesterday only the bare facts of the spacecraft's landing and leaving unexplained its inability to dock with the Salyut 8 space station. Kovolenik and Ryumin, both space rookies, were launched five days after the 20th anniversary of the Soviet Union's space program. They carry out some kind of space spectacular in honor of the occasion, including possibly a space walk, after docking with the space lab But the news agency Tass reported Monday that the space-shiners go only to within 393 feet of the space station, and "because or some deviations from a planned docking From page one "The docking of a spaceship with a station is a complex procedure," Praveda said. "It may morning in describing the failure it detected. It demands that the crew but perfect operation of all Bakke ... nation, both domestically and internationally, dictate that there must be no judicial retreat on the constitutional mandate that equality and freedom must be achieved for all the people of our country," the caucus said in a brief submitted to the court. "Any vacillation or hesitation by this court in reaffirming the fundamental principles at stake in this case may well sound the death knell of the progress made since this court's decision (outlawing school desegregation in 1954),7 the caucus con- The commission statement did not deal directly with the Bakke case, but contained obvious references to the forthcoming court ruling. IN ITS REPORT, the Civil Rights Commission called affirmative action programs "promising instruments in obtaining equality of opportunity." --- HARBOR LITES invites you to meet its new owners Thurs. Oct. 13 John Woodens Appreciation Day for Ben Grewing Pitchers $1.00 6-8 p.m. $1.50 8-12 p.m.