TREES AND TIGERS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY AUTUMNY KANSAN Student polls open tomorrow Vol. 89, No. 37 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, October 17, 1978 See story page three Staff photo by TRISH LEWIS Pumpkin pickina John Carlin, Democratic nominee for governor, took a look at the pumpskin for sale in front of Wesley Hall during his campus campaign yesterday. Cindy Brown, Houghton. Mich., senior, said the pumkins were being sold as a fund-raising project for the Intercollegiate Association of Women Students. Polish cardinal elected pope VATICAN CITY (AP)—Cardinal Karol Worcley of Poland was elected pope of the Roman Catholic Church yesterday in a bold bid with a 458-year tradition of Italian pontiffs and a strong case for relations between Rome and the Communal world. The little-known, 58-year-old archbishop of Krakow, whose election by the secret conclave of cardinals came as a complete surprise, took the name John Paul, the same as his immediate predecessor. "May Jesus Christ be praised," the new postflot told a tiring of 100,000 as he made his first public appearance on campus in 2014. "VIVA IL PAPA." "Long live the pope," the crowd roared into the moonlit night. He told them he had feared being called to the papacy but accepted it in the "spirit of obedience to Our Lord." Wotylya's selection of the papal name John Paul II apparently indicates he plans to follow in the stens of his thees Wolya's election came on the seventh or eighth ballot of the conclave of 111 cardinals, which began Saturday at the Vatican. immediate predecessors - John XXIII, Paul VI and John P, I was died 28 Sep. 128 after a reign of only 34 days. WHITE SMOKE, the traditional signal that a pope has been chosen, waited from the chapel church at 8:18 p.m. (12:18 p.m. CDT.) Tens of thousands rushed to St. Peter's Square as news of the election spread. Soon afterward, a senior cardinal deacon stepped onto the St. Peter's Basilica balcony and proclaimed in Latin: "Nuntio vobis gaudem magnum. Habenum papam?" "I announce to you a great joy. We have a none!" About an hour after the smoke appeared, Wolland, clad in his new papel boner, walked onto the balcony, waving and smiling. "I love you," he said. "NOW THE most revered cardinals have called a new bishop to Rome. They have called him from a distant country," he said, speaking good Italian with a slight accent. "I was afraid to receive this nomination but I did it in the spirit of obedience to our Lord and in the total confidence in you," he said. He is the first non-Italian pope since the Dutchman Adrian I, who reigned from 1522 to 1523. The son of a Polish unarmed commissioner army officer, Wolfram is secretly studied for the priesthood in Poland while he is a student at the University. AFTER THE war, he was active both in teaching ethics and philosophy and in parish work under difficult conditions created by the new communist government in Poland. A man with a quick smile and craggy features, he made his international mark during the sessions of the Second Vatican Council in the early 1960s, when he served as an expert on the commission studying martial problems. Promoters push for Cole sell-out By SAM VAN LEEUWEN Staff Reporter Marvin Webster is several hundred miles from his home in Los Angeles, working toward one goal: to make the Natalie Cole concert at KU a sell-out. Webster has been in the Kansas City-Lawrence area since Oct. 6 to promote the Oct. 28 concert for Lewis Grey Productions, a company running most of Cole's upcoming tour. The concert will be at 8 p.m., Oct. 28, in Allen Field House. "I'm what they call an advance promoter," Webster said yesterday. "I take the concert in certain cities and run the event, and take care of the technical aspects at the show." "THAT FIGURE is in the ballpark," Webster said, "but I don't want to say exactly how much we are spending to promote the show." To make certain that people know about Cole's performance, an estimated $25,000 is being spent on advertising, including ads on three Kansas City television stations. Webster said a 30 second ad that ran early Saturday morning during the Midnight service at the airport. cost $100. The concert is not being ad- versed during prime time because ads cannot be shown. Grey Productions, which handles only black talent, never has produced a major concert on a college campus. It has college concerts on college campuses, however. *'WE'RE ASKING people to do something out of the ordinary and that is to drive away someone.* One difference, however, is the availability of round-trip bus service from two locations in the Kansas City area to the concert here. Webster said that Cole's concert in Kansas City, Mo., last year was a sell-out and that he was expecting the Lawrence show to do the same. "Basically the same promotion is used for a concert at KU." Webster said. "We're trying to encourage younger people and people in general who don't want to drive to take a bus and come to the concert." "All shows we expect and hope will sell-out. Tickets for this show are selling fairly An SUA spokesman said that about 2,500 Although the majority of advertising for Cole's concert here is being handled by Grey productions, publicity, as well as being handled by Student Union Activities, tickets had been sold for the concert. Allen Field House has a capacity of 15,644. Chris Kahler, SUA adviser, said campus publicity and hospitality arrangements were beind handled by SUA because it was convenient. Khaler said SUA received a caver's check for the estimated cost of locally owned equipment. A local restaurant which might provide the food for Cole's entourage would bill Grey Productions, not SUA, Kahler said. The restaurant offers a deposit to make sure all the bills are paid. SUA IS SPONSORING the show in cooperation with Grey productions. The required deposit clause in SUA's context contains the promoters was added after TZ207. `MZZ` `ZZZ` `ZZZ` "We feel responsible to pay and we will pay if for some reason Lewis Lewis doesn't, Kirsten." KU is售价 $19,347.64 from Arthur R. Newberger of Amusement Conspiracy Inc. Fire leaves 2 students homeless Staff Reporter the promoter of that concert, for allegedly not paying expenses he had agreed upon. Tickets for the Cole concert cost $5.90 and $7.50 with a KU ID, $7.50 and $8.50 without an ID. Appearing with Cole will be Henderson and Asford and Simpson The rest of her clothes and her roommate's clothes are being examined and treated for smoke damage at a local dry cleaner after a fire caused extensive damage to their belongings last week in their Southside Plaza apartment. Kim Kennedy, Lawrence senior, is beginning her eight week of school at the University of Kansas with only a pair of overalls and a By LORILINENBERGER "I have a few things lent to me by my sister," she said, "but the rest is it the cleaner's. I want to think how much that alone is going to cost." fire that began in the furnace room of the apartment directly below them. The women's apartment was gutted early Sunday morning by a They were forced to move out of the apartment Sunday and have been since to organize what belongings they have left. KENNEDY SAID she and her roommate, Katherine rouse, Cedar Falls, Iowa, spent, allent of Sunday and yesterday sor- ly spent on a trip to the mountains. "The stere is beyond hope," Potter said. "It's totally destroyed. We're almost sure that all of our albums are ruined too, but we won't be really sure until we have something to play them on." The women currently are living in a room at the Best Western See FIRE hard note Students waiting for scholarships By PHILIP GARCIA Staff Reporter Students who have waited half the semester for their State of Kansas scholarships can expect to wait at least three weeks before the scholarships are available. In addition, there is a possibility that some of the 89 University of Kansas students who are eligible to receive the remaining awards might not receive one. The certified rosters show the number of awards that have not been accepted or picked up. The scholarships are then sent to the assistance section and awarded to other Gerald Bergen, student assistance officer for the Kansas Board of Regents, said yesterday. "We hope we have checks and verification weeks after certified rosters are completed." Bergen said that once the amount of money available for the scholarships was determined from the certified rosters, he would send students with the earliest date of application. "We just have fewer dollars than last year and those who were awarded scholarships are not." students who were eligible for a grant but have not received a scholarship. "There might be 750 to 1,000 scholars who are eligible but have not received funds," Bergen said. "I don't how much money we need to pay the students to 350 students may get money." There was $740,000 available for State of Kansas scholarships in 1978-79 compared to $580,000 available for State of Illinois. Financial aid officials said the decrease in money available for state scholarships was because of a lack of attrition from the past year to this year in the number of students accepting awards. This forced the amount to increase in order to avoid awarding too much money. STATE OF KANASAS scholarships are $500 for two semesters. The scholarship usually comes through the University of Kansas. See SCHOLARSHIPS back page Bureau noncommittal on Med Center study Staff Reporter By DAN WINTER An FBI official confirmed yesterday that the bureau has been studying deficiencies in the agency's staff. However, the FBI official, Jack Lawn, assistant special agent in charge of the Kansas City, Mo., office, declined to say whether one of the buildings was on the University of Kansas Medical Center campus. An FBI spokesman who refused to identify himself Sunda denied the FBI was involved in an investigation of Orr-Martel, the basic sciences building at the Med Center. Buchhe reeferred to a statement made Sunday by State Sen. Sean Games, D-Conn. Buchile said he would not have confirmed the investigation except that one of the people questioned by the FBI already had talked about it. The report of the investigation was in the Sunday Topeka capital Journal. James Buchelle, U.S. attorney for Kansas said he had been contacted by the FBI about the investigation and was asked whether he should be arrested for any indictments. Buchelle said he would Gaines said he had been contacted by an FBI agent and was asked about his knowledge of construction projects funded by the federal government. Lawn said, "I know our agent called Gaines but I don't think he asked questions specifically about the Med Center. He may have used that as an example." LAWN SAID. "We have received complaints from contractors pertaining to the letting of construction contracts for state buildings using federal funds." Lawn and Bachele said they would not discuss details of the matter because the judge was on the bench. GAINES WAS a member of a legislative committee that last summer gathered in formation on the problems at the Med Center building. Lawn said the FBI had investigated the 1923 architectural scandal that was the basis of a lawsuit against him. Norbert J. Sidorwicz was the only man convicted for conspiracy to bribe. He is serving a one-to-five year sentence in the Kansas Penitentiary in Lansing. The investigation led to the indictment of 16 persons for allegedly contributing money to the U.S. government. Gov. Robert Dinker in return for the architecural and construction contract for the bridge. Russell Miller, a Med Center vice chancellor, said he had not been notified by the bureau about the investigation. He said he has been asked about an investigation at the Med Center if it hurts him. Another member of the legislative committee, State Sen. Norman Gaar, R-Westwood, said the FBI had not contacted him about the investigation. Miller supervises the Med Center's building projects. Places to register are the First National Bank Tower, 910 Massachusetts St., from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; the Douglas Street Building, 910 Massachusetts St., Law Enforcement Center, 11th and Rhode Island streets, from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.; the Kansas Union Building, 8.30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Today is deadline to register to vote Today is the last day for Lawrence residents to register to vote in the November general election. Students are eligible to vote in Douglas County if they have lived here at least 20 days. Airborne ambulance Representatives of the Life Flight helicopter ambulance service. Staff Photo by ALAN ZLOTKY yesterday discussed with local officials the possibility of using the air ambulance service in Douglas County. See story page five.