University Daily Kansan, August 28, 1981 Page 5 ort to where con- lumbering and in up ad- do- ning the re to such te for trike the an se of se of inous and and Committee From page one committee and help in the money allocation process. Busy also complained of the manner in which those non-sentators would be chosen. Busy said that process would further close the system. According to the bill as it stands, the nonsenators would be picked by Abbott, Student Body President Bert Coleman and David Adkins, chairman of the Student Senate executive committee, from among applications submitted. Bush said that process would further close "It's putting the control of funds into a pretty elite group." he said. Miki Gordon, former Rights and Finance and auditing Committee chairman, was more than $10 million. "This bill is ugly," he said. "It takes away student input into the budget making process." Gordon said that currently, non-seniors could get onto any committee simply by applying and attending meetings. The numerical limit on the committee would prevent non-seniors from doing so. Abbott defended the bill saying that it would cut the length of budget hearings and make them more efficient. "Budget hearings constitute two-thirds of Student Senate's time," he said. "By the time they roll around and are over, students are really bummed out on Senate." "What we're trying to do is take the burden off the Student Senate committees," Coleman said. "We're trying to streamline the budget process." Coleman said that students interested in government were always free to run for Senate and that there should be some limit to the number of non-senators on committees. Adkins said the bill also was an attempt to iron out inconsistencies between the different committees and how they allocate their money. Some committees allowed certain expenditures, such as long distance telephone calls, while others favored money spent in other activities, he said. He said that some groups had members of the organizations join a certain committee while the group was up for funding and then quit the committee after the group received its funds. The "dogleg" Hay complained about is a section of land in the Sebelius plan that extends northward into Douglas and Franklin counties and is part of the 5th district. From page one The 9th district in Sebelius' plan would extend from Douglas County on the north to Harper County, south of Wichita on the Oklahoma border, on the southwest. Reapportionment Both plans call for a geographically smaller 4th district, including all of Sedgwick County. The composition of the 2nd district differs the most between the two proposals. Hay's proposal would divide central Kansas counties between the 1st and 5th districts, while Sebelius' proposal would have more of those counties included in the 2nd district. Several central central counties will move from either the 4th districts to the 1st district. Neither plan has been adopted or even favored by the legislative committees, said state Rep. Robert G. Frey, R-Liberal, at the House Committee and Congressional Apportionment Committee. Frey said he would favor Douglas County remaining in the 3rd district, with Wyandotte County possibly being included in the 2nd district. After one plan is decided upon by the apportionment committees, he said, a bill to change the district boundaries would be introduced in the Legislature next spring. Red tape costs. If the vendor is called, the prices may be lower and shipping cost not included. - A University rule bans faculty members from receiving 12 months of pay. The depart- ment of geology offers a three-month summer camp. Students must be working during the school year cannot be hired. Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, will review the report with KU vice chancellors on Monday to decide which suggestions, if any, should be implemented. Pre-enrollment From page one "At the beginning of the school year the advisers are extremely busy. The middle of the school year is even more stressful." Ambler said the University could choose from a number of systems. For example, the University of Iowa allows students to work on a schedule with an operator at a computer terminal. Ambler likes that system but he said it would cost about $65,000. The system used at Kansas State University does not allow students to pick the times for their classes. They submit a list of courses, and a computer determines the schedule. Bert Coleman, KU student body president, didn't mind the drawback. "It has its problems, but it's a lot better than what we have to go through now," Coleman said. "If you want a class, you should be able to get it." Coleman thought most students would agree with him. Ambler said he had heard of a few scattered protests about pre-enrollment. He said some teachers have complained that they would have to plan their courses earlier than they would like. Buy your Thanksgiving and Christmas airline tickets now. Get the best prices and availability. Maupintour travel service K. U. Union 900 Mass. 749-0700 JUST PURCHASED! 85 Desks and Chests. See at Emerald City Antiques Tie In With Us Recreation Services 415 N. 2nd Daily 9-5 Find-A-Racquetball-Partner-Service - Find a racquetball partner of your same level of racquetball ability - Come Into Rec Services office, 208 Robinson, and complete a Racquetball Ability form. - A card file grouping persons of similar ability will then be available in the Rec Services office so you can contact potential partners. TRY OUR - Sandwich & Salad Bar Make your own FREE DRYING WITH WASH Laundromat Games Laundromat 26th & Iowa - Take out beer - Coffee 35° 19th & Louisiana WELCOME KU STUDENTS! 9th & Mississippi (Open 24 hours after Sept.1) We have 3 coin-operated laundries to serve you. - Self Serve Copies $ 3^{\circ} $ - (8) 7 a.m.-2 a.m. Behind the teepees Security Sale 24 hour Emergency Service Hours Lock and Hardware Installations Lock Re-keying and Repair (free estimates) Phone : 0123456789 All types of vehicle lock and ignition service 15% Discount on all security hardware through the month of September. Phone 749-2499 842-3877 A Few Thoughts About Enclosed Shopping Malls The last two decades have seen a national proliferation of enclosed shopping malls. The tenants of these structures usually pay their rent to an alien corporation — a relationship which underlies a local's independence and self-sufficiency. These malls invariably contain not a few of its noise-pollinating, inherently worthless pinball and video machines into which many grade schools and adolescent minors pour both their money and time. Considerable energy is wasted controlling the climate in each of these enclosed cavers of sterility. Yet when shopping mall developers lay siege to a local governing unit they frequently prevail with their own domain both acquiring for the desired property and exercising its right of enforcement domain, and helping pay for the property's development with public funds. Eminent domain is the governmental right to take private property for public use while Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution limits the use of tax revenues to paying debts and providing "for the common defense and general welfare of the United States." ... Black's Law Dictionary tells us that "One does not devote his property or business to a public use or cloth with a public interest." ...ily because he ... sells to the public." Therefore it follows that these governmental acts are clearly beyond the Constitutional pale when undertaken in behalf of a privately-owned business. However, the financial success of these accursed mails has forced many local governments to ignore these Constitutional limitations on governmental behavior in order to maintain the health of their communities. It is only at the national level that decisive action can be taken to stop the advance of money laundering and terrorist financing by a burden of fraud occurring among the Social Darwinists now at the helm is almost nil. Former Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandles put it this way: "The greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well-meaning but without understanding. Our Government is the potent, the omnipresent teacher. 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