University Daily Kansan Tuesday, September 13, 1977 5 KU student killed in one-car accident Robert C. Godfrey, Prairie Village senior, died at 11:40 a.m. yesterday at the KU Medical Center from injuries he suffered in a one-hour late night Saturday night. He was 22 years old. Godfrey had been in critical condition since being transferred to the Med Center from Lawrence Memorial Hospital early Sunday morning. Tamara Pilkington, Hays sophomore, a passenger in Godfrey's car, was in serious condition last night Med Center officials said. A spokesman for the Douglas County Sheriff's Office said that Godfrey was driving south on Louisiana Street when the accident occurred. om a your pace The spokesman said Godfrey lost control of his compact car, crossed the center line and crashed head-on into a bridge abutment two-tenths of a mile south of 31st Street. obbling gabble. brooks visely. Godfrey, an honor student at Emporia State University, transferred to the University of Kansas for the spring 1976 semester. He was a senior in the School of Journalism. GODFREY WAS the city reporter for the Kansan during the summer and had hoped to continue writing for the paper during his senior year. Family graveside services will be at 11 a.m. wednesday in Russell. He was born in Kansas City, Mo., and lived in this area all his life. Godfrey is survived by his mother, Marian Godfrey, Prairie Village; two sisters, Mrs. Gal Gullo, San Francisco, and she was born in the small, informal maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Mills, Russell; and his paternal grandmother, Mrs. Gladys So尔斯, DeSoite. Otto ... From page one OTTO HAD PAUL'S card but after a minute of waiting, Otto had not allowed her to continue the transaction. "It took my card," she said. After Paul put her card in correctly, Otto wanted to know her personal identification number (PIN). Each customer receives the card which only Otto and the customer know. Paul spoke too soon, Otto then beeped and out popped her card. Paul had put it in backward. She said it was her first encounter with Otto. Otto then displayed four 'X's on the screen. Paul had to enter one digit on her PIN for each X in the proper sequence before Otto would let her go any further. PAUL ENTERED the numbers, Otto beeped and then flashed instructions for her to punch in the amount of the deposit on the card. This is between the card slot and the screen. After Paul told Otto how much she was deposing, she told it she didn't want to do any other business. Paul put her money in the deposit cylinder, and Otto oweed, gave her a receipt and buzzed until Paul removed her card from the slot. The whole business took about two hours. Errorslss transactions take about one minute. "Don't forget to tell your friends about Otto." Otto flashed on the screen. Paul and Rundquist both said they did not mind doing business with a machine and thought it probably was safer than conventional banking. KUCAZ SAID, "We feel it is more con- tractive than transaction. One in the bank has asked that I be." The computer in Kansas City, Mo., which controls Otto, selected all PIN's at random, Kucza said. Employees of Lawrence National have to pass through four levels of security before being allowed access to terminal, which is used for entry and retrieval of information about accounts. Dave Nordlund, assistant director of remote computing for the University of Kansas, said the safety precautions Kucza describes sounded typical for most banking offices. Having the PIN was usually enough to prevent theft from an account, Nordland said. "It would be very difficult to cheat on," he said. SOME PEOPLE make it easy for others to steal from their accounts, Nordland said, by carrying their secret numbers with their identification card. The chance of anyone being able to steal through a computer terminal actually is less than 1%. "In a computer system, it's much better organized," he said. "They are about as reliable as you can get." Kucza said the only problems so far were caused by bent cards. ANOTHER TYPE of teller, the remote Gardner indicted on felony rap Joseph Gardner Jr., 22, will be arraigned at 11:30 this morning on a charge of aiding a felin in connection with the Feb. 6 murder of a county Attorney Mike Malone said yesterday. Gardner, who is currently serving two to 20 years at the Kansas State Reformatory in Hutchinson for aggravated battery, originally was charged with first degree murder in the stabbing and strangulation of Maxev. Malone said the charge was changed because county authorities thought that although he did help dispose of her nude and legless body, he did not kill her. James Gardner, 18, pleaded guilty this summer to second degree murder in connection with the attack. service unit (RSU), has been used by Capitol Federal Savings and Loan Association. It also uses an identification card and a secret number, but the computer terminal is operated by a clerk in the grocery stores where the machines are located. Malone said elder Gardner's trial would begin Thursday in Douglas County District Court. Frank Wright, vice president at Capitol Federal, said the Dillon's terminal at 1740 Massachusetts St. handled about 200 transactions a day. Ned Cushing, chairman of the board of University State Bank, said his bank would have the remote teller system sometime to share a computer with Cantol Federal. Customers from either firm will be able to use the terminal in Dillon's or either of two terminals that will be installed in the Kansas Union and the proposed satellite ALLAN LILLEOIEN, vice president of the First National Bank of Lawrence, said his bank and the Douglas County State Bank also would share the terminals in the unions. Eventually, Lilleoien said, customers at any of the five institutions could use any of seven clerk-operated machines, which will be in local grocery stores. Marshell Bigerstaff, vice president of Anchor Savings Association, said his company eventually would be getting the tellers but that he didn't know when. Kuzaa took the convenience and security of banking made the automatic teller a success. As Wright said, "It's safer than a signature." The Lawrence City Commission tonight will discuss gas rate hikes and a possible surcharge to pay for gas used but never billet to Lawrence residents. They will meet at 7 p.m. on the fourth floor of the First National Bank Tower, 900 Mass. St. cent for homeowners, raised the average gas bill from $19.60 to $20.98. The October hike, 2.3 per cent for homeowners, would increase further to $20.54. An overall gas rate increase of 2.9 per cent went into effect Aug. 23 and another increase of 2.5 per cent is scheduled to begin Oct. 23. Lawrence Mayor Marine Arngersinger said yesterday that a representative of the Kansas Public Service Co., Inc., the gas supplier for this area, would have to be $20 million more than $18 million gas that the company failed to bill them for from Jan. 31 to Aug. 23. She said they would City commission to discuss gas rate hikes The August increase, which was 2.5 per The 2.5 per cent rate increase that began Aug. 23 was the same rate that the company should have been charging Lawrence residents since Jan. 23, she said. If a surcharge was added, approximately 10 percent was added to the average budget bill. do this by adding a temporary surcharge to Lawrence's president's gas bills. In other business, the city commission will consider an architectural contract for a new city hall building. The contract includes an $8,000 architect's fee to apply for a grant from the Energy Research and Development Administration to install a solar heating and cooling unit in the new building. Jewish New Year Rosh Hashanah Services' Monday, September 12th, 7:30 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Union —featured speaker: Sig Lindenbaum— Tuesday, September 13th, 9:30 a.m. 8: 7:30 p.m. & 7:30 p.m. Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Drive 917 Highland Drive [one block east of 9th & Iowa] —featured speaker: Carl Leban— Wednesday, September 14th, 9:30 a.m. Lawrence Jewish Community Center Lawrence Jewish Community Center featured speaker: David Katzman sponsored by Hillel and Lawrence Jewish Community Center Anyone interested in becoming the 1977 mike person should attend the tryouts Sept.14 at 6:30 p.m. in Allen Field House. QUALIFICATIONS: full-time student full-time student uninhibited enthusiastic leadership qualities interested in backing Jayhawks No special preparations needed instructions will be given Sept. 14. BASF Cassette Tapes Downtown 928 Mass. BASF Audiotronics --- BLOW FOR BLOW A NEW YORKER FILMS RELEASE