Wednesday, September 20, 1972 5 x Spreier Kansan Photo by CLYDE LOBB Football Aside Even though the football season has just begun, workers are laying the support beams for the basketball floor in Allen Field House. The Turnpike Prices Higher first practice for basketball is scheduled for Oct. 15, Tony tee, tett, of the athletic department, and James A. Lewis of buildings and grounds, tighten the holes hold the beams together. Six or seven again work Monday and the floor should be in place by noon today. By SCOTT EATON Kansan Staff Writer Motorists traveling along the Kansas Turnipke can expect to pay slightly more for oil and gasoline if it is bought on the turnipke rather than in nearby cities. Motorists buying the turnipke gasoline costs depends on where else the motorist decides to purchase it. The cost of gasoline is the same for all six of the service areas where it is used. The average costs 37.9 cents per gallon for regular and 41.9 cents per gallon for fuel. These prices are the same as they have been for several years, according to Steve Rutherford, owner of a restaurant on his son's restaurant at the Lawrence service area. Rutherford said the prices of gasoline and oil along the turpike were determined by theansas Turnipk Authority (KTA) Motorists can save money by buying gasoline at service areas where the competition depends on the competition in the area where the gasoline is purchased. Many times, major oil company service stations will be charged more than similar to those found on the turnip, while nearby cut-rate service stations will be charging less for every gallon of gasoline. The service areas are at Lawrence, Topeka, Emporia, Wellington, Matfield Green and Towanda. PRICES DON'T change often along the turnipkee because the length of time the contracts that service area concessionaries wear station contracts are signed for a period of five years. Each of the six service stations along the turnipkee is bid for separately, so they are concerned. The contract goes to the company that made the highest bid for the particular service station. Rent for the station is paid for with a certain percentage of the station's revenues. ACCORDING TO A KTA OFFICIAL, the prices that a service station can charge for its gasoline and oil are controlled by contract and the stations cannot change prices without KTA approval. Three major oil companies operate service stations along the KKR 高速. The company operates four stations and shops and Mobil operate on each THE OPERATIONS of the restaurants along the turnipke service station seem similar to the service station at KTA, the chain of six restaurants Campus Bulletin Human Sexuality: 10 a.m., Parrors A. B. Union Employees: 10 a.m., Pine Room, 3rd floor. Campus Crusade! 7 a.m., Alove D. Cafeteria, Kansas Union 148. French Table: 11:30 a.m., Cottonwood Cafeteria. Boston Table: 11:40 a.m., Cottonwood The restaurants at Topeka, Emporia, Lawrence and Ellenburg serve the one at Maffield Green has a coffee shop and the one at Towanda offers sit-down all the restaurants have gift shops. "First of all, these buildings are too large," said a. "A lot of things are wrong that could not have been forseen. Some of the buildings are too small." History Advisory Committee: 11:30 a.m. Alcove A Cafeteria. Faculty Forum: noon, Westminster along the turnip is bid on as a whole, to avoid problems that individual ownership of each restaurant is bided for. Many restaurants are bid on every ten years, because of the amount of capital the company leasing the land, and because it is necessary for the restaurants, as with the service stations, is paid for with a percentage of the gross sales. A hotel building, a building and equipment, which are owned by the KTA. Howard Johnson's restaurant chain now owns about 40% of the Russian Table: 11:30 a.m., Meadowlark Cofeerita. Private Group: noon, Alcove B, Cateria. Bridwell Luncheon: 12:15 p.m., English Room. Union Employees: 1 p.m. Pine Room. Jayhawk Pictures: 1 p.m., Browsing. Political Science: 2:30 p.m., Jayhawk Social Welfare Black Engineering Program: 12:30 p.m. Curry Room. Social Welfare Faculty: 2:30 p.m., International Room. RUTHERFORD SAID that often people who complained about the turpine along the turnip didn't realize problems a restaurant operator had. Curry Room. Union Employees 1 p.m., Pine Room. Pictures on wall. IFC: 4 p.m. Governors Room Jarbawker Picture, 6 p.m. Browsing SIMS: 7 p.m. Council Room StudEx: 7 p.m. Governors Room Delta Sigma Pi: 7:30 p.m., Centennial Room. Human Sexuality: 7:30 p.m., Btg s. SIMS: 7 p.m., Council Room. StudEx: 7 p.m., Governors Room. Sophomore Class: 7 p.m., Pine Room. RU Dames: 7:30 p.m. Oread Room. RU Classical Library: 7:30 p.m. Woodward. "FROM TIME to time we have some bad reports," Rutherford Ford said. "We don't realize what we have to work with. It's just something we have to put up with. Howard Johnson's restaurants along the rumpie. Auditorium. European Club: 7:30 p.m. Room 305. 7:30 p.m. Groom Road SUA Chemical Films: 7:30 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium They paid around $150,000 to remodel here." Rutherford also said the belief that food was more expensive along the turnippe was not true. He said prices were competitive sometimes lower on the turnippe in the surrounding community. Rutherford said one of the problems people had when they bought food at restaurants on the turnipke, particularly at the market where they met that they took many servings of the different dishes offered. "There is a lot of food to choose from," Rutherford said. "People get upset when they buy a dinner and the price seems high, but they don't stop to consider how you individual servings they have." "They could have a good meal at a good price if they just bought the bare essentials." Rutherford said prices for the restaurants were also controlled by the KTA. He said food prices changed for the past four years. Keeping the turpile restrooms clean is another reason I found along the turpile. He said as many as 3,000 persons might use a rest room in a period of a week. The cleaning was a tremendous problem. RUTHERFORD SAID all the food served at the restaurants on the turpike was prepared at a the commissary to assure uniformity of the differences in the food would be the way an individual cook handled it. Rutherford said the food would be prepared all over the nation, but because the different ways it is prepared and because in the cafeterias the food must often spend time on the table, not all of it, it is "not quite home cooking." "But we have a check card for the rest rooms." Rutherford said, "and the rest room must be checked and the card signed every hour. Rutherford said the turnpike restaurants had problems. all their own. Senior's Body Found at Lake The body of James Danielson, Kansas City senior, was found at 6:45 p.m. Tuesday floating on top of the waters at Perry Lake 200 from the shore, according to Jefferson County Sheriff's office. The sheriff's office which did not find the body was found by an unidentified man who was traveling in a boat. The body was taken to a police station. "A sexual relationship is ethical if people are open with one another. The need to trust the other, to have faith in their action, to be careful about stantence and can be lost easily," said Paul Friedman, associate professor of speech articulation and human relations. Sheriff officers had discontinued dragging operation Monday after searching for the children. He apparently drowned Saturday in a boating accident. A companion in the boat was rescued. By EMERSON LYNN Kansan Staff Writer Friedman's Tuesday night presentation was the first of a three-day seminar on Human Behavior when this week in the Kansas University. Assuming the narrative role, Friedman used the word "Unlingering" by Constance Beeson to point out the openness of open sexual relationships. Tonight, Wed. Sept. 20 8-12 p.m. DOLLAR NIGHT Guys $1.00 Pitchers $1.00 LADIES FREE 642 Mass. RED DOG INN 842-4950 TO FRIEDMAN, "Unfolding," was the antithesis of the present day situation. "Today the people involved are too self-conscious. They worry too much about their straints they might break," he said. "The sexual relationships are stiffed." Popular Vote To Determine HOPE Prof Sexuality Seminar Stresses Trust The HOPE Award winner will be determined by popular vote this year. The HOPE Award committee announced Tuesday, The winner will be the finalist who receives the most total votes in a debate. The centage of votes in relation to the number of students enlisted in the study is taken. Interviews beginning this week the first three weeks will be conducted, Mark Shockey, Abiline senior and chairman of the committee said. The committee members will also choose the candidate, and consider the results of the balloting done last week in their selection of five all seniors may vote Oct. 19, with the selection being made Senior Day, Oct. 21, at the KU-Nebraska football game. "I have to be concerned with how people can move out of sexual competition and into real life," she said. "Whether it be sexual or not, every human being has the potential for a deep relationship, connection from stranger to lover or from stranger to lover that may be very difficult. It is in these more difficult situations that increased communication is achieved." THE FILM was dominated bv the use of double exposures. For example, scenes of couples were superimposed on scenes of nature. The senior class voted on the original nominees last week and two of them are: Kenneth Armilas professor of physiology and biology; Curtis Besinger, assistant professor of urban design; Norman Forer, assistant professor of social welfare; Edward McBrien, Sr., engineering; Jess McNish, engineering; Jess McNish, adjunct professor of business; John Michel, associate professor of physiology and cell biology; Pickett, professor of journalism; David Quadagno, assistant professor of physiology and cell biology; associate for choral music; Marilyn Stokstad, student; Norman Wright, professor of psychology and human development. Friedman said the double images help one to understand the relationship between openness and nature. "When people talk joyously and are open and direct, then their relationships are successful," he said. Today the second part of the seminar will begin. The film "Confidence by Choice" will be shown at 11:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. in Parlor A of the Kansas Union. A film on venereal disease will be shown at 12:30 p.m. and 3:30 p.m. in Parior A of the Union. The film is called "The Lunatic." The evening presentation will begin at 7:30 in the B 8 Room of the Union. The presentation will be followed by Dr. Wayne Hirt. The toque is "How to Take the Worry Out of Being Close."