6 Monday, October 23, 1989 / University Daily Kansan Need Money? We've Got The Solution! Telemarketing ENTERTEL INC The Lawrence facility is expanding their staff. 25 positions available. Full-time and part-time schedules. We offer good sales experience, paid training, and advancement opportunities. Guaranteed base wage plus bonuses and incentives. Most employees average $6-8 per hour. Benefits package for full-time employees. Call Darryl at 841-1200 to set up an interview. E.O.E Call Darryl at 841-1200 to set up an interview. E.O.E. UNITED ARTISTS Reg. class +1.50 Women's/Men's/Mature +1.60 Student with power+1.50 GRANADA 1020 Mass 843-5788 FABULOUS BAKER BOYS (R) EVN 7115 923 SAT JUN 10T 8:45 AM 7115 924 TOLEDO TOLEDO SEA OF LOVE (R) BAY, FL PUNCH, FL 32101-1580 842-8400 FATMAN & LITTLE BOY (mg) EVE 500 739 1840 EVE 600 739 1840 HALLOWEEN V (mg) EVE 500 739 1840 EVE 600 739 1840 PHANTOM OF MALL (R) EVE 500 739 1840 EVE 600 739 1840 NEXT OF KIN (R) EVE 500 739 1840 EVE 600 739 1840 LOOK WHO'S TALKING (ml) 13 CINEMA TWIN ALL SEATS $1.00 VAIL INN 932-558-9460 All Seats BATMAN (pg1) EVE 7:10 9:30 $1.00 BATMAN (pg2) EVE 7:10 9:35 FIELD OF DREAMS (pg1) EVE 7:10 9:35 Anything! EVE 7:10 9:35 m5 co Traffler & Fresh roasted nuts Mon.- Fri. 10-8, Sat. 10-6, Sun. Noon-5 15th & Kasdall • 749-4848 Dickinson PRIME TIMER SHOW #SR CU ANTIVI MOVIE LINE 841-5191 Dickinson **PARKS AND SPIRITS** PARENTHOOD (PG13) * #2.10, *4.40, 7.15, 9.40 IN COUNTRY (R) * #2.00, *4.30, 7.00, 9.35 DEAD POETS SOCIETY (PG) * #2.05, *4.35, 7.05, 9.30 INNOCENT MAN (R) * #2.06, *4.35, 7.05, 9.35 BLACK MAN (R) * #2.04, *4.45, 7.10, 9.25 (NOTWO FOR ONE PASSES) TURNER AND HOCHOOG (PG) * #2.20, *4.50, 7.25, 9.25 (no student discounts) Showtimes marked with # are good only on Set & Sun. Mr. Steak 920 W.23 841-3454 Open 11-9 Sun-Thur 11-10 Fri, Sat Free Steak Dinner on FOR GREAT HAIR! Your B-day! You must be 16 years or older and come in after 4 pm on your birthday. 2.99 Lunch Special Mon-Sat 11-4 for a limited time only for a limited time only 611 W.9th 843-2138 FREE SCHOLARSHIP INFORMATION FOR STUDENTS WHO NEED MONEY FOR COLLEGE Every Student is Eligible for Some Type of Financial Aid Regardless of Grades or Parental Income. * We have a data bank of over 200,000 listings of scholarships, fellowships, grants, and loans, representing over $10 billion in private sector funding. * Many scholarships are given to students based on their academic interests, career plans, family heritage and place of residence. * There’s money available for students who have been newspaper carriers, claimer teachers, non-smokers . . . etc. * Results GUARANTEED. CALL ANYTIME (800) 346-6410 For A Free Brochure ONE HOUR MOTOPHOTO Photo Processing At Its Best Free Halloween Pictures Come see us anytime between now and Halloween and have your picture taken free. Goblins of all ages welcome, with or without your costume. --approval was required for a purchase. (35mm, 110, 126, Disc, C-41) Monday thru Friday 9:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. Saturday 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. 40% OFF-PROCESSING 2340 South Iowa Not Valid with any other Promotion IN YOUR SHOTS 842-8564 UDK108 He said the faculty's other allegations were incidental. Frederickson Continued from p. 1 "They threw in all sorts of stuff about secrecy and the absence of shared governance, low morale, and they sort of gathered up every other kind of incidental grievance anybody ever had," he said. Dan Grimm, former chairman of the state House Ways and Means Committee and now the state treasurer, said Frederickson made decisions about financing and increasing enrollment without notifying the Legislature. Eastern Washington faculty members and a former state legislator also criticized Frederickson's relations with the Washington Legislature. "It represented a certain cavalier attitude regarding the responsibilities to the rest of the state," Grimm said in a telephone interview. "I guess you can have that attitude, but it doesn't sell well." Frederickson denied that. "He knew what we were doing all along," he said. "We didn't send him a memo, but no university does that with a legislator." Swan said Frederickson's poor relations with the Legislature caused Eastern Washington to lose money to other institutions. "Many of us felt the Legislature was basically penalizing Eastern for things he had done," Swan said in a telephone interview. "The fuss over athletics on campus caught Mr. Grimm's attention and that probably cost us a little money in the budget," Frederickson said. Frederickson conceded that. The most visible controversy involved Frederickson's method of purchasing a building for Eastern Washington. Frederickson signed a lease-purchase agreement for a $3 million building in downtown Spokane, about 20 miles from the Eastern Washington campus, Grimm said. As president, Frederickson had the authority to lease buildings, but legislative "Legally, he purchased that building, and that's where he broke the law," Grimm said. No charges were filed. Frederickson said he acted properly. "It was not an illegal act," he said. "What it was was creative." The lease-purchase agreement saved Eastern Washington money by consolidating leases on several other buildings, he said. The Legislature appropriated money to purchase the building the next year, Frederickson said. "Instead of throwing money away, this way, at least at the end of it, we owned the building," Frederickson said. "It was enormously clever. Everybody sees it now as enormously clever." Frederickson said his problems with the Washington Legislature stemmed from a personality clash with Grimm. him," Frederickson said. "It has nothing to do with George Frederickson. I worked for a board of trustees. I don't think I ever did anything that wasn't exactly what the trustees wanted done. I would have been fired. "It's just much more fun for Dan to have a devil he can point to and say the devil did it." Grimm conceded that Frederickson did not act alone. "Dan does not like me, nor do I like "It was not George Frederickson off on his mission to do something," Grimm said. "He had the approval of the Board of Trustees in everything but this." George Frederickson was the problem or an instrument of the problem. By Dave Wakefield Kansan staff writer "I think George Frederickson did what he was hired to do. In fact, he was a general in the war, not a president. He may have been the first governor of Texas, how we can do it," but the battles he was fighting were given by the Board of Trustees and the community. It was a problem with the system." River City meets Rosenstadt this week as delegates arrive tonight to formalize a sister-city relationship with Lawrence. Delegates from Eutin, West Germany (pronounced oy-teeh) will participate in a week of activities that will culminate with the signing of the sister-city agreement 9 a.m. Friday in Nashville, Sixth and Massachusetts streets. Exchange with Eutin formalized 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 Lawrence Mayor Bob Schumm said the City Commission would proclaim this week "Eutin—Lawrence Week." Eutin, which is known as Rosenstetr or the City of Roses, is located east of Hamburg, between Lubeck and Kiel in northern West Germany. Besides getting acquainted with Lawrence, delegates from the City of Roses will have two days of meetings to iron out details of the sister-city agreement agreements for exchange programs that would include high schools, libraries, arts and cultural areas such as handicrafts. Eutin, Lawrence's new sister city. is located north of Hamburg between Lubeck and Kiel Kevin Master/KANSAN Groups of workers from the fire department and police departments also are interested in exchanging visits, said William Keel, professor of German and a member of the Friends of Eutin committee that arranged the visit. The department of German has conducted its summer study program in Eutin for the last 25 years, Keel said. Residence hall security efficient at University By Bryan Swan Kansan staff writer Jeanne Clery was beaten, sexually assaulted and strangled in a dormitory at Lehigh University in Bethelem, Pa., in April, 1986. Her death demonstrated to University of Kansas housing officials the importance of strict residence hall security. Clery's murder sent a message the officials still have not forgotten. One seemingly harmless exception to a court-hall security rule can be deadly. The dormitory Clery lived in was equipped with automatic locks, but someone had propped one of the doors open, allowing Joseph Henry to enter the building and kill Clery. Jean Morrow, assistant director of residence life, said the case was used as an example in the training of the security hall directors and security monitors. She said that last spring Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, had asked for a report on campus security programs and her security programs had rated well. "There were no demands, no pressure for change," Morrow said. "The Clery case brought a lot of focus to campus security across the nation." She said all residence halls were required to follow the security-related specifications in the residence hall contract and that all the halls must be secured between midnight and 5 a.m. However, Morrow said that each hall's security program had permission to set different hours within the contract's constraints. Jim Wilkins, residence hall director at Templin Hall, came to the University from the University of Wisconsin at Oshkosh, where he said security was more lenient. "At Wisconsin we had what we called night hosts, which were a lot like the front desk staff we have here at Templin," he said. "We never had security patrolling. Security officers patrolling the halls, though. Security here is much more efficient." Wilkins said that the review of the Clery case was part of staff training, but that the key to a successful program was an experienced staff. "Most of the people here have worked at Templin for two years," he said. "They're very determined and motivated, and I think just their presence deters crime." Find out about New Age Religion, Channeling, Astrology & More from a former spiritual medium. TONIGHT! Big Eight Room, Kansas Union, 7.p.m. with Ben Alexander CHALLENGE of The OCCULT Kansas Union, p.m. A d m i s s i o n i s F R E E Halloween costumes and accessories for adults Open 11-8:30 Mon-Fri 10-8:30 Sat 12-5:00 Sun 732 Mass. 843-0611 Looking for Ways to Fund Your Education? TRY THE SCHOLARSHIP SEARCH! The Office of Student Financial Aid is pleased to announce that the University of Kansas Scholarship Search Program, funded with a grant from the KU Student Senate, is NOW OPEN to KU students. This program provides an automated search of over 24,000 sources which include names and addresses, advice and a sample letter of application. Many KU scholarships that have specific restrictions are included in THE SCHOLARSHIP SEARCH program. An application fee of $12.00 has been set to cover the cost of hardware, materials and future software rental. There are no guarantees--only sources and guidelines are provided that could lead to success in your search for scholarship dollars. Scholarship Search information is available between 8:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, in Room 26, Strong Hall. Ad paid for by Student Senate. $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$