THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University of Kansas Monday October 10,1977 Lawrence, Kansas Vol.88,No.30 fund-raiser Rep. Martha Keys, D-Kan., whispers to Vice President Walter Mondale while keys' husband, Rep. Andrew Jacobs, D-Ind., speaks at a Democratic fund-raiser in Topeka yesterday. Mondale discussed his role in a recent Senate filliburst about natural gas, the Panama Canal treaties and the administration's proposed farm bill. Later, in Chicago, Mondale said the administration was "firmly committed" to a permanent Jewish state in Israel. Architect promises to end delays By JOHN WHITESIDES Staff Writer Despite concern by some University of Kansas administrators, the newly appointed acting state architect said Friday that, although he was unfamiliar with all of the details, there should be no delays in any current or planned KU construction. "Frankly, this job is overwhelming," Carl Ossman, the action state architect, said. "I'm not familiar with all the details of all the projects yet, but I'm doing everything I can to speed them up. And I can see no delay at all in any KU construction." Osman was appointed acting state architect Sept. 18 by Keith W温尔, state secretary of administration. The appeals in the case were also lodged Louis Krueger, who had become involved in controversy earlier this year. Krueger had testified before the interim House Ways and Means Committee which was investigating defects in recently constructed state buildings. MAX LUCAS. University director of Enrollment rise causes request for more funds As a result of higher than predicted enrollments for the last three semesters, the University of Kansas may receive an additional $688,030 from the state this year, according to Keith Nitcher, KU's director of business affairs. The Board of Regents will not consider KU's request until its next regular meeting, on Oct. 21. If the Regents authorize the additional funds, the request will be sent to the state budget director, governor and state legislature for approval. KU administrators asked the Kansas Board of Regents Friday for authorization to request the additional funds from the state. Part of the $698,030 KU is requesting is a result of this fall's enrollment increase of nearly 900 students on the Lawrence campus. A total of 23,446 students are enrolled this fall, compared with 22,553 last fall. - NITCHER the request would not reach the legislature until January and final action on the request might not come until March. This enrollment increase, coupled with an estimated increase for the spring semester, will generate nearly $450,000 more in revenue than previously predicted, according to Nitcher. KU ADMINISTRATORS predicted last fall that enrollment for this fall would be 22,750. That prediction was used by the Board of Regents and the state to determine KU's budget aid and spending ceiling. Therefore, even though KU has taken in facilities planning, said recently he thought there might be some delay in getting projects that were being reviewed by the state architect ready for bidding on time. Lacasa said the huge amount of work that Ossman suddenly faced might delay the project. Lacus mentioned the $6.7 million addition to Robinson Gymnasium and the $11.5 million addition to Malott Hall as two projects that might be delayed. He said that he hoped the Robinson addition might be opened for bidding in a few weeks and that the Malott Hall addition might be ready for bidding by early November. See BUDGET page five "We want to get these projects under contract as soon as we can," Lucas said. "It's not good to have too many projects out for bid at the same time." Ossman said that plans for the Robinson addition were being reviewed again by the architects for the project and that he hoped they would be ready for bidding within the next few weeks. HE DESCRIBED the Malott Hall addition as "a little ways from bidding." The architects are working on schedule, he said, and are 60 per cent done with their work. Bidding should be opened by the end of this year, he added. Bidding also will be opened soon on the $2.5 million satellite student union and the $3.5 million radiation therapy center at the KU Medical Center. Ossman said those projects should be placed out for bidding within a month. Bristol Center construction has been a see ARCHITECT page two Mondale endorses Keys encounters MIA protest By TERRY SELBY Staff Writer TOPEKA-Vice President Walter Mondale, in town yesterday to endorse the governor of Florida, Michael Kan, interrupted his schedule to meet with three representatives of demonstrators protecting the Carter administration's efforts to prevent missile missing action in Southeast Asia. Mondale was greeted as he arrived at a fund-raising barbecue at the Shawnee County Fairgrounds by 23 protesters carrying signs that read "don't write them off" and "A full accounting of 2,900 MIAs and POWs; another broken promise." MONDALE MET for about 10 minutes with Comnie Conne, Topaka, Cammie Fugh, and Tommy Conne. three were identified as members of the National League of Families, a group that wants President Jimmy Carter to reverse reclassify to reliclassify MLAs as killed in action. When he arrived at 2:40 p.m. at Forbes Air Field, Mondale said he could not comment on a recent report that more than $1 million in federal funds had been placed in the National Bank of Georgia, in which Bert Masterson, budget director, holds a major interest. Speaking on the Bakke reverse discrimination case, Mondale said the bank's efforts to avoid harassment. "I JUST read it in the paper," he said. "I don't know what it means." The women were not available for comment after the meeting with Mondale. Students given reprimand for enrollment practices By JOHN WHITESIDES Staff Writer Several University of Kansas students have been reprimanded for using illegal enrollment practices this semester, Gill Dyck, dean of admissions and records, said. He said that fewer than 10 persons were involved, and that they had been discovered during a search for evidence. The students were not punished, he added. "I called them into the office and talked to them individually, and we reached an agreement that they would enroll correctly." Dyck said. I felt that nothing has been resisted. It was a very minor matter." Dick said the illegal enrolments were discovered by workers in the enrolment sorting room, where they noticed an extra set of scribe checks on the enrolment cards. THE STUDENTS apparently picked up class cards for people scheduled to enroll later. After picking up extra cards, the students then enlisted their enrollment cards before turning them in. Dyck said the scribes, who pass out the class cards at enrollment, are instructed to mark students' enrollment cards in ink. The teacher is placed in the room, where each one is checked. "We're not looking specifically for 'cheaters, but at that point it is very obvious if someone is cheating. Dyck said." "We don't look at it as a pretty good picture of what's happening." Last semester 10 students were discovered stamping their enrollment cards with an outdated dean's stamp from the university. The students received an undisclosed punishment. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN- News Capsules From the Associated Press, United Press International Carter plan offers tax cut About Carter's energy proposal, which recently has met stiff opposition in the Senate, Mondale said he did not break the Senate filibuster but merely "applied the rules." Mondale cut short presentations by a lemurty Senate energy plan after a lemmity Senate debate. THURMONT, Md.—If President Jimmy Carter's tax package is accepted by Congress, individuals and businesses can expect to receive tax cuts totaling $2 billion, according to an administrative source. Carter, expected to suggest the closing of loopholes used by Camp David working on his proposal. See story page 29. Deposit report questioned He called the case a delicate issue, one of trying to right the wrongs against minorities in the United States while trying to keep them minimizing against white Americans. Newsday, the Long Island newspaper, had reported that Lance's Georgia bank held $13 million in federal savings this spring. Newsday said 63 other national banks in combined federal savings deposits of $39,000 at the same time. ATLANTA—A report that former budget director Bert Lance's bank received unusually large deposits of federal money may be misleading, the Atlanta Constitution said in today's editions. Dayan threatens Geneva walkout Dayan Kissinger The Constitution quotes a treasury official, who says the story may have compared 'apples and oranges'. See star. NEW YORK-Iraeli Foreign Minister Moshe Daean said yesterday that Israel would walk out of any Geneva peace conference if the Jewish state were forced to discuss the situation in Palestinian state in the Middle East. Congress faces porn,reactor bills racial quota systems, but we are in favor of affirmative action." Dayan, interviewed on ABC's "Issues and Answers," said Israel would not sit down with any American in the prestigious Liberation Organization (PLO). WASHINGTON—Child pornography and a proposed nuclear breeder reactor at Clinch River, Tenn., are two items facing Congress this week. And the Senate Foreign Relations Committee will call 34 witnesses, including representatives of State Henry Kissinger and Dean Rusk, in its continuing hearings on the Panama Canal treaties. See story page two. they were in session long after the session was supposed to end, and they had the first all-night filibuster in 13 years," he said. Something had to be done." Attorney to begin crusade MIAMI - Attorney Ellis Rubin says he plans to appeal the murder conviction of 15-year-old Ronny Zamora and launch a nationwide crusade against television violence, which he contends caused the vountaster to kill. Rubin says he has the approval of Zamora's parents to file the complaint. He said he found 17 possible violations according to the complaint. Judge Paul Baker set Nov. 7 'as the date to sentence Zamora for the slaying of 82-year-old Elinor Haggart. The woman, a neighbor of Zamora's, was killed after she caught Zamora and another youth robbing her Miami Beach home Rubin contended Zamora was temporarily insane, and the 'buyer's' addiction from childhood to violence on television could not be erased. He said that he thought the great majority of KU students enrolled properly, but that he didn't believe enrollment cheating this year was defined to those students who were caught. Locally... this measure is the most far-reaching piece of agricultural legislation to be enacted in New York. "Cheating is always a major concern at enrollment," Dyck said. "That's why there is a letter schedule, so that over a period of a few semesters everyone will get an equal opportunity." The Kansas City Royals' George Brett delivered a roundhouse punch to start a first-inning fracase, but the New York Yankees delivered the knockout play last night in Royal's Stadium. For the second straight year, the Yankees rallied in the ninth inninning of the final game of the American League championship series to beat the Royals and win the penchant. The Yankees strung together two walks, a walk and an error in the ninth inninning to win 5-3. See story page nine. "I'd be naive to say that," he said, "but apparently the rest of them managed to do something a little bit differently so we couldn't find them." The bill provides about $200 billion in federal payments for Kansas farmers, Mondale said, which is an average of $1.9 million for every county in the state. Mondale also endorsed the administration's Panama Canal treaties, calling them an effort to "undo a serious historical mistake." "The Joint Chiefs of Staff have unanimously endorsed the treaty," he said. "They think it will improve our ability to defend the canal." MONDALE ALSO supported the administration's farm bill, recently passed by Congress, and praised Keys for playing a critical role in shaping the bill. He also said the bill established a vigorous sales program aimed at selling more agricultural products abroad and allowing the Russians to buy 18 million tons of wheat a year rather than the present eight million tons. Weatherproofed Staff Photo by GEORGE MILLENER A pair of sweaters under the usual KU field hockey unit kept Madelyn Ellain, Kansas City, Mo., solemnly warm during Saturdays games in the Rhoe Hoyer Jaishurin Invitational tournament.