University Daily Kansan, November 16, 1981 Page 3 132 cent on campus TODAY THE ART HISTORY SLIDE LECTURE will feature Innis Sheoarmer from the University of North Carolina speaking on "Marcantonio and the Italian Renaissance", at 3:30 p.m. in 211 Spencer Museum of Art. A PRE-LAW MEETING for students interested in attending law school will be held at 7 p.m. in 104 Green Hall. THE KU BRIDGE CLUB will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Trail Room in the Kansas Union. KJHK RADIO will hold a debate featuring the candidates for student body president at 7 p.m. in the Big Eight Room in the Union. THE COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Oread Room in the Union to discuss women's resource book for Lawrence. THE STUDENT SENATE ELECTIONS COMMITTEE will meet at 8:30 p.m. in the Walnut Room in the Union. TOMORROW ROBERT HOGG from the University of Iowa will speak on "Adaptive Robust Statistical Inference," at 4 p.m. in 4025 Wesco Hall. THE STUDENTS CONCERNEED WITH DISABILITYS will present a film, "A Different Approach," at 4 p.m. in 371 Wollah Hall. AUDITIONS FOR THE PI KAPKA LAMBDA CONCERTO CONCERT will be at 7 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST will meet at 7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room in the Union. THE TAU SIGMA STUDENT DANCE CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in 242 Robinson Center. SAVENOW Friendly Dependable service TUNE-UP SPECIAL We'll: - install new spark plugs - replace points and cond. (if appl.) - set engine to recommended manufacturer's specifications - adjust carburetor - install new fuel filter (Toyota & Mazda only—excludes Supra) - inspect operation of choke 6-cyl, models and rotary engines slightly higher.) All Japanese imports. for only present this coupon at time of Write-Up VISA' THE NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENTS ORGANIZATION will present a program on stress training p.m. in the Pine Room in the Office. THE STUDENTS' ANTINUCLEAR ALLIANCE will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the International Room in the Union. THE CAMPUS CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Parlors A and B in the Union. THE LINGLISTICS COLLOQUY will feature Mary Haas, University of California, Berkeley, professor emeritus of linguistics, speaking on "Sapir and His Times," at 7:30 p.m. in 2017 Blake Hall. THE NATIVE AMERICAN ARTISTIC TRADIATIONS PROGRAM will feature David Saile, associate professor of architecture and urban design, speaking on "Dwelling with the Pueblo Landscape," at 8 p.m. in the Main Gallery of the Museum of Anthropology in Snooner Hall. JOHN WILLIAMS, counterterror, will perform a recital of Baroque music at 8 p.m. at the First Presbyterian Church, 2415 W. 23rd St. THE INTERDENOMINATIONAL DEATH AND DYING SUPPORT GROUP will meet at 8:15 p.m. at the Lawrence Center, 1631 Crescent Road. Opinions conflict in schol halls' exemption Regents consider $25 hall application fee By JANICE GUNN Scholarship hall residents should be exempt from a proposed $25 application fee for all new students in the university hall system next fall, Roger Martin, All Scholarship Hall Council president, said yesterday. Staff Reporter The $25 fee will be used to process applications for all halls through a new computer system if the Board of Directorsaves the fee in their next two meetings. Because of conflicting opinions about exempting scholarship hall residents from the $25 fee, the Residential Programs Advisory Board, a committee that makes contract cost proposals to the Regents, appointed a panel of four of its seven members to discuss the fee Thursday. Members of the panel include Martin; Brenda Darrow, Association of University Residence Halls president; Fred McElhene, office of residential programs director; and Edwynna Gilbert, associate professor of English. other members of the RAPB include J. W. Wilson, housing director, Layne McGraw, and Kathy Brown Association presentative; and John Brenner, professor of journalism. Boyd's Coins-Antiques Class Ranges Blue - Navy - Gold Trade Gold - Silver - Coins Navy - Washers 21 New Hampshire TONIGHT! One Night Only!! Tickets still available Opens at 7.30 Show at 8:30 Where the stars are 7th & Mass. 842-6930 Lawrence Opera Tuesday is Preview Night at Gammons-no cover charge for the band. Thursday 50¢ Draws all night long 10¢ Draws 10-11pm Friday and Saturday Come alive at eleven! $1.25 drinks 50¢ draws 11pm-12am. Wednesday Ladies Night - the ladies get two free drinks after 9.00 pm. Poppin' Fresh Tuesday thru Saturday "If we charge a scholarship hall person $25, we're penalizing them," Martin said. "I don't think it's fair because the scholarship hall resident doesn't get his money's worth from the $25 fee." 2 for 1's 5-7pm all week 7-9pm Saturday THE NEW COMPUTER SYSTEM will do functions that presently are executed manually, such as placing smoking and non-smoking rooms together, matching students with their preferred hall and determining what information pamphlets should be sent to the student according to his application. Martin argued that scholarship hall residents did not use the computer for roommate assignments, saying that it was more effective from the individual scholarship hall. Moreover, students in the scholarship hall system would not benefit from the computer system as much as residence hall students, he said. She argued that all students who decided to move out of the residence hall system should be allowed the not only scholarship hall students. But Darrow said that a scholarship hall exemption from the fee was unfair. "I don't see her analogy between scholarship halls and fraternities—scholarship halls are under the same system as all University housing. She used an example of a male resident who is voted into a fraternity. This student would not know until after he filed an early residence hall contract, whether he would be voted into the fraternity, she said. the same way he has said to McElhenie said he had mixed feelings about exempting scholarship halls. "The idea of a scholarship hall is to save the student money," McEhlenie said. "It would keep scholarship halls a little less expensive than residence halls, but not a substantial amount less." "The student would be moving within the same system, not outside of it." She said that if the $25 was for processing the contract, then no students in any living situation should be granted an exemption. HOWEVER, MARTIN SAID that scholarship halls were within the University housing system, which includes scholarship and residence halls, Jayhawk Towers and Stouffor and the situation was not the same. "I see a lot of difference between someone pledging a fraternity and joining a scholarship hall as an excuse to leave a residence hall," Martin said. He encourages students who apply for scholarship halls to contract a residence hall room in case they are not accepted. "If it were voted to exempt scholarship hall students from all or some of the fee, it would allow people in scholarship halls to apply for a residence hall early with their selection of a hall," McElennie said. "If they are not accepted into a scholarship hall, they would still have housing." FRIDAY NOV. 20 FIND OUR KLZR REPRESENTATIVE IN A LAWRENCE NIGHTSPOT FRIDAY NIGHT. BE THE FIRST TO LOCATE OUR PERSON BETWEEN 9-10 PM AND SAY: "I LISTEN TO 106 KLZR" AND WE'LL GIVE YOU $1006!! THE KLZR REPRESENTATIVE WILL BE AT ONE OF THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONS. GAMMONS J WATSON'S ICHABOD'S MINGLES SGT. PRESTON'S LOUISE'S MR. BILL'S KANSAS STATE LAW REQUIRES THAT YOU BE A MEMB BONA FIDE GUEST TO ENTER A PRIVATE CLUB LISTEN FOR CLUES ON KLZR! Student Body Presidential Candidates DEBATE —David Adkins Perspective -Loren Busby Working Alternative Dave Phillips TONIGHT! Groucho Marx November 16,1981 7-8 p.m. Big Eight Room Kansas Union Broadcast Live on FM 91