Page 10 University Daily Kansan, November 20, 1981 miscellany Three members of the music faculty in the School of Fine Arts have been named winners of 1981-82 ASCAP awards for their written music by the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers. Recipients of the awards are James Barnes, assistant to the director and staff arranger in the KU department of bands; Charles Hoag, professor of music theory and composition and double bass; and John Podzro, professor and chairman of music theory and composition. The Kansas Defender project of the University of Kansas School of Law has been renamed in honor of project founder Paul Wilson, John H. and John M. Kane Distinguished Professor of Law. Wilson, who will retire Dec. 31, pioneered legal aid programs in prisons with the Kansas Defender project. James F. Budde, director of the KU Affiliated Facility at Lawrence and director of the KU Research and Education Independent Living, has been elected to be president of the American Association of University Affiliated Programs. University of Kansas music students won most of the top awards in the statewide Kansas Music Teachers In the piano division, first place was won by David Simmons, Skaiook, Okla., freshman. The alternate selected was Randy Bush, Paloa junior, and Adrienne Wiley, Tacoma, Wash., senior, won honorable mention. Association competition last Saturday at Pittsburg State University. Tom Bontrager, Manhattan junior, won first place in the brass division and Paul Garner, Scottsdale, Ariz. Garver, Williamson won first place in the woodward division Nancy Ives, Overland Park senior, was named first alternate in the strings division. Sharon Appelbaum, Prairie Village junior, was elected Campus Board Representative for the Society of Professional Journalists, Sigma Delta Chi, at the group's national convention in Washington, D.C., last week. This column appears every Friday. The Kansan encourages suggestions for items to be included. Anything involving individuals on campus is fair game for this feature. Contributions for military should be submitted to Kansan Newsroom 12 Flint hall, by noon Wednesday for publication Friday. --- Come Party with . . . KOKOMO Friday. November 20th Friday, November 20th orn 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. Members $1 Guests $2 530 Wisconsin Memberships Available Our first article appeared on the first Saturday of March, 1862, and with the exception of the following week there has been one in every Saturday paper. In the first one and in all the following ones, directly or indirectly, we have seen that God is not our teacher, but rather a junked discipline, and the results of "corrupting God's way in the earth" will mean in the end, (and the end might be near) the visitation of the wrath and curse of God upon us as individuals, our nation, and the world. Psalm 2:1 and Acts 4:25 'WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?' This was the cause of the destruction of the world in the days of Noah, who brought the visitation of the wrath and curse of God upon the Jewish people down from the high mountains to the earth. This caused the earth of great cities and nations and kingdoms of antiquity, and the cause of all the troubles, disasters, etc. of mankind including the calamities we now know. We have also in these articles continually talked about the fact that God sent His Son to the earth to keep His Commandments perfectly, and that He wanted them to be perfect. We know that Jesus Christ was a believer and believes on Jesus Christ, and will write His Commandments in their hearts, or in other words fix them up where they will want to "obey God, and believe." On a number of occasions letters have come asking the objective of this column, which probably is another way of asking, "What are you talking about?" FOR THE WAGES OF SIN IS DEATH; BUT THE GOD OF GIFS IS ETERNAL LIFE THROUGH JESUS CHRIST OUR LORD!" - Romans 8:23. RUSSELL'S EAST P. O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031 invites you to enjoy Sunday Dinner prepared especially for you!! the Russell way by Kent Russell!! Your choice of two dinners ALL YOU CAN EAT for $6.50 Choose from: Salad Bar Pan Fried Chicken Whipped Potatoes Pan Gravy Home Made Biscuits Whipped Butter Salad Bar BBQ Beef Ribs Oven Baked Beans Corn on the Cob Homemade Biscuits and Muffins and honey Corn on the Cob Parties of 4 or more served family style if you choose 3400 w 6th 841-3530 RUSSELL'S EAST Come and enjoy our delicious specials! Sunday Only! Gafotoria & Restaurant WANTS YOU! Any Sandwich $1.49 Giant Chef Salad $1.49 Breads and Pastries made fresh daily! But the Valliantis, in a burst of caner, admit that "among blacks, women, others denied equal access to jobs, the predictive value of childhood industriousness would be less powerful." In this brief addendum the Valliantis acknowledge that the foremost factor in the creation of millions of potentially productive yet unemployed personnel is the quality of their education system. This study — a sophisticated exercise in charlatanity — is just one more ostensibly precious gem in the already presumably initaly psychiatric crown. Dr. and Mrs. Valliant feel that chronic unemployment "offens more to do with chronic depression and emotional instability than with prior training and ability." Are we to conclude from this tommytmt that those individuals reaping a financial harvest in such fields as pornography and the sale of sexual favors i.e., the massage parlor set's expression of "free enterprise," are doing so because of their innate cheeriness and emotional ambiguity? Open Daily: William Dann 2702 W. 24th St. Ter ANOTHER GEM IN THE PSYCHIATRIC CROWN 11 a.m.-2 p.m. 5 p.m.-8 p.m. "The willingness and capacity to work during childhood is the most important "tornerunner" more than native intelligence, social class or family structure—of mental health in adulthood, according to the results of a newly published study." So began a recent effort of the New York Times News Service describing a study recently published in the American Journal of Psychiatry. "A related conclusion and the capacity to work are the core skills that are essential for successful employment" is closely related to both mental health and the capacity to love. When it described 'the capacity for adult work' as being 'closely related to both mental health and the capacity to love' what's new about this? The biggest single factor in our society's decline, which manifests itself in more crime, violence, single-parental families, child abuse, alcoholism, drug addiction, at, is forced unemployment, is it really surprising that the unemployed, objects of societal scorn, undergo greater mental distress with its concomitant, a diminished capacity to love. Dr. and Mrs. George E. Vallaint of the Harvard Medical School, the authors of this study, "see far landing implications in these findings." Sociology should pause before it seeks the sale etiology of poverty and unemployment in external factors . . . the sources of job failure do not always rest on ignorance, dropping out of school, the absence of faculty knowledge of the job market. Being chronically unemployed has more to do with chronic depression and emotional irritability than with "or training and ability." Valliant said in an interview that it was likely that among blacks, women, and children denied access to jobs, the predictive value of childindustriousness would be "Nearily 1,000 eleven to sixteen-year-olds from blue collar families, mostly the sons of foreign-born laborers with little education took part in the study" which later focused on the 456 members of this group who had, up to that time in their lives, "never been arrested." While virtually everyone concedes that 'the willingness and capacity to work (preferably) during childhood' is a necessary step in emotional development and maturity, this study reaches conclusions which are either obvious or, due to its self-imposed limitations, beyond its ken. It is obvious that one's attitude toward work, i.e., willingness to apply self-discipline, to sacrifice, or of far greater importance than one's native intelligence because the values held and resultant choices made by each person are what makes that individual's essence. However this study, which focused on the self-imposed skills and abilities required for success in 'the blue collar', ... foreign-born laborers with little education, was not qualified to reach conclusions about 'social class' or 'family structure' because of the homogeneity of those being studied. Sussexshire Hampshire Shropshire County Lancashire, Kentland Kent (83) 750-1100 !!ONE BUCK WEEKEND!! Bottles Only one buck cover 8-9!! And only one buck pitchers & drinks 8-9!! SATURDAY Rock with Three Group Rock Showcase 3-BOCO Party with JASPER December Shows 4—KU Jazz Ensembles 5-CARIBE 9, 10 & 11—FOOLS FACE 12—BLUE RIDDIM BAND 19—Brian Bowers Christmas Show FREE Every Sunday & Wednesday in the 7th Spirit Club A film by Claude Goretta director of THE LACEMAKER The Last Years of Rousseau $1.50 2:00 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium Improve Your Grades with SCHAUM'S OUTLINE SERIES ACCOUNTING, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS Each outline includes basic theory definitions and hundreds of carefully solved problems and supplementary problems with answers Accounting I, 2nd Ed $5.95 Accounting II, 2nd Ed $5.95 Writing $3.95 Bookkeeping & Accounting $5.95 Introduction to Business $4.95 Business Statistics $5.95 Business Law $5.95 Cost Accounting $5.95 Development Economics $5.95 Moderate Accounting I $5.95 International Economics $5.95 Macroeconomics Theory $5.95 Maths $4.95 Mathematics for Economists $7.95 Mathematics of Finance $7.95 Microeconomic Theory $3.95 Consumer Economics $3.95 Principles of Economics $5.95 Quantitative Methods in Management $5.95 BIOLOGY BIOLOGY $6.95 CHEMISTRY College Chemistry 6th Ed. $8.95 Organic Chemistry $8.95 Physical Chemistry $8.95 COMPUTERS Boolean Algebra $'95 Computer Science $'95 Data Processing $'95 Digital Principles $'95 Mathematics $'95 Programming with Basic $'95 Programming with C++ or Python $'95 EDUCATION, PSYCHOLOGY & SOCIALOLOGY Child Psychology $5.95 Psychology of Learning $5.95 Psychology of Learning $6.95 Introduction to Sociology $6.95 ELECTRONICS & ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Basic Mathematics for Electricity and Electronics Circuits $|$ 54.95 Electromatics $|$ 56.95 Electromagnetics $|$ 56.95 Electronic Circuits $|$ 55.95 Electronic Communication $|$ 55.95 Feedback and Control Systems $|$ 79.95 Laptop Transmissions $|$ 79.95 Transmission Line $|$ 79.95 ENGINEERING Acoustics $\\$ 5.95 Advanced Structural Analysis $\\$ 5.95 Equations of Engineering $\\$ 5.95 Continuum Mechanics $\\$ 4.99 Describes Geometry $\\$ 4.99 Descriptive Geometric Calculations $\\$ 4.99 FOREIGN LANGUAGES Engineering Mechanics. 3rd Ed $7.95 Fluid Dynamics $7.95 Fluid Mechanics & Hydraulics $6.95 Heat Transfers $7.95 Grangetive Dynamics $7.95 Machine Design $7.95 Mechanical Vibrations $6.95 Reinforcement Curve Design $6.95 Space & Linear Systems $7.95 Strength of Materials, 2nd Ed $7.95 Structural Analysis $7.95 Theoretical Mechanics $7.95 Mechanics $7.95 ENGLISH MATHEMATICS & STATISTICS FOREIGN LANGUAGE French Grammar, 2nd Ed. $4.95 German Grammar $4.95 Spanish Grammar, 2nd Ed. $4.95 ENGLISH English Grammar $4.95 Punctuation, Capitalization, & Spelling $4.95 PHYSICS & PHYSICAL SCIENCE Advanced Calculus 5.99 Advanced Mathematics 5.99 Linear Algebra 5.99 Basic Mathematics 5.99 Calculus, 2nd Ed 5.99 College Algebra 5.99 Complex Variables 5.99 Differential Equations 5.99 Geometric Algorithms 5.99 Elementary Algebra 5.99 Review of Elementary Mathematics 5.99 Linear Differences & Difference Equations 5.99 Finite Maths 5.99 First Year College Mathematics 5.99 General Topology 5.99 Group Theory 5.99 Linear Algebra 5.99 Handbook Geometry 5.99 Matrices 5.99 Modern Elementary Algebra 5.99 Modern Introduction Differential Equations 5.99 Plane Geometry 5.99 Probability v 5.99 Probability & Statistics 5.99 Projective Geometry 5.99 Real Variables 5.99 Set Theorema & Related Topics 5.99 Statistics 5.99 Technical Mathematics 5.99 Trigonometry 5.99 Vector Analysis 5.99 Weekdays 8:30-5 Applied Physics 55.95 College Physics 7th Ed 55.95 Bach Science 56.04 Modern Physics 56.95 Optics 17.95 Physical Science 56.95 Saturdays 10-4 Kansas Union Bldg.