SURPRISE!
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Kansas harvest
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, July 1, 1975
See page 4
No. 154
Regents finish budget review
TOPEKA—The Kansas Board of Regents finished its review yesterday of the budgets of the state's colleges and universities for fiscal year 1977.
The Regents apparently made their final decisions on most items in the budgets during six tours of closed meetings. A meeting was held with the Regents taking action in closed session.
Max Bickford, executive officer of the Regents, said that all he could say about the budgets that some items had been approved was "too much." The pretty and some, had been cut, aptly.
Bickford said the Regents' staff would have to make computations to arrive at the final dollar amounts for the items that had been purchased finally. He said that would take a few days.
Announcement of decisions on items that were approved in full and items that were cut entirely will wait until the computations were approved items are worked out. Bickford said.
When asked how he could reconcile the Kansas Open Meetings Law with the Regents' making decisions during closed session, Bickford said, "All I can say is they made the motion (during open session) to override decisions they had made before that time."
With that statement, Bickford was saying the Regents took no binding action in the closed session. The formal motion, and thus the binding action, to approve decisions reached in closed session was made during open session.
DANNY HUNTER
The Open Meetings Law states, in part, "... it is declared to be the policy of this state that meetings for the conduct of governmental affairs and the transaction of governmental business be open to the public ... so that information or executive meetings provided . . . that they shall not be used as a subterfuge to defeat the purposes of this act."
NEW YORK (AP)—An Eastern Airlines pilot acknowledged a warning of dangerous turbulence minutes before his jetliner crashed on its final approach to Kennedy airport with a loss of 112 lives, according to tapes made public yesterday.
Tapes reveal pilot of ietliner warned
The crash of Eastern's Flight 66 June 24 in a thunderstorm excited the highest death toll of any single plane disaster in U.S. aviation history. The tapes of the pilot's radio contact with the ground gave no clue as to the cause.
Photo by JACK McNEELY
Saturday's a workday
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes walks Saturday from the Kansas Union, where he has just finished speaking to a freshman orientation session, to Strong Hall, where a pile of paperwork awaits him. Dykes became the 13th chancellor of the University of Kansas two years ago today.
Big gifts buy best seats
By STEVE McMURRY
The best football season seats in Memorial Stadium will go to season ticket holders who contribute to an athletic scholarship fund, John Novotny, director of the Williams Educational Fund, said yesterday.
A letter sent to several football ticket holders last week said that if they didn't contribute to the Williams Educational Foundation, their seats would be relocated, Novtay said.
The Victory Club is a select group of people who contribute a minimum of $500 to get good seats and a parking space at the stadium.
Many people affected by the change in polio have been season ticket holders for a decade.
Dr. Edward Jones, Harrisonville, Mo., said he had purchased season tickets for 17 years without ever belonging to the Victory Team, even when a contributor to other scholarship funds.
"The letter simply said if I didn't want to join the Victory Club and pay the $900 they'd cost," she wrote.
Cyclie Walker, athletic director, said he thought people holding seats in certain places should be contributors to the scholarship fund.
"Since these people have the best seats in the stadium they should contribute to the funds that we set up, but we're not taking advantage of that," Walker said, and we don't intend to." Walker said
Novotny said that the KUAC tried to satisfy all the requests as fairly as possible, but that people who contribute regularly will now get priority seats.
Some members of the KUAC board aren't in total agreement with the new policy.
"We have to run this thing like a business," Novotny said, "We have to give a little more attention to our big contributors."
Ed Kelfs, student body president, said the students shouldn't be forced to pay year after year.
"When we're talking about this kind of
what he wants, he most gets
what he wants. Woody said.
“It’s unfortunate that this type of requirement is placed on friends and alumni of the university,” he said. “These people have patronized KU and the athletic department for many years, and you just can't move in and tell them they're out.”
Patrons disfavor Hawklet closing
By ALISON GWINN
Virginia Sell Reporter
A reevaluation of the closing of the Hawklet in Summerfield Hall will be discussed by a committee of students and administrators as soon as possible. Ed Rolfs, student body president, said yesterday.
The letter, which was addressed to
Mary, came from a mailbox
(lo) called the Hawklet a valuable
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
said the committee would examine
workable alternatives to the Hawket's
closing, but he didn't want to speculate on
the possibility of the concessions area
remaining open.
Westerday Shankel was presented with 183 copies of a letter, each copy signed by a different person, that supported the continuation of present services in the Hawklet. The letter was sponsored by the Uni- Business Council and StudEx, Rofs said.
The petition and letters were available yesterday at a table set up in the Hawklet.
"We didn't really solicit outside of the patronage area," Rolfs said. "We didn't go up to the student union and drag people off the street to stetch." In other words, the people who use the area are the ones who participated and signed the petition."
multi-use facility, used as a study hall, food-
serving service and user area.
The letter said plans to change the Hawklet would reduce the utility and flexibility of the area, which accommodates the needs of students to eat on campus and save time and fuel.
"Anytime that you can get 183 signatures inside of five hours, that's a voice and a force that needs to be listened to by the administration," Holfs said.
Students and faculty members in general dislike the closure of the Hawkeye
Adequate research of the possibility of building a new science building has not been done, he said.
"We really need the Hawklet. There's nowhere to go in this building," Linda Parsons, Kingman senior, said. "I haven't upset who, or who wasn't very upset about it," she said.
Ed Eower, Lenexa graduate student, said, "This is my home. I've always said I want to go up above the second floor. I'll go up to the reading room and bring books down here. I always feel like I'm jammed into a closet in the reading room. It's more open down
Monica Barash, Leawood junior, said, "Everybody I know is dead set against it, but that may be because everyone I know is in a Murphy or has classes in Murphy or, Haworth.
"It isn't that Wescos's that far away, but Wescos' up the hill. Summerfield's in a
Dykes enters third year of solid leadership
By JACK MCEELY
Kansan Staff Reporter
By JACK McNEELY
When a reluctant Kansas sun rolled laboriously out of bed this morning to have another go at burning away a muggy Mid-America backpack, I saw some satisfaction the sprigly step of a short, mostly bald man wearing spectacles as he made his way from a beautiful white house fronted by warm trees to an ugly backpack ending fronted by a frozen oosteridly.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes had reason to sprinker his praise as he walked toward the Strongs.
central location. If the Hawklet wasn't here, I'd probably use the reading room, but I didn't.
Dykes had his first press conference during his second visit to campus-at a meeting in the Kansas University under tight security, because of fears of a demon- boy by students who were unhappy with Student Senate allocations from activity fees.
When Dykes became chancellor of the University of Kansas two years ago today, he was the fourth man in five years to have the job. The University was reeling from approximately equal portions of student funding and riot and reduced legislative funding.
Several people interviewed said that if increased library space meant closing the Hawklet, they were in favor of the administration's decision.
Students interviewed generally said they'd use the reading room for studying and reading computer print-outs, but not using it for taking or for discussing group projects.
Few people were making book that this Tennessee with the flashy smile and eager handshake would survive the slings and arrows of an outrageously demanding job.
But survive he has. And, in the many students, teachers and administrators, he has done more than survive. He has turned this University around.
Dykes has, to use his own phrase,
"increased support" for the University. That
It has slacked off a bit during the past year, but trips throughout the state still consume enough of Dykes' time during the summer in his office on Saturdays and Sundays.
PROFILE
"For those of us in the business school, the reading room is the only place to study." Rob Fletcher, Cameron, Mo., graduate student, said.
"As much as I hate to see the Hawklet close, I would prefer seeing it closed to me," he said.
"I'll just have to budget my time better,
get up earlier to make a sandwich."
Typically, Dykes praises the efforts of her own role in building support for KU.
"increased support" also refers to less tangible things than money. It covers the attitudes of legislators, Regents and KU graduates in education in general and KU in particular.
been most beneficial to the improvement of public support," Dykes said Saturday.
"We've had exceptionally good student leadership in the University, and that has
Dykes' blitz of public relations earned
But Dykes doesn't mention his own whirlwind campaign of jaunts through the state to improve KU's image. That camp was a "say no" camp for Dykes' time during his first year here.
means more, than just "gotten more money."
He also praised the efforts of faculty members who have taken educational and service programs to the people of the state, while at the same time subsidy lobbying for
Another group drawing Dykes' praise is the Chancellor's Associates, a group of prominent Kansans formed by Dykes shortly after he became chancellor to give him a feel for what people in the state think they have originally had 36 members. Now it has 50.
"It has been a very helpful organization," Dykes said. "The interaction we have had with that group of people has made this a better university."
him the suspicion of newsmen early in his chancellorship. When a guy is always happy to see newsmen and never has anything nasty to say about anybody, skeptical reporters naturally wonder what he's biding.
Dykes said that if the coming legislative session granted KU's request for a third consecutive increase of 10 per cent in teacher numbers, they would be in the middle rank of the 23 schools.
But Dykes is completely frank about his goal, which is to keep KU one of the best universities in the country, and is always happy to tell reporters that to achieve that end, the University needs "increased support."
When Dykes came, funding for KU's faculty salaries ranked 23rd of 23 schools in the American Association of Universities, and it ranked fifth in the top 15 in major educational areas.
Dykes has gotten lots of money for KU
career stature, and he is properly
grateful for it.
Dykes noted that Kansas was one of only eight states that gave enough money to higher education in fiscal 1976 to keep abreast of inflation.
In addition, KU has under way the largest capital expansion in its history. About 75 million worth of construction is in progress, including buildings for the KU Medical Center, the law school and the department of visual arts.
When asked about his plans for the future, Dykes emphasized continuing education, which has become one of his recurrent themes.
The idea of college as a place to go for the early high school is an idea the past. Dykes
"the circumstances of our society today will require lifelong education," he said.
Dykes reiterated his stand on the balance between the university's three functions—study, research and teaching.
"Clearly there must be present within the institution a strong commitment to teaching," be said. "The quality of teaching is at the very heart of this institution. I believe that progress has been made in that area."
But, Dykes said, the highest quality of undergraduate teaching is achieved only in a university that has extensive research and public service programs.
USD teachers get 12% raise in new budget
A 12.33 per cent increase in salaries of teachers in Lawrence Unified School District 497 highlighted the 1975-76 budget for the school district at the school board meeting last night.
The budget, presented by Kenneth E. Fisher, ast. superintendent for business and facilities, would also provide a 12 per year grant to all of the offices of administrators and classified employees.
Fisher said the budget called for a staff increase for the coming academic year of four full-time positions and one part-time position. He added that the system's scealal education department.
In addition to the salary increases, substantial increases would be made in many of the line items of the general fund, supplies and books, substitute teachers, supplies and books.
Fisher said that if the assessed valuation for the school district increases by an estimated $4.1 million, the total mill levy for the school's budget will increase by less than $200,000. The valuation increases more than $4.1 million, there might be no increase in taxes.
"Over the state, the levies will increase by two mills, or a little more, on the average," Fisher said. "Lawrence will be at the median or a little lower."
The publication of the budget will be July
18th, the budget hearing and final adoption
will be August 23rd.
In other business, the school board approved the hiring of 11 teachers for the 75-76
The board also directed Fisher to study the advantages of building a new steel building compared to renting and renovating a vacant business building for needed facilities for the school's vocational extension program.
Cyclist crosses country to promote zero auto growth
By IAN KENNETH LOUDEN
Ed Arszman is protesting cars.
Arszman, who was sporting a bright red sunburn, baggy blue jeans, a weathered hat and a T-shirt that read "I believe in Zero Auto Growth," said yesterday that the belief that the automobile job market is necessary to the American job market.
Instead of carrying a picket sign or sitting on a General Motors assembly line to stop production, he is riding a bicycle from Detroit to protest what he calls the "roadblock."
"Cars pollute the air massively, slaughter thousands of our citizens annually and mangle the heart out of our cities and towns," he said. "Yet every protest of the automobile meets one standard line of defense: 'What about jobs?'
In truth, Arzman said, the national reliance on cars has put many people out of work and out of business. For example, he said, "They have jobs because they don't have cars."
As a result of this revelation, Arsman said, he sold his car, bought a bicycle and became a member of the Committee for Zero Automobile Growth.
Arsman said that when he worked as an employment interviewer for an urban job corps in Indianapolis in 1972 he realized that he had to find a real-time trouble finding jobs didn't have cars.
"Having a car determined whether they had a job," he said. "Without a car they didn't get a job. Without a job they couldn't afford a car."
sponsored several anti-car rallies. It is mainly concerned with informing people of the alternative to cars, such as mass transit systems and bicycles.
The group, which has its headquarters in Indianaapolis, has about 206 members. It is a nonprofit organization.
Arszman said the organization tried to convince people that the bicycle was a better option.
"One of the biggest problems that we face is that bicycles are still considered toys instead of vehicles," he said. "Roads and bridges are hard to get into. People should take bicycles seriously."
He said that a fear ofairs also caused many people to shy away from bicycles.
"If a person is riding a bicycle that collides with a car, it doesn't matter whether he was in the right," he said. "The person riding the bicycle is still going to have greater injuries than the person in the car."
Next to cars, Arzman said, the beetles' greatest enemies are bicycles there.
Arzman said he flew to Oakland from Indianapolis in May. He left Oakland June 1 and plans to reach Boston by the end of August. His bicycle is a Columbia.
"Columbia is the oldest American bicycle," he said. "In 1884 Tom Stevens rode a Columbia bicycle from Oakland to Boston, where it was born. That is where I got the idea for the protest."
Arzman said that he had been staying at motels or youth hostels during his trip and that sometimes he camped out. He encountered bad weather only once, in
"I don't have a raincoat or a tent," he said. "When it rained in Colorado, I just got wet."
Otherwise, he said, he hadn't had any problems.
Although the dress is mainly a protest, Azizman said he is enjoying it. He said he must keep his hands away from the crowd.
"Bicycling, however, gives you a freedom of movement. It relieves tension instead of causing it to build up. Most people don't try it so they never notice the difference between the confined space in a car and the freedom on a bicycle."
"You experience movement when you ride a bicycle," he said. "People who drive cars become caught in traffic jams and always have to be wary of rules and other drivers. It can be a terribly frustrating experience.
Arazian stressed that he was doing more than just protesting. The Committee for Justice had said.
alternatives to using cars, he said. They include:
-That all Highway Trust Fund money be available to construction of bikeway or road construction.
That Congress levy a horsepower tax on all new cars, the proceeds of which could be used to develop energy efficient means of transportation.
—That the federal government take over ownership of the track beds of the railways
Wait, in the image, it looks like "the federal government" on the left.
In Markdown, it's "the federal government" on the left.
So the same thing? No, they are different.
—That bike lanes and sidewalks be put on the street and highway in the United States.
"We aren't saying that cars should be abolished," Azmanm said. "We just want as many different forms of transportation to be available to neocle as possible.
"It's all in the name, you know—Zero Automobile Growth."
Tuesday, July 1, 1975
University Daily Kansan
NEWS DIGEST THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
New plan boosts solar power
WASHINGTON - The administration unveiled a long-term energy development plan yesterday when it promised to lift lights for nuclear power and elevate potential sources of energy.
The report, from the Energy Research and Development Administration, called for pursuing a number of possible energy sources rather than devoting all effort to producing them.
$^{a0}$ The energy administration's report, while stressing conservation at all times, predicted energy requirements through 1985 would be met through new sources of electricity.
$^{a1}$ In a separate study, the government suggested that 2004-2005 energy requirements would
In a budget request accompanying the report to Congress, the energy administration asked for a 27 per cent increase in its solar research funds. Although the $19 million request is relatively small, Robert C. Siemans Jr., chief of the energy administration, characterized it as very significant for a new technological
For the period 1985-2000, it predicted acceleration of new means of manufacturing synthetic fuels from coal and shale and increased demand for electricity, heat, and solar heating.
India orders newsman out
NEWDELIH - The Indian government escalated its political crackdown on two fronts, authorizing police to make arrests without saying and ordering the
Authorities said more than 900 persons have been pulled in by the dragnet.
Authorities said more than 900 persons have been killed by the offenders. The foreign correspondent ordered expelled Lewis was Lewis M. Simons of the Western Front, who had leave the country because of a story in which he said that Indian army officers were "known to be annoyed" about Mrs. Gandhi's refusal to resign.
Milk gift trial hears Kalmbach
SANT ANTONIO-Herbert W. Kalmbach, one-time lawyer to former President Obama, will he accept $100,000 political contribution from the Associated Milk Producers.
Kalmbach was lead witness as prosecutors tried to prove that Stuart H. Russell, an AMPI lawyer, participated in violations of federal political contribution laws. Kalmbach said he accepted the money as a political donation and placed it with more than $1.5 million in a trust which he was keeping for Nixon.
Kalmbach said that AMPI had said it had three objectives in giving the $100,000 access to the White House, a 30 per cent parity support price for milk and having a lower cost of living.
By KENSTONE
Kansas Staff Reporter
A series of complaints against several local roof repairmasters in recent months has spurred calls for the city ordinance that would require the licensing of Lawrence roofers.
Carol Boone, director of the Consumer Affairs Association (CAA); Mike Malone, assistant county attorney; and several local roofing contractors have backed the idea of a licensing procedure similar to the one in place for plumbers, electricians and trimmers.
According to Malone, the complaints ranged from criticism of sloppy and incompetent work to suits for possible criminal negligence or breach of warranty.
"We've received complaints against several individuals who have advertised in the Yellow Pages," Malone said. "One individual and five complaints made against him."
At least seven complaints against three local roofers have been filed since November with the county attorney's office, and four others. Those complaints were against one man.
This roofer, he said, would give customers an estimate of his work and ask
Malone said he thought there should be regulations and minimum standards before roofs could advertise in the Yellow Pages. He suggested in favor of a roofer's license in Lawrence.
"Then he would never show up." Malone said. "In one case, he started to take the old roff, and then he never returned. It's bordering on criminal deception."
Funding allows intramural reform
Malone said there was nothing to prevent a person whose work had been criticized by the police.
"It's more of a consumer thing than a criminal thing," he said.
Carol Boone, the director of the CAA, said her office had referred three complaints against one of the roof repairmen to the Small Claims Court.
Another complaint, involving $1,000 in water damage, was referred to the attorney for investigation.
"I'm sure the plaintiff will win." Boone
Licensing of city roofers urged
The newly reorganized intramural department will attempt to reopen basketball games to the public, include more sports in the intramural program and improve officiating at intramural games for the 1975-76 school year.
The reorganization was announced last week when Richard Marks, head soccer coach and assistant intramurals director at the University of Wisconsin, was hired as new director of the intramurals department at KU.
Marks will assume his position Aug. 18. Tom Wilkinson, recreation coordinator, said yesterday that the reason for the reorganization was to put men's and women's intramural sports under the same administrative roof.
"W hope to eliminate the complication of having two separate programs for the men and for the women," Wilkerson said yesterday.
He said the duties of the two program supervisors often overlapped. In addition, both departments were printing nearly the same material, and he hoped that putting the programs together would reduce printing costs.
The allocation for last year was about $9,000.
Dave Shapiro, chairman of the Student Senate Sports Committee who has helped organize the season made possible by an increase in the Student Senate allocation this spring for intramurals. This spring the committee received $23,024 for the 1975-76 academic year.
He said that as a result of the extra funds the intramural board would be able to buy athletic equipment, improve the overall facilities and offer activity in more sports. Some of these sports include rugby, soccer and fencing.
He said the Senate would look for different ways to fund programs so that the
intramurals program could continue to expand.
One alternative he suggested was to cut the funds the Student Senate allocates to the Kansas University Athletic Corporation and those those funds to the intramurals department.
Another route the Senate could follow would be to raise the amount taken out of the student activity fee for recreation from 65 cents to $1.50.
Wilkerson said the new intramurals program should be under way by the beginning of the fall semester. The only change he would be breaking in the new director.
He said that Marks had some ideas for new sports. Wrestling would be initiated in the fall as would be a number of activities which would include men and women.
He said there would be indoor and outdoor track meets, as well as water polo and water basketball programs, open to men and women.
There may be co-ed teams, Wilkerson
said, but that will depend on the degree of
design. It may be made by him, or he will be
made by the new directors, he said.
For the past few years, Shapiro said, the intramurals department had come under a lot of criticism for its lack of proper organization.
"For the past two years," he said, "the basketball games were closed to the public because some disturbances had been reported. We felt that these problems were caused by poor control by officials present at the game."
He said the department hoped to be able to train the officials, or referrers, to deal with such problems. He also said the team should be drawn into the idea of increasing 'increasing' pay.
Shapiro said the department would present a calendar during the summer which outlined deadlines for submitting teams and startling dates for each sport.
The old department, he said, didn't prepare calendars for intramural events like basketball games.
Rogers said people who live on state property, including many students living in residence halls, weren't counted unless they were registered to vote or had registera at the car in the county.
Reasons for the large jump included a large number of voter registrations for last year.
The population of Douglas County is 60,883 and about 14 per cent more than last year.
do is check around and see who's recommended."
Dusty Rhedes, of Rhodes Heating and
Air Conditioning, Inc., the need for a license for roof repairmen.
She said, however, that before a license would do any good a competent group of roofing provisions would have to write some roofing provisions for the housing code. The code now has no provisions relating to minimum roof standards.
Phill Everly, of Everly Roofing and Heating, said he thought a minimum standard for roofs should be inserted in the housing code, but that licensing wasn't enough to prevent people from hiring a dishonest or irresponsible repairman.
"We have enough city inspectors now," Rhodes said. "I just want to know how many housing inspectors around the country know anything about roofing."
Ellis said she knew of one case where a roofer had charged a 60-year-old women $200 for a new roof made of tar and gasoline. The roof was destroyed by the first rain.
City nears 50,000 citizens
He said more students had taken these steps in the last year than in the past, and this had boosted the county's population figure.
Members of three Lawrence roofing companies and a lumber company were asked their opinions about the need for roofers to be licensed.
Everly said that he was in favor of a law which would make good if the public didn't know how to do it.
The figures will be sent to the state board of agriculture, which is charged with keeping Kansas population figures between censuses. Figures from all cities and counties will be collected and used to decide the distribution of state funds, Rogers said.
"He's not intentionally ripping people off. He's just not fully aware of his responsibilities. People should check with this office to see whether there are any complaints against a roder they have members of three Lawrence roofing were
Erma Ellis, of Weill Roofing, said, "This is something that we have been trying to for seven years. We think every rooftier should be licensed and have to take a test."
The official population of Lawrence is now 49,988 an increase of more than 17 per cent from last year's figures, Darwin Douglas county assessor, said yesterday.
Bill Woods, a roofing materials supplier for Woods Lumber Co., said much the same thing as Everly concerning the public's importance concerning roofing contractors.
said. "But the roofer can't pay. And you must take his license to put him out of business."
"People's own greed gets them into more problems," Woods said. "They want to take advantage of it."
Lawrence City Manager Buford Watson said that if an ordinance was passed by the City Commission requiring roofers to be licensed and that if roof standards came from housing code, city housing inspectors would probably need training in roofing.
Watson said he had received no formal request for the change in the housing code or for a city ordinance requiring the licensing of roofers.
"They do the most rotten things, she said. 'I don't know you can sleep at night.'"
By JOHN BRUS
Kansas Staff Reporter
The formula used to prepare the census used such variables as motor vehicle registrations, voter registrations, University enrollment, birth and death statistics and a rural census taken during the agricultural tax assessment.
"Most of the things we've gotten into," James Gunn said last week as he leaned back in his chair with his arms crossed in his head, his "we've gotten into by accident."
Gunn plans sci fi future at KU
"The '30s were great for pulp magazines and I think it's all a matter of really being converted to science fiction at an early age." he said.
Gunn, professor of English, author of 12 science fiction novels and 60 short stories and the host of the University of Kansas series *Mary Jane*. How he became interested in science fiction.
He became a fan, he said, by reading the great old science fiction pulp magazines like Doc Saving, Astounding, Amazing and Famous, Fantastic and Mysterious. He
He published his first science fiction story in 1948.
started reading them when he was a teenager. he said, and was hooked.
first time something quite like this has been done anywhere, that I know of," he said.
PROFILE
The program will be taught by Gunn and Thomas D. Clareman, professor of English at the College of Wooster (Ohio) and president of the Science Fiction Research Association. The organization association is an organization devoted to research and the teaching of science fiction.
"I wrote a science fiction story and sent it to O. Astounding and it was refused. I sent it to Thrill and Wonder Stories and the editor wrote back "I like your story "Paradox" and I'll pay you $80 for it", he said.
Clareson will teach the literary side of Gunn, who said, while Gunn will teach its history.
If the program is held next year, he will get the announcements out early, he said.
Twenty-seven years later, Gunn is still writing stories and his interests now include the relatively new field of science fiction scholarship.
The major problem, Gunn said, was the late financing for the program. This delayed announcements, and by the time interested people had heard of the program, they had already made their summer plans, he said.
"I haven't had as many sign up as I thought there would be," he said.
Students will have access to the special collection of science fiction magazines, books and journals in the Spencer Research Library. There are series of instructional science fiction films.
Gunn said the idea for the program started when Ben Bova, editor of Analog magazine, wrote an editorial criticizing the authors of most science fiction teachers.
'My particular area of interest is the history of science fiction,' he said. 'I'm going to be dealing primarily with the ways science fiction developed and ways it has been influenced by historical, scientific technological and social trends and events.
an outgrowth of that interest, starting on July 7, KU will host a three-week intensive instruction course for college and high school teachers and anyone interested, preparing them to teach science fiction as feature and from an historical point of view.
Gunn said he talked with Bova and they devised a rough program outline. The program was approved and finally received funding, Gunn said, through the efforts of Jerry Hutchison, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs.
Sixteen students have registered for the program and most come from Kansas, Gunn said. A few, though, will come from as far away as Oregon and Pennsylvania.
The program will also feature a series of guest lecturers, who are successful and award winning authors. Ben Bova, science writer and editor of Analog, the leading science fiction magazine, will be on campus July 21-25.
"It's the first time I've done it and the
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"Bambi" at 7:30 & 9:30
Grandade
THIS IS THE CLIMAX.
GENE HACKMAN
FRENCH CONNECTION
R II
Eve at 7:30 & 9:40
Sat.-Sun. Mat. at 2:30
Varsity
JOHN CASSAVETES
A WOMAN UNDER THE INFLUENCE
The terrifying motion picture from the terrifying No. I best seller.
JAWS
PC ARE GO BRING FOR CHILDREN
Tickets on sale at 1:30 for 3:00 Mat.
Tickets on sale at 4:15 for 7:30 Show
Tickets on 4:45 when 7:30 sells out
Hillcrest
3rd Week
Matthew Acclaimed Film of 1974
Hintowny
with Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway
Daily at 11:30, 7:20 & 9:45
Hillcrest
"Best Picture of the Year"
INDEPENDENT IMAGES AWARDS
Daily at 1:00 and at 8:00
Hillcrest
"DEATH RACE 2,000"
Plus
"Death Race" at 9:00
(Fri., Sat. 12:15 also)
"Stacy" at 10:40 Only
Sunset
Council Rm., Kansas Union, 11:00 a.m.
First National Bank, Community Rm., (lower level), 1:30
TAKE A COUPON
TO DINNER
SAVE
UP TO
7.5¢
WITH THIS COUPON
ON A
VISTABURGER
Limit: 5
Coupon Expires July 15, 1975
55ᵃ
Reg. 70ᵃ
Vista
1527 West 6th, Lawrence
842-4311
Vista
1527 West 6th, Lawrence
842-4311
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, July 1, 1975
---
Legal aid helps students
By ALICE DELEHANTY
Kansan Staff Reporter
Last year 37 per cent of 700 cases the Douglas County Legal Aid Society handled were those of student clients, Deanell Tacha, director of legal aid, said yesterday.
Student requests for assistance range from handling landlord-tenant and utility issues to managing employee relations.
"The watchword here is to do whatever is best for the client." Konke said
John Kepke, one of the student directors,
said legal aid was fairly successful in
dealing with landlords and in making out of
court settlements with them when possible.
Third year law students are selected as interns for legal aid, and work under the supervision of practicing attorneys in Douglas County. Because of Supreme Court rules against practice in Kansas courts with the supervision of a member of the bar, Tacha said.
During the academic year 25 interns are assigned interviewing hours at the legal aid office, at 846% Indiana St. Two of the interns work at the branch office in the Haskell Indian Junior College Student Union.
To qualify for assistance from legal aid an individual's income must not exceed $240 net a month. This amount is increased by $60 a month for each dependent in the household of the person seeking aid, Tacha said.
The prospective client must also be a resident of Douglas County or have some connection with Douglas County that applies to the point in question. For example, if a person worked in Douglas County or was employed in Douglas County, he would qualify for aid.
All legal aid policy guidelines, including financial guidelines, are established by the Board of Directors of legal aid, consisting of the dean of the Law School, a faculty member from the Law School, members of the Douglass County Bar and community members.
The initial fee for an interview at legal aid is one dollar. If the case is accepted, the client is charged five dollars and assumes any resulting court costs for the case.
People whose incomes are slightly above their financial guidelines are referred to a Pension Administrator.
Bargaining unit proposals made
Five groups submitted proposals to the Kansas Public Employer-Employee Relations Board yesterday in the first step towards establishing a collective bargaining unit for the faculty at the University of Kansas.
At the close of yesterdays' meeting, Donald Hoffman, chief assistant attorney general, who is acting as hearing officer, said there were three main areas of disagreement to be discussed before the bargaining unit can be defined.
"Faculty equivalents" include such professional librarians and research associates.
The three areas are whether the chairmen of departments, faculty members in the Schools of Law and Engineering and in the College of Business included in the collective bargaining unit.
Michael Davis, general counsel for the University, said the administration's purpose of creating a unit should be established for faculty members because they aren't state employees, but are individuals contracted by the university to teach and conduct research.
If this proposal isn't accepted by the board, Davis said, the administration proposes a bargaining unit that includes faculty equivalents and excludes department administrators because they are more likely to consider a part of the administration.
Inarza Horton, representing the American Association of University Professors, said her group's petition would include in the bargaining unit members of the faculty and all employees essential to the functioning of the faculty, such as museum curators and librarians. She said research associated had been excluded on these grounds.
Carl Leblanc, associate professor of Oriental languages, submitted a petition which would include research associates in the bargaining unit but would exclude department chairmen, whom he said, he hoped would have been qualified them as administrators.
The School of Law and the School of Engineering each submitted petitions requesting that he be considered as separate bargaining units because they had different names and interests that weren't in common with any other schools in the University.
ON CAMPUS
EMILIO GIGLIARDO, professor of mathematics at the University of Pazia in Italy will lecture on "Noncontemporary Graph Theory" tonight at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall.
JOIN MURPHY, PROFESSOR OF LAW,
has been made co-director of a research
project to find solutions to international
terrorism. The work is funded by the U.S.
State Department through the American
Society of International Law.
THE GUILD OF CARLLOONNEURS in North America has published two works by Albert Gerken, associate professor of music theory and diversity carillonist. One is *The Guild of Carloonneur* and the other is *Handel's* "Water Music." The other is his own "Prelude and Fugue for Carillon."
to take cases for a smaller fee than would usually be charged. Tacha said.
In many instances the legal aid office acts in the central panel when clients need assistance.
"When clients have a legal problem, they often also have a social service problem."
in right of us, we regard our service
as a responsibility with social service
service, she said.
Since legal aid can channel clients to many other resources, Kepke said, the best thing to do is to come to the office and describe the problem.
Problems commonly handled by legal aid include consumer and domestic problems, misdemanders, civil cases, employment and unemployment cases and welfare and military cases.
In addition to working on individual legal memorandums to write during the session
Kepke said. The interns also have to keep up with a certain area of law and provide information to the other interns on relevant developments in that area.
Interns enroll in three hours of credit for legal aid. Their skill in handling cases and in understanding the history and legal background of the cases is then evaluated, and the student receive a grade of A, pass or fail for the course. Tacha said.
Funding for legal aid comes from Lawrence University. The county revenue share is the Lawrence County Fund Student Senate. The law school provides the director's office to the student directors and must be nominated.
"There is no doubt legal aid is reaching people," Tacha said. "Every year there is a big demand."
"The quality of legal services is outstanding," she said.
"Legal aid provides invaluable actual litigation practice." Kenke said.
"The intern learns the ropes of procedure and of dealing with a judge and opposing attorneys."
Keaton's 'General' is best
Bv CHUCK SACK
Kansan Reviewer
Have you ever run superlatives when describing something? Well, that's the problem one has in describing "The Buster Keaton film made by and starring Buster Keaton.
"The General" is one of the best movies ever to come out of the Hollywood film factory. It offers everything to the viewer—pathos, comedy, a chase (which is especially important to contemporary viewers), romance and action.
Many people consider it to be the greatest comedy ever made.
Based on an actual event from the Civil War, "The General" tells the story of
REVIEW
amusing attempts to get enlistment papers.
Forced to remain a civilian because his occupation as an engineer is vital to Southern defenses, the dejected hero mumbles to the recruiter officer. "If you lose this war, don't blame me."
Johnie Gray an engineer for a Southern railroad. The chase occurs when Johnie's train is stolen and he tracks it behind Union Railway, his girlfriend and retrieve his engine.
If a chase confined to railroad tracks sounds too restricted to provide any suspense, think again. Not only do both trains need parallel routers and parallel routes, but the constant need for fuel adds tension. The return chase, with Yankee bluecots trying to stop Johnnie from reaching the Confederate forces with their thriller that involves three train engines.
Keton-the-director is well served by Keaton-the-actor. Keaton's remarkable stuntwork sparks the picture. Despite setback(s) he has faced, he maneuvers, burning boxcar that mysteriously appears and disappears before his train, Keeton maintains a mask of grim determination that lends Johnnie heroic stature. Yet he is never so stolid that the emotions of love, surprise terror and violence arise. He handles in his own abilities don't seem believable.
Sight gags don't take a back seat to the action. Johnnie goes through a series of
The best moments in the film are aboard the train. Keaton uses this single, elaborate prop with hilarious virtuosity, varying the gags without ever pushing for clams, silly
In one sequence Johnnie attaches a heavy cannon behind his train and it soaim that it will fire over his engine and the Union vehicle on the tracks ahead. After lightning the fuse, he starts to scramble back to the engine. Howeveng he can reach the cars and by the time he discovers this, the cannon has slipped and is aimed directly at his train.
For all of the comedy, "The General" never sacrifices its dramatic integrity, thanks to Keaton's splendid narrative sense and to his insistence on realism. The filming was done entirely with genuine 1860s locomotives; no miniatures were involved.
Keaton also used the Oregon State Guard as extras for his sweeping battle scenes.
CATFISH
BAR N GRILL
12 & Oread
Happy Hour Daily
6-12
$1.25
Pitchers
20c Draughts
Salads
Potato Salad
Bean
Tossed Salad
Cottage Cheese
Chef Salad
Bowl
In
Air
Conditioned
Comforts
Corned Beef-Roast Beef- Ham-Braunschweig-heim-Wam & Cheese-Hot Dog-Almond & Egg Salad Granola & Rye Bread
and More
INDEPENDENCE DAY
SALE
Bring this ad and get an additional 10% off any single item. (one ad per customer)
10% to 50% off
ALL ITEMS
Everything you need in athletic shorts, shirts, shoes & equipment
June 26-July 3
Complete line of knit tennis shorts and shirts
RAG TAG
1144 Indiana—Mt. Oread Corner "upstairs"
1
842-1059
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment.
Offered by the following organizations:
AIRBUS ALERT: national airline, FLASH BRUNG
ALERT: national airline, ENERGY BRUNG
to run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Saturday 5 p.m.
Thursday Monday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one time three times five times
15 words or less $1.50 $2.00 $2.50
Each additional word .01 .02 .03
AD DEADLINES
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or via the UDR business office *864-4358*
FOR SALE
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
Make sense out of Western Civilization?
Makes sense to use them—
1) As study guide
2) For class preparation
2) For class preparation
3) For exam preparation
Get It Together (with a little help from your friends)
(with a little help from your friends)
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Available now at Town Crier and Campus M
house.
The GRAMOPHONE Shop at KEFS offers every priceies on audio components that equal most "special sales" or "cost-plus" deals found in the stores and equipment found nowhere else in Lawrence.
Home in the Country—1972 double wide mobile washroom and laundry room, dishwasher and dryerware, and kitchens. Wardrobes and bedrooms Located on private lot 5 miles from Lawnings with large garden plot and storm cellar.
Come on out! Lots of shade and parking—for you, too. A variety of antique furniture and other furniture, antiques, collectables. Wooden products; nail kegs, 4 ft tall; baskets for storage; decorative items; 1 bushel; baskets, ammo boxes, apple boxes, biceps, caeca cases, crock pots, and thousands of watermelon cups, $14 each. Zucchini squash, 10 cups, 3 lbs. $120 Potatoes, 10 lbs. $120 Salad dressings, 6 lbs. $120 Fruits and vegetables. Lettuce, onions, cabbage, potatoes, shellfish, sunflower seeds in shell, hurgery, sorghum, popcorn, assorted nuts, fresh country vegs, straw and alfalfa. Pineapple juice, pineapple chunks,
Woman's 3-speed bike with backpack. Perfect condition. $55-willing to bargain. 842-6198, room 708.
*** COST PLUS 10% *** only
*** MARRIAGE*** only
MARNARIS 2270 $ was $250 $ was $295
MARNARIS 3200 $ was $280 $ was $295
HATCHA 5200 $ was $280 $ was $295
HATCHA 6200 $ was $280 $ was $295
ROTEL 402 $ was $290 $ was $295
ROTEL 402 $ was $290 $ was $295
Marantz 2245接收, a pair of JBL L-81
Mamarit 2245接收, a pair of JBL L-81
Pittsburgh Pikering cartridge, Call Scott, 841-2044. 7-2
With prices like these we've been pretty busy.
We've had 10 calls, but we'll call you CALL DAVE. 842-6288 - 71-1
Framan Hardwoods hard-carry tray. 12 inches in
frampan. Hard-molded copper tray. $50
or best, $85 or best. Call 646-8691 at 7:30 p.m.
1965 Triumph Triton, new overhaul, hardtack and convertible. Call 843-8887 7-3
35 mm SLR camera outfit in excellent shape.
841-4137 7-3
1966 VW Squareback, and r-70 000 miles. Reliable
transport, in good condition. $75 Call 843-266-9777
Now fire merchandise close-outs, etc. New selling huge grocery store from a Chicago supermarket at today's retail price. At the checkout, check if you are closed. Closed Sunday. Metzger's Salvage Center, 628 Vermont.
1970 WV Squareback, new tires, mudflies, rebuilt wheel arch, new brakes, and SSD10 upgrades. Wear to SSD10 and SSD10 upgrades. **Wear to SSD10**
In Topeka, 1972 Barrington 14 x 64, 2 bedroom,
14 baths, aa¹, skirred, sedimented, patio,妒着,
storage shed. Will share moving expenses. See
8, 40th Street Terrace, Topeka, Gift book
8, $550
MATH TUTORING Competent. Experienced tutor
116, 116, 116, 151, 122, 122, Reasonable rates. Call
(718) 354-2050
Kay Cellio and how Good condition and tone.
Reasonable price. 842-384.
1944 Honda CB 150, Tip.肩形, 1800 ml
1945 Harley-Davidson Bagger,
Collection item, $30 or best price. 842-764-9200
HIGH PROTEIN horse meat dog food. 24-14 ounces, cans. $49.99, no discount. Metzner Salad.
Color TV, RCA 19", 1 year old. Call Hasher at 843-8599 7-8
Home Growin'
904 Vermont
心
SIRLOIN STOCKADE
Cold Beer & Chilled Wine
9th Street Center
(Next to 'Hole in The Wall')
842.8722
JAMES LIQUORS
11-9 Mon.-Fri.
11-10 Sat.-Sun.
AM-FM Stereo w turntable. wakunet $watut. punchback. HP
Berry pickup w approm. $60. 843-7890. Bare
2,3
5,000 BTU Air Conditioner, used one season. $100.
7:43 - 8:16
1971 Capri 4 speed, air conditioned, Red. Low
yachtage, Jayhawk W43, 821-230 7-3
1975 Ptonythum Duter, 2 dr. HT, red, automatic.
Save, Jawhawk VW, M8-2120. **7-3**
Squareback Wagons, Choose from three, from 1988 to 1971, Jayhawk W-848-2210 7-3
1974 Yamaha, Enduro 125, One Person, 3200 Miles,
Jayhawk VW, 843-2200, 7-3
$3.50 per Dozen
TACOS
1968 WV Bu, converted to camper, ice box,
gas stove, Jayhawk WV 843-220-200
1973 WV Super Belle, yellow, 4-speed, 1 owner,
service agreement, Jaywalk! 7-43
843-210
1970 Chevette station wagon, automatic, power
cylinder, rack 45, kmages 2,000 miles W
8325 HW 8325
Casa de Taco
1105 Massachusetts
1971 Karmann Chia, blue, 4-speed, 34,000 miles
Jayhawk VW, 843-2200. 7-3
1966 VW BuG, excellent transmission, two-to-3
from Jayhawk VWJ, 843-220.
1690 Malibu 3-dfr M, automatic, alr bucket
2200 only of its kind. Jayhawk WV-7
2500
1989 Pinnacle Fury, automatic air conditioned,
Jacuney, JA8600W82070
73
Closest of all 1971 Demo's and Rental cars, 7-3
hundreds. Jayhawk WA-83-6210 7-3
FOR RENT
Johnson Rental Company, Studio 1, bedroom 2,
and office 2. Available to KU Medical Center, Karanasi City, Kanagara.
Phone: (850) 491-3267.
Two bedroom apartment, all utilities paid, close to campsite. This fall, furnished or unfurnished. 413-992-8000
Rooms - Kitchen privileges. One block to campus.
$35 and up. Apts. possible rent reduction for
mature students.
Are communities like they say they are? No, they aren't. Programmatic chefs rent free laundry and off-street concessions at restaurants free from laundry and off-street concessions.
Natrium 4-room apartment in older house. 1 block from campus. $85 plus else. 842-6312
Help! Must submit a 2 hour apartment, f-7-
Reasonable. Call 864-6707 after 5 p.m.
Apartment: 1, 2, and 4. bedroom: furnished.
Bachelor, KK and near town. Phone: 843-7567, fc1
House 2- story, three bedroom unfurnished. Bore-
rally furnished. Marry couple coupled.
No pets. No children.
Nice room in spaces communal household 160.2
dorm. Next door to dorm. 949,1178 17.9
Extra rides rooms with private kitchens. One
room has a private parking, utilities pit.
Roadside restrooms 83-7530.
NOTICE
PRINTING. WHILE YOU WAIT. Let us do your job.
$25,000 per hour
$1,400 per hour
$3,400 per hour
We want you to work at our company.
PHOTOGRAPHY Shooting Gallery Specializing in
Photography for Commercial & Professional
Weaknesses. We specialize in photography and any you need.
We are a professional photographer, and always your best go-to source.
Tuesday night special at Sirlin Stoinock Incunade in or by phone for $120. book at, bata 7-1234567890. pay for $120.
GAY LIBERATION MEANS WHAT THAN
A GAY LIBERATION
GAY LIBERATION, INC. Gathering 7:1st and
3rd Monday of each month. Office in
420-865-3029 for APF or socializing
843-852-3029 for socializing
843-852-3029
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CUPID
15 East 18th 841-2656
10.5 Monday Saturday
Room to rent?
Advertise it in the Kansan
864-4358
THE ICE CO.
THE WEEKLY BEER SALES
AND $2,100 KEGS
ALL SUMMER LONG
HOME MADE ICE
CREAM
SUPPLIES
616
Vermont
Executive-style gourmet parties planned, catered. Executive dinner parties are beautiful, beautiful private pool. For details call (312) 560-8971.
TYPING
Typing in the IBM iM selective with pice maps. Typing in the IBM iM selective with map, and mfile maps. Call Pam, 842-5799
THIS IS BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is located in your business location. Our service in fast and prices are reasonable. Please visit us at www.hotmail.com/thibert
Experimented in typing theses, research papers,
books, and reports (e.g., "Hunting the pteronidium"
carbonite; ribbon element), call 912-835-1700.
IBM S琴性, pica or clite, reasonable, experi-
rent to have discussions. Cases Call 7-31
at 842-9127
HELP WANTED
Experienced typist—term papers, theses, mite.
Experienced typewriter, letterpress, spelling,
spelling 843-6554; Mrs. Wright
Experienced in typing disclosures, thesee. esteem in Psych. Call Leste. 943-8088. Response #2
PROFESSIONAL TYPING at reasonable rates.
Papers, Theses, and Dissertations. Call Linda in
the morning or after 9 a.m.
Part time Dairy Farm help wanted. Must have experience 10 miles south of Lawrence. Phone 326-495-4766.
LOST AND FOUND
The Office of Instructional Resources is accepting applications for a Research Assistant for the high school level of competency in statistics instruction, computer programming experience. Dwites will participate in Instructional Survey and assist in the operation and development of the Survey. The improvement of teaching through evaluation and month appointment. Starting date: August or October of the Office of Instructional Resources, 409 Calley Street, Suite 1380, Washington, DC 20007. Equal Opportunity / Affirmative Employer.
Foreign student seeks private English teacher, 13 hours per week; Call 843-2105, 4-3-25, 7-22
Ladies watch found in 105 Bailey. Call 864-3726 or go to 112 Bailey.
Lott: Male grey and brown cat with black stripe, while the rear call near 48 and Kentucky
Found: Set of keys between Summerfield and
Robin. Call 844-603-60.
7-2
SERVICES OFFERED
Lost: Tam backpack and contents in Clinton area.
Received call: 841-4658. 7-2
WANTED
FOUND: Keys left in 111 Flight A, Mune H. 32
Call: 864-1438 or come by 111 Flight L. 7-3
CUSTOM JKWELRY Reasonably Profied, specialized technician. Stains oil and purge. Turguio Saltz. Stainless steel.
Tutoring in math or eon. Tutoring and teaching experience in both. Call 842-6829. 7-3
College women want housekeeping, gardening,
hailing jobs. Have pickup. Call Rosemary at
724-359-1200.
Wanted: female nominee for July, Augusct. 8pm
+ interviews per month. Phone #814-3250 aftermorrow.
TRAVEL
Male pre-school teacher will provide afternoon care for six. Call Mike, 842-369-1043 (morning) or 842-369-1044 (napping).
Need a travel companion for Europe this fall?
84-72-54 Ask for Dave, keep trying
Ask for Dave, keep trying
WAGON WHEEL
1401 Ohio
Open 11 A.M.-Midnight
Sandwiches, Delicatessen, Foods
Penner's Cycle Barn Norton Ducati Moto Guzzi Used Motorcycle NEW CLEARANCE
Used Motorcycle JULY CLEARANCE
71 Kawasaki 500 Mach III $395⁰⁰
74 Kawasaki 350 dirt bike $695⁰⁰
Like New
New 075
100500
If You're Planning on FLYING
Let Marvelon go!
72 Norton Commando
71 Norton Commando
Do The LEGWORK For You! (NEVER an extra cost)
$995^{00}$
Very Clean
66 Norton chopper
Jardine headers
Extended forks
$ ^{5}895^{00} $
$695^{00}$
15 miles east of Lawrence
585-1048
on Hiway 10 585-1048
SUA / Maupintour travel service
Make your
Summer Vacation
Reservations now
PHONE 843-1211
Bicycle Ride
KU Union—The Malls-Hillcrest-900 Mass
Harvest
GLEANER
ALLIS CHALMERS
Although forced by rain to wait a little longer than planned, Richard Sanders made a successful harvest last weekend. Sanders' 17-acre wheat yield yielded 38 bushels an acre.
Staff photos by DON PIERCE
SAM BALDWIN
A well-worn hat shades Sanders from the June sun and the 90 degree heat.
The image shows a tractor in the middle of a wheat field, with its arm extended towards the crop. The wheat appears to be in full growth, with fine spikes visible. The background is a flat, open field, typical of a rural agricultural setting.
Unlike large wheat farmers in the western part of the state, most eastern Kansas farmers own their own harvesting equipment.
By THERESE MENDENHALL
Konrad S.W.L.900716
On a hot, muggy Kansas afternoon at the end of a cold wet spring, the brothers-in-law began harvesting their wheat. The weatherman bet 70-30 against rain, but the grain felt better than it should have been.
"It's wonderful corn weather—lots of rain, high humidity," said Alvin McKinney last week. "But what's good for the corn is bad for the wheat."
McKinney was harvesting a field he rented from his brother-in-law, Richard Sanders. Sanders waited with his truck to grain to the Farmers Co-ep elevator.
Later, at the elevator, the grain was analyzed and found to have a moisture content of 14.9 per cent. That was too much and McKinney and Sanders lost six cents a bushel for their grain that day.
"See how tough the straw is?" McKinney said, bending a piece in his
CENTER AMERICA
hand and gouging the soft ground with his heel to show that it was wet, too.
"When it gets tough the combine won't knock the grain out of the head," he said.
A suggestion of leaving the crop in the field a few more days wasn't a good idea.
"It might not get any drier," he said, scrutinizing the cloudy sky over the field he's farmed for 55 years.
The loss Sanders and McKinney faced was so bad as it might have been. McKinney guessed he'd bring in 35 bushels an acre. Some Lawrence and other farmers 15 bushels an acre, which barely paid the cost of planting and harvesting.
Outguzzing the weather solves only half the farmers' puzzle. The other half is the market. They can sell the grain at the current price, or they can pay 14% a cent month to store it at the Co-op, and sell it later.
McKinney didn't expect the price to rise. But he said he couldn't afford to sell more than half the crop before the end of the year because doing that would damage his social security status.
Storing was the primary choice for several other area farmers, too. None expected the price to rise. But selling the grain now would subject them to higher taxes than waiting until after the beginning of 1976.
"You can't sell two crops in one year," said Harold Lutz, who finished, harvesting his 55 acres Saturday.
But McKinney couldn't afford to save all his wet wheat. either.
"I need a little money once in a while," he said.
I
Sanders and McKinney discuss the quality of the day's harvest (left). The yield was good but the wheat was not as dry as usual.
1
BEAUTIFUL!
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
City airport criticized
No.155
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, July 2, 1975
See page 5
1976
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Camp contortions
to Lissa Leonard, Independence. Leonard is one of 41 girls attending the Jayhawk girls basketball camp.
Hot. humid weather and dawlong drills combine to bring misery
Groups squeezed out of building
By BRUCE SPENCE Kansan Staff Reporter
The GRNC building had been occupied by the School of Engineering, which allowed students to work in the building.
Two campus groups may soon find themselves without a home when the KU Endowment Association begins to renovate their buildings or west campuses for its own use.
B. G. Barr, executive director of CRINC, said other groups used extra space in the building only with the condition that it was temporary.
TWO GROUPS, the KU Radio Club and the radio-TV-film division of the School of Journalism, have been unable to find new locations for equipment that is still in the CRINC building. They were to vacate the building by June 30.
"They always moved in with that understanding." he said.
oneric Hardman, a member of the KU radio club, said the club had been under attack.
He said Barr implied that the radio club school of Engineering had control of the building.
"THE INDICATIONS," said Hardman, "were that they would not lose control of it.
Robert Rankin, assistant professor of linguistics and adviser to URU Radio College, said that he didn't anyone in his situation. He said that because nothing had been published, it was easy to have a chance for it.
"I guess we just didn't think about that at all." It wasn't just unwitting, it was considering the possibilities.
BRUCE LINTON, director of radio-TVFILM, said he wasn't told the arrangement was temporary until a month after his return. "We were very careful with equipment into four rooms of the building,"
The Endowment Association has allowed them to leave equipment in the building facilities.
Todd Seymour, executive secretary of the Endowment Association, said that he wasn't sure what would happen but that the situation was being investigated.
Martin Henry, director of property management for the Endowment Association, said the tenants had been given approval to build on the land, and the building had been scheduled for July.
of a delay with drawings and specifications from a mechanical engineer.
He said he'd not know when work would start, but he expected it to begin sometime the following year.
The Endowment Association, Henry said, has been planning to move to another location because the present building is too large. The new construction makes fire a greater problem.
"OUR RENOVATION of the building will involve work in every room," he said, and the risk involved, particularly with radio equipment, would be out of this world."
"We can't begin to put everything in that vault we would desire to have protected from fire, should such a frightful thing ever happen." Henry said.
A new vault is planned for the CRINC building, he said.
THE CRINC BUILDING has always
Work hasn't started, Henry said, because
The lease on the no-rent basis stipulates that the University provide upkeep, insurance, repairs and any internal modifications and additions to the building.
belonged to the Endowment Association, Henry said, but has been occupied by the U.S. Air Force.
All the spaces will be used by the Endowment Association for offices and storage or administration of some kind, Henry said.
Henry said some of the tenants had requested to stay but were turned down.
"I appreciate the needs of every one of our groups, but we can't let them stay," he said.
Regents announce KU budget decision
By JACK McNEELY Kansan Staff Reporter
The Kansas Board of Regents has approved an 11.4 per cent increase in general use funds for the University of Kansas fiscal year 1977 budget.
The Regents approved KU's request for increases of 10 per cent in faculty salaries and wages.
KU RECEIVED **$44.3 MILLION** in general use funds for fiscal 1976, which began yesterday. For fiscal 1977, KU requested **$6.6 million** in general use funds, an increase of 17.2 per cent. The Regents **$33.8 million**, an increase of 11.4 per cent.
"IT LOOKS AS if they've given us a rather austere budget," Shankel said. "They've cut things we really need and think we can justify. But, given the state of the economy, they have difficult budget decisions to make."
The Regents' decisions on the fiscal 1977 budget were reached in closed session Monday in Topeka and released last late fern evening. Executive Vice Chancellor Del Shunkel
The Regents call a request to replace wear equipment from $407,273 to $154,069. They cut requests for library development from 30.1 per cent to $250,214 - a reduction of 30.1 per cent.
THE KU BUDGET is made up of three
units: (a) commercially derecused use
funds and auxiliary enterprises.
The requests for equipment replacement and library development had been given by the Board.
from taxes, they are the crucial part of the budget.
Restricted use funds come from money generated within the University, such as library and parking fines. They are spent primarily on the programs that generate them. The University must get Regents approval to spend restricted use funds, but the Regents generally let the University spend them as it wishes.
MONEY FOR AUXILIARY enterprises comes from student services, primarily housing, health services and activity fees. They are also spent primarily on the programs that generate them. Expenses from auxiliary enterprises also must be covered by the Regents but here again the Regents generally let the University spend the money as it wishes.
KU's total budget request for fiscal 1977 was $31.1 million, including $66.6 million in general use funds, $1.5 million in restricted use funds, and $11 million in auxiliary enterprises.
According to the Associated Press, the recipients approve $84.4 million for the KU beverage operations and will operate enterprises, an increase of 11.2 per cent more than the amount received from 1975 session and 1976.
SHANKEL DIDN'T know how the Regents had treated the requests for restricted use funds and auxiliary enterprises.
Late last night Shankel knew only that the Regents had approved an 11.4 per cent increase in general use funds, cut from the 17.2 per cent increase KU had requested.
The $100,000 figure was arrived at by taking one per cent of KU's current inventory of equipment, which is about $40 million.
The request for about $400,000 for equipment replacement, which the Regents cut to about $154,000, was one of KU's highest priorities.
BUT THE REQUEST of one per cent of current inventory assumes that all equipment will last 100 years. For example, if a typewriter is bought for $300 and replaced at a rate of one per cent, or $3 each, it would take 100 years to accumulate the cost of replacing it with a replacement rate of one per cent, the typewriter would have to last 100 years.
All the Regents institutions submitted similar requests of one per cent of current students.
During the 98s much equipment was bought with federal money. According to Chancellor Archie R. Dykes, the federal government dried up and the equipment needs care.
The Regents have in the past denied
the government spend state money to replace
wrong equipment.
When asked whether the request of one per cent of current inventory was an attempt to the Regents to agree in print that all equipment be replaced equipment bought with federal money and whether the request might be raised to 5 or 10 per cent in future years, Dykes said. "We would like to have it in the established part of the needs of the University."
"We will continue to seek for the University funds for equipment needs. The one per cent will obviously not be adequate."
Shankel said some of the Regents' cutting in reducing the $400,000 to $154,000 occurred when they refused to allot state funds to equipment bought with federal money.
Lewis to spend 2 weeks in jail
Lewis was found guilty of battery in June. He was accused of hitting Officer Bill Morrill with his car after he and Morrill argued about traffic violations.
Steven Lewis, former assistant professor of social welfare, has been ordered by District Court Judge James W. Paddock to serve two weeks of a six-month jail sentence for the battery of a University of Kansas security and parking officer.
Judge Paddock denied a motion for acquittal and a motion for a new trial today. Lewis attempted to show that evidence was not sufficient to prove the publicity had been perjudicial to his case.
Paddock said Lewis had failed to introduce new evidence to overturn his conviction and hadn't shown that publicity affected the jurors' decision.
The jail sentence is to begin Monday. The court will decide tomorrow what Lewis will do.
Faculty bargaining unit discussed
Witnesses were called yesterday at the Kansas Public Employer-Employee Relations Board (PERB) hearings to aid in the investigation of a project in a proposed faculty bargaining base.
By JACK FISCHER
Kansas StuFF Reporter
Calgaard he thought the majority of chairmen fulfilled the state statute's description of a supervisor, which would legally exclude them from the unit.
THE WTENESSES were called by Inara Horton, representing the American college football team at Michael Davis, University attorney, to answer questions regarding the inclusion of department chairmen and faculty equivalents, such as research associates, in university sports teams.
that a final draft of a decision by the relative to the faculty would soon be read.
RONALD CALGARD, associate chancellor for academic affairs, said that the inclusion of department chairmen in the bargaining unit would necessitate the creation of a new level of bureaucracy to assume the chairman's supervisory func-
Regarding the research associates, Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, testified
The AAUP originally wanted to include department chairmen in the bargaining unit and exclude research associates. The administration wanted to include research associates and exclude department chairmen.
In her closing statement Horton said that when the new titles were designated, research associates should be included in the system on the type of work they are engaged in.
Only research associates holding degrees at least equivalent to faculty members in their field would be eligible for inclusion in the unit.
DAVIS DISAGREED in his closing statement, saying all research associates supported the University's mission of research and, therefore, all should be included.
Carl Leblen, associate professor of oriental languages, who deferred his own unit proposal, because the administration's proposal was better organized, said most chairmen wanted to be included in the bargaining unit.
However, Davis said that although health service employees were different in most respects, their salaries were comparable to the average faculty and that this justified their inclusion.
Closing statements regarding whether department chairmen should be included in the unit will be given at the start of today's meeting.
Horton and Davis also disagreed as to whether University health service employees could be trained.
After the end of yesterday's meeting Calgaard said the University was unlike any labor management group because its employees were only a fraction on any satisfactory bargaining unit.
Horton said they had no interests in common with the faculty and on that basis the department would have to accept.
By TONI DIXON Kansan Staff Reporter
the faculty demonstrated little interest in collective bargaining.
DAVIS SAID it was unfortunate that the university was forced to spend so much money on the renovation.
StudEx reexamines full drugs coverage
Raymond Goetz, professor of law, who was representing the School of Law at the hearings, disagreed with Davis saying that it had been typical of labor-management practices. Davis managed to not recognize their employees' desire for collective bargaining.
In April the Student Senate approved a policy in which the $2$-$a-year drug rider that had formerly covered all prescription costs was removed. Under that policy, the student would pay the first $100 in fees and 20 per cent of the next $900.
Total prescription costs may again be included in Blue Cross-Blue Shield insurance policies if StudEx can negotiate a discount. For details see the Hyle, StudEx member, said yesterday.
IN AN EEFORT to retain the drug rider,
IN AN EEFORT to reduce in rates of
the prescription,
Steve Segebrecht, StudEx member, was appointed to draw up the contract and to meet with Kyle Ward, Blue Cross-Blue Healthcare, in Chicago, and others, to discuss these changes.
The new policy, without the drug rider,
would cost $44.44 a year for single students,
which would reduce the number of dependent
and $30.20 a year for families.
With the drug rider, policy costs would be
increased by $26.76 for single students,
$55.32 for students with one dependent and
HYLE SAID she received more than 40 letters from students who were in favor of the new law.
"Most people I talk to are upset because they were not consulted," she said.
Segebrecht said the majority of the policy holders didn't spend more than $$ 2 a year on them.
A petition may soon be available in the
MARYLOU REECE, student body vice president, said, "The people we're hurting are the ones who are buying the policy for other reasons than drug expenses."
Kansas Union for students who wish to express their opinions about the drug rider and the Blue Cross-Blue Shield policy, Hyle said.
Last spring semester 3,456 policies were sold. covering 5,118 persons.
StudEx members debated Sunday whether most of the strong support for the drug rider might come from policy holders in high prescription bills in the coming year.
$61,000 was paid in health insurance,
averaging $17 a person in 1974.
The present policy includes three categories: health benefits, major medical coverage and prescription coverage after the first $100.
Hyle said, "Last year the prescription
were $75, but now it's $30. We're
getting less coverage on cover."
THE PRESENT DRUG coverage, as well as the rider, would cover prescription costs anywhere, not only at Watkins Hospital. Hyle said a local pharmacist told her it was easier for pharmacies to collect from Blue Cross-Blue Shield than from students.
Hyle said the new contract was presented to the Student Senate by the senate's health
See StudEx page 5
Watson replys to charges of favoritism
By LYNN PEARSON
City manager Buford Watson said last night that Lawrence was attempting to enforce the city's minimum housing code fairly for all the city's residents.
His comments came as a response to a story last week in the Lawrence Journal-World in which Ed Covington, city minimum housing code inspector, said that Watson wouldn't let him do his job properly and had told him to "take it easy on the job." Daniel Linbark associate professor of physics and astronomy.
Watson apologized for the delay on legal action to force Ling to bring his properties on Ohio Street up to city housing standards. He said that some of the repairs that the city was trying to force Ling to make hadn't properly ordered by the housing inspector.
"Now we have things laid out and are ready to accomplish what we want," Watson said. "We're on the right track now, legally and procedurally."
Watson and Mayor Barkley Clark disagreed on the city's legal authority to enter houses for inspection against the wishes of the owner.
Clark said that the U.S. Supreme Court had "clearly determined" that showing probable cause wasn't necessary for a forced housing inspection when a house was within a red line target inspection area such as the Hill Target Area.
Clark directed Watson to ask the city legal staff to compose a memorandum on the city's legal authority under the housing code.
Watson said that Milton Allen, city attorney, had said that there must be a reason to inspect the house. There must be a complaint from a neighbor or tenant or the house must look dangerous and unhealthy before a warrant can be secured, he said.
"We've been getting this in bits and
we've said," he said, "I think it help all of us
us to know what our legal options are under our housing code."
Commissioner Carl Mileck agreed with Clark. He said that there was no point in having something that was unenforceable in the code.
Watson said the major goal of the housing inspections program was to get houses fixed, not torn down and that it took a lot of time to do that.
Mibbeck said that if rehabilitation was the city's goal, the administration should reflect a more positive attitude when dealing with property owners.
"You can't tell by reading those letters they send owners that rehabilitation is the goal. Mibeeck said. "Phrases such as 'this hurts' come down should be forever struck."
In other action the commission allocated $4,000 to the Douglas County Child Care Association, awarded bids on two street projects, set public hearings on four properties and received copies of the proposed 1976 city budget.
2
Wednesday, July 2, 1975
University Daily Kansan
NEWS DIGEST THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
K-State has new president
MANHATTAN—Kansas State University has a new president for the first time in 25 years.
Duane Acker, who was on the Kansas State staff for four years in the mid-sixties, assumed the position he succeeded James A. McCain, who retired 25 years in the state.
Red River valley flooded
Acker, 44, spent the day with administrators and faculty members. Acker said he planned to review the school's programs to pinpoint K-State's unique mission. He said school officials had conveyed to him a belief that K-State had unique missions but that it would have to be selective in any new areas it developed.
BISMARCK, N.D.—A million acres of fertile Red River valley farmland were under water after four days of torrential rain.
More than a foot of rain has fallen in some parts of the valley and in other areas of southeastern North Dakota since Saturday.
The waterlogged soil is sofucating the roots of the wheat, corn and soybeans grown in the valley. Farmers said it would be too late to plant another crop when the soil is dry.
Nearly 3,000 garbagemen were in city employees laid off by Mayor Abraham Bean in an effort to balance the 1975-76 city budget that took effect at midnight in 2008.
NEW YORK—About 30,000 tons of garbage pulled up at curbsides in 80-degree heat as sanitation workers struck to protest 19,000 layoffs by the city.
Hundreds of the dismissed police officers blocked traffic for about 15 minutes on the Brooklyn Bridge, which links Brooklyn's downtown section with lower Mile 2.
WASHINGTON—Secretary of Defense James R. Schlesinger said the United Right wing militant strategic nuclear weapons against selected targets in Russia was a very low level of threat.
U.S. might use A-bombs first
Some congressmen and others have been under the impression that the United States long ago renounced any first use of strategic weapons such as long-range artillery.
The confusion apparently arises from a distinction between "first use" of nuclear weapons on a limited scale and a massive "first strike" that could disarm
Uganda's Amin pardons Hills
KINSHASA, Zaire—President Idi Amin of Nigeria pardoned Denis Hills, the area a village tyrant in an unpublished book, as a village tyrant in an unpublished book.
Radio Uganda said Amin had decided to spare Hills. British Foreign Secretary James Callaghan said in London he was ready to visit Amin to discuss British-Israeli relations.
Orientation enrollees expected to top 1,600
By ALISON GWINN
Kansan Staff Reporter
More than 1,600 freshmen students should be enrolled by July 12, the date of the final freshmen orientation session, Jeanne McCullough, head of Admissions and Records, said yesterday.
This would be an increase of about 260
students from last year's total of about 1500
students.
"I think that's why we've had so many late registrants." Gorman said.
"I think the increase is directly related to the fact that students have gone home with a duplicate copy of their schedules in their hand," she said.
This is the first year in which freshmen have left with a schedule of classes that listed the classes' location and time, she said.
Students, who mainly express interest in enrollment and academic advising, have been encouraged to plan their schedules before they arrive for orientation she said.
This is the first year, incoming freshmen
in meet with faculty from the professional
school.
"I think the advisers and the students are enjoying it," he said. "I kind of gleam from a mutual satisfaction."
"The problem is the number of faculty available. It is a little deceptive in the summer, because even the department has to have to draw on the people who are here."
Gorman said parents seem to be most amazed at the friendliness of the staff and staffing of the clinics.
"The bus tours are going really well," she said. "The students tell the parents all sorts of tickets about campus life, such as what to eat and where to stay in the spring. It's really, really informal."
Gorman said parents frequently commented on the availability of administrators. During the parents' program, they eat lunch with either Chancellor Archie Foster or Del Shankel, and one or both of them has to answer a period with the parents
more period with me the parents.
Parents also meet Vice Chancellor
"Parents can ask questions all day long about the myths and rumors they've heard," she said. "For many of them, this is why they ever have to meet administrators."
William Balfour, either Kala Stroem, dean of women, or Donald Alderson, dean of men, and someone from the financial aid office, Gorman said.
"Probably on any given day of orientation, between 75 and 100 people from the University participate in enrollment, with between 15 and 30 advisers, plus student staff and students who volunteer their time," she said.
German said that orientation was a very basic responsibility for the University to institute.
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Incoming freshmen from all over Kansas have attended the program, as well as a large number from the Chicago and St. Louis areas. Several others have traveled from areas as far away as Wisconsin and New Jersey, she said.
More than 50 per cent of freshmen are expected this summer, even though it takes a while to get the job.
"I'd like to see it get up to 75 to 80 percent," she said, but added that she didn't know how the program would change in the campus, since it responds to changes in the campus.
If Don H. Homan had his way, Kansas City would be decked out in red, white and blue for America's 200th birthday—rednocks, white socks and blue ribbon beer,
Holman, a Shawnee businessman, recently proposed forming a posse comitatus, or band of armed citizens, to patrol the streets, fighting crime.
Holman's posse would maintain an arm
sure of weapons and practice on private
Right wing idea in left field
pistol and rifle ranges. The group wouldn't begin patrolling until a riot erupted. Then the group would defend its own members and their families first.
COMMENT
One of Holman's objectives is to solve the drug problem by means of "a phone number for kids to call in and pop off on other kids and adults." Another is to remove two Kansas City police officials, Joseph McNamara, police chief, and Ilus Davis, chairman of the Board of Police Commissioners, from office.
When I began to read Holman's proposal, I couldn't believe he was serious. I envisioned cowboys riding off into the sunset through a field of lynch mobs stringing up their victims.
My disbelief increased when I learned that he called the Kansan in May and said that he had devised a three point plan to cure all the nation's economic aliments.
Before policemen are allowed to bear deadly weapons, they are trained not only how to use them, but how to avoid using them. They are taught to exercise judgment and not to fire unless it is imperative. Police mentions no such training for his posse.
Holman wants his posses to be allowed to keep and bear arms at all times and to use these weapons to enforce the law, but the rule of training he mentions is target practice.
A group of citizens have no expertise in matters of law enforcement. Rather than basing their actions on rational judgement, they would rely on instinct and emotion.
Instead of helping the police eliminate crime, the blunderning efforts of a self-appointed band of crusaders against crime probably create more work for police.
There is something very nightmarish about the thought of Holman and his posses getting a hot tip on their drug line, grabbing their guns and bursting into the home of a high school kid who sold someone an ounce of marijuana.
This is perhaps my strongest objection to allowing a bunch of untrained citizens loose on the streets with deadly weapons and the power to use them.
Clerical workers' status examined by study group
Unfortunately, as I read further, it began to dawn on me that Malton was serious.
By JAMES EISELE Kansan Staff Reporter
In my home state, Nebraska, we used to have something called the "shoot your
Clerical workers aren't classified as high as they should be, he said, and there is a great variation between employee classification. There are currently six classifications for head secretaries because they have so many different duties, he said.
A committee headed by Charles F. Sidman, chairman of the history department, is studying and gathering data aimed at changing the classifications of clerical employees in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Charles A. Klesler, chairman of the psychology department, who is chairman of the workload subcommittee, said his staff was comparing the work loads for secretaries of other colleges with the work loads of liberal arts secretaries.
Sidman said his committee would attempt to determine how clerical classifications are differentiated. Two factors his committee will consider in determining work and degree of skill required for jobs.
"The classifications we have now are not based on a rational analysis," Sidman said more than once.
Sidman's committee and three subcommittees, he will gall data this summer and submit a report to the dean of the College on Aug. 31.
"We feel our classified employees are not paid equitably," he said.
Professor Philip S. Humphrey, director of the natural history museum and chairman of the uprating subcommittee, said most civil service employees are underpaid.
"I think most employees could be emplayed under more favorable conditions,"
a third subcommittee, headed by Ernest A. Angino, chairman of the geology pooling arrangements within the College. Angino, who is on vacation, and his staff will study better ways for the College to use its initialized secrections, according to Sidman.
Because some departments of the College only have one secretary other secretaries may be used to transcend departmental boundaries, he said. He said that one secretary usually wasn't qualified to handle technical work that must be done for a department.
Laurel Wise, president of classified office and clerical workers advisory unit, said the reclassification of clerical workers was needed because for a long time
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secretaries thought they were doing work outside their classifications.
"I think it's a good idea and will set some priorities for the rest of the University," she said.
neighbor," law, which allowed a citizen to legally shoot anyone who was trespassing in their property.
Sidman said that after the study was completed, University personnel would present the classification change proposals to the Civil Service Commission which will approve, reject, or revise any changes suggested.
If an armed posse was permitted, the "shoot your neighbor" law could become a reality in Kansas. Citizens could shoot people if they did not claim they did it to protect their families.
Law enforcement is the duty of trained law enforcement officials, not private citizens. If a posse was formed, I firmly reject it, rather than law and order, would result
Jain Penner
Holman's proposal is nothing new, either. In fact, the only things missing are the inquiries about what is being done.
The source said the internship was arranged by White House photographer Dave Kenney and Rich Clarkson, photo credit. He will last through July and part of August.
Posses and vigilantes are newing now. They have been used for centuries not only to fight crime, but to spread terrorism and control citizens.
Miss Ford will probably stay with a Topeka family, the source said. She is expecting to be "loosely followed" by Secret Service agents while working in Topeka.
Her duties will include photo lab work and use of pictures assigned by editors. She will begin
Susan Ford, daughter of President and Mrs. Gerald R. Ford, will arrive in Topeka Monday to begin a student internship for the university, where she will be a source at the newspaper, said last night.
"The whole thing, hopefully, will be pretty low key," Clarkson said. "She'll be doing the same work as our other photo interns."
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, July 2, 1975
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This game's name is really quite academic
We remember sitting down the other day to discover the TV full of Texas football coach Darryl Rorytell the government that if it didn't change its new rules about men and women being equal and so forth, college sports would shrivel and die.
COMMENT
Well, we don't cotton lightly to statements like that. Personally, we don't know what the levelers and shakers in the government are supposed to do or how much of reckoning should be ignored. If Sheil would
open, we think w'd better be ready. Given the unpredictability of the folks at HEW, fanatics had better get used to the notion that sports could be around longer than footballs.
If that happens, however, we need some sort of new game, something with books, games, or puzzles. Our University Game is played mainly by some administrators and erstwhile campus politics, a popular base clearly so weak that students can be crushed on their patent leather shoes.
Now, we don't propose to invent the game. There are plenty of games-minded souls who can attach purposes, parameters, and rules to thin air and make people cheer. But we news types are basically promoters at heart, our hopes and fears often turning to that horrible, perplexing problem of finding enough stories to keep everybody reading
our paper. For us, the game is less im- plemental in all the potential hoopla of the PRESENTATION.
And so we hit on it; whatever the game, it's got to have trades. Trades make good news copy and lots of room for analysis. We can see news releases like this:
"The University of Missouri announced today that it had acquired veteran Nobel-Prize-winning chemist Linus Pauling from Stanford University in exchange for three biochemists, two assistant registrars, and the entire department of French.
"We were surprised to get Pauling in a trade this late in the season, and we feel fortunate to have him," said MU president Jerry Bordford. "He'll add new depth to our attack."
"Analysts believe that Stanford traded Pauling as part of a new drive to usurp all French departments. University officials said that such a move will counter Boston University's expanded economics department."
Or this:
"Ohio State University announced today that it had traded football coach Woody Hayes to Richard Stockton State College. Richard Stockton is reported to have traded his president, ten professors, six undisclosed teaching contracts, and two residence halls.
"Hayes was not immediately available for comment, but friends close to the coach said he might retire to raise cattle rather than accept the trade."
Anybody want to buy a Jayhawk?
—Melchol Vulpinus
A plan making trash service mandatory in Douglas County, as recommended by the county's Solid Waste Advisory Board, isn't going to be released until missioner Pete Whitenhall said Monday.
County disposal plan opposed
Whitenight said the difficulty of enforcement and the unpopularity of the mandatory system were the reasons it was unacceptable to the commissioners.
The plan was unanimously approved by the county's Solid Waste Advisory Board early in May in response to a recently passed state statute, Whitengen said. The council would be meeting this countywide solid waste management system to be ready by July 1976.
The plan proposes that trash service be mandatory for all residents living on 10 acres or less.
Med Center bid postponed again
Bids for the new clinical facilities building Medical Center have been posted online.
Originally scheduled for June 17, the bid opening was put off until today at the request of contractors. Now it has been scheduled for July 10, at 2 p.m.
"There were 89 addendum items needing clarification," Frank Applegate, chief of engineering for the state Architectural Services Division, said yesterday.
Applegate said the building was estimated to cost $50 million.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Gay ads condemned; Kansan responds
I am a normal heterosexual male, and I have never felt the impulse to scream out this quality, much less publish it in bold face. I have never felt the impulse to scream or publish my pride of sexuality if I were a homosexual. It is nothing to be proud of in either case. Only Gay Lib thinks it is. I consider it to be very poor taste on the part of our audience. They advertising? Obviously not to help people with counseling. Such ads as "GAY LIB. MEANS MORE THAN WHAT WE DO WITH OUR GENTAILS" has little do with screaming and much to do with conversation.
You may ask what right I have to complain about such practices. I feel that this type of complaint in the newspaper that represents my university, Gay Lib ads must be successful
if they are willing to shell out money every day for advertising. For this reason the practice should be questioned, and hopefully ablished. As a student I pay $2.50 a semester for the Kansen from activity fees. This money subsidizes advertising indirectly. This gives me the right to question why people who feel that homeosexuals should be tormented, but don't want to see or pay for ads that promote homosexuality.
Business Manager's note:
John Olson Lawrence junior
We would argue with your reasoning on several points. First of all, students don't advertise payoffs for much of the cost of producing the paper every day. Secondly,
My final point concerns your moral objections to Gay Liberation advertising. The Kansas reserves the right to refuse advertising from anyone at any time, but as a practical matter, we only reject advertising that is unlawful (i.e., pornographic, fraudulent or illicit) or what we deem to be offensive. We don't think the Gay Libs fall into either category, regardless of how we feel about the organization personally.
To the Kansan editor:
please check with the Student Senate to see how much you really pay each semester for the student newspaper. You'll find the amount is closer to $69 cents than $2.50.
To offer an example of what I'm talking about: I might think a certain religious group is morally and intellectually objectionable, but I wouldn't reject ad copy promoting its church services, as long as it had the money to pay for its advertising.
and industrial establishments in Douglas County.
Persons living on property of more than 10 acres could dispose of the waste on their land, subscribe to the collection service or find other means of disposing of trash.
The board suggested that the trash be collected by a single, private hound and that it be returned.
Uniform rates would distribute the cost of
plans for local trash collection. If city officials decide to initiate a new system using a private hauler, the county may tie into that system, he said.
Whitenight said commissioners considered this plan disagreeable.
the whole operation equally among all users of the system.
"We think there are ways to work this out without jamming it down people's throats," he said.
The commissioners are in no hurry to work out another plan, Whtighten said. The commissioners have agreed.
The Lawrence City Commission is considering the effectiveness of its collection system because of a report released last week by Ross McMinkey, professor of civil engineering, which criticized practices in the Sanitation Department.
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Fine Light Tropical Blends—Cool Pin Cords Reg. Price '95 to '145 Now From '71 to '109
SPORTCOATS
DRESS SLACKS
Cool Crisp Solids and Patterns
Reg. Price '70 to '110
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Reg. Price '25 to '38
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DRESS SHIRTS
CASUAL SLACKS
California Styled by Hang-Ten Reg. Price '12 to '14 Now From'9 to '11
Washable—Crisp— Cool—New Reg. Price '16 to '25 Now From '12 to '18
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Solids, Patterns
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Knits by Gant,
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Reg. Price '13 to '21
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PAJAMAS
Cool Shorties by Pleetway
Reg. Price '8 to '12
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Entire Stock
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Town Shop
Town Shop All Sales Final
839 Massachusetts
University of Kansas Theatre Presents
LANDMARKS of the AMERICAN THEATRE
Sr. Nat
Fr. June 6 University Theatre
Sa. June 7 University Theatre
Su. June 8 University Theatre
Su. June 15 K.U. Museum of Art
Mo. June 16 Swarthout Rec. Hall
Su. June 17 K.U. Museum of Art
Mo. June 23 Swarthout Rec. Hall
Pr. June 27 University Theatre
Sa. June 28 University Theatre
Su. June 29 K.U. Museum of Art
Mo. June 30 Swarthout Rec. Hall
Tu. July 1 Woodruff Auditorium
We. July 2 University Theatre
Su. July 29 K.U. Museum of Art
Mo. July 5 Woodruff Auditorium
Sa. July 5 University Theatre
Mo. July 7 Swarthout Rec. Hall
Tu. July 8 Woodruff Auditorium
Th. July 10 University Theatre
Fr. July 11 University Theatre
Sa. July 12 University Theatre
Th. July 14 Swarthout Rec. Hall
Tu. July 15 Woodruff Auditorium
Fr. July 18 University Theatre
Sa. July 19 University Theatre
Su. July 20 K.U. Museum of Art
Mo. July 21 William Inge Theatre
Tu. July 22 William Inge Theatre
Woodruff Auditorium
We. July 23 William Inge Theatre
Th. July 24 William Inge Theatre
University Theatre
Fr. July 25 University Theatre
Sa. July 26 University Theatre
Tu. July 29 Woodruff Auditorium
- Indicates event FREE.
*Theatre Rally* 7:30
*Auditions: John Brown's Body, The Time Of Your Life, Oklahoma* 2-5:00
*Auditions: John Brown's Body, The Time Of Your Life, Oklahoma* 2-5:00
*Exhibit: American Regionalist Painters* 1:00
*Performance: Spoon River Anthropology* 3:00
*Lecture: The American Experience* 7:00
*Lecture/Concert: Music of the American Folk* 3:00
*Lecture: Regionalist Trends in American Art* 7:00
*Lecture: The Movies--An American Idiom Film: "Gone With the Wind" 7:00
*Concert: American Keyboard Music* 3:00
*Lecture: John Brown in Kansas* 7:00
*Play: John Brown's Body* 8:00
*PLAY: John Brown's Body* 8:00
*PLAY: John Brown's Body* 8:00
*Lecture: The Black Experience AND "The Writing Tree" 7:00
*Duck Soup* 7:00
*PLAY: The Time of Your Life* 8:00
*PLAY: The Time of Your Life* 8:00
*PLAY: The Time of Your Life* 8:00
*Concert: American Chamber Music* 3:00
*Lecture: The Indian Experience* 7:00
*Film: Cheyenne Autumn* 7:30
*PLAY: Oklahoma* 8:00
*PLAY: Oklahoma* 8:00
*Film: Junction City 1890-1915--Portrait of a Kansas Community* 3:00
*PLAY: The Mirror Man (Theatr for Children)* 2:30
*Lecture: The Land* 7:00
*PLAY: The Mirror Man (Theatre for Children)* 2:30
*Films: "The Plough that Broke the Plains" AND "Grapes of Wrath" 7:30
*PLAY: The Mirror Man (Theatre for Children)* 2:30
*Films: The Mirror Man (Theatre for Children)* 2:30
*PLAY: Oklahoma! (Benefit Performance for Lawrence Arts Center) 8:00
*PLAY: Oklahoma! 8:00
*PLAY: Oklahoma! 8:00
*PLAY: Modern Times* 7:30
Monday, July 7, 7:00 p.m. Swarthout Recital Hall Lecture: The Black Experience,and Film: The Learning Tree Admission Free
WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, AND SATURDAY
JULY 2, 3 & 5, 8:00 p.m.
KU STUDENTS '1.50—OTHERS '2.50
THE BATTLE OF THE CAMPAIGN.
JOHN BROWN'S BODY
University Theatre-Murphy Hall-864-3982
4
Wednesdav. July 2,1975
University Dally Kansan
Girls' camp routine also rugged
By KEN STONE
For $125, the 41 girls participating in the first Jawahays girls' basketball camp are learning that there is more to basketball than shooting a ball through a hoop.
Up at 7, darts at Lawrence High School gymnasium from 9 till 12, lunch and a period of enforced rest (no talking allowed), and another three hours of harder practice.
After dinner, the campers, whose ages range from 11 to 17, return to the gym to hear lectures by the coaching staff, see films and play in a scrimmage.
Marian Washington, KU women's basketball coach and one of nine camp staff members, said yesterday. "I think last night they didn't argue at all about going to bed at 10:30. They're very quick to turn that light out."
Despite the heat of the gym, the active schedule and the long days, the girls follow the same week-long program as the four boys' camps. The major difference between the boys and girls' camps is the number of activities they participate in, sometimes has 300 campers attending.
Ted Owens, KU basketball coach and director of the camp, said, "The girls are very receptive, and when you have fewer it's more relaxed."
LA&S to offer 30 fall classes
Approximately 30 interdisciplinary Liberal Arts and Sciences classes will be offered next semester by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, according to Jerry Lewis, director of the LA&S program. Lewis, who is also associate dean of the College, said yesterday that one-third of the college's new program would still emphasize human relations and subject matter not generally offered in other curricula.
Faculty members, graduate students and a few senior honor students will be class instructors and about $20,000 of University funds will finance the program, he said.
The LA&S program has been funded by University and Student Senate funds for five years, but has actually been in operation somewhat longer than that, Lewis said.
"We it's an established program," he said.
"We try to give students what they want,
not what they need."
East | W | L | Pet. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Boston | 41 | 34 | 347 | 0 |
| Milke knicker | 41 | 34 | 347 | 0 |
| Baltimore | 39 | 29 | 472 | 6% |
| Cleveland | 39 | 29 | 472 | 6% |
| Detroit | 39 | 29 | 472 | 6% |
By The Associated Press
BASEBALL STANDINGS
National League
Toronto's final Season
California 42, Michigan 35, 3-1 in game 10 lunches.
Baltimore 10, Boston 8
Detroit 6, Cleveland 1
New York 3
Oakland 10, Chicago 1
Michigan 10
West Oakland 49 21 645
KANASNAT CITY 49 27 389 8
FIRM 47 35 88 7
Chicago 35 39 473 13
Minnesota 35 40 473 13
Oklahoma 35 40 450 15
East W L Pet GB
Philadelphia 40 35 14
Philadelphia 46 35 13
New York 37 37 24
St. Louis 37 37 24
Chicago 37 40 18
Detroit 37 40 18
behind Leavenworth High School basketball coach Bob Knoll yelled at a pair of girls engaged in a passing drill, Jerry Stallworth, brother of former RU basketball player Bud Stallworth, and a member of the camp staff, commented on the camp's mood.
West
Cleveland 50 28 641
Los Angeles 43 37 338
Los Angeles Francisco 43 37 8
San Diego 37 32 474
Atlanta 37 41 474 13
St. Louis 32 44 474 13
The Villages is seeking a conditional use permit to put two residences for neglected and dependent children in the Village, the original proposed site atop Pleasant Ridge, south of town.
Summer Shoe SALE
Tuesday's Tournament
St. Louis 6, Houston 7, 13 wins
Cincinnati 8, Houston 13, 13 wins
Pittsburgh 10, Montreal 10, 10 wins
Philadelphia 10, San Diego 10, Los Angeles 10
Selected Styles of Our
The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission will have a new site plan from the Villages Inc. to consider at its July 23 meeting.
Villages Inc. seeks site plan approval
The original plan was withdrawn in April in the face of heavy opposition from neighbors. The planning commission had recommended approval of the original plan.
Hiking Boots
25% off
Moccasins
30% off
The new plan has been filed with the planning commission.
Frye Shoes
30% off
One of the campers, Victie Sanders of KU next fall on a basketball scrimmage and KU next fall on a basketball scrimmage.
"They smile every time you seem them," Sailworth said. "I'm getting a lot of fun out of it."
Richard Wright, Eudora, Douglas County representative for A Brotherhood Against Tottalitarian Enactments (ABATE), said yesterday that local bikers would meet riders from other parts of the state July 20 at the state capital.
"It's a lot of fun to work with the girls because it's so easy to get across to them." Stallworm said. "They're going to listen to you the first time.
Entire Stock Not Included
PRIMARILY LEATHER
"Everything they learn here is something new to the girls. Just the idea of knowing that there are proper techniques really important. They're really amused by the concept."
Washington said Sanders was one of 27 women who would receive financial aid from the women's athletic department this fall.
But Stallworth said, "This isn't half as bad as the boys' camp. They think they know it all. You've got to be strict with the guys."
In the background, an occasional angry scream punctuated a drill.
The sound heard most often, though, is the sound of laughter.
Area motorcyclists will meet July 19-20 at Lake Perry for an overnight campout to precede a statewide protest ride demonstrating opposition to mandatory helmet laws.
Lawrence, Ks
Washington. ever on the lookout for new
812 Mass.
talent moved to the other side of the gym to
wet the play of some girls, move close.
ABATE hopes to change state and federal
required cyclists to wear helmets
while driving.
Wright said his group hoped to induce the
state to enact and enforce such laws,
from states to enact and enforce such laws.
"I'll use opportunities like today to sign some," she said.
Protest planned by motorcyclists
Straw Hat Pizza Palace invites you to CLIP $1.00 OFF DINNER
(or any other time)
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$1.00 off
any large
pizza.
offer good
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50¢ off
any medium
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Both offers good at:
2515 W. 6th
841-2547
First Visit
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom--684-4810
Advertising--684-4358
Circulation--684-3048
Editor Ward Harkavy
Published at the University of Karimabad during the academic year 2018-19. Registered at Lawyer's Office at Lawrence, KS 65028. Subscriptions by mail e-mail s.miller@lawyersoffice.com or call (314) 557-2222.
Associate Editor
Copy Editors
Copy Authors
Cathy Benz, Ken Loudon,
Rickard Pasonen, Kathy Buchert,
Kevin Benz
Business Manager Jim Merrill
Assistant Business Managers
Promotion Manager
Associating Manager
Cindy Long, Jerrick Kanel
Bee Sherer
Gary Burger
News Adviser
Brand Manager
Office Manager
Office Manager
Susan Shawne
Mark Brennan
Oleen Ross
MAKING WAY FOR GOBS OF NEW FALL FASHIONS
We're Saying "good by" to Spring and Summer Fashions at 50% Off During Our
MID-SEASON
Clearance Sale
SAVE
1/3 to 1/2
- PANTS • SKIRTS • PANT SUITS • PURSES
• DRESSES • KNIT TOPS • SWIM SUITS •
• BLOUSES •
All Sales Final Entire Summer Stock Included the VILLAGE SET
Country Club Plaza/Metcalf South/Prairie Village Blue Ridge Mall/922 Mass.
A sporting offer from Lawrence National Bank.
J SPALDING
L
E S
B A F
SPALDING
K
H
SPALDING
M
C G
| DESCRIPTION OF ITEM | AMOUNT OF DEPOSIT |
|---|
| $250 or more | $5000 or more |
|---|
| A. Pancho Gonzalez Tennis Balls (Set of 3) | FREE | 2 FREE |
| B. I Dixon Eagle Golf Balls | FREE | 2 FREE |
| C. Valley Ball | $ 0.00 | FREE |
| D. Basketball | 2.00 | FREE |
| E. Impact 180 Tennis Racket | 3.50 | FREE |
| F. Soccer Ball | 4.00 | FREE |
| G. Football | 5.00 | FREE |
| H. Trophy Badminton Doubles Set | 5.00 | FREE |
| I. Tennis Gift Set | 7.00 | $ 2.00 |
| J. Tennis Carry All Bag | 15.00 | 10.00 |
| K. Smasher Aluminum Tennis Racket | 28.00 | 23.00 |
| L. Championship Men's 7 - Piece Golf Set* | 36.00 | 31.00 |
| M. Championship Ladies 7 - Piece Golf Set* | 36.00 | 31.00 |
- Set includes 1 & 3 Woods; 3.5,7,9 Irons; Putter
These quality Spalding products are yours free or at tremendous savings when you open or add to a savings account... or open a new checking account.
Make a basket, sink a putt, hit a backhand, bat a birdie, throw a pass, spike a ball, kick a goal!
**Maximum discount allowed bv Federal regulations.
Lawrence National Bank helps you score the winning point with quality sporting goods from Spalding - America's leading name in sports equipment.
Thirteen different items to choose from.
Some are free and others are available at fantastic savings depending on the amount of your deposit.
Come in to Lawrence National Bank and open or add to your account today...and take us on our sporting offer.
Offer available at Townsquare and Southplaza locations. Limit: One per family, please.
a new view
Lawrence National Bank & Trust Company
TOWN/ZIPCODE 7th & Massachusetts • CAMPUSBANK 9th & Louisiana • SOUTHPLAZA 27th & Iowa
Wednesday, July 2, 1975
Jams in store for Apple Valley
A folk singing jam session in the country might be just the summer entertainment you've been looking for. If so, any Thurday evening, you can join the band, tapping your feet or singing along, drive out
University Daily Kansan
5
By MERLE GOLDMAN
REVIEW
to the Country Music Hall of Apple Valley Farm and join in the song.
There is a jam session from 8 to 9 p.m.
The performance feature and
more intimate jam sessions.
Gloria Throne, the coordinator of the
sessions, said it was a chance for "people to get together and play music, even people who aren't familiar with it."
Steve Mason, who builds and repairs guitars at McKinney-Mason Stringed Instruments, said there was a group of good musicians with instruments wanted to share what they knew with others.
She said the jam sessions were an out growth of their original attempt to start a Fond's restaurant.
"Even if you don't play an instrument," he said, "we strongly encourage people to come and play the spoons and stamp their feet and dance, to come and participate at
Mason aid the sings differred from week to week, but that there was always a spirit of joy and laughter.
The jam sessions have been held at Apple Valley Farm since the beginning of June, and have included many of the she said, when weekly jam sessions were held at McKinney-Mason Stringed Instruments. More and more people kept up with the jam sessions and the eaters had playing elbow to elbow.
Everyone who wants to perform has the chance to use the central mike, Mason said, but there are also many timid guitarists who sit out in the audience and pick along.
The Joe Strop, owner of Apple Valley
Park Mall, said Music Hall for a
meeting place, he said.
"We have a lot of fine musicians in the area, this beautiful lake," Stroup said, and we needed a low keyed recreation business place like they have in the Ozarks."
The farm is on Route 1 in Ozawakie near a lake. Beies the music hall there on an afternoon.
The rustic Country Music Hall provides the space for the 50 people who have been coming to the folkskids recently. Thorne will be looking for a meeting place in Lawrence.
The feature performances are a time to listen to just one group of musicians, she said. On July 3, a Lawrence couple, Robert and Colleen folsom have in the United States and Latin America, will sing songs West V Virginian, Kansan and Spanish.
Occupancy in University residence halls is up, J. J. Wilson, director of housing, said last week. Oliver Hall, where summer classes live, has 76 more students than last year.
Wilson said the housing office had received $38,000 this summer, compared with $300,000 last summer. However, Wilson said he the difference more to increases in the cost of the summer camp than to the increased number of occupants.
Housing occupancy up
Although the senior high enrollment was
much lower than the high enrol-
ment more than middled up the loo-
d.
Enrollment for the Midwestern Music and Arts Camp, was up according to Jean Hamblin, administrative assistant of the camp.
section. Junior high enrollment totaled 692, which is 212 more students than last summer, with 500 enrolled in the music section, 116 in art and 76 in the journalism section.
Figures for last summer's senior high enrollment weren't available.
Senior high enrollment totaled 471, with 383 in music in 86 art and 97 in the speech.
"The junior high enrollment was fan-
tastic. It was the history of the cam-
p." Hamilin said.
Hamblin said the increase was because of the short term of the junior high session, 10 days, which lowered the cost. She said many parents sent their children to summer camps to take the place of an expensive family vacation.
In response to another question, Wilson said that of June 13, processed and signed contracts for University residence halls for next fall totaled 2,987 compared with 2,865 last year at this time which is a 15 per cent increase.
Airport condition decried
BY MARK FENNIGTU
Kansan Staff Reporter
By MARK PENNINGTON
Lawrence mayor, Barkley Clark yesterday called the city municipal airport a "miserable facility" and said the city would provide money for its maintenance and repair.
Clark also commented on how the airport affects the city's commerce, such as the problem of the airport accommodating airplanes flown by industrial companies.
Clark said many Kansas communities smaller than Lawrence had better airports.
"I want Lawrence to be a first-class class in every respect," he said, and "we already are in areas such as educational facilities, parks, roads and so on in bridges."
Clark said many people in the city had failed to vote. Yet in the last city bond vote a year and a half ago on whether to expand the airport's facade, the proposal was soundly favorable.
He said that he didn't foresee another bond vote for improvement of the airport, but that the city would explore other ways to finance the project.
The city will receive little aid, if any, from the federal government for such a project, but many state governments cover it is owned by the Kansas University Endowment Association. The government doesn't give funds for expansion projects of this type unless the land is owned by the city.
Any program to lengthen and widen the armprogrm. Clark said, won't be ready in time.
"Certainly it's been a negative influence." Clark said.
He said it was hard to tell whether present airport facilities had kept any industry from operating.
Buford Watson, city manager, said that recently landed at the airport for business and when they were ready to leave the pilot refused to take off with them in the air.
The pilot was convinced there wasn't enough runway for a safe take off, Watson said. The representatives were driven to the municipal airport in Kansas City, Mo.
He said the airport runway, which is 3,000
long, wasn't long enough for big trains.
The airport land is leased to the city for 25 years. Watson said, at $1 a year.
"The Endowment Association is willing to sell the land," Watson said, "and, had the bond issue passed, we would have bought it for $1 million." The company runaway and build the necessary facilities."
Robert Walters, manager of research and development for the Law Center and chairman of the Lawyer Chamber of Commerce aviation committee, said the airport facilities were "pretty nice."
"I know the airport is not on a par with what many other communities in Kansas have." Walters said. "I've been in enough planes that they have better facilities than we do."
Walters said the runway needed to be extended 600 feet and sidened 25 feet to help insure the safety of passengers using the airport.
City Commissioner Carl Mikeck also criticized the airport.
Referring to the story told by Watson, Mibeeck said, "Those company representatives landed that airplane. But what to do about the problem is a tough question because we don't own the airport land and the people of it want to want to pay for an improved facility."
subcommittee after the drug rider had already been removed.
From page 1
"The only figures available were without the rider." she said.
rofs said he thought that if the costs should be included the $28 drug rider shouldn't be included
"If they could afford the $26, they could probably afford the $10," he said.
StudEx will make the final vote on the policy in two weeks. The policy must be decided at that time in order for Blue Cross to have to provide it available for fall enrollment.
He said he thought the increased costs of school would make it difficult for many students to attend.
SUNFLOWER SURPLUS
804 MASS LAWRENCE
You Pay Less The Second Time Around
oiva
In addition to our fine lines of SLEEPING BAGS,
PACKS and FRAMES, TENTS, and BOOTS, we carry a full selection of accessories for the camper and backpacker including:
Optimus shaves and lanterns
Buck and Gerber knives
Rich Moore and Mt. House freeze-
dried foods
Palco and Sigg cookwear
Canteen
Cutter insect repellent and first aid
kits
Silva compasses
Bausch & Lomb sunglasses
All types of rope
Surplus gear and clothing
Optimus stoves and lanterns
The Complete Outdoors Store
SUNFLOWER SURPLUS
843-5000
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, good services, and empathetic support will be provided. Please refer to the BIRING AID CARD (BIRING ADVANCEMENT CARD) located at [link](http://www.biringadvancements.com).
CLASSIFIED RATES
one three five
time times five
15 words or less $1.50 $2.00 $2.50
Each additional word .01 .02 .03
AD DEADLINES
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
304 Mass.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the URB business office at 864-1555.
JDK BUSINESS OFFICE
11 Flint Hall 864-4358
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
Make sense out of Western Civilization?
Makes sense to use them—
2) Rs salary guide
3) For class preparation
Get it together (with a little help from your friends)
"New Analysis of Western Civilization
'new aware at Town Clerk and Compus Mad-
house
The GRAMOPHONE on KIEFS offers every daily prices on audio components that equal the prices of "cost-plus" duns found elsewhere. Many layups of equipment found where else in lawrence." **if**
Home in the Country—1872 double wide mobile kitchen with two refrigerators, dishwasher and appliances, skirting and ledges. Located on private lot 5 miles from Lawnland with large garden plot and storm cellar 842-9375
Come on out—Lots of shade and parking—to the Country Shop, shops for furniture and other furniture, antiques, collectables. Wooden products; nail kegs, 4 ft x 5 ft bowls; amber bottles, 13 baskets; ammo boxes, apple boxes, lime coats, candle boxes, coffee cups, decorative items and "Junk." Crimson sweet watermelon $19 each, Zucchini squares 12 beans, 3 lb $12.50. Inks to the $11 Bowl fruits and vegetables. Lettuce, onion, cabbage, fruits and vegetables. Lettuce, onion, cabbage, in shell, horgar, sorghum, popcorn, assorted nuts, honey, sorghum, popcorn. Alderdon, 9 open 9 to 7 days 64/325-8138 Herbert alldon, Jr.
Marantz 224S receives a pair of JBL L-881
Mantz 224S receives a pair of JBL L-881
Pickering cartridges. Call Scott. 841-262-7900
1965 Triumph Spitfire, new overhaul, hardtop
Call: 845-838-73
7-3
35 mm SLR camera outfit in excellent shape 7-3
841-137-600
1966 WV Squareback, under 70,000 miles. Reliable
machine, in good condition. Call 823-4538.
Now fire merchandise close-outs, ee. New selling grocery stock from a Chicago supermarket stand. Open 9 am-5 pm, 1-3 at checkout stand. Open 9 am-5 pm, 1-3 at checkout stand. Gorilla's Salve Mater. C288, Mercer University.
190 WV Squareback, new tires, muffler, repair kit
FM station receiver and SS10 spare. Keep to
station receiver and SS10 spare. Keep to
station receiver and SS10 spare. Keep to
station receiver and SS10 spare. Keep to
Kay Cello and bow. Good condition and tense.
7-2
price: 842-3844.
JAMES LIQUORS
Cold Beer & Chilled Wine
9th Street Center
(Next to the Wall!)
412-872-3222
GAY COUNSELING & RAP
for referrals
info center
864 3506
or
849 7505
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1015 Iowa 11. 9 Mon.-Fri.
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In Topeka, 1972 Barrington 14 x 64. 2 bedrooms,
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HIGH PROTEN HIP meat dog food. 24-14 oz.
cash. $49.94 case, no discount. Metzler Salve
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MATI TUTORING Compcient experienced tutor
123 135 146 157 168 179 180 181 182 183 Reasonable rate. Call
(212) 555-5555
TACOS
$3.50 per Dozen
Casa de Taco
essehusetts 842-5889
1974 Honda CB 180, Tup Top shape, 1800 ml
Dishwasher Safe
Collect items, $30 or buy online. 842-748-6500
Color, TV, RCA 19", 1 year. Call Hasher at 843-858. 7-4
AM-FM Storm w. willfultite, walnut cushion
AM-FM Storm b. willfultite, walnut cushion
Berry picker w. presp. $185 - 819-709 - 2-3
5.000 BTU Air Conditioner, use one season. $100.
Btu 841-1796 7-3
[971] Capi 4 speed, air conditioned, Red. Low
RPM. VWB-UVM VWB.852,716 7-3
1970 Plymouth Duster, 2 dr. HT, red. automatic.
Savor Jawkwell JW, N22-210.
7-3
1974 Yamaha, Durodor 1250, One Owner, 3200 Miles,
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1968 WV Bus, converted to camper, ice box,
kids bus, gas站, Jawhark WV 843-200, 830-200.
1973 WS Super Beetle, two-4-speed, 1 owner.
1976 WS Super Beetle, service agreement Jailhawk T-5
843-210
843-210
1970 Chevette station wagon, automatic, power steering, rack rate 45,000 miles. JEEP 350. W 8425.
1966 VW Hug, excellent transmission, two to
choose from, Jabawah, VW4-820-200.
1971 Karmann Ghiua, blue, 4-speed, 24,000 mLF,
laboratory VWB, 848-2900
1966 Malibu, 2-dr ht, automatic, air, bucket
Only one of its kind. Jayhawk V84-83
1969 Plymouth Fury, automatic, air conditioned,
Jayhawk W-843 - 821-260, 7-3
Closeout of all 174 Demo's and rental cars, save
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7-3
Nikon F. body only Best offer. 5 sale barcode
NIKON F. camera Yamaha 300, 8 best offer. 7-10
NIKON F. 849-187 after 5 days
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale
Make sure use of Western Civilization!
Make sure 1)
1) As study guide or
selection paper
2) For exam preparation
3) For exam preparation
1964 Plymouth Belvedere, 4-door sedan, low
Macrane plant hangers, potteries, planters, battles,
waxing and corm care, case holders, low new low price
plants, microwave trays, 12-5-8
FOR RENT
New Analysis of Available now at Town Crier Stores. tf
17 Honda 350, excellent condition. Call 843-0884-
495 for Tena. Before 10 P.M.
Free rental service. Up to the minute littings of
Lawrence, Lawrence Ballet Rental Exchange 842-230-9655
Two bedroom building, all utilities paid. close to cafee where this fall, furnished or unfurnished. 813-929-7650
Johnson Retail Billing Company, Studio 1, bedroom 20,
travel center to KU Medical Center, Kansas City, KS) Manage
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904 Vermont
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
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15 East 8th, 841-2656
12-5 Monday-Friday
10-5 Sat.
WAGON WHEEL
1401 Ohio
Sandwiches, Delicatessen, Foods
Madridina Indian Shop
Shop
For the Finest in Authentic, Handcrafted Indian Jewelry, Arts and Crafts
19 W. 9th
10-5; 30 Daily
Thursdays 'til 8
Nest 4-room apartment in older house. 1 block from campus. 351 plus else. 842-6312. 7-360
Rooms - Kitchen privileges. One block to campus.
$5 and $10 meals, possible rent reduction for
their rooms.
Room furnished, single, with or without cook-
ing facilities. RU and NU, no dwell-
ings. No pets. Phone 843-7667
Apartments. 1, 2 and 4 bedrooms furnished.
BORDERS KIU and near town. Phone 835-7567. fff
Help Must submit a 2 bdr apartment for
Reasonable. Call 864-7671 after 5 p.m. f-2
House 2- story, three bedroom unfurnished Borders KU and new town. Married couple prince.
Nice room in spaces communal household $60;
no. total 3 next door.穴客 842-1178
www.michelleco.com
Extra rice room with private kitchens. One
room with refrigerator, dishwasher, utility
space. Bedrooms: 843-3579
Need roommate, male or female, to share Power
Whistle 155th, 195th, Great Breathe, Karaus 75
and 76.
Exceptionally nice unfurried one bedroom
apartment with a private pool. Some
utilities included. Within walking distance
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COST PLUS 10%* Storcere equipment. All major
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Figure 13, Times, and Disturbances. Call Line 7-142.
Experienced typist—term paper papers, thesis, mrn.
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LOST AND FOUND
Lost: Male, gray and brown cat with black
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FOUND LESSON keys left in 11 Flii Hall, AM Jug 142,
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Last - A white nurse with personal encirclements, if
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Found. medium-sized, light-colored, female Siamese. Travels to good home on third day. 843-872-7911. Free to good home on third day. 843-872-7911.
Time part Dairy farm help was needed. Must have 14 miles south of Lawrence Philipson 594-347-8470 594-347-8470
HELP WANTED
The Office of Instructional Resources is accepting applications for the 19-76 academic year. Qualifications include a high level of competency in statistics in the computer programming experience. Duties will include creating a computer program and assisting in the operation and development of the Survey. Applicant's improvement of teaching through evaluation and monthly visitation. Startling date: August or October at the Office of Instructional Resources, 409 Valley Hall. Application deadline: May 25th. Active Inline Action Employer.
Foreign student seeks private English teacher. 13 hours per week. Call 843-2105, 6-30: 7-20.
SERVICES OFFERED
WANTED
Tutoring in math or econ. Tutoring and teaching experience in both. Call 842-6281. 7-3
CUSTOM JEWELRY Reasonably Profited. price.com
Steel and polished. Turguise. Salt-
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College woman want housekeeping, gardening,
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Male or female roommate wanted to share house
monthly, and 1 month paid off to campground
in summer. All roommates will be required.
Employment Opportunities
Continuing Studies of the Family, Wanted; married, must be a citizen of the United States. To find out more, call 643-759-1900. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Friday.
pre-school teacher will provide after-
school tutoring for six. Call Mike, 462-3019 (462-302-
mornings)
Wanted: female roommate for July, August $850
Wanted: female roommate for June. Came by 1800 Abbey
evening.
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1
6
Wednesday, July 2, 1975
University Daily Kansan
INDIRA
'John Brown's Body' awakened in a-smolderin' KU performance
hy EVIE RAPPORT
"John Brown's body lies a-moulderln' in the grave, but his soul is marching on."
Historians are still fighting the Civil War. Battles include what caused it, why it went on so long and how the issues might have been resolved if political power had rested in different persons. But the terrible tragedy of war is that everyone forgets the people it wounds the deepest—the individual men who fight the battles,
REVIEW
women who grieve and pray the farmer stock is destroyed by stray crabmenhals.
Stephen Vincent Benet didn't forget. In 1928-27, when he hadn't yet turned 30, he wrote "John Brown's Body," an epic narrative poem about the people who lived the Civil War for Lincoln, Grant, Lee, Davis, and Robert E. Lee as soldier, the women who loved them.
Benet's poem was awarded the 1929 Pulitzer Prize for poetry. It became immensely popular, receiving praise for its historical accuracy as well as its mastery of style. In the early 1950s, it was adapted for the stage as a concert reading.
The first production of the 1975 University of Kansas Summer Theater Festival will be a concert reading of "John Brown's Body." The play, directed by Tom Rea, associate
professor of speech and drama, opens
hours each week at Heart. Other
performances will be July 31st.
The play closely follows the action of the poem it has three principal performers and a chorus.
The principal parts will be performed by three alumni of the KU theater program. They are Richard Kelton, Sue Tisdale Niven and Sean Griffin, all of whom have pursued successful professional careers since leaving the University.
Each assumes the character of several persons during the play, ranging from President Abraham Lincoln to a plantation owner in Mississippi, and Kentucky girl. The play itself reflects the dreadful national divisions caused by the Civil War, with representatives of the North, the South and the border states each accusing the master on the personal impact of the war.
The play begins with John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry, Va., in October 1859. This ill-advised and hasty attempt to free Southern slaves cost Brown, two of his sons and several others, including two freed slaves, their lives.
But it was the turning point for the abolitionists and their cause. Brown's attack on the song about him quickly became a rally cry. In 1862, Jillia Ward Howe, an abolitionist, set the words of her poem, "Battle Hymn of the Republic," to the same
The play takes the actions of the war through the battles of Ball Run, Shibal and Wheeler, and the battle of Brooklyn.
the union soldier, his love affair with a young woman and the mourning anger of a Southern woman watching her home and her life crumble around her.
The action and personalities of the principal characters are interpreted and commented upon by the 16-member chorus, which sing music composed for the play by Ferino Heath. Besides the original music, the a capella chorus songs a few contemporary songs, and the effects of bugles, banjos, marching feet, crowd noises and wind.
The vocal range of the chorus is complemented by the different voices of the principal players. Rea described Kelton's voice as "a deep tympany."
"Sean's voice has another timbre and quality, while Sue has a rich alto voice," she
The play, which Rea directed in a 1963 KU production, has been applauded for its historical accuracy. In this production, copies of lithographs depicting Civil War scenes will be printed on cork on lithographs first appeared in Harper's magazine in 1862 and 1863.
Although the mood of the play is somber and although Benet speaks powerfully against the tragic waste of war, Rea said that "the body" Bory "was a hopeful and optimistic work.
And although Benet's Northern sympathies are never hidden, his compassion for the tragedy of the Southerners is clearly expressed. As Ralph Tappin wrote in 1957, "No one else has caught the essence of the Civil War as well as Benet."
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As studies on the feasibility of widespread use of the helium dirigible move into their second phase, proponents of these balloon-like airships take hope that in the future they will become an accepted mode of transportation.
Dirigibles, airships and blimps are all called Lighter Than Air vehicles (LTA), Jan Roskam, professor of aerospace engineering, said yesterday.
By KELLY SCOTT
Kansan Staff Reporter
To the layman, an LAta is more readily identifiable as the Goodyear blimp that supplies the overhead crowd shot on Monday Night Football or flashes cagle slogans on its great belly while coating high above Kansas City.
"There is real potential for low-polluting mass transportation," Roskam said.
Roskam said that was about all LTAs were now used for.
He said he thought there would be more LTAs in practical use by the year 2000. Development of the vehicle to meet modern needs would take almost ten years, he said.
He said he could forsee a transcontinental system of LTAs that could move at a maximum of 180 knots, and would receive plane loads of passengers from small commuter planes that would land right on the runway, as planes land on aircraft carriers.
"It would be like landing on a cloud,
or cloud would hold you up," Brik said.
He said the LTA could be valuable in transporting outsize freight. Now, the only ways for large freight to be moved over long distances are by ship or truck into smaller components and shipping it.
Some industrial equipment doesn't lend itself to be broken down into smaller parts.
Feasibility of blimps still debated
He said large equipment needed for nuclear power plants couldn't be broken down. Transporting such equipment, he could be easier if LTAs were used.
Phase One of the feasibility studies NASA funded for the study of long range LTA use was completed in May when Boeing and Goodyear, the only companies that still build presented their reports to NASA Ames Research Center at Moffett Field, Calif.
Congress will then decide whether to fund actual development of the vehicles, Kokam
The results of these studies were largely inconclusive, Roskam said, and there were strong feelings for and against further study. Regardless, both companies will begin Phase Two of LTAs. Phase Two should be completed by the end of this year.
If Congress votes to develop the LTA, Roskam said, and if NASA funds study by universities to solve fundamental problems in space exploration, they are invested in doing that research, Roskam said.
Roskam said he believed public sentiment against the LTA, caused partly by the tragic crash of the Hindenburg in 1897, but there were people died in the Hindenburg disaster.
"You better believe it," he said. "I'll make sure of that."
He said the abandonment of dirigible aircraft at sea came was the result of other factors as well.
"History just converged," Roskarn said. "Political events of the late 1930s and early 1940s is addition to the growing popularity of the system combined to siftile dirigible development."
Development of the LTA for modern use would be an undertaking too expensive for a private company to afford, Roskam said.
If the feasibility studies indicate a future need, such information must be supported by the tarpawel.
Once a feasible model of the LAFT is established, statutory control over them, Roekam said.
Safety rules, licensing procedures, and specification of size or airplanes are covered by federal authority. Since there have been no LTAs in practical use since the Hindenburg crash, there is no legislative authority governing them.
This lack of legislative authority would
lift the requirement to build and certify
LTA's, Rookam staff.
He said that if it was proved there was a profit in using LTAs, airline companies did not. The report said.
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1
FLATING
BLAZING
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
No.156
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
The next issue of the Kansan will be published Tuesday, July 8.
Thursday, July 3, 1975
A teacher reads a book to a group of children.
Magic carpet
A large Persian carpet dominates the scene of the "Magle Me"
coursed design for four- to eight-year-old children. The two-
week course encourages the youngsters to act out their imaginations. See story page 4.
KU grant to aid disabled
By PETER PORTEOUS
The University of Kansas has received a $240,000 federal grant to help eliminate architectural and transportation barriers to the handicapped.
Approval of the grant was announced yesterday by Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan. KU's grant is one of three such grants, totaling $15 million, approved for public agencies in Kansas.
The grants comprise 80 per cent federal funds matched by 20 per cent from the recipient agency. The funds will come from HEW and will be administered through the state Division of Vocational Rehabilitation. Dr. Fuchs will serve as the University Committee for the Architecturally Handicapped, said yesterday that it was appropriate that the grant had been approved now, during the National Awareness Week for the handicapped. The observance is part of a national observance and rehabilitation program, he said.
The grant approval was the culmination of more than two years of discussion and preparation.
Williams said the grant's approval was achieved through the cooperation of the Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services.
"This will mean a tremendous acceleration of our program in opening all of the University's facilities to everyone," he said.
The grant will probably advance KU's program on the handicapped more than WKU's. If the kid was
The grant will allow the University to install new elevators and continue its program to eliminate barriers such as stairways without ramps and restroom doors too narrow to admit a wheelchair, be said.
The new elevators are the most important improvements to be made, according to Williams. Bailey and Fint halls will have elevators at the elevator in Snow Hall will be renovated.
"The elevators will open up entire schools and programs for people who were previously excluded from the buildings," Williams said. "The one in Bailey will made academic counseling services, which are on all floors, available to many more people."
Planned improvements include renovated restrooms in Melott, Snow and强壮 halls and Robinson Gymnasium, new grade-level buildings and additional curb cuts.
There are 40 or 50 "severely handicapped" persons on the KU campus, according to Williams, and an unknown number of handicapped persons have been prevented from enrolling because of numerous barriers to wheelchair travel.
The University is now in the middle of a fiveyear program to eliminate archaeological gaps.
As well as making physical changes, he said, the committee for the handicapped is researching modes of transportation for wheelchair users.
Union reps hear faculty appeals
By JACK FISCHER
Kansan Staff Reporter
These two groups waived their right to present their pleas in open session before the board to speed up the hearings because a lengthy presentation by the School of
Representatives of the University of Kansas School of Law and administrative representatives met in closed bearings last night and agreed on working terms in their opposing appeals before the Kansas Public Employer-Employee Relations Board (KPERB).
Engineering threatened the possibility of reconvening today.
The law school submitted a statement of facts to the board supporting its request for a separate bargaining unit. That, and the administration's response, was acceptable to both parties. The board will determine who will make up the bargaining unit.
The administration and the law school agreed to submit final drafts of their statements to the board within five working days.
Housing muddle blamed on code
By MARK PENNINGTON
The vagueness of the Lawrence Minimum Housing code is probably responsible for much of the confusion in decisions to rent to students at Oxford Watson, city manager, said Tuesday.
In addition, both waived the presentation of closing arguments until they received written transcripts of the hearing, after which they were to return written briefs stating their final positions to the board. The briefs must be turned in by September
"I think there's too much interpretation on the part of any individual," Watson said. "What is dangerous, what is unsafe and what is against the general welfare of the nation?" I think the more specific we can on uniform standards the better off we'll be."
Watson said the housing code would be enforced as uniformly as it could be.
"What happens is that the inspector goes in and makes an inspection, and be finds
He disputed charges made by Ed Covington, former minimum housing inspector, that the code wasn't enforced uniformly. Covington resigned yesterday.
something that he thinks is dangerous or unsafe," Watson said. "He tells the people about it. Some people fix the problem, but some other people don't think that the person is dangerous, and they appeal to the Minimum Housing Code Board of Appeals.
Watson said he had asked Covington what Covington meant in a previous statement in which he accused Watson of not letting him do his job the way it was supposed to be
"If the board agrees that the problem isn't dangerous, then the code hasn't been interpreted uniformly. But everybody has no right to go through the appeals process."
"He really wasn't directing at me so much as he was all of these different interruptions. He didn't direct."
Watson said he had never told Covington how to do his job.
Housing inspector resigns
★ ★ ★
Ed Covington, Lawrence minimum housing inspector, submitted his resignation to City Manager Buford Watson yesterday, saying that he had endured "mental agony" from the frustration of not being able to do his job efficiently.
Watson said he was sorry that Covington the way he did about his job as housing manager.
"He feels strongly that he is correct in his assessment of how the housing code should be implemented."
wanted to enforce the code only against unhealthy and dangerous conditions. That's the policy that we have to work with and that's what we have to carry out."
Watson said there had been a high percentage of success in bringing houses up to standard in the Hill Target area. The Hill Target area is immediately east of campus. Students who want to attend were in compliance with the code and 15 more should be in compliance shortly.
"I've tried to tell him that the enforcement of the code is a policy of the company."
The position of city minimum housing inspector will be filled as soon as the city can get out notice of the position and take applications, Watson said.
"The thing that has happened," he said,
"is that as they get into situations where there are legal problems, then the legal requests have to come through me."
Under cross-examination by Michael Davis, attorney for the administration, all of the witnesses conceded to links between the engineering school and the administration in such vital matters as control of salaries and internal governance.
Watson said Covington had delayed a long time in inspecting some houses, so the first thing that should be done would be a complete reinspection.
"Some of these houses haven't been inspected since 1973," Watson said.
"It been hard for me to understand why the city has been so much more concerned with the pollution that comes out of the wrong type of a trap under a sink than with the pollution that comes out of an industrial plant."
Six houses ordered held from placarding last December would be reinspected and placarded if necessary, he said. When a sign is placed on it declaring it unsafe.
City Commissioner Carl Mibek, who is chairman of a committee that is revising the housing code, agreed with Watson that it should be implemented in some areas and too general in others.
However, Mibkeck said there was a difference between owners of old houses that tried to comply with the law and owners who did nothing.
"Some owners in the city, after having received a citation from the housing inspector, have fixed up things in their houses that I considered to be needless expenses," he said. "They just did it because they felt it was the law. I consider this to be grossly
"The code as it is now enforced is just too strict for old houses," Mibuck said. "Our committee is trying to come up with a different approach for houses built before the construction and that to be on the very minimum that affects the health and safety of the occupants.
The question of whether the engineering school's methods of accreditation were different from other schools and departmental methods was answered swerved because Haynes, in an unexpected move, requested information from the administration about all the other methods of accreditation within the University. The information will supply the information in two weeks.
Donald Hoffman, assistant attorney general and KPERB hearing examiner, said the board would be flexible in answering questions after arguments after the briefs were hurried in.
unfair when there are guys who won't even do the minimum."
Mibek said it made sense to him for the commission to be lenient with owners who tried to improve their properties. Low-cost care is essential for families that is desperately needed, he said.
Mibeeck said he didn't think the city administration would allow fororing the favoring of the code, because of fewer
"I just think the city manager has tried to go the last mile with some of these people," Mibeck said. "I think they re reluctant to go out and spend time out to come out to be expensive for both parties."
"This has probably been the most elaborate unit determination ever before the board," Hoffman said at the conclusion of the hearings.
He also said the board had collected a good factual record of the petitioners
William Haynes, representative for the School of Engineering, called five witnesses to testify that the school needed a separate bargaining unit because many of its functions were independent of the rest of the University.
In her close statements regarding the inclusion of department chairmen in the bargaining unit, Inara Horton, representing the American Association of University Professors, said that because chairmen are not at all the same cities as other faculty and didn't formally allotted to administrative work, they should be included in the unit.
In addition, she said, the duties of the chairmen vary greatly in different departments. Excluding chairmen would normally only represent in bargaining disputes.
Davis said that although chairmen didn't precisely fit the state statute defining a supervisor, they did have power to run their departments.
He said chairmen usually carried only one-third of the normal faculty course load because they were engaged in administrative work.
Regents deny fee waiver request
By.JACK McNEELY
Kansan Staff Reporter
A request by the University of Kansas to waive tuition payments for graduate teaching assistants and assistant instructors was among items cut from the fiscal year 1977 budget by the Kansas Board of Regents
KU had submitted the request to waive
FIREWORKS
The Kansan wishes everyone a happy Fourth of July and reminds everyone to observe the rules concerning fireworks. Fireworks can be shot off today and tomorrow from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. Please observe the law.
tuition payments so that it could compete for the best teaching assistants with other major universities, most of which waive tuition. This is according to Chancellor Archie R. Dykes.
Iowa State University, for example, not only waives fees for teaching assistants, but also pays them higher salaries than KU pays.
"With whatever salary increase money we get for next year, we'll do the best we can for the teaching assistants." Executive Vice Chancellor Del Shankel said Tuesday.
Shankel didn't know the Regents' reasons for denying the request to waive fees for training.
"I suppose they're a pretty autonomous board," shankel said. "I think it's fair to say that they don't have to justify their actions."
But, Shankel said, the Regents are set up by statute to be a group of responsible
citizens whose purpose is to advise the governor about the needs of higher education.
KU's budget, as cut by the Regents, will be reviewed by James Bibb, state budget director, and Gov. Robert Bennett in late November or early December.
Bennett will then pass KU's budget to the legislature for final consideration.
The Regents cut $460,390 that KU had requested to handle an expected increase of enrollment. KU expects enrollment in the program at per cent higher than enrollment next fall.
The Regents decided to postpone a decision on the money requested to handle the expected enrollment increase. The reason for the postponement was that preliminary figures for next fall's enrollment would indicate the enrollment increase for the fall of 1976 will be higher than 1.3 per cent, Shankel said.
Decriminalization of marijuana to be legislative topic
By CONNIE BRUCE
Kansas Staff Reporter
Kansans may have marijuana by the toke before they have liquor by the drink, if the toke is a prescription.
A proposal has been drawn up to legalize small amounts of marjuanja for private use in the home. The proposal drafted by State Representative James Cornish, Kansas director of the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana laws (NORML), and Lance Burr, Lawrence attorney, will be heard by a Joint Committee. The exact date will be set July 10.
MARJUANA POSSESSION is cond-
dered a criminal offense in Karaas and
Arabia.
Some people say decriminalization will encourage marijuana use. Health hazards such as birth defects, sexual impotence and other psychological problems have. However, the President's Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse reported in 1972 that it could curb criminal activity and minimize health damage.
Glover said yesterday that although 26 states had attempted to soften marijuana laws, only five had succeeded: Oregon, Alaska, California, Colorado and Maine.
A survey taken by an Oregon legislative committee a year after the abolition of marijuana in 2010 showed that 52 per cent of those using marijuana reported no change in the frequency of usage, 40 per cent decreased usage and only 5 per cent increased their use.
CORNISH SAID that it was the right of the individual to control the biochemical and psychological effects of something on himself
If the present proposal becomes law it will remove criminal penalties for possession of
two ounces or less by an adult in non-public places. Two ounces of marjuana could be distributed among adults but it would still be a crime to sell it for nwort. Cornish said.
- felony penalties for sale of any amount for profit.
——misdemeanor penalties for possession
or distribution of more than two ounces
—distribution by adults to minors would be a Class A misdemeanor.
In addition, the proposal includes the following:
- possession of any quantity by a minor would be a misdemeanor.
- -distribution or consumption of any quantity in public places would be a crime.
- transportation of permissible quantities placed in the same category as transported
—the same penalties would be placed on
driving under the influence of marijuana as driving under liquor.
THE KANSAS PROPOSAL is based on an Alaska Supreme Court decision, Glover said. The Alaska Supreme Court ruled in May that possession of marijuana by adults at home for personal use was cannibally protected by the right of privacy.
In 1973, Glover introduced a bill to
pass legislation that the bill was killed in
committee by a vote.
During the last session a proposal to set up a study committee on the public's interest in removing criminal penalties for marijuana and possession of marijuana was approved.
The 13-member committee hearing the proposal in September will listen to testimony of witnesses arguing for and against decriminalization. If the committee
decides to act on the proposal, a bill will be drafted.
He has received one letter supporting the proposal.
John Hayes, chairman of the Joint Special Judiciary Committee, said Tuesday that he had received several letters from members of the medical profession opposing the proposal.
"I don't make up my mind one way or another until the witnesses are heard," he said.
WITNESSES FAVORING decriminalization will include representatives from the Meninginger Foundation, the University of Kansas Medical Center, law enforcement agencies and the judiciary, Glover said.
"Alaqua hung the right to smoke pot on the right to have privacy in the home," Cornish said. "We're not saying that the Constitution explicitly grants the right to
smoke pot but it does say that before the government bursts into your home they have to prove why they're there. It's simply too hard to say this drug might be dangerous."
CORNISH SAID there were no laws prohibiting cyclamen or birth control pills in the home. The framers of the Constitution, he said, tended to preserve more than an individual's private affairs than an individual operating in public commerce.
"The whole issue is the conflict between securing the right of the individual against the assertion by the state of protecting the public welfare." Cornish said.
The question is more one of law and order than one of the individual's right to "get high." The present law has utterly failed, he said.
"It hasn't deterred use," said Cornish
See MARIJUANA page 3
1
6
Wednesday, July 2, 1975
---
University Daily Kansan
INDIRA
'John Brown's Body' awakened in a-smolderin' KU performance
By EVIE RAPPORT kansan Reviewer
"John Brown's body lies a-moulder' in the grave, but his soul is marching on."
Historians are still fighting the Civil War. Battles include what caused it, why it went on so long and how the issues might have been resolved if political power had rested in different persons. But the terrible tragedy of war is that everyone forgets the people it wounds the deepest—the individual men who fight the battles,
REVIEW
women who grieve and pray, the farmer
stock is destroyed by stray
cannonballs.
Stephen Vincent Benet didn't forget. In 1928-27, when he hadn't yet turned 30, he wrote "John Brown's Body," an epic narrative poem about the people who lived under the rule of Colin, Grant, Lee, Davis, a union soldier and an armed soldier, the women who loved them.
Benet's poem was awarded the 1929 Pulitzer Prize for poetry. It became immensely popular, receiving praise for its historical accuracy as well as its mastery of style. In the early 1950s, it was adapted for the stage as a concert reading.
The first production of the 1975 University of Kansas Summer Theater Festival will be a concert reading of "John Brown's Body." The play, directed by Tom Rea, associate
professor of speech and drama, opens
tonight at 8 in University Theatre. Other
offices open Monday through Saturday.
The play closely follows the action of the poem. It has three principal performers and the actors.
The principal parts will be performed by three alumni of the KU theater program. They are Richard Kalton, Sue Tidale Niven and Sean Griffin, all of whom have pursued successful professional careers since leaving the University.
Each assumes the character of several persons during the play, ranging from President Abraham Lincoln to a plantation manager. In Kentucky girl. the play itself reflects the dreadful national divisions caused by the Civil War, with representatives of the North, the South and the border states each representing the character on the personal impact of the war.
The play begins with John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry, Va., in October 1359. This ill-advised and hasty attempt to free Southern slaves cost Brown, two of his sons and several others, including two freed slaves, their lives.
But it was the turning point for the abolitionists and their cause. Brown's songs and a folk song about him quickly became a rallying cry. In 1862, Jula Ward Howe, an abolitionist, set the words of her poem, "Battle Hymn of the Republic," to the same
The play follows the actions of the war through the battles of Boll Run, Shiloh and Goliath.
the union soldier, his love affair with a young woman and the mourning anger of a Southern woman watching her home and her life crumble around her.
The action and personalities of the principal characters are interpreted and commented upon by the 16-member chorus, which songs music composed for the play by Ferino Heath. Besides the original music, the capella chorus sing a few contemporary effects of bugles, banjos, marching feet, crowd noises and wind.
The vocal range of the chorus is complemented by the different voices of the principal players. Rea described Kelton's voice as 'a deep tempany.'
"Sean's voice has another timbre and quality, while Sue has a rich alto voice," she
The play, which Rea directed in a 1963 KU production, has been applauded for its historical accuracy. In this production, copies of lithographs depicting Civil War scenes will be projected on large screen on the campus first finely printed in Harper's magazine in 1862 and 1863.
Although the mood of the play is somber and although Benet speaks powerfully against the tragic waste of war, Rea said "We've been a body" was a hopeful and optimistic work.
And although Benet's Northern sympathies are never hidden, his compassion for the tragedy of the Southerners is clearly expressed. Ralph Ripley, a historian who conditioned it in 1957, "No one else has caught the essence of the Civil War as well as Benet."
As studies on the feasibility of widespread use of the helium driigible move into their second phase, proponents of these balloon-like airships take hope that in the future they will become an accepted mode of transportation.
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By KELLY SCOTT
Kansan Staff Reporter
Dirigibles, airships and blimps are all called Lighter than Air vehicles (LTAs), Jan Roskam, professor of aerospace engineering, said yesterday.
Roskam said that was about all LTAs were now used for.
To the layman, an LTA is more readily identifiable as the Goodyear blimp that supplies the overhead crowd shot on Monday Night Football or flashes catchy slogans on its great belly while coating high above Kansas City.
He said he thought there would be more LTAs in practical use by the year 2000. Development of the vehicle to meet modern needs would take almost ten years, he said.
"There is real potential for low-polluting mass transportation," Rakam said.
He said he could forsee a transcontinental system of LTAs that could move at a maximum of 160 knots, and would receive plane loads of passengers from small commuter planes that would land right on the back, as planes land on aircraft carriers.
"It would be just like landing on a cloud,
except the cloud would hold you up,"
she said.
Feasibility of blimps still debated
He said the LTA could be valuable in transporting outsize freight. Now, the only ways for large freight to be moved over long distances are by truck and ship into smaller, components and shipping it.
Some industrial equipment doesn't lend itself to be broken down into smaller parts. Rockers do that.
He said large equipment needed for nuclear power plants couldn't be broken down. Transporting such equipment, he could, be easier if LTAs were used.
Phase One of the study benefits NASA funded for the study of long range LTA use was completed in May when Boeing and Goodyear, the only companies that still build ships, presented their reports to NASA at Research Center at Moffett Field, Calif.
Congress will then decide whether to fund actual development of the vehicles, Rekam
The results of these studies were largely inconclusive, Roskam said, and there were strong feelings for and against further study. Regardless, both companies will be obligated to conduct more sign studies of LTAs. Phase Two should be completed by the end of this year.
If Congress votes to develop the LTA, Roskam said, and if NASA funds study by universities to solve fundamental problems in space exploration, they must be tested in doing that research, Roskam said.
Rokamk said he believed public sentiment against the LTA, caused partly by the tragic crash of the Hindengbun disaster in 1897, which killed people died in the Hindenburg disaster.
"You better believe it," he said. "I'll make sure of that."
He said the abandonment of dirigible construction at that time was the result of a fire.
"History just converged," Roskam said. "Political events of the late 1930s and early 1940's in addition to the growing popularity of the war combined to stifle dirigible development."
If the feasibility studies indicate a future
development such as their development
must be supported by
Development of the LTA for modern use
for mobile devices.
private company to afford. Rookham said,
Once a feasible basis for an LA TA is established, statutory control over them, Roakam said.
Safety rules, licensing procedures, and specification of size or airplanes are covered by federal authority. Since there have been no LTAs in practical use since the Hindenburg crash, there is no legislative authority governing them.
This lack of legislative authority would
require the required to build and certify
LTA's, Roakman.
He said that if it was proved there was a profit in using LTAs, airline companies would buy them to meet demand.
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SUN BAKING
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
BLAZING
KANSAN
No.156
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
The next issue of the Kansan will be published Tuesday, July 8.
Thursday, July 3. 1975
STUDIO 1975
WHERE THE MOTHER WORKS TO SUPPORT HER CHILDREN.
Maac carpet
A large Persian carpet dominates the scene of the "Macle Me" course designed for four- to eight-year-old children. The two
week course encourages the youngsters to act out their imaginations. See story page 4.
KU grant to aid disabled
By PETER PORTEOUS
The University of Kansas has received a $240,000 federal grant to help eliminate architectural and transportation barriers to the handicapped.
Approval of the grant was announced yesterday by Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan. KU's grant is one of three such grants, totaling $12 million, and approved for public agencies in Kansas.
Roger Williams, chairman of the University Committee for the Architectureally Handicapped, said yesterday that it was appropriate that the grant had been approved now, during the National Awareness Week for the handicapped. The officer's observance is part of a national employment and rehabilitation program, he said.
The grants comprise 80 per cent federal funds matched by 20 per cent from the recipient agency. The funds will come from the Department of Vocational Rehabilitation state division of Vocational Rehabilitation.
The grant approval was the culmination of more than two years of discussion and collaboration.
Williams said the grant's approval was achieved through the cooperation of the Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services.
"This will mean a tremendous acceleration of our program in opening all to the University's facilities to everyone," he said.
The grant will probably advance KU's program for the handicapped more than
The grant will allow the University to install new elevators and continue its program to eliminate barriers such as stairways without ramps and restroom doors too narrow to admit a wheelchair, be said.
The new elevators are the most important improvements to be made, according to Williams. Bailey and Flint walls will have the same height as the elevator in Snow Hall will be renovated.
"The elevators will open up entire schools and programs for people who were previously excluded from the buildings," Williams said. "The one in Bailey will make academic counseling services, which are on all floors, available to many more people."
Planned improvements include renovated restrooms in Maltso, Snow and强壮 halls and Robinson Gymnasium, new grade level buildings and additional curb cuts, buildings and additional curb cuts.
The University is now in the middle of a five-year program to eliminate archery.
There are 40 or 50 "severely handicapped" persons on the KU campus, according to Williams, and an unknown number of handicapped persons have been prevented from enrolling because of numerous barriers to wheelchair travel.
As well as making physical changes, he said, the committee for the handicapped is researching modes of transportation for wheelchair users.
Union reps hear faculty appeals
By JACK FISCHER
These two groups waived their right to present their pleas in open session before the board to speed up the hearings because a lengthy presentation by the School of
Kansan Staff Reporter
Representatives of the University of Kansas School of Law and administrative representatives met in closed hearings last night and agreed on working terms in their opposing appeals before the Kansas Public Employer-Employee Relations Board (KPERB).
Engineering threatened the possibility of reconvening today.
The law school submitted a statement of facts to the board supporting its request for a separate bargaining unit. That, and the administration's response, was acceptable to both parties. The board will determine who will make up the bargaining unit.
The administration and the law school agreed to submit final drafts of their statements to the board within five working days.
In addition, both waived the presentation of closing arguments until they received written transcripts of the hearing, after which they were to return written briefs stating their final positions to the board. The briefs must be turned in by September
Housing muddle blamed on code
By MARK PENNINGTON Kansan Start Reporter
The vagueness of the Lawrence Minimum Housing code is probably responsible for much of the confusion in decisions to move to a new location. Warren Watson, city manager, said Tuesday.
Watson said the housing code would be enforced as uniformly as it could be.
"I think there too much interpretation on the part of any individual." Watson said. "What is dangerous, what is unsafe and what is against the general welfare of the public?" I think the more specific we can on minimum standards the better off we'll be."
He disputed charges made by Ed Covington, former minimum housing inspector, that the code wasn't enforced uniformly. Covington resigned yesterday.
"What happens is the inspector goes in and makes an inspection, and he finds
something that he thinks is dangerous or unsafe," Watson said. "He tells the people about it. Some people fix the problem, but some other people don't think that the man is dangerous, and they appeal to the Minimum Housing Code Board of Appeals.
"If the board agrees that the problem isn't dangerous, then the code hasn't been interpreted uniformly. But everybody has to go through the appeals process."
"He really wasn't directing at that me so much. I had to interpretations of the code," Watson said.
Watson said he had asked Covington what Covington meant in a previous statement in which he accused Watson of not letting him do as his job the way it was supposed to be done.
Watson said he had never told Covington how to do his job.
★ ★ ★
Housing inspector resigns
Under cross-examination by Michael Davis, attorney for the administration, all of the witnesses conceded to links between the engineering school and the administration in such vital matters as control of salaries and internal governance.
Ed Covington, Lawrence minimum housing inspector, submitted his resignation to City Manager Buford Watson yesterday, saying that he had endured "mental agony" from the frustration of not being able to do his job efficiently.
Watson said he was sorry that Covington
telled the way he did about his job as housing
installer.
"He feels strongly that he is correct in his assessment of how the housing code should be amended."
wanted to enforce the code only against unhealthy and dangerous conditions. That's the policy that we have to work with and that's what we have to carry out."
"I've tried to tell him that the engagement of the code is a policy of the company."
Watson said there had been a high percentage of success in bringing houses up to standard in the Hill Target area. The Hill Target area is immediately east of campus. The Hill Target area, 148 were in compliance with the code and 15 more should be in compliance shortly.
The question of whether the engineering school's methods of accreditation were different from other schools and departmental methods was answered swerved because Haynes, in an unexpected move, requested information from the administration about all the other methods of accreditation within the University. The management will supply the information in two weeks.
The position of city minimum housing inspector will be filled as soon as the city can get out notice of the position and take applications, Watson said.
"The thing that has happened," he said, "is that as they get into situations where there are legal problems, then the legal requests have to come through me."
Watson said Covington had delayed a long time in reinspecting some houses, so the first thing that should be done would be a complete reinspection.
"Some of these houses haven't been inspected since 1973," Watson said.
Six houses ordered held from placarding last December would be reinspected and placarded if necessary, he said. When a sign is issued, a sign is placed on it declaring it unsafe.
"It's been hard for me to understand why the city has been so much more concerned with the pollution that comes out of the wrong type of a trap under a sink than with the pollution that comes out of an industrial plant."
However, Mibeck said there was a difference between owners of old houses that tried to comply with the law and owners who did nothing.
City Commissioner Carl Mibek, who is chairman of a committee that is revising the housing code, agreed with Watson that the code should be in some areas and too general in others.
"Some owners in the city, after having received a citation from the housing inspector, have fixed up things in their houses that I considered to be needless expenses," he said. "They just did it because they felt it was the law. I consider this to be grossly
Donald Hoffman, assistant attorney general and KPERB hearing examiner, said the board would be flexible in accruing evidence of arguments after the briefs were hurried up.
"The code as it is now enforced is just too strict for old houses," Mibec said. "Our committee is trying to come up with a different approach for houses built before 1930. We want the emphasis to be on the health and safety of the occupants, the health and safety of the occupants."
unfair when there are guys who won't even do the minimum."
Mibeck said it made sense to him for the commission to be lenient with owners who tried to improve their properties. Low-cost care would not benefit families is desperately needed, he said.
Mibeck said he didn't think the city administration had held on enduring for years.
"I just think the city manager has tried to go the last mile with some of these people," Mibbeck said. "I think they're reluctant to go there." We turned out to be expensive for both parties."
"This has probably been the most elaborate unit determination ever before the board," Hoffman said at the conclusion of the hearings.
He also said the board had collected a good factual record of the petitioners' records.
William Haynes, representative for the School of Engineering, called five witnesses to testify that the school needed a separate bargaining unit because many of its functions were independent of the rest of the University.
In her closing statements regarding the inclusion of department chairmen in the bargaining unit, Inara Horton, representing the American Association of University Professors, said that because chairmen performed primarily the same duties as department heads, they formally allotted to administrative work, they should be included in the unit.
In addition, she said, the duties of the chairmen vary greatly in different departments. Excluding chairmen would require any representation in bargaining disputes.
Davis said that although chairmen didn't precisely fit the state statute defining a supervisor, they did have power to run their departments.
He said chairmen usually carried only one-third of the normal faculty course load because they were engaged in administrative work.
Regents deny fee waiver request
Rv.JACK McNEELY
Kansan Staff Reporter
A request by the University of Kansas to waive tuition payments for graduate teaching assistants and assistant instructors was among items cut from the fiscal year 1977 budget by the Kansas Board of Regents.
KU had submitted the request to waive
FIREWORKS
The Kansan wishes every one a happy Fourth of July and reminds everyone to observe the rules concerning fireworks. Fireworks can be shot off today and tomorrow from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. Please observe the law.
tuition payments so that it could compete for the best teaching assistants with other major universities, most of which waive tuition and coursework according to Chancellor Archie R. Dykes.
Iowa State University, for example, not only waives fees for teaching assistants, but also pays them higher salaries than KU pays.
"With whatteen salary increase money we get for next year, we'll do the best we can for the teaching assistants," Executive Vice Chancellor Dial Delkhan said Tuesday.
Shankel didn't know the Regents' reasons to the request to waive fees for teaching assistance.
"I suppose they're a pretty autonomous board," Shankel said. "I think it's fair to say that they don't have to justify their actions."
But, Bshankel said, the Regents are set up by statute to be a group of responsible
citizens whose purpose is to advise
them about the needs of higher
education.
KU's budget, as cut by the Regents, will be reviewed by James Bibb, state budget director, and Gov. Robert Bennett in late November or early December.
Bennett will then pass KU's budget to the legislature for final consideration.
The Regents cut **406,309** that KU had requested to handle an increase of enrolment. KU expects enrolment in the fall at about per cent higher than enrolment next fall.
The Regents decided to postpone a decision on the money requested to handle the expected enrollment increase. The reason for the postponement was that preliminary figures for next fall will be higher than those indicated the enrollment increase for the fall of 1976 will be higher than 1.3 per cent, Shankel said.
Decriminalization of marijuana to be legislative topic
By CONNIE BRUCE
Kansas Staff Reporter
Kansan may have marijuana by the toke before they have liquor by the drink, if the toke is not being used.
A proposal has been drawn up to legalize small amounts of marijuana for private use in the home. The proposal drafted by State Senator John Kane, chairman of the Cornish, Kansas director of the National Organization for Reformation of Marijuana Laws (NORML), and Lance Burr, Lawrence attorney, will be heard by a Joint Committee on Law and Justice this November. The exact date will be set July 10.
MARJIUANA POSSESSION is con-
tained in a criminal offense in Kansas and
44 other states.
Some people say decriminalization will encourage marijuana use. Health hazards such as birth defects and lung damage are feared. However, the President's Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse reported in 1972 that 60 percent of marijuana caused meaningful health damage.
Glover said yesterday that although 26 states had attempted to soften marijuana laws, only five had succeeded: Oregon, Alaska, California, Colorado and Maine.
A survey taken by an Oregon legislative committee a year after the abolition of marijuana showed that 52 per cent of those using marijuana reported no change in the frequency of usage, 40 per cent decreased usage and only 5 per cent increased their use.
CORNISH SAID that it was the right of the individual to control the biochemical and psychological effects of something on himself.
two occasions or less by an adult in non-public places. Two ounces of marjiana could be distributed among adults but it would still be a crime to tell it for profit. Cornish said.
misdemeanor penalties for possession or distribution of more than two ounces
—felony penalties for sale of any amount for profit.
If the present proposal becomes law it will remove criminal penalties for possession of
-distribution by adults to minors would be a Class A misdemeanor.
- possession of any quantity by a minor would be a misdemeanor.
In addition, the proposal includes the following:
-distribution or consumption of any quantity in public places would be a crime.
- transportation of permissible quantities
be placed in the same category as transported
—the same penalties would be placed on
driving under the influence of marijuana as driving under liquor.
THE KANSAS PROPOSAL is based on an Alaska Supreme Court decision, Glover said. The Alaska Supreme Court ruled in May that possession of marijuana by adults for personal use was constitutionally protected by the right of privacy.
In 1973, Glover introduced a bill to require that members of the committee was killed in committees by a vote of 15-0.
During the last session a proposal to set up a study committee on the public's interest in removing criminal penalties for marijuana and possession of marijuana was approved.
The 13-member committee hearing the proposal in September will listen to testimony of witnesses arguing for and against decriminalization. If the committee
decides to act on the proposal, a bill will be drafted.
He has received one letter supporting the proposal.
John Hayes, chairman of the Joint Special Judiciary Committee, said Tuesday that he had received several letters from members of the medical profession opposing the proposal.
WITNESSES FAVORING decriminalization will include representatives from the Meninginger Foundation, the University of Kansas Medical Center, law enforcement agencies and the judiciary, Glover said.
"I don't make up my mind one way or another until the witnesses are heard,"
"Akala hung the right to smoke pot on the right to have privacy in the home," Cornish said. "We're not saying that the Constitution explicitly grants the right to
smoke pot but it does say that before the government bursts into your home they have to prove why they're there. It's simply bad behavior to say this drug might be dangerous."
CORNISH SAID there were no laws prohibiting cycamates or birth control pills in the home. The framers of the Constitution, he said, tended to preserve more than an individual's private affairs than an individual operating in public commerce.
"The whole issue is the conflict between securing the right of the individual against the assertion by the state of protecting the public welfare." Cornish said.
The question is more one of law and order than one of the individual's right to "get high." The present law has utterly failed, he said.
See MARIJUANA page 3
"It hasn't deterred use," said Cornish.
1
2
Thursday, July 3, 1975
University Daily Kansan
New city budget shows 10% increase over '75
By LYNN PEARSON
Lynn Staff Director
Taxpayers will have to pay $2.67 more per $1,000 assessed property valuation next year if the new proposed city budget is adopted. The budget was presented to the Lawrence City Commission Tuesday night and must be sent to the state by August 25.
Public hearings on the proposed budget are scheduled for August 5 and August 12. August 12 is the deadline for the city's adoption of the budget.
The total budget of $12,155,579 is a 10.3 per cent increase over the 1975 year to $11,010,648. Most of the additional money will go to a nine per cent cost of heat in the building and increased women's compensation payments and to rising costs of materials and utilities.
In addition, the public health department will get an increase of $12,000, and the new computer system shared with Lawrence and Douglas County will cost the city $16,000.
City Manager Bufent Watson told the commission that even with the 2,666 mill increase, the tax rate was still well below the 1500 level.
In writing the budget, Watson said, he and his department heads considered the tremendous increase in the prices of all materials and tried to be considerate of city
"The cost of living index for the city of Lawrence has risen 12 per cent this year," Watson said. "I'm not asking for that much, but I'm telling you the cost of living increase for city employees."
He asked the commission to budget a 25
Because of a reduction in the rebate from gasoline to motor vehicles to reduce its environmental improvement program,
He said the city administration had been studying the sanitation department and the budgeted 25 per cent rate increase would give the commission the option of implementing the increase should it become necessary in 1978.
Williams also said that gasoline had risen from 15 cents a gallon in 1970 to 43 cents today. The sanitation trucks get about two miles to a gallon of gasoline, he said.
Assistant City Manager Mike Wilden said the high price of gasoline to the consumer would probably result in less gasoline bought in 1976, thus reducing further the gasoline tax refunded to the city by the state.
George Williams, director of public works, said last week that the city would have to purchase a new bulldozer for the sanitary landfill which would cost about $100,000. A similar machine cost the city $46,000 in 1970.
per cent increase in sanitation service
rate doesn't mean it can't ask for a
rate increase at this time.
Wilden said staffing for the water and sewer plant scheduled to be completed in January 1977 would also cost the city additional money.
"Salaries for four people for the new water and sewer plant and three people for the new central maintenance garage have to be budgeted now." Wildgen said.
ENTERTAINMENT
The city figures its budget for the calendar year.
ON STAGE
T.N.T. REVIEW • A-8:30 tonight through
the Free State State Office House
ON SCREEN
JOHN BROWNS' BODY-Stephen Vincent Benet's Pulpitizer Prize-winning play Poignant, honest and intense. Featuring Richard Kellan, Sue Niven and Sean G. Griffin, Directed by Daniel McDermott, composed and drums. At tote and Saturday at the University Theatre.
Midwestern Music and Art Camp Concert—Guest Conductors: Russell L. Wiley, Clayton Krebble and Harry Lantz. Choreo 2 p.m. Sunday at 7 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre.
DRAGON INN-1988 Chinese film
film from 1988. At 8 tonight in
Woodstock, Auckland.
THE LEARNING TREE—Film version of the autobiography of Gordon Parks, famous black photographer from Ft. Scott. Sentimental but entertaining, Directed by Parks (1969). At 7 p.m. Monday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
DUCK SOUP-Marvelous satire on pomposity, war and everything else. Many consider this to be the best Marx brothers movie. With Groucho, Harpo, Chico, Zeppo, Margaret Dumont, Louis Calhern and Charles Midletton. Directed by Lee McCarey (1933). At 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Woodruff.
Check advertisements for correct time and place.
THE DROWNING POOL—Paul Newman returns as the detective Harper. With Joanne Woodward. The film is based on one of Ross MacDonald's excellent detective novels. In fact, this is possibly his best. Unfortunately, the film is rather short and does not allow a full interpretation of a middle-aged man trying to cope with modern society.
ONCE IS NOT ENOUGH-Based on a trashy entry by the late Jane Cassius Sueen, this high-style melodia剧 is surprisingly good—at least if one considers the base material. Kirk Douglas, Alexis Smith, Jasmin Janssen, George Hamilton and Dereff Rabbaff.
THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN—Sloppily sentimental film about Jill Kinnomt, the American Olympic ski contender whose tragic fall left her cripped. With Marilyn Hassett and Beau Bridges, Sure to take a handkerchief if you bother to watch.
JAWS - Third terrifying week. If you have
caught twice before taking them to the
one, Gremont.
BAMBI -- Best movie in town. Walt Disney's great animated film isn't just for kids.
SPECIAL
23rd Annual Fireworks Display-7 p.m.
tomorrow at Memorial Stadium.
Bing Hart, director of the drug information telephone service, Dial-a-Drug, said yesterday that he didn't think the Douglas County Drug Abuse Council would vote to extend his contract to continue the service.
The Dial-a-Drug line, a research and educational project designed to provide information on drug abuse patterns in the county, ran for three and a half months until the contract between the county and Hart expired Monday.
Hart said he was in favor of continuing the project, but not under what he called the same political conditions of the last contract.
"It should be a research effort and not bothered by anyone," he said.
Complaints against the content of the outgoing drug line messages, which last month included references to the presence of narcotics agents in the county, led to the resignations last month of two members of the Douglas County Drug Abuse Council.
The two members, Lawrence Police Chief
Steve Stumpf and Sheriff Jim Saunders,
left because they said
New Dial-a-Drug funding doubted.
Despite the publicity given the resignations of the two council members, a memoir published last year questioned the question of refinancing the drug line, Alan Johnson, said that the council's main objections to the drug line weren't the same as those of Stanwick and Watson.
Johnson said contract considerations and confusion over specific duties of Hart and his assistant researchers were the main objections of the council.
In reference to the resignations, Johnson said, "That's been pretty much blown out of proportion. They gave us an indication a long time ago that they would resign."
"The council has to think it out more carefully and critically, and consider what kinds of uses it could be put to," Johnson said of the drum line.
Hart agreed and said the council's only main objection was that of financing.
the Dial-a-Drug line might hamper law enforcement efforts.
Productions of the University Theatre this summer are centered on the theme "Landmarks of the American Theatre." The three major ones are "John Brown's Body," by Stephen Vincent Benet, being directed by William S. Burroughs of Your Life, by William Saray, July 10, 11 and 12; and "Oklahoma!" by Rodgers and Hammerstein. July 18, 19, 24, 25 and 26.
Several KU organizations are already planning bicentennial activities. The University Symphonic Band is planning concerts to be presented in Washington, at the last tour of John Philip Sousa's band, which took place in the Midwest in 1911.
Nancy Hartman, chairman of the council, declined to comment on the prospect of the program's continuation until after the council meets July 10 to make the decision.
Lawrence and four other Douglas County communities were recognized as Bicentennial Communities at a June 14 celebration in downtown Lawrence marking the 200th anniversary of the Army and the American flag.
Recognition as a Bicentennial Campus requires the planning of activities based on the themes Heritage '76, Festival U.S.A. and Horizons '76, which are the same themes designated by the ARBA for the Bicentennial Community Program.
Kansas University will seek recognition as a Bicentennial Campus this month, W. Stitt Robinson, professor of history, said yesterday.
BY THERESE MENDENHALL
Secretariat
The University Theatre is planning to use "The Continuing American Revolution" as
Robinson was appointed chairman of the KU Bientemetal Committee this week by Executive Vice Chancellor Del Shanker. He is also the student body, faculty and administrative staff to the committee after being notified of the Bientemetal Colleges and Universities Campus Program last week by the University Administration (ARRA) in Washington.
KU seeks status as Bicentennial Campus
The drug line was financed by a feder- grant. The money was channeled through the Kansas Drug Abuse Council to the Douglas County council.
The price of the program, which ended this week, was $1,750. In a 100-page final report delivered to the Douglas County Commissioners Tuesday, Hart said that financing the operation for one more year would require a little more than $10,000.
By KELLY SCOTT
Kansan Staff Reporter
KU aids NASA on sea project
the theme for next summer's productions.
Robinson said other plans that are being considered by the committee include lectures, special courses, additions to library collections, displays, radio programs and a
Instruments developed at the Remote Sensing Lab of the University of Kansas Space Technology Center will be aboard the SEASAT (sat seaplane) Richard K. Moore, professor of electrical engineering, said Friday.
Other University groups planning bicentennial activities should notify the bicentennial Committee so the committee can help prepare the application for bicentennial Campus status, which is to be submitted later this month, Robinson said.
Members of the committee, who were appointed by Shankel, include: Robinson; Lewis Armstrong of the staff of Spencer Research Library; George Griffin, curator of the department; Daniel Davis, professor of journalism; and Jed Davies, director of the University Theatre.
Other members are: Casey Eike, assistant to the dean of women; Charles Erdlegrd, director of Spooner Art Museum; Steve Garcia, Garden City Junior; ManJoe Lau, garden center manager; Sue Sutton of the Office of Labor Relations; and Paul Wilson, professor of law.
Robinson said that Garcia and Wilson didn't yet confirmed their acceptance of the offer.
Published at the University of Kansas
University of Kansas
holidays and examination periods. Second-
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Editor
Ward Harkavy
Business Manager
Jim Merrill
State law defines tenants' rights
By KELLY SCOTT
Legislation passed in the last session of Congress legislates creates a virtual bill of rights for the poor and boundaries of landlands, Carol Boone, director, Consumer Affairs department, said Joe Musselman.
Boone said that House bill 2253, the Residential Landlord and Tenant Act, which became law July 1, clarified the relationship between landlord and tenant
"Until now, the statutes haven't dressed the problems between landlords and tenants as we know them." Boone said, "We have a cultural landlord and tenant. Boone said.
The new law spells out rules governing such housing problems as security deposit recovery, eviction guidelines, entrance into housing, and the waiver of liability with the lease or rental agreement.
The new law is more lenient, Glover said. Various damages awarded by the law were reduced and a provision saying that suits could be taken against the defendant handled by small claims court was added.
State Rep. Michael Gloyer, D-Lawrence,
"it's basically the same bill that got
back."
Glover said the Judiciary Committee had revised the bill this year because of objections by the Kansas Senate, which prevented its passage last year.
"It's not that big of a change, but now the laws are codified for both the landlord and the tenant."
The new law affects only leases entered into or changed after July 1, Charles K. Morris
Norwagrad is preparing a handbook explaining the law for publication by the University of Wisconsin.
The law also limits security deposits to one and a half month's rent for furnished property, one month's rent for unfurnished property and an additional half month's rent above the basic deposit for property allowing pets.
Boone said the small claims court stipulation was an advantage for students because small claims courts didn't require them to be a lawyer and had a five-dollar filing fee.
In suits in which the tenant is unwalthy deprived of a place to stay, the landlord is now compelled to compensate the tenant for the cost of staying elsewhere.
In addition, tenants can no longer use their security deposit as their last month's rent.
Once the tenant moves out, the landlord has 14 days to determine damages, and must refund all of the balance of the tenant's damage deposit within 30 days.
Landlord and tenant are required by the new law to contract a joint inventory of the leased premises within five days of acquisition. A written record of the status of the property.
"Most of the boots will fall under the small claims amount." Boone said.
Novogradac said he thought the law would cut down the number of conflicts between landlords and tenants because each side's role was better defined.
INDEPENDENCE DAY
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If the tenant can prove the landlord is guilty of "material noncompliance" with the contract or lease, he can now give a 30-day termination notice, and if the landlord doesn't make the repairs or fulfill the contract, he can move out, free of responsibility.
Booe said she advised getting a legal opinion on whether a situation constituted assault.
Under the new law, landlords are allowed the enter the premises without the tenant's permission during "reasonable hours" and for "reasonable inspection." However, these privileges can't be used to harass the tenant.
For example, if a tenant files a counterattuit after he has been evicted and wins, the landlord must pay the tenant's hotel or rent during the period he was deprived of his apartment.
Glover said the self-help clause was a major reason why bill didn't pass the first time.
FLOWER SHOP
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Landlords across the state opposed the bill when the self-help clause was a part of it.
Moore and Mark Komen, Chicago graduate student, and George Dome, Kansas City, Kan., graduate student, are working on the NASA-supported development of the radar scatterometer radcatson, that uses microwave sensors, Moore said.
The new law also says that once the tenant has complained to a federal agency or brought in suit in court, a landlord can't "retaliate." If it can be proven that the
Self-help is the term applied to the right of tenants to make small repairs to the leased property and then deduct the expense from their monthly rent.
Glover said the original bill awarded three times the monthly rent for all stipulated damages and the automatic fees of lawyers' fees to the gully party.
Glover also said he had hoped the bill would include "hemla" as a statutory exception.
A 1917 Kansas Supreme Court decision adds self-help, Glauer said, but it isn't enough.
landlord is "retaliating," the tenant is eligible for damages up to one and a half month's rent. However, "retaliation" isn't specifically defined in the new law.
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Moore is also a consultant on the imaging radar device on the SEANAT being developed by another company.
SEASAT will provide scientists with information about the physical properties of water.
It will also concentrate on the speed of winds on the ocean's surface, he said.
842-3990
Ocean windspread affects wave forecasting, which is important to shipping masters.
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"It will tell us a lot we don't know about hurricanes." Moore said.
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Microwave radar has the advantages of being able to see the earth at all times and in all weather conditions. Windspind isn't measureable by infra-red waves.
Although the radscan贴于 the Skyla spacecraft began to gather data about both the earth and the ocean, SEASAT will provide continuous data. Moore said.
*We've been fighing to get the size equation in bean siece for 11 years. This me
GEOS III is the only other satellite to use microwave instruments, Moore said. It uses the Terra-1 instrument.
The radscad on SEASAT, originally designed by NASA, will enable scientists to see a wider stretch of the ocean than the one developed for Skylab, Moore said.
Komen and Dome, 1974 KU graduates, spent the past winter at the Space Technology Center working on the radar scatterometer, but are present at NASA-Langley in Langley, Va., continuing their experiments.
One aspect of the project that Moore said he regretted was that data gathered by SEASAT would be analyzed by the National Ocean and Atmosphere Administration (NOAA), not the universities who developed the equipment.
"Once it's operational, it's NOAA's," Moore said.
Moore said NASA didn't have the money to move out the data to the universities for research.
The drug line was still in operation Tuesday morning, a day after its contractual conclusion. The message going out on Monday was that the last message Hart had prepared.
Hart said that County Commission chairman Arthur Heck called him Tuesday to express his surprise at the fact that the message was still running.
"I immediately pulled it off at his suggestion." Hart said.
Tuesday Hart's voice on the tape message said that the program might be continued.
"Any responses would be welcomed," the recording said.
By The Associated Press American League East
Cincinnati 51 28 646
Los Angeles 45 37 806
San Diego 38 40 806
San Diego 37 41 474
Atlanta 37 41 474
Houston 37 41 474
W W 1 Pct GB
Boston 42 35 .943
Milwaukee 42 35 .943
New York 35 33 .849
Baltimore 35 32 .849
Cleveland 35 32 .849
Denver 35 32 .849
13.0%
W L W Pts. GB
Pittsburgh 28 15 431
Philadelphia 45 23 551
Boston 43 38 459
St. Louis 17 37 483
Chicago 37 41 474
Michigan 41 31 454
BASEBALL STANDINGS
Oakland 49 28 636 7
Kansas City 49 32 545 7
Tampa 37 36 461 8
Cleveland 36 39 481 12
Minnesota 36 40 461 13
Colorado 36 40 464 14
Wednesday's Results
Lots more not included
Boston 8, Milwaukee 3
Chicago 4, Detroit 2
New York 3, Cleveland 2
Minnesota 4, California 4
Kansas City 7, Texas 10, Indiana 15
Atlanta, 6. San Francisco
Philadelphia, 3. Louisville
4. Boston
Pittsburgh at Montreal, ppd. rain
New York, 7. Chicago
8. Atlanta
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, July 3, 1975
3
IEC committees said to lack student participation
By DAVID BARCLAY
Kanyon Staff Recorder
Despite the creation of six Intensive English Center (IEC) committees early last fall to handle foreign student grievances in the U.S. in April 1974, few complaints have been made.
According to several IEC students, teachers and administrators, participation in the committees is low because few IEC students know the committees exist and because of inherent problems that the committees can't solve.
FOCUS
The six committees are the executive committee, the academic committee, the curriculum, teaching committee.
materials and facilities committee, the student affairs committee, the appointments, staffing and performance and the finance and budget committee.
Student representation on these committees ranges from one student on the curriculum committee to four students on the student affairs committee, but many students don't even know the committees exist.
Ibrahim Mari, Tripoli, Libya, a second semester IEC student, is the highest level of language proficiency in the IEC, that he had never heard of the committees.
Mohammad Mirmzami, Esfahan, Iran, a first semester IEC student, said that he heard of the committees for the first time when the summer elections were held June 21 but because of language difficulties, he committees did or what was happening.
The committees were formed as a result of foreign student demands for a voice in the administration of the IEC. These grievances culminated in a walkout in April
John Moriarty, an IEC instructor, said he thought the Kansan had exaggerated the problems of the IEC in the time of the Korean War. He said that people were troubled than actually were.
Moriarty and several other instructors said they thought that was part of the explanation for the small number of studentsressed after the committees were formed.
Edward T. Erazmus, current director of the IEC, also said the IEC's problems had been exaggerated, but not simply by the Kansan.
The committees found that some barriers limiting student participation in the IEC were identified.
"Many of those who were complaining the loudest were not in IEC clubs," said Ginny Gathercole, an IEC instructor and chairman of the grievances committee. "I think it's kind of strange that the people not in classes were the ones starting things."
Other students may not be familiar with a system in which they can participate, he
"I think the student body was used by pressure groups outside the IEC who were interested in working with students to achieve their own goals," he said.
An IEC student's level of English proficiency may not allow him to participate, said Tony Staiano, an IEC instructor and chairman of the student affairs office. Once students reach a reasonable level of proficiency, they leave the IEC.
"Students' goals are not reached because too much is expected in too short a time." Erazmus said. "The whole area is prone to a lot of unhappiness and frustration."
A frequent complaint of IEC students is that they are taught by graduate students, usually from the linguistics department, with professors or assistant professors.
Moriarty and Erazum also said that a primary reason for frustrations and complaints among IEC students was that their expectations were too high.
No specific plans about the consultation have been made, Del Shankel, executive
KU to be consultant to community college
Mohammed Abugrain, Tripoli, Libya, a second semester IEC student, said, "The problem is that our teachers are students. We don't have time to prepare lessons."
Except for conversation and lab teachers, instructors in the EEC must be classified as graduate students. Instructors must take the linguistics class, "Applied Linguistics: Methods of Teaching English as a Second Language." It is preferable that they also
By ALISON GWINN
Kansan Staff Reporter
Donnellly requested KU's assistance
with the program before applying for
the grant.
The grant, which will be available for the 75-76 fiscal year, is the largest federal grant that the Kansas City, Kan., college has received in its 25-year history.
The University of Kansas will provide consultant services to Donnelly College under a $100,000 grant from HEW, Frances Koehler, to the president of Donnelly, said yesterday.
KU plied its support in providing consultation in the spring in four areas: planning, communication, institutional research and management.
"KU has people who have great expertise in institutional management," Hay said. "They can give us the benefit of their experience."
Often applied for the grant last October after unsuccessfully applying the two options.
The grant comes under the Title III Higher Education Act of 1965 for the Basic Institutional Development Program. It is designated to help a developing institution strengthen academic, administrative and student services.
"We've had an ongoing relationship with KU for many years, and we've worked together on various programs. We have a natural affinity for KU," Hay said.
Donnelly is a two-year independent
"R is particularly dedicated to giving *access to people who otherwise wouldn't* know."
community college which was begun to
serve the urban Kansas City, Kan. com-
pany.
The college concentrates on serving
disadvantaged people, she said.
At that time, Donnelly began its first development campaign, by seeking funds from the community. It also began new training that it suited its students' needs, she said.
An English program that presented English as a second language was started for Donnelly's foreign students. The college also instituted more flexible scheduling and night classes to provide for students who work. Hav said.
In 1972, Donnelly reappraised its goals under a national program, "College Management and Planning Workshop," Hay said.
Dorrellly also began a program that provided special individualized instruction for students with poor high school educations.
The college attempts to maintain a low tuition fee for economically disadvantaged students by using funds from outside the college.
"Because of a declining enrollment and a changing composition of the inner city, we had to decide what we could do to stay in the mainstream of education," she said.
The present law makes a first offense of possession of any without intent to sell a Class A midsemester. The penalty is up to a year in jail, a $2,500 fine or both. The second offense is a felony and any sale or intent to sell a class A midsemester often years in jail and a fine of up to $,000.
Cornish said that about 500,000 people were arrested on marijuana charges last week.
Donnellly, which publicizes itself as "the best kept secret in Kansas City, Kan," intends to use part of the HEW grant to build a stable to the community it serves. Hay said.
Glover said that time could better be spent on crimes of violence and crimes against people and property. Most arrests are carried out rather than sales of marijuana, he said.
This controversy is symbolic, Cornish said, of many issues that deal with the people and how the government responds to them.
THE STATE IS often seeking revenge
the moral code of the public, said Cornell.
Marijuana . . .
Marjana is the third most widely used recreational drug in the United States Cornish said, and 30 million people have tried it. The law has been violated because non-users state reasons other than fear ofsecution for not using marijuana, he said.
From page 1
Glover said the question is: Should we focus on something that is still up in the air
or on things that are clearly hurting society as a whole?
NOT ONLY IS prosecution of marjuanja users a waste of time and effort, Glover said, but it also destroys the credibility of marjuanja officials in the department official in the eyes of the public.
The American Medical Association and the American Bar Association are in favor of decriminalization, Berkowitz said, but he insists that the law must be decriminalizing the marijuana laws.
If a bill is drafted from the present proposal, it will go through the House committee process, discussion and vote in the House, the Senate's committee process, discussion and vote in the Senate and the governor.
David Berkowitz, Douglas County attorney, said he favored the proposal. It has certainly gotten further than it could have a few years ago, he said.
"They can't enforce their own laws but they can't change them," he said.
The bill could be amended or killed at any stage in the legislative process.
Glover said he thought a positive vote could be obtained to draft a decriminalization bill at the September hearing.
The effective date for the bill, if finally approved, would be July 1, 1976.
have prior experience teaching English as a second language.
"I don't think it would make a lot of difference if professors were hired in the place of graduate students," he said. "I don't believe that if students were not able to go to school, students would not be able to go to school."
Kurt Godden, an instructor and a member of the grievances committee, said that if graduate students couldn't learn at the IEC, they would need them to get their training somewhere else.
All 16 assistant instructors teaching the IEC this summer are graduate students.
"in general, the quality of instruction is pretty good, with a minority of instructors who are not highly skilled."
Staliano said that many of the instructors in the IEC had prior experience teaching and preparing for the course.
Erazmus said he expected the IEC would hire only five new instructors this fall, making the graduate student instructor turnover smaller in the past. This would mean that those instructors remaining at Erazmus would have more experience in teaching.
What the graduate students lack in professionalism, Erasmus said, they make up for with energy and enthusiasm for foreign students.
Farhad Mighani, Arak, Iran, a first semester IEC student, said he thought it was better to have young instructors to whom he could relate.
structures have had to pay for more control in the operation and administration of the
Although the grievances committee has been in existence since last fall, it will issue its first handout explaining what procedures IEC students should follow when making a complaint after its first summer meeting next week.
Faramaz Elkai, Tehran, Iran, graduate student, said he thought that the varying level of proficiency within the same section was a major problem in the IEC.
ferent levels of proficiency in each section when they should be on the same level.
he began teaching in the IEC a year ago the quality of teaching had improved.
Stucky said that the curriculum committee had begun to decide on specific skills that it wanted students to have at the end of school, but that no proposal had been written.
IEC, said Susan Stucky, an instructor and a member of the curriculum committee. "It's a good thing we do it."
Godden said that although Erazmus had strongly encouraged the instructors to coordinate their methods of instruction, he asked whether any instructors were doing so.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dally Kansan are offered to all students without regard to their ability. The course will bring ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
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Masud Tahzeradeh, Tehran, Iran, a first semester IEC student, and Thais Moya, Barcelona, Venezuela, a second semester IEC student, and the IEC had more conversation classes.
one times five
time three times five
15 words or less $1.20 $2.00 $2.50
Each additional word .01 .02 .03
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
"Our problem is conversation." Taha-zadeh said. "In Iran we learn grammar very well, but now they just teach us grammar. I think that is not our problem."
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
*eound items can be advertised FREE or charge for a period not exceeding three days.* These ad can be placed in person or by calling the UDX business office at 864-358.
A problem has resulted from the loosening of control by administrators on the teaching methods used by individual instructors. Stucky said. Because instructors can choose their books and teaching materials, students are at dif-
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Thursday, July 3, 1975
University Daily Kansan
Marijuana laws seen as affront to privacy
We must not weaken, ever. The regulations our government continually produces are ever chiseling at the foundation of our castle—our privacy.
I am referring to many things, among them our present laws making it a crime to smoke marijuana in our own homes. No one should tell me I cannot partake of
COMMENT
marijana—a substance found to be no more hazard than damaging or inky in my mouth.
There should be some regulation of those who would sell it for profit, or those who would drive a car while stoned, because they would be engaging in public acts
However, while in the privacy of their own homes, they should be able to enjoy
marijuana as they can now enjoy the hardest of lour or pornography.
There is a move afoot in Kansas to legalize possession of two ounces or less of marijuana, but it doesn't address the issue.
I, for one, support this move. State Rep Michael Glover, D-DLawrence, who has introduced a proposal to the legislature that would move, is another. And there many more.
The proposed changes would retain criminal sanctions for sale and related activities involving marijuana. They would also require a special dissection of the citizen, where it belongs.
A joint special judiciary committee of the state legislature will hear testimony for and against the proposed decriminalization plan in September. The committee will also consider drafting a bill to send through the legislative process.
—Peter Porteous
I hope they consider it wiser and decide to draft this long overdue legislation and I
Children's creativity sparked by course
BY JENIFER OTWELL Kansan Staff Reporter
In a large basement room of an old stone building at 9th and Vermont, you might find, as various times, a five-legged horse with a short mane, or a thumb-sized blue horse named George.
The class uses various forms of art to develop imagination and sensual awareness. The children are encouraged to exercise their senses and their imaginations through the use of dance, music, painting, drawing, clay and stories read by their teachers, Marsha Paludan and Leni Salkind.
Yesterday the children were asked to imagine an animal they would like to be, draw it and then become that animal in their imagination.
Then they mottled like a pig, slithered like a or stretched their necks like a graffite.
Next they imagined make-believe animals, modeled them from clay and wood.
cing around the room to music and wearing skins of colored cloth.
The child gives visibility to the things he imagines so that they become real, Paludan said yesterday. He is encouraged to "see" his pictures as if they were as lines, color, shape, texture and movement.
Pulalan has a Master's degree in dance from the University of Illinois and taught there for three years, as well as at the University of Missouri. He also has also taught at the University of Kansas.
She said she had been interested in creative movement education for about 10 years.
"Education is a focusing of attention," she said, "and it doesn't really matter what the attention is focused on. It's the capacity to focus that's crucial."
Children should expand their imaginations through participation in art,
She became interested in teaching a class like this when she taught in Maryland schools and found that most art museums had good educational programs, she said.
Salkind has a master's in art education from the University of Maryland. She has taught aesthetics and sensory awareness in both students program in Lawrence schools.
Oregon prof explains how computers compose music
Computers can do more than play music; they can compose it, Emilio Gaglario, professor of mathematics at Oregon State University, said here last night.
Each program contains about 1,200 rules of harmony that he has recorded, Gagliaro said, and each note is chosen by the compilers. It satisfies the largest number of rules.
For the past year, Gagliardi has experimented with programming a computer to compose music, and he played recordings of his last night at Swararthe迟到 Rectal Hall.
The resulting music reflects the taste of the programmer, Gagliardi said, because
the music depends on which rules of harmony have been recorded.
He said he was one of only four persons who had used computers to compose music which is played by conventional instruments.
At Oregon State University, Gagliardo uses computers to solve statistical problems in biology, other natural sciences and medical diagnosis.
Music composed by computers is diffe- rentive because of any repetition or variet- ion of themes, he said.
Gagliardo said he didn't know why some of the music sounded pleasing and some harsh since all of it satisfied the rules of harmony.
The thought of the perfect honey-
producing bee might set some apiarists
quietly giggling, but the Brazilian bee is
nothing to laugh about.
U.S. feels Brazilian bees' sting
By BILL KATS Kansas Staff Reporter
Michener said the bee had spread over all of Brazil and north into Guiana and Surinam. There have been no reports of stingings in Guiana or Surinam because bee
What does one make of a bee capable of working hours longer than other honeybees; one that will work into the evening and even in light rain; one that carries larger nectar loads; and one that is nearly twice as large as some commercial honeybees in use. *in*?
The number of deaths attributed to the Brazilian honeybee has elevated the bee to a semi-mythical status. Human deaths have been higher than those of worker near Rio de Janeiro who was killed had reportedly been stung 1,000 times. Chickens, horses and mules have also been
"There have been an awful lot of scare
the professor, professor of gnomeology,
and yesterday.
The Brazilian honeybee has built a reputation for these capabilities. Unfortunately, it also carries a record of human and livestock deaths from its sting. Congress to enact legislation to prevent the bee's importation into the United States.
colonies haven't had time to become well-enhanced there, said Michener. There are no Brazilian honeybees yet in Central America, he said.
Initially the bees were moving at the rate of two hundred miles a year, but they spread slower than was anticipated for lowland Amazon forests, Michener one.
Kerr wanted to combine the best attributes of an industrious but highly aggressive African bee with gentler, lazier European strains.
The man sometimes held responsible for opening this entomological Pandora's box is Warwick Kerr, a Brazilian geneticist. In 2015, he described how an attempt to breed the perfect honeybee.
But before controlled hybridization could occur, 26 swarms of African bees escaped, mated with native bees, and began to form a colony that came to be known as bizarre honeybees.
The new strain inherited none of the pacifying characteristics of the European bees, yet the African strain's viciousness and transcience remained.
The bees have been known to chase people long distances, rob other hives of honey, and leave hives suddenly to establish new colonies.
They are known to engage in mass stung when provoked, sometimes attacking victims who are far from the bees'
intensive to vibrations from farm equipment.
As a result of this sensitivity to sound, a result may be adversely affected, said Michael
"You're not going to be able to put the hives as close to where you want the pollination done," he said. "Pollination may be an important loser if these bees come in."
The farm value of crops requiring pollination is $1 billion a year, Micheen said. Honey is an approximately $40 million a year business.
Although he expects the Brazilian bees to reach the United States, Michener said, he doesn't think they will take up residence in Kansas.
Protest to be held
The Wolf Creek Opposition and the People's Energy Project will gather at 11 a.m. in Shelter House No. 4 at the John Burlington, 80 miles south of Topeka.
Two groups opposing the construction of a nuclear power plant near Burlington will meet on the Fourth of July for speeches and a balloon release.
"I wouldn't expect this bee ever to eat it," she explained because the winters are too cold. "She needs some thawing."
But he said he did expect the bee to reach the southern United States. The bees will probably reach the Gulf coast, Texas and all of the other states where they are the same bees we are hearing of now.
If the bees migrate through Mexico, there is a good chance that the Brazilian bees would mate with some of the tamer European varieties found there, Michener said.
"By the time they reached southern Texas they wouldn't cause much of a stir to them," he said.
But there is no real assurance that the country imported into the country, said Michener.
To help insure against such an event, Senator Bob Dole introduced a bill several weeks ago that is aimed at controlling the tax on methane in the States. The bill was passed by the Senate.
The Dole bill essentially strengthens the import laws on bees. It specifies controls in importation of larvae, adult bees, eggs and semen from countries where African bees are endangered. The Dole bill suggests that research be pursued to eradicate the bee's harmful traits.
Comprehensive plan near final approval
After more than two years, the Lawrence Comprehensive Plan is near the final approval stage. Dick McClanahan, city-county planning director, said yesterday.
The preliminary comprehensive plan is expected to be discussed at a special meeting of the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission July 16. Final approval should come at the commission's regular meeting July 23, McClanahan said.
It should take about six weeks to two months to print the preliminary plan and distribute it to the public, McClanathan said. Public hearings, which are required by law, should be scheduled in September or October.
In addition, the plan makes suggestions for improving the general appearance of the city and for making the best use of public fire and police fire and police stations and the city offices.
"This will give the citizen an opportunity to make suggestions that we can incorporate in the final comprehensive plan," McClanahan said.
The comprehensive plan, McClanathan said, will be a guide for development, redevelopment or nondevelopment of the Lawrence area.
The plan includes broad goals for the best overall land usage, best locations of commercial and industrial areas and projections on economic and population growth.
McMchanan said the proposed comprehensive plan was a departure from the plan currently in use for Lawrence. The old plan involved geographic areas within the city, be said.
McClanathan said the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission should have a consultant under contract by the end of the month to begin gathering data for a comprehensive plan for Douglas County's unincorporated areas.
The proposed plan will develop broad policies designed for the entire city, as well as local districts.
He said 14 consultants had applied for the job and he would accept applications for a few more days before turning them over to his division's executive committee for screening.
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Library committee studies space shortage problem
By STAN STENERSEN
While workers, contractors and architects scramble over the grounds of the new law school and art museum, the man who perhaps has the biggest construction project at the University on his mind sits quietly in a high-ceilinged office in a corner of Watson Library while an FM radio plays quietly in the background.
He is Robert Malinowski, assistant director for reader services at the library and chairman of the library facilities committee. His committee's job is to recommend how the University should be furnished with $25 million on new library equipment and buildings
THE COMMITTEE'S WORK shows the paradox of having to plan the future by welding it onto the present and the past. One, hand plans, can visualize well on paper how you would equip equipment, cathode-ray tubes that catalogue books and computers that help
students find information. On the other hand, they must deal with the realities of old, inefficient buildings and the knowledge that they don't want to buy everything they would like to have.
Above all, however, there is the pressure of knowing that the library needs more information.
"Right now, our stacks are more than 90 per cent full," Malinowsky said last week. "In some places they're more than 100 per cent full, with books lying on top of books." He added that the room is not per cent full so that you have room for shifting and expanding the collection."
THE 13-MEMBER COMMITTEE began its work last February. Malinsky said most of its time had been spent looking at the needs of the University's library system and evaluating the solutions tried by other schools.
KU's own choices narrow to three, he said. One is simply to expand Watson and keep the problem simple.
campus. This choice is the least desirable, he said, because the University can't afford it. Such costly services as reference areas, reserve rooms and binders must be duplicated, and students must sometimes go to several branches to find books because the University can no longer afford to buy many books of needed books in more than one library.
A second choice is to build a new library big enough to combine several of the branches and spend the rest of the money renovating Watson Library. The new library would house the science, technology and engineering institutions; Watson would set most of the rest.
THE GREATEST PROBLEM with the second choice, Malinowsky said, is the difficulty of renovating Watson Library. In addition to the original bearings walls, he said, and some previous additions are so inefficient that they should be torn down before new additions are built.
libraries and build a new centralized one. Such a library would probably house all collections except those in Spencer College, the law and the law school library, he said.
A third choice is to abandon the existing
Malinowsky said that, ideally, the third choice was best, because it would eliminate duplication and allow the staff to work more effectively. However, what is ideal and which is not is a coincidence he said, and the choice of building a new branch library may be necessary.
"What else would you do with Watson if we abandoned it?" he said. "It's not an easy task."
MALNOWSKY SAID that even if the entire amount of money were put into a new central library, there would probably be no more total floor space than Watson Library has already. The difference, he said, is that a new library would use space more effec-
In part, efficiency means more extensive use of microfilm and computers.
Malinowski said that although the library would never rely totally on microfilm instead of books and periodicals, any new facility should use it more.
"Esthetically, I'm not that concerned about preserving the old, musty volumes in the library," he said. "What matters is what's on the paper. We've got a bit of Latin American material that that's printed on poor paper and is rolling on the shelves."
STUDENTS WHO associate using microfilm with the dreariness of the library's current microfilm room are mistaken, Mallowsky said, because microfilm readers have been developed and imbedded in well-lighted, pleasant surroundings.
Malmowsky said that simply to conserve existing space by microfilming more of the present collection wouldn't solve the problem. "The space was needed for more than books."
"It's the reader space we really don't
have. We should be able to accommodate one-fourth of the student body. Even with squeezing, we don't have space for more students. We can't — that's counting all our branches," he said.
Sites under consideration for recommendation for a new central or branch facility include the area around the Military Hospital, the east of Haworth Hall, Malmhousky said.
THE COMMITTEE HOPES to submit its recommendations to University administrators by the end of the year, Malinowsky said. Whatever the administrators' decision, however, they won't see the result. Detailed planning of any new facility will still be required, as will approval and funding by the legislature.
Malinowski said the earliest that any new facility could be ready was about 1860, and even that date would require a speeding-up University's current long-range goals.
DRUNKING
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BLAZING
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, July 8, 1975
No.157
Shakespeare meets machine
Cobb new College dean
See page 3
By STANSTENERSEN
Robert Cobb has been appointed Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Ronald Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, and Del Shankler, executive vice chancellor, announced last night.
Cobb has been serving as acting dean of the College since September 1974, when the former dean, George Waggoner, dismissed him for morpheme. Waggoner resigned in April to return to teaching in the English department and to become an adjunct professor of affairs in charge of international programs.
In making the appointment, Shankel said, "We feel confident that Bob Cobb will provide the leadership and initiative to maintain the high quality that has characterized the College during Dean Wagoneer's tenure."
A nine-member search committee was formed in April to recommend a new dean. The committee finished its work June 28 and submitted its recommendations to Chancellor Archie Dykes, Calgard and the Three then made the final selection.
Cobb had high praise for Waggoner, who had been dean of the College for 21 years.
"The prospects of filling his shoes are awesome," Cobb said.
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Cobb, a long-time resident of Salina, joined the KU faculty as an assistant professor of English in 1957. He was promoted to associate professor in 1962 and to full professor in 1967.
He was chairman of graduate studies in the English department from 1960 to 1963 and was assistant chairman of the department in 1962.
He became assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences in 1962, associate dean in 1968 and acting dean in when Waggoner took sabbatical leave.
He served as dean of international programs from 1968 to 1971, and as director of Numerical Systems for the University. He then co-raised the College to the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences as associate dean in 1973.
New head selected for English center
Michael M. T. Henderson, a linguist currently working at the University of Wisconsin, has been appointed as director of the Intensive English Center, Robert Cobb, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said yesterday.
Henderson will become director Aug. 1, succeeding Edward Erazmus.
Henderson, 32, is assistant editor of the Dictionary of American Regional English, a dictionary of American speech being compiled at the University of Wisconsin.
Cobb said that Henderson's background
MARK D. RICHARDSON
Del Shakel, executive vice chancellor, adjusts his visor while shouting instructions to the del pere yesterday. Shankel takes second hand on the Rude Mechanicals, a University
Who's on second?
in teaching English to foreign students made him a "most imposing" candidate.
Henderson has taught English to foreign students in the United States as well, at the University of Pittsburgh in the summer of 1965 and at St. Louis University in 1968-69.
"He has a background of to deal with tough circumstances, as shown in his work in Laba and Afghanistan," Cobb said. "He has seen the range of problems here as well."
From 1965 to 1968, Henderson was the head of a language center in Afghanistan. During the 1972-73 school year, he taught English and directed the special courses division of the English Department at the University of Libya.
The Intensive English Center has been the object of a number of complaints and protests by foreign students in recent years, with the most important of the problems being exaggerated.
Henderson was selected from a field of about 40 candidates, said George Wedge, associate professor of English and chairman of the search committee. Wedge said Henderson was well qualified both as a teacher and an administrator.
David Dimeen, professor of French and Italian and a member of the search committee, said Henderson's record showed an ability to work with a variety of people. Henderson has an excellent background in both practical and theoretical linguistics, he
Henderson received his Ph.D. in linguistics from the University of Wisconsin
I
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Cobb
Continuing Ed gets federal grant
By STANSTENERSEN
At a dinner about 10 years ago in Washington, D.C., Howard Walker, dean of continuing education at KU, told a group of college officials that he thought the Federal government should be involved in funding some建筑工程, said Mr. Walker. KU received a Federal
Ten years later, KU received a Federal grant to plan of the first three.
The Department of Health, Education and Welfare last week awarded an $86,400 planning grant to the Division of Continuing Education. The grant will be used for architectural and engineering studies for a Bachelor's in continuing education center on the KU campus.
Walker said his proposal at the dinner was the start of a long effort to persuade the Federal government to fund continuing education for teachers in testimony before Congress by Walker and
by former chancellors Laurence Chalmers and Raymond Nichols.
Each center is to be a prototype of an approach to continuing education, Walker said. One center is to serve a region, one a community and one a state. KU submitted a proposal for the state-oriented center and was chosen over proposals from K-State and from schools in Pennsylvania and New York. Walker said.
Efforts to include appropriations for the centers under the Higher Education Facilities Act were unsuccessful until 1974, be said. In 1974, Congress appropriated $500,000 for architectural and engineering plans for three continuing education centers.
The center, whose cost Walker put at "a
million" in 1983, would hold
probably the following million.
Overnight accommodations for con-
tuning education students who travel to the campus for seminars and examinations
Meeting rooms for classes, seminars and conferences
—Such "media support" as television and films.
About 35 continuing education centers have already been built around the country, Walker said, but KU's facility will be unique in that it will bring together the best ideas of existing facilities and the innovations needed for the future.
A facilities advisory committee, which will help plan the building, will be appointed by the start of the fall semester, Walker said.
Money hasn't yet been appropriated to build the center after plans are completed. Walker said the committee would work on developing specific plans to present to Congress.
Parkwav funds caught in debate
By THERESE MENDENHALL
Kansas Staff Recorder
A bill appropriating $10 million in federal funds for construction projects, including Clinton Parkway is expected to come before the House of Representatives for a vote this Thursday, a spokesman for Ren. Larry Winn said yesterday.
House consideration of the bill follows a request made last week by President Ford
ANALYSIS
that Congress rescind the authority to appropriate the funds. If passed, the bill would, in effect, deny the request and make money available for the 4-mile road connecting the intersection of 23rd and Iowa streets to the Clinton Dam.
the out, reported to the House by the Appropriations Committee last week and now being considered in the Rules Committee, provides $10 million for the construction of "access roads to public parks" and provides a plan for Parkway was one of six such projects given priority when the lake access highways program was authorized.
The $10 million provided in the House bill is $15 million less than the $25 million limit set for this program in the authorizing legislation. The Senate's version of the bill, which may be marked up as early as next week, might provide the full $25 million.
If the House and Senate bills disagree on the amount, the matter will be settled in a hearing.
The appropriation of the full $25 million would increase chances that the local project would receive the requested $4.13 million, or 70 per cent of the $9.9 million needed to complete the project. The other 30 per cent will be provided locally.
A letter sent by Seens. Bob Dole and James Pearson last week to key members of the House Appropriations Committee requested that the full $2 million be appropriated or that $4.13 million be earmarked for Clinton Parkway.
Passage of the appropriations bill in Congress would settle a question about the source of the audits that followed. The Senate last two weeks ago when a local delegation presented its request for funding for Clinton Parkway to the transportation committee of the Senate
The Administration said that funding for the lake access highways program was
subject to the contract authority of the Department of Transportation, which would mean that funds actually became available for the program July 1, the first day of fiscal
Congress maintains that funding for the lake access highway programs is subject to a fee. Congress wants that
Ford's request last week that Congress rescind the authority to appropriate the funds expressed the administration's opposition to funding the program, Winn's
a bill appropriating the funds must be passed by both the House and Senate.
mans aide said the bill to come before the House this week revokes the contract authority of the Department of Transportation, if it ever existed, and appropriates funds through its own budget authority.
The Congress probably won't prepare a separate bill to respond to the President's rescission request because the appointee will still settle the question, Winn's aide said.
The Regents requested that the redrafting
Visual Arts bids sought
However, the architect hasn't yet given specific data to the Regents, said him.
Bids for the University of Kansas' new visual arts building should be received by about October 1, Warren Corran, facilities manager, Kansas Board of Reserves, said last week.
A first set of bids accepted early last spring yielded a low bid that was $900,000 more than available funds, making redesign necessary.
The planned changes involve construction details such as windows and finishes, he added. "They'll be a lot more expensive," he said.
be done in time for July 1 bids, but the deadline could not be met, Corman said.
he did not the amount of floor space allotted. He said that bidding competition wasn't particularly intense on items such as
Last Monday the Regents requested a state appropriation of $1,033,000 to complete the state financing of the project that has occurred over the past two years.
Construction should take two years.
2
Tuesday, July 8, 1975
University Dally Kansan
NEWS DIGEST THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Refunds settle drug case
TOPEKA—Checks totaling $1.79 million have been mailed to 56,120 individual Kansas households as their refunds in a broad-spectrum antibiotic drug antitrust suit settlement. Atty. Gen. Curt Schneider announced yesterday.
That is an average of nearly $23 to every client that filed a refund claim last August. Schneider said it represents a return of 32 cents on the dollar for the overcharges five national pharmaceutical firms made to consumers in the 1854-66 period.
Israel strikes refugee camps
Israeli troops, jets and warships Suspected Palestinian terrorist bases in southern Lebanon, leaving 13 persons reportedly dead and scores of refugees灭掉. Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin vowed Israel would pursue "an uncompromising war" against the guerrillas using "the only language they understand."
lebanese Premier Rashid Karami who his troops and Palestinian guerrillas prevented the Israelis from achieving in goal in yesterday's raid, which he said was a "tragic mistake".
He also said Lebanese authorities were negotiating with the leftists who kidnapped U.S. Army Col. Ernest R. Morgan last Sunday and "we hope to get him released soon." The kidnappers have threatened to kill Morgan, 45, of Petersburg, in a mass distribution of food, clothing and building material to a Beirut alum by tomorrow.
Peron yields to labor demands
BUENOS AIRES—A general strike forced President Isabel Peron to agree to lift the collins on wage increases she ordered, leaders of the strike reported.
After a four-hour meeting with Labor Minister Ceilidio Conditi, the strike leaders announced they would meet again this morning to analyze the government's response.
Meanwhile, Argentina was paralyzed as the two-day strike closed industry, commerce, public offices, transportation, entertainment and the news media.
Buenos Aires and other industrial cities in the nation of 24 million were generally calm, except for three reported bomb blasts.
Board alters prayer rules
The Board of Education of USD No. 497 voted last night to replace the Prayer and Bible Reading section of its policy manual with a statement statement drawn up by a committee.
The new policy statement, entitled "Religion in the Schools," said, "activities that have religious implications may be a part of an instructional program as long as they do as their purpose or activity effect the advancement or inhibition of religion."
The policy statement said that when the topic of religion occurred "naturally" in studying other topics, it should be treated as a part of that topic.
A set of guidelines for implementing the district administration's school district administrator's handbook.
Examples of appropriate activities under this policy include the singing of official anthems containing references to God and Jesus. You can also use a note of secularity, decorated Christmas Irees.
Appropriate activities include celebratory or devotional reading of poems, music, and storytelling.
symbols for celebratory or devotional purposes.
This meeting was the first for new board members Martha Masinton, Charles Oldfield and Eileen Barker who were elected for the 75/6 school year. Bradley was elected president and Juliana Hack, vice president, Joan Brown and Eileen Barker. They are the headork and treasurer of the board respectively.
The board defeated an amendment that would have used the same guidelines that determine which students get a free lunch to determine which students wouldn't pay a tuition fee. The board decided such cases and judges each case by the financial status of the family.
In other business, the board passed additions to affirmative action hiring policies, and additions to the process procedures for the purchase of new mathematics textbooks for Lawrence junior high schools and new report card forms for the elementary school. The board also approved publication of the 1975/76 school district budget.
Administrators,profs play summer softball
Yes, sports fans! That gorgeous hunk of brute strength and athletic prowess you saw last night on second base was Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor of the University.
Last night, the Rude Mechanicals of the Last night, the Rude Mechanicals of the Clos Pups of the history department
"It was a good game." Shankel said.
"It was a good game!" 'sankan kain'
Shankal he said he had played softball while at the college. He said he had and played softball with the English department at KU for several years.
Shankel is one of several familiar University faces participating in a softball program sponsored by the summer recreation division of the physical department.
"We have fund and get our exercise, too," he said.
The names of the teams are unusual but meaningful. The Rude Mechanicals take their name from the comedy group in Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream," Albert Cook, score professor of English and score keeper, said. He said Shakespeare's group, which consisted of 12 men who were working men, were hired to entertain the queen even though they were incapable of being testers.
"We are inspired incompetents," Cook said, and was perhaps right, because the team entered the game with an O-4 record. The defense was dominant, Clos, goddess of history, John Clark,
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas
on May 4, 2013
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Subscriptions by mail are $8 a semester or
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professor of history and team manager,
said. The Cloes Pups began the game with a
Other members of the Rude Mechanicals are Philip Wedge, Eric Winners, manager Jim Carrothers, Don Warders, Gerhard Zuther, Tony Gowen and Steve Goldman, all English faculty members; Reynold Marshall, professor; and Steve Wood, English major.
Editor
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Associate Editor Porte Peter
Campus Editors Kimberley
Glen Meyer
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The Clos Pups members are Clark; Greg Black; Howard Feilder; Byron Dixon; all of the history department; John Goldberg, assistant instructor at the Intensive English Center; Michael Davis, University attorney; Neal George, University access attorney; Kevin Deeley, director of Journalism; John Novotny, director of the Williams Educational Fund; and Dave Dinnenen, Professor of linguistics and French and Italian.
Convicts break in KU professor
By MARK PENNINGTON
Kansas Staff Reporter
In 1300 Dante Alighieri called life the "divine comedy." Over 600 years later in 1975, Robert Reinhheimer, assistant instructor in speech communications and human relations, couldn't agree more. But to be specific, Reinhauer thinks it is man's spirit at utterance at communication—oral and otherwise—that is the best show in town.
Last summer and this spring semester Reinheimer took his insights into human behavior to the U.S. federal penitentiary in Leavenworth. He taught personal communications to two classes of about 25 convicts.
Reinheimer said that although he had convinced himself to remain cool about his first meeting with Leavenworth, he soon found himself shaking like a leaf.
"When I first saw the prison walls," he said, "I immediately had reservations about continuing. My reservations doubled when I walked through four electric gates,
*"After the second class session everything was great. We'd trade it adults."*
"They had a little talk with me before I went to my first class, he said of them that were prisoners."
Reinheiser said he thought some of the men's behavior — 'probably tried to rescue the bell' — out of him.
and they tripped when I heard them all lock behind me."
told me, that they would lie and that they would try to take advantage of me.
PROFILE
"They told me that, when not if, but when trouble started, if I could get to a phone, to dial a particular emergency phone would immediately head for the classroom.
"They said that if I could get to a phone but couldn't dial it, to just knock it off the hook. If it stayed off for three seconds an alarm would sound in the control center.
came to find out they were exactly right, I had nothing to worry about.
Reinheimer said he wandered down a hall thinking about what the guards had told him.
foursome will be Paul Hawes, associate chairman, and Wilkerson, HPSER chairman, and Wilkerson.
"I had visciss of being beaten to a pulp and dragging myself to a phone."
The deadline for entering the tournament was last Thursday, Wilkerson said, but anyone who shows up before the tee-off time will be eligible to play.
"By the time I got to the classroom I was pretty damn worthless." he said.
"We'll be offering small prizes to the best two-man teams and the best stroke play for nine holes. We'll also give some awards on the team who shot the longest shot and the longest drive," he said.
"I walked in and stumbled around for awhile and finally stopped and told them that with the song and dance I had just received I was convinced I wasn't going to get out of there, and I was shock. I had also done what else to do, I had just told them."
Reinheimer said the men in the room were visibly upset by what he had related. "One man in particular," he said, "started talking about how I had nothing to do and wanted me to move forward to my class. The men went out of our way to make me feel comfortable.
Reinheimer is teaching a speech communications class this summer at Leavenworth High School. Three convicts from the prison's honor camp are in the class. The three men all said they were enjoying the class very much. One of the men, Dale, said Reinheimer was a great instructor and had a very quick wit.
Alvamar site of KU Open
Tee-off time for the nine-hole tournament is 3 p.m.
"The reason I'm taking the class," he said, "is because a guy who took it last year told me it was a course. He said the instructor made it fun, and he was right."
Faculty, staff and summer students are eligible to participate in a golf tournament tomorrow at Alvamar Hills Golf Course. The tournament is sponsored by the department of health, physical education and recreation (HPER).
While at KU Reinheimer has done managerial consulting for a few major industries and hopes to continue the practice after he leaves next spring.
Tom Wilkerson, recreational coordinator for HPER, said Thursday that Executive Vice Chancellor Del Shankel would see off the first ball. Other members of the opening
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Man, machine seek Shakespeare
By ALISON GWINN
Kansas Staff Reporter
"He was a scholar, and a ripe and good man. He was wise, fair-spoken, and persuasive."
When Shakespeare wrote those words for Griffith in the play, "King Henry VII," he could have well been describing Charlton Himan who, over three centuries later, became an enlightened playman more accurate and more faithful to the poet than any folio ever printed.
Himman, distinguished professor of English, has made Shakespeare's text and the printing of that text his major study for more than 25 years.
Himan worked as a research fellow for the Folder Shakespeare Library for a few
PROFILE
While he was in the Navy, from 1942 to 1946, Hinman observed an unsuccessful method for comparing airfields before and after bombings that he would later use to revolutionize the collation of Shakespearean texts.
months in 1941 and 1942, after receiving B.A. and M.A. degrees in English from Oxford University as a Rhodes scholar and a Ph.D. from the University of Virginia.
The Navy, for wartime purposes, photographed a field before and after it was bombed from an exact elevation and under like atmospheric conditions. By superimposition, the damage was alternately lightning one image and then the other, the Navy hoped that bombing damages could be made apparent as they came and went on the screen. Because of the lack of transparency under like conditions, the technique was used for bombing photographs.
Himan took the Navy's idea, using it to print the copies of the纸的 printed page of the first book.
He invented the Hinman collating machine, an optical mechanical device on which very detailed comparisons could be made from two copies of one page of manuscript.
"A man has only one lifeface and only one set of eyes." Himman said.
The collator enabled him to peruse 50 copies of 37 plays, page by page, "about 50 times as fast and much accurately" he had done with an unaidied eye, he said.
By following the sequence of types (individual letters) and how they were damaged, Humman was able to reconstruct the image day-by-day record was kent of the printing "."
For example, a letter "B1," distinguishable because of slight imperfections, can be followed as it is used and reused, line after line and page after page.
Six typewriters who worked on the printing of the folio have been identified. Himman identified three of them by observing their spelling, which was not uniform in the English language at the time, habitats of punctuation, and alterations made from what the folio was published. A quarto was the publication of single play.
One typewriter's spelling, for example,
"was "goe", "doe", and "here", while
Exhibitionists seen in vicinity of Potter
A nude man approached a sum-bathing woman west of Potter Lake Saturday and asked whether he could sum-bathe with her, the woman told Security and Parking officials. The woman described the man only as a white male.
Captain B. L. Ellison of parking and security said of the two incidents, "There is no significant correlation indicating the two incidents of same person, yet it cannot be ruled out."
Last week a woman reported that during a walk from the Campanile to Potter Lake she noticed a man sitting under a tree watching her. She said when she walked down the hill, she saw his pants down mastubating. She described him only as a white male.
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another typeetter's spelling was "go," "do," and "here," he said.
One typebetter might use spaces before and after commas, one might put a space either before or after a comma, and one might omit spaces completely. Himman said.
Proreaders in Shakespeare's time concerned themselves mostly with obvious bliemishes on the printed page, such as altering incorrect page numbers and filling in white space within the margins. The typesetting they weren't concerned with the meaning of the text.
Typeetters, then, are the main link to the actual written manuscripts of Shakespeare, the best-known form of literature.
The typesetters varied greatly in the accuracy. Hinman said. Typesetter A made approximately one mistake in every 300 times; typesetter B made one mistake in every 17 lines.
Some typesters were apparently very faithful to the written manuscript before them, while others inserted and deleted text that fitted their personal tastes and knowledge.
For example, if "sold" is changed to "sullied" in Hamlet's opening soliloquy, the meaning of his speech changes to include "he had been seen his mother and his uncle. Human said."
University Daily Kansan
"Poetry depends on small things, as a lot of things do." Hhim said.
For example, Hinnan said, in the first part of "King Henry IV," Shakespeare apparently repeated the word 'great' in one of Falstaff's speeches, making the phrase, "If I do grow great great." He added an 'aweful' word left with an 'aweful' space which he filled with the word, "again," which implied a previous greatness that Falstaff never had.
With the addition of seemingly innocuous words to fill in white space, typeetters either altered the meaning of the text, or made the text inaccurate.
Himan said he attempted to use his knowledge of printing house personal and their practices in his edition of Shakespeare's plays.
Hinman compiled "The Norton Facsimile of the First Folio of Shakespeare," which contains the most accurate pages from all the copies.
By studying page by page all of the copies of the foliated contain in the Folger library,
Himan, who is retired from teaching, is now working on an edition of Shakespeare's complete works. He calls his project as close to Shakespeare as possible."
He is now going through the 29th play for the final time. He has been working on the play for the past 12 years, and expects to spend about two more years on it.
Hirnan said his edition should have "thousands of differences, mainly in small things," from the Riverside edition of *The New York Times*, which is the most recently published edition.
His work, he said, should be modernized with greater degree than the Riverside edition.
For example, Himman's edition will use the modern spelling for "precedent" instead of the "president" spelling used in Shakespeare's time, because of the discrepancy in meaning that could occur with that spelling, he said.
Having problems starting on that term paper? The reference department of Watson Library has something that may help.
Library clinic offered
The reference department offers a term paper clinic which will lead the student to work with researchers in the field.
"We don't do a formal bibliography or actually perform the research," Linda Parker Griffin, associate reference librarian at MCU, can guide the student to what is available."
The reference librarians can often counsel students about which books on a specific subject would be best for their particular papers. Griffin said.
Griffin said the clinic could be used by a person who was new to the KU library system and needed an introduction to its workings, by a person who knew the system more about reference materials by a researcher who wanted to obtain miniature.
Any student who wants a term paper conference should contact the Watson reference desk for an appointment. This will save you time to sort out available information.
"If it's something I've done over and over again, I can do it off the cuff," Griffin said, "but if it's something new, I may spend four or five hours on it."
During the session, which may last from 20 minutes to more than an hour, the librarian gives the student a list of possible sources of information. The librarian writes on identifying card catalog headings, bibliographies and periodical indexes.
"We try to tailor the session to the interests and needs of the individual," Griffin said. "It's more effective if we get to talk to the individual before the actual session."
KANSAN WANT ADS
The clinic is not limited to students, she said. Professors researching fields that are new to them may wish to contact the reference librarians.
Griffin said the reference department assists 15 to 20 persons a semester.
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan student without regard to color, creed, or nationality be HIRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLAT HIGH.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one time three times five times
15 words or less ... $1.50 ..$2.00 ..$2.50
Each additional word ... .01 ..02 ..03
AD DEADLINES
Monday 5 p.m.
Tuesday 5 p.m.
Wednesday 5 p.m.
Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday 5 p.m.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
*bound items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These items can be placed in person or by calling the UDR business office at 861-4358
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 First Hall
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
FOR SALE
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Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale
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STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS—regardless of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or close-out products, they will be priced at $350 each at the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIFT; if not, please call (877) 694-1234.
1966 WW Squareback, under 70,000 miles. Reliable
storage in good condition. Call 855-743-8432.
1970 WV Squareback, new tires, muffler, rebuilt brakes, front discs, rear suspension and RS150 speaker. Speak 'Eyes'.
Now fire merchandise close-outs, etc. New selling huge grocery stock from a Chicago supermarket chain. Save $4 off the stand. Open 9 a.m.-5 p.m. closed Sundays. Valgate's Salvage Center. 628 Vermont. Mtf
In Topeka, 1972 Barrington 14 x 64. 2 bedroom,
14 baths, a kite, skirted, tied down, patio, awning,
grey bed. Will share expense expens. Sale
$29.50 8th Street Terrace, Topeka 6 toilets
$69.50 7-17
HIGH PROTEIN horse meat dog food. 24–14 oz.
€60 cask no discount. Merge Salver.
Color TV, RCA 19", 1 year old. Call Hasher at 843-8559 7-9
Nikon F body only. Best offer. 5 string hammer.
Kamera Yashica 3500. Ammo 8-128.
F8-1978 at 5.900. Battery 7-10.
Macrane plant hangers, pottery, planters, bathtubs
McCormick plant hangers, bathrooms, planters,
JVLT7. 117 Bm, 8th, open 12pm - 7-10
71 Honda 350. excellent condition. Call 843-684-8
ask for Tena. Before 10 P.M.
Just arrived—shipment of Rabbitts and Scrierecus
come by for a drive train. JawvY WAW. 843-210-
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1968 WB Win, converted to camper, ice box, bkes, gas stock, Jayhawk WM 843-220. -Roof
1972 WV Super Beetle, yellow, 4-speed, 1 owner.
1973 VW Service agreement, Jaguar-70
1976 WV Standard Beetle, yellow, 4-speed, 1 owner.
Stereo Stargard Marantz 46 speakers, 20-watt
system and BSR automatic turntable.
Call 842-7900.
Squarebake Wagons. From choose three, from 108 to 171. Jayhawk VW, 843-2210. 7-10
SONY Cassette-Corder Available AC 196- 198
MAGnetic Corder Available AC 197- 198
AM Bold Solid Case $29. Call 831-1854 1 a f g p.
Sony Cassette-Corder Available AC 196- 198
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BAR HOTELS
car smokes
1015 Iowa 11-9 Mon.-Fri.
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1969 Portola 4 dr. bt., power and air. Jayhawk
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1920 Lernan Sport Coupe air, automate, only
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15,000 lionets Jaynesm WV 84-230 7.10
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Fiinked, Red and black 2 dancers
Fiinked, Black and red 2 dancers
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For Sale SONY TC-368 tape deck. New heads,
excellent condition. Call 841-0799 7emons. 7-15
Huey-125MX Good condition. Must oll
475mm F47. Call 841-1058 after 4. 7-15
Come on out! Late of shade and parking to the Country Store 250 West 13th Street, dine in, drink coffee and other refreshments, collectables. Wooden products make logs, 4 ft x 4 ft; hushback chairs, animas boxes, apples, oranges, grapes; baskets, animal feed, chicken feet; watermelon, watermelons $19.99; Zucchini, Cinnamon, sweet corn, watermelons $19.99; Beans, beans $19.99; Green beans $3, 80 for $15.00; Corn beans $3, 80 for $15.00; Combine fresh by 30 for $15.00; Corn and popcorn, Grapes, lime butter, lingers, cherries, lettuce, tomato, potatoes in shallow, sorghum, potato peel
Did you know that Webster's Mobile Homes were made with homebies for the sold homes in Webster, WI. We provide mobile homes for sale in Webster, WI.
38R McDonald 310 AXE Tumblare with Shure
38R McDonald 310A excellent condition $0 Call #:
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Double-ducked Sun Queen Orthopedic maultron,
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Donutform Call 514-3178 after 5. Also Suncare,
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1971 Cajir 4 speed, air conditioned, low
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1970 Pilmquist Dmouth 2, dr. HRT, Red. Automatic. Save. Jawhack WK, 843-2210. 7-10
1974 Yamaha. Enduro 125, one owner, 3200 miles.
Jawk VW. 843-2300. 7-10
1970 Chevrolet station wagon, automobile power steering rack, rack 4,600 miles. Kenworth W-851, B221-2
1966 Malibu, 2-dr ht, automatic, airt bucket
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1921 Karrant Ghin, blue, 4-speed, 34,000 miles
1921 Karrant Ghin, blue, 499-999
FOR RENT
1966 WV Bug, excellent transmission, two to 70
to Jawky江ywjk. WVA 842-2200
842-0753
rental service. Up to the minute listings
of law firms in Lawrence, Lawrence
Fox Exchange: 842-526-3010
Johnson Rental Company, Studios, Iodro, 1 bedroom, 2 baths. Medical KU Medical Center, City Kansas, City, KS.
Two bedroom apartment, all utilities paid, close to campus this fall, furnished or unfurnished. 434-695-8700
Rooms - Kitchen privilleges. One block to campus
Room 842-709 or 843-760.
Room 842-707 or 843-760.
Exceptionally any customized one bedroom apartment. Some utilities included. Within walking distance to Walgreens.
Need roommate, male or female, to share tower
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55th 1987 Great Bond, Kansas 67203
55th 1987 Great Bond, Kansas 67203
House 2-- story, three bedroom unfurnished. Borrowed furniture and coupled couple pups. No pet. Not 843-7567.
Rooms furnished, single with or without cook-
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For the Finest in Authentic, Handcrafted Indian Jewelry, Arts and Crafts
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Extra nice rooms with private kitchens. One room has a full kitchen, utilitarian, kitchen rent = $343-3579
Room AAAA = $1800-2067
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Webster? 842-7700. 7-17
Lost! Male grey and brown eat with black
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Found medium-sized, light-colored, female Statue
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Lost-Monday AM between Browns & Simmons
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Last-A *W* purse with personal accessories. If found please call 842-4527 asleep. 7-8
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ARTHUR A. OLSON III. found your draft requisition from the same time ago. Call UDK 864-328-7-9
REWARD=For return of silver and torquage necklace lost in Kansas Mall 842-706-90 7-10
LOST. Pair of bicepels in groove behind Union
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4
Tuesday, July 8, 1975
University Daily Kansan
-LETTERS TO THE EDITOR-
Darts, laurels to IEC story
To the Kansan Editor:
First, you should be congratulated for publishing an article on the Intensive English Center (IEC) that was largely accurate and thorough. You may also appear during the last two years. There is, however, one misstatement, and a typographic error in your text of last Thursday's article on the IEC which may some readers to incorrect assumptions.
The story stated that Ibrahim Mari was "a second semester IEC student, which is the highest level of language proficiency. This isn't correct. Students enter the program of competence and may spend more or less than two times here before leaving.
There is also a typo appearing in the fourth column of the article. The hiring of only five assistant instructors (AIs) this coming fall will not make the "turnover smaller in the past." This too turnover of the largest changes in persons witnessed.
To Mohammed Abagrain's assertion that assistant instructors neglect their jobs to keep up with our own course work, both he and I have been taught most of us, especially those who teach grammar, composition or reading, spend approximately two hours out of class preparing for the final exam out-of-class this summer, my own out-of-class time is more like four hours.
Abugrain is probably correct in assuming that we do not sacrifice our other academic responsibilities, but we do forego personal pleasures to ensure our preparedness when needed.
It is doubtful that students within individual sections are at disparate levels of ability from the use of a variety of texts. Because of the center's structure, it is necessary to place students on the basis of overall ability, which results in sections composed of people who may be stronger in differing aspects of English proficiency.
Naturally, it is frustrating for someone who has mastered the phonology of English to suffer through a classmate's efforts, but that same person may find himself having more trouble with written English than the individual with poor pronunciation.
Ideally, students who are strong in particular areas can serve as models and sources of encouragement for their less capable classmates, stimulating their own development as well as that of those they help.
My colleague, Kurt Godden, does not speak for all Als on the matter of interrelating teaching methods and activities, nor do I. But another composition instructor and I have planned our lessons together this summer, attempting to develop activities appropriate to both classes. Last fall, all of the Als teaching Section One met weekly to discuss the new curriculum, the following week and approaches which might have realized those goals.
Additionally, there has always been during my stay at the IEC, a healthy, albeit informal, exchange of ideas and techniques among instructors.
Finally, Masoud Tahrzadeh's plea for more conversation classes comes as a polign reminder of the difficulties our students face when trying to socialize with the natives.
The problem is twofold.
To begin with, grammar is a problem for anyone learning any language. A close examination of test performances, writing examples and explanations reveals that while many students can more or less make themselves understood and conversely comprehend what they hear or read, the process goes on with considerable difficulty. The part of both the native and non-native.
Students sometimes feel that having mastered basic sentence structure and phonology, the language is under control. Students who have prepositions, articles, conjunctions and other particles belts this, often producing what is meant by one party or the other.
On the other hand, I agree with Tahrazade that he and every student at the IEC needs more conversation. However, the place to get it is not in the formally constrained context of the classroom, but out in the speech community at large. This is where the language learner can put to work what he learns in class, experiment with recently acquired constructions, learn new words and phrases in the language and culture of this country.
Local artists exhibit textiles and crafts
Quilts, rugs, pillows and wall hangings are part of the Contemporary Kansas Textiles show that opened Sunday at the Lawrence Arts Center, 9th and Vermont.
Five Lawrence artists are exhibiting items such as a hammock with two stitched pillows, a bedspread and several articles of clothing, including a woven cap.
Interest in textiles and crafts is increasing because some people think that kind of art is warmer and more pleasing to have at home than paintings, Ann Evans, a painter from Chicago on Sunday. Also, the craft movement is receiving more attention from the news media.
The attitude that crafts aren't as valid an art form as paintings or drawings is changing, she said, and this show is a good one. She also noted that design that is belting to charge this attitude.
Exhibitors and their exhibits are: Marlyn F. Brown, president of the Lawrence Arts Commission and KU graduate in fine arts—stitchery and weaving; Pam Carvano, a downtown Lawrence—quilting; Rudolph Kovacs, a KU graduate in textile design—weaving; Am Schlager, a KU graduate in weaving and a partner in the Hand and Footwear Studio, and Elisa Sreenivam, assistant professor of design—presumed textiles.
The textiles will be exhibited through July 31.
KU is fortunate in having clubs and organizations that are involved in a broad range of activities.
Foreign students should be encouraged to join those that reflect their own interests. Given a topic of concern, both native and non-native alike should find shade as well; play a foundation for further contact with life in the United States.
Again, many thanks for your timely article.
John Moriarty
Assistant Instructor
Intensive English Center
To the Kansan Editor:
Inspiration in the guise of disgust provokes once more an offering up of my limited editorial capability in this here form, as a letter.
Yes, dear editor, it finally seethed up, became warm and was forced to a boil. I write in concern, yes dire concern, cone-ment from the young "normal heterosexual."
Well, now, I'm just a run of the mill heterosexual, I guess, not brave enough to go out on a date with someone I don't have much use for sheep or goats or anything, but some people think I'm weird, and I would never challenge anyone intelligent enough to attend the party.
the question of whether there is a place for "normal heterosexuals" here or anywhere (maybe in young love novels). At any rate, I've never seen one.
I wonder. Is our "normal heterosexual" the kind of "normal heterosexual" who is so insecure in his masculinity as to necessitate ego games in like "beach boy tan" and can understand his queer fear of homeosexuals coming out of their so-called closets.
Now for the serious part, my dear editor. The so-called road to freedom is paved with radicalism. A point has to be made loud and clear before its heard. Just as it takes an angelic voice to say 'I love you', Panthers notwithstanding, dirty, smelly hippie pervers with burned out minds to make Americans think their way out of silly wars, it takes, perhaps, the 'profane' mention of genitals to make people notice how their sexuality becomes synonymous with homosexuality.
Again, I repeat, I am very heterosexual, and though I don't care to be otherwise, I don't need to wear a "kill the faggots" T-shirt to prove to myself that I am male.
What I'm wondering, though, is related to
Your business manager, dear editor, put up a good case for the paper. It's easy to defend economics. It's difficult for me to defend what I am, much less, what I am not.
I make no moral judgements concerning sexuality of any type. Mine is not the power, if indeed there is one. I do, however, make moral judgements on tunnel vision, stupidity and unreasoning fear. I hope you will forgive me, dear editor, as well as our "normal heterosexual," for taking up space in which we whom, of course, did not nav. for
Alan C. Howard McPherson Sophomore
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BASEBALL STANDINGS
By The Associated Press American League Foot
Boston | W | L | Pet. | GB |
New York | 44 | 37 | 321 | - |
Milwaukee | 44 | 38 | 530 | - |
Hamilton | 44 | 36 | 451 | - |
Cleveland | 37 | 43 | 463 | - |
Detroit | 37 | 43 | 463 | % 39 |
Oakland | 50 | 31 | 417 | - |
Kansas City | 40 | 27 | 474 | - |
Texas | 40 | 28 | 474 | - |
Cape Cod | 40 | 28 | 475 | 11 % |
California | 38 | 42 | 475 | 11 % |
Massachusetts | 38 | 42 | 475 | 11 % |
Boston 6, Minnesota 3
Detroit 2, Chicago 7
Washington 1, Chicago 7
Milwaukee 4, Kansas City 3
Cleveland at Oakland
Cincinnati 8, Miami 7
National League
Steelworkers study unions during week-long institute
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Pittsburgh | 41 | 37 | .500 | 48 |
| Philadelphia | 47 | 37 | .500 | 49 |
| New York | 39 | 36 | .481 | 11 |
| Los Angeles | 39 | 43 | .481 | 11 |
| Chicago | 39 | 43 | .481 | 12 |
| Aramark | 39 | 43 | .481 | 14 |
Cincinnati 55 29 865 ~
Los Angeles 30 28 845 ~
San Francisco 39 44 470 13½%
San Diego 38 45 458 18½%
Atlanta 38 45 458 18½%
New York 36 27 345 18½%
About 90 steelworkers are attending classes at the University of Kansas this week as participants in the 29th annual Steelworkers Institute.
The institute, sponsored by the United Steelworkers of America in cooperation with KU's Division of Continuing Education, seeks to teach steelworkers about unions and union activities. Bob Nelson, program director for the Division of Continuing Education at KU, said yesterday.
The participants in the Steelworkers Institute represent the western half of district 34 of the United Steelworkers of America.
The five states in the district are Illinois, Missouri, Nebraska, Iowa and Kansas. However, the majority of the steelworkers are from the greater Kansas City area.
This week's institute is one of 25 that will be held this summer across the country.
The Steelworkers Institute is set up in a steelworks enrolment in classes according to
the number of years they have attended the Institute.
The participants in the institute are
the students, faculty and all are
attending classes in the Kapua
Friday, the final day of the institute, a general session will be held for all participants. Ari Marcus, director of the American Historidust Institute in New York, will speak on "Today's Economy and How it Effects the Steel Industry."
The institute will conclude Friday with a graduation luncheon.
ON CAMPUS
STUDENTS CAN NOW PICK UP their IDs at the office of Admissions and Records 1128 Belong Hall, Window 1. Each student must complete registration and should pick up his own ID.
---
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Nuclear power protested
See page 2
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday. July 9. 1975
No.158
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Electronic innovator
the only American designer of electronic jewelry, Gary Nenchock, assistant professor of design, looks forward to even
greater innovations blending the arts and sciences. Nemchok hopes to expand his collection and exhibit the pieces in U.S.
Design prof tools electric jewels
By JAIN PENNER
Kansas Stff Reporter
Bodonic: the art or field of body embellishment, especially jewelry, utilizing electronics as a unique and integral component.
This is the technical definition given to a new type of jewelry that responds to sound, body temperature, motion or environmental conditions.
Its only American designer, so far, is Gary Nemchock, assistant professor of design. He has gotten a trademark on the term.
Nemchock said Sunday that he saw his bodonic jewelry as a meeting of art and science. His jewelry combines elements of design with intricate electronic circuitry to create pieces that unite their wearer with the artistic work and the environment.
Unlike traditional jewelry, Nernchock's bodicnes use light-emitting diodes in place of gems and acrylic and fur, bronze, vinyl or gold silver for settings instead of gold or silver.
Nemchock said his primary interest in light-emitting diode color rather than their production.
Light-emitting diodes can be activated by heat or motion he said.
Nermchock said some of his pieces, such as a belt that gleams with 30 red light-emitting diodes, were activated by body movement. Others are activated by changing body or environmental temperature, changes in light intensity or sound, he said.
Nernchock said he was working on a piece that would be activated when a certain word was pressed.
"The possibilities are unlimited," he said. Nernchock, 31, began his career as a
goldsmith in Denmark and joined the University of Kansas faculty four years ago. He said he became interested in the idea of electronic jewelry last fall.
Before he designed his first piece, Nemchock said, he researched the subject thoroughly, audited some electronics classes, and consulted several electronics firms and faculty members of the KU School of Engineering.
Nernchock said he was pleased with the cooperation he had received from people in the region.
"I can see these pieces before I make them," he said. "I know what I want to happen. I know the feeling, intensity and materials and I pull them all together."
Some of his pieces have been shown at an exhibit in Georgia. He said he would like to exhibit them in Kansas City, Mo. or New York.
pieces. He said he hoped to finish 30 or 35 and then exhibit them.
So far, Nemchock has completed 13 or 14
At this time, commercial success is far from Nemchock's mind, he said.
He said that he had a lot of offers for people who wanted to buy his jewelry, but he didn't have any until (and kept) it.
"I like my lifestyle now," he said. "I just see myself sitting in a factory."
Nernchock said assembling pieces for an exhibition collection was more important to him than the art.
Although Nemchock has mentioned bodionics to some of his jewelry classes, he said he wasn't trying to force the idea on his students.
"Bodonics aren't for everyone," he said.
See NEMCHOCK page 4
NEW DELHI (AP)—About 200 demonstrators waved flags of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's ruling Congress party, shouted "Shame on the CIA" and shook fists at fans every hour at stin yesterday in the U.S. Information Department in downtown New Delhi.
Crowds in India rap CIA
They acted as Mrs. Gandhi lent indirect support to the growing campaign to implicate the Central Intelligence Agency in the central crisis since its independence in 1947.
In an interview with Current, a pro-government Bombay weekly newspaper, Mrs. Gandhi was asked whether she had planned to "sever the links" between "the reactionaries at home and their friends abroad," an allusion to the CIA.
person would not have such links and certainty if there are, we should do our best to keep them.
"I should have thought that any patriotic
The demonstrators milled around the driveway as Albert F. Hersing, head of the USIS in India, drove out of the compound, which houses the six-story American library and USIS headquarters on an island of New Delhi's main shopping plaza.
"CTA agents are the enemies of our country," said one placard. Another said, "we have no choice."
It was the first anti-American demonstration in India since Mrs. Gandhi issued an emergency decree on June 26 to quell her political opponents who demanded that she resign after she was convicted for violating election laws, Members of the Congress
party have hinted that the CIA might have connections with political opponents
The decree banned political demonstrations but police stood by during yesterday's demonstrations. Protest leaders, who said the group belonged to the Bengal People's Party with corps, the Nehru Brigade, shook hand with commanders after the half hour skid.
CIA director William Colby has issued a flat denial of any agency connection to the Indian crisis. A news dispatch from Washington that reported his comment was the government censors last week after it appeared in a New Delhi afternoon newspaper.
a group of Congress party members of a parliament have demanded an inquiry into the conduct of the prime minister.
Dispute spurs code reappraisal
By LYNN PEARSON
Kansan Staff Reporter
A controversy over fair enforcement of the city's minimum housing code may be raised.
There is still argument as to who was responsible for delaying enforcement of the code as it applied to several houses. It has been suggested ways to expedite enforcement of the code.
THE ISSUE CROPPED UP when Ed Covington, who resigned last week as the city minimum housing code inspector, said that city Manager Buford Watson had told him in December 1794, to take it easy on six properties, 1000, 1200, 1220, 1234 and 1309 Ohio St. and 1632 Kentucky St. All of the properties except 1209 Ohio and 1632 Kentucky are owned by Daniel S. Olig, associate professor of education, who owned by James Mendenhall, 1207 Ohio St., and Minnie Cleveland, 2622 Belle Haven Drive.
Covington ingrated his charges in a story two weeks ago in the lawrence Journal-World.
Watson said he hadn't told Covington to delay action on the six properties.
"You know what I say to those charges?"
Watson said yesterday, "Bullshit!"
"I did not tell Ed Covington to hold off placarding any of these six properties," Watson said. "I rarely even talked with Ed."
COVINGTON'S IMMEDIATE supervisor was George Williams, public works director. Williams said that Covington had to him much about his job and its function.
Covington, who resigned last week, said that he hadn't been allowed to do his job properly and that he had been frustrated in his effort to bring substandard housing to us standard.
Watson said that it wasn't up to the city administration to set policy, but that the city commission drew up ordinances, set the number of housing inspectors and decided how the ordinances should be enforced.
The issue of housing inspection and enforcement of the city's housing code goes
A new method of electing student senators will be decided before the fall elections, Steve McMurray, chairman of the Students' Committee and one of the responsibilities Committee, said yesterday.
"The abolition of the Colleges-Within-the College system necessitates the reassigning of Senate seats from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences," he said.
Senators previously elected under the
"a senator, when elected, retains his constituency whether he changes schools or not," he said. "We could continue without him." substantive change in the elections.
Student Senate seating to change
A group of students who have worked on elections will meet informally tomorrow to discuss possible alternative methods of election for the fall.
Senators would be elected from voting districts identical to the CWC districts. Records of voter names would be maintained in the Senate. Senate instead of the Republic, Rolla pledged.
CWC system would remain in their offices.
Rd Effos, student body president. said.
McMurray said, "Because a major change is necessary, we're also going to review
The final decision on a new election method probably would not be made until the fall when the elections committee and the rights committee meet, McMurry.
it's a bigger problem than I at first say we're talking about a big promotion of our brand.
"They'll have to meet some time in August, since the elections are in September."
existing election policies and procedures
involved in reactions to the elections
committee this fall.
back much further than Covington's charges.
In 1972, the city commission authorized a door-to-door inspection of houses in an area designated as the Hill Target Area. The area, bounded by 10th Street on the north, 14th Street on the south, Louisiana Street on the west and Tennessee Street on the east, contained 199 houses, mostly rental properties.
ACCORDING TO WATSON, 144 of those are now in compliance with the code and 15 are ready to be reinspected. Thirteen homes have been inspected; these houses have never been inspected.
in the fall of 1974, the city commission decided that the housing inspector should be held accountable for fights that were dangerous and unsafe. This was a change from the previous enforcement policy that went by the city commission and was adopted by the city commission in May 1972.
Watson said this policy switch caused some confusion on the part of the housing community.
"When you think of it this way, that the Hill Target Area was inspected by three different housing inspectors under two buildings where confusion could set in," Watson said.
BEFORE ADOPTING the national housing code in 1972, the city had its own national code. The city has a national code. Presently, Commissioner Carl Mibek and a committee of other interested citizens are devising a reasonable code which will resemble the one used by the city.
Watson said the new code would be more specific in its requirements and wouldn't leave much room for judgmental decisions on the part of the inspector.
George Williams said yesterday that the housing inspectors were going to concentrate on making sure that all of the houses in the Hill Target Area were up to the city's code before inspecting houses in other parts of Lawrence.
Commissioner Fred Pence sait Covington's charges and the consequent blow up in the Journal World had made no difference. Mr. Pence viewed housing code enforcement.
"We were already doing something about it, even before it blew up in the paper," Pence said. "Carl Mibec was working on a new housing code and the commission was already pushing to have these houses inspected."
MAYOR BARKLEY CLARK said some enforcement is coming in housing code enforcement.
"I want to make sure that inspection is done quickly and that the code is evenhanded enforced," Clark said. "I believe that there has been some laxity in our process, so we want this whole thing cleared away and completed as soon as possible."
Clark is especially interested in pursuing the use of search warrants to gain entry into
houses when their owners refuse to grant housing inspections.
Clark stressed that this type of forced entry would only be used in extreme cases.
"I think that when we can't inspect because someone refuses entry, that's unequal protection of the law." Clark said.
Clark is also interested in exploring the city's legal position in pressing criminal charges against noncomplying property owners. This would allow the city to prosecute property owners under the criminal code.
ANOTHER CHANGE in the city's enforcement procedures may come in the form of different phrases and words used in the inspection orders and notices.
"Those letters threaten impending
City schedules a hearing date on Ling house
The city commission decided last night to set a date next week for a hearing to determine whether property located at 1301 Ohio St. should be demolished.
The property is owned by Daniel Ling, associate professor of physics and astronomy. Ling will be invited to attend the meeting because why his property shouldn't be rage.
The commission decided to take no action on property located at 1321 Tennessee ST. until the Minimum Housing Code Board of Appeals ordered that the property has been set for reexamination.
The commission also approved efforts by Burford Watson, city manager, to look into the conditions of the city's environmental inspector. The inspector would try to keep substantial houses in compliance with the minimum housing code by correcting defects in the exterior of the buildings.
Watson said the inspector could order the exterioris of houses painted if the owners refused to comply with a request by the city. Of the job would be billed to the owner.
"I don't believe a man should be told what to do with his house unless he is being a bad neighbor and people are complaining," City Commissioner Carl Mieke said. "What you are doing here smacks of middle class imposing their will on the lower class."
Mibee compared the inspector to the friendly neighborhood dog catcher.
"He's a great guy until he comes into your yard after your dog," he said, "Suddenly he hits you. He puts his foot on the ground."
Mibek said the city should receive a complaint before it acted on any property.
mission would answer M里克's objections before further action was taken on the job.
New rules may hurt football program, Moore says
By KEN STONE
The University of Kansas football team, already struggling to recover from a spate of spring practice injuries, might be able to move forward under strict college athletic programs are passed at a special convention of the NCAA in August, Bud Moore, KU head football
The NCAA, meeting in only its second session this year, will consider 73 proposals by the NCAA Council that would restrict athletic demands to cut expenses of member schools.
Ted Tow, recording secretary of the Council, said the proposal was "great" and would increase the million of dollars.
of Alabama, before becoming head coach at
Auburn, before certain proposals might
purify the KU football team.
Moore said he was against Council proposals to end scouting and to outlaw moving the football team off campus the night before home games.
But Moore, who was the offensive coordinator at one of the most prosperous companies in the country.
He said he also had objections to proposals that limited further the size of the traveling ship and cut the maximum number of ships available in one year from 30 to 27.
Tow said that at a meeting of the NCAA on economy last April in Kansas City, Mo., the majority of the delegates favored the elimination of scouting.
"Darrell Royal (the head football coach at the University of Texas) spoke strongly in favor of this," Tow said. "Royal said would give them everything they want."
you can't learn from films. You can't tell anything about the enthusiasm of the other team or be able to turn the kicker. You cannot catch the height of a pout from watching a film."
However, Moore said, he would sacrifice scouting to save some of the other proposed strategies.
Moore disagreed, saying, "Some things
The NCAA will consider cutting the maximum number of football players on a team.
"I think we could play with 48 people," Moore said, "but it would cut down on your pay."
Having the team stay busy in Topeka before home games, a tradition of KU football and a common practice at large venues, it is no surprise that we be in leopardy at the special convention.
"You want your team in a mood to play a football game," Moore said. "It would take us to win."
were required to stay on campus the night before a home game."
Tow said there was a split on the overnight housing issue at the NCAA meeting on economy. Division 1 schools were emphatically against eliminating it, Division 2 schools were mixed, and Division 3 schools were strongly in favor of eliminating it.
Most Division 1 schools are universities and large colleges, while Division 2 and 3 schools are smaller. KU is a Division 1 school.
Division 2 and 3 schools favored elimination of sormin practice, Tow said.
while most Division 1 schools wanted to keep it.
Another area of wide disagreement at the economy meeting, which more than 50 college and university presidents, athletic directors and athletic associate leaders attended, was whether to eliminate spring football practice.
KU now awards a maximum of 30 scholarships in football each year.
On the prospect of the NCAA cutting the maximum number of football scholarships available in one year, Moore said, "I can't help but feel that a cutback would be premature. We haven't given our new policy a chance."
"It gives younger players an opportunity to increase their skills. Spring practice very definitely gives us a chance to see what the team will look like in the fall." he said.
Although no proposal will be offered at the NCAA convention to abish spring practice at Division 1 schools, Moore said he was against abolishing it.
Tow said the proposal to limit the number of scholarships available was just one of five scholarship options the NCAA would consider.
"The council's role is to enable the delegates to have the broadest possible set of restrictions to choose from." Tow said. "All the proposal are designed to enable a sizeable number of institutions to realize some financial savings."
Clyde Walker, KU athletic director, has said that he is opposed to national legislation by the NCAA in areas affecting the athletic budgets of its members schools.
Because of the varied economic situations and geographical locations of NCAA schools, NCAA members would have a difficult time agreeing on new legislation, bylaws and amendments to the NCAA constitution, Walker said.
Tow said that although he didn't expect a reunion institution to be in fashion, the one he had attended the serious
See MOORE page 3
2
Wednesday, July 9, 1975
University Daily Kansan
NEWS DIGEST THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Ford announces candidacy
WASHINGTON—President Ford, pledging never to neglect his official duties and praising "an open and aboveboard campaign," officially announced Monday that he would be stepping down.
Ford's long-promised announcement came in low-key fashion and in a setting calculated to portray him as incumbent President rather than just another office seeker. He read his statement while he was seated behind his desk in the Oval Office.
House passes Navy oil bill
WASHINGTON—The House passed a bill that would give the Interior Department control of oil production from the nation's naval petroleum reserves for the first time since the Teapot Dome scandals of the 1920s.
The House approved the bill by a vote of 391 to 20. It would allow an unlimited amount of oil to pump from the river falls, Calif., reserve, the most important source of crude oil in the state.
The bill now goes to the Senate, where similar legislation has been introduced by Sen. Mark Hatfield, R-Ore.
3 refugee camps may close
HARRISBURG, Pa.—Three of four camps set up in the United States for relocation of native refugees may be closed by this winter, a federal govern-
Only FT Chaffee, Ark., will be kept open through the winter, said Eleanor Green, spokesman for the federal Interagency Task Force on Indochina refugees. Those centers to be closed are FT Indianotown Gap, Pa., Camp Pendleton, Calif., and Folin Air Force Base, Fla.
The task force has been releasing about 715 refugees daily from the four camps. The refugees either have sponsors or enough money to set out on their own. If the release rate holds up, it would mean all refugees, including those still at camps in the Pacific, could be relocated by the end of October.
Plans to move an Indian training center at Brigham City, Utah, to Kansas to be under the control of Haskell Indian Junior College have been dropped and aren't likely to be revived. Clemmon Socke, director of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, said yesterday.
Haskell denied training center
For the past year it had been assumed that the National Indian Training Center, which is at the Intermountain Indian Boarding School at Brigham City, would have been settled or it would be left where it is and brought under control of Haskell administrators.
However, neither option was taken by the BIA.
"It has been determined, in accordance with tribal needs, that the program should stay in Utah and under local control," he said.
The training center is used to train federal employees and Indians in such areas as organizing tribal governments and businesses and personnel management.
Lewis set free by court appeal
Steven Lewis, former assistant professor of social welfare, entered Douglas County Jail yesterday morning as he was instructed to do after being found guilty of battery in District Court last month.
Lewis posted a $500 bond.
Lewis was released in the afternoon, however, after Wesley M. Norwood, his attorney, filed a notice of appeal to the Kansas Supreme Court.
Prof's film examines prison life
By BRAD JONES
For years, penal reform and rehabilitation have been misunderstood by most people. Jacob Godon, associate professor of African studies, said yesterday.
Gordon, through the production of a 30-minute film, hopes to bridge the gap of
The film was made possible by a grant of $13,815 from the Kansas Committee on Humanities (KCH), a sister organization to the Humanities Guild Endowment for the Humanities.
"We wish to show the programs that the prison offers, the characteristics of the prison environment, and the needs of the inmates."
Gordon got the idea for the film four years ago as a volunteer instructor at the Kansas State Prison at Lansing, where the filming team was involved. It is to show prison life as it really is, he said.
County speeds shift of records
Under home rule authority, the commissioners can take actions not specifically provided for under state statutes by passing an ordinary resolution. They have used a similar resolution to establish a levy for the county bicentennial commission.
State law provides for transfer of only microfilmed copies of original documents. The law allows destruction of original documents if they are more than 20 years old, but says nothing about transferring them.
Douglas County commissioners are using home rule authority to transfer some county records from the courthouse to Spencer Research Library.
Because the county is interested in transferring the original documents themselves, home rule authority must be used.
viewpoint of the administrators." Gordon said. "But most of all, we want to show the teachers how it works."
Gordon said there was a critical need for the film, which shows the actual conditions of the prison and the problems that exist in it. He also argued for a reformed life once they are released.
Gordon estimated that 90 per cent of all ex-offenders released in Kansas stay in the state. But very few can get a satisfactory education, either on their own, or in some cases, their families.
"Some offenders go into prison with a great deal of training in whatever occupation they held before they got caught," he said. "We don't know if they can't get jobs that require state licenses. For example, an auto mechanic who gets put in jail for stealing cannot, when released, return to his mechanic's job because he has a state certificate of qualification."
In contrast, Gordon said, there were problems involved in vocational training in the school.
"I spoke to one inmate who had, for 40 years, made his living by stealing," Gordon
Gordon said the man had worked a total of one month during his life. When he was confronted with the idea of being released, he lost it. He didn't know what he would do.
"We have two alternatives in dealing with the present penal system," Gordon said. "Either we should just kill them and say, 'That's the end of our problem,' or we should try to work with them as human beings."
Gordon said administrators were aware of the deficiencies of penal rehabilitation programs and of the poor atmosphere in prisons. He said he thought, however, that a new approach in hands tied by governmental red tape to improve rehabilitation programs.
In the film, Gordon is assisted in the interviews by three KU professors: William M. Baldwin, David R. Larsen, and
After its release in September, the film will be sent to all television stations that request it, Gordon said. It will also be available to business and social groups.
Pemington, professor of speech and drama,
and Richard Peckham, professor of English.
He said that although he hippopermembers of the Kansds Legislature would have the opportunity to view the film, stirring up legislative action wasn't his primary
"We did not make the film for changes" sake, but to bridge the gap of misunderstanding.
Three profs named to education council
Three members of the School of Education faculty have been named to a newly formed State Advisory Council for Science Elementary and Secondary Education Art.
The three are: William La Shier,
associate professor of curriculum and instruction; Robert Michal, associate
professor of counseling; and Edward Meyen, chairman of the department of
special education.
Title IV is a consolidation of several federal education programs that provide money for library and media resources, equipment, guidance-testing programs and programs for improving the state department of education.
The council comprises 21 Kanners who will advise the State Board of Education on matters of education.
Two other new members of the council are Ovrel Criqui, principal of South Junior High School in Lawrence, and Carmen Diaz, principal of Guadalupe School in Tokea.
PUT YOUR BEST EAR FORWARD
Shockley, 65, professor of engineering and applied science at Stanford University, was a co-winner of the Nobel Prize in physics in 1956 for the invention of the transistor. Recently his theories about genetics have stirred controversy.
He states that black people's conceptual intelligence, determined by IQ tests, is markedly lower than white people's, and that to an extent, the discrepancy is genetic. If a person who is not paid to those with less than average QS who submit to voluntary sterilization.
See Tari Mosier
Lawrence School of Hairstyling 9361/2 Mass. 843-2535
Richard Goldsby, a black professor of chemistry and microbiology at the University of Maryland, received his B.A. in Biology from the University of Berkeley in 1961.
Selection will include Rossini's "William Tell Overture," a medley from Rodgers' and Hammerstein's "The Sound of Music." Souas'a "Stars and Stripes Forever," Tskiakovskiy's "182 Overture" and David Bennett's "Mexican Hat Dance."
IN BRIEF
THE SIXTH AND FINAL CONCERT of the season of the LAWRENCE City Band will be tonight at 8 p.m. at the South Park Bandstand.
Shockey's racial debates in 1973 often ended before they began. Harvard cancelled an October 1973 debate when a coalition of black and white students and VGTI representatives also VGTI and Staten Island Community College also were cancelled because of protests.
On July 2, in response to a letter, we said that the Kansen received 69 cents a semester from each student's activity fee. This was incorrect. The actual figure is closer to $1.35. The amount fault accused is $1.74. We controlled. We thank Kevin Barr, Eudora graduate student, for bringing the error to our attention.
Capote and Shockley to speak here in fall
CORRECTION
Author Truman C萨姆 and Nobel Prize winner William Shockley have been scheduled by the SUA Forum to make appearances at the University of Kansas next fall, Mike Miller, SUA activities adviser, said yesterday.
Capote will speak October 21 in Hoch Auditorium on "The Writer's Life," Miller said. The program will be a lecture and perhaps a dramatic reading and a recounting of some of Capote's anecdotes, he said.
By BILL KATS
Shockley will participate in a debate with Richard Goldschmidt, geneticist and KU graduate, on the question of "A Superior Race" on November 13 at 8 p.m. The location of the debate hasn't yet been determined, Miller said.
Capote, 50, wrote such works as "Other Voices, Other Rooms," "In Cold Blood" and "Breakfast at Tiffany's." He received the O. Henry Memorial Award for short stories in 1946 and the National Institute of Arts and Letters' Creative Writing Award in 1959.
"We do not believe the energy received is worth the risk or expense," Nolan said. "We therefore oppose the construction of a nuclear plant in Kansas."
The possibility of a meltdown, although scars, scare the people who gathered near her house.
The emergency system has never been tested on a large reactor, but a series of six small scale tests were performed recently in Nevada. The system failed in all six tests.
BUHLINGTON—Opposition to nuclear power showed its face near this small farming town on Independence Day, and a strange face it was.
Nuclear power seen as baleful
with coolant to keep the temperature down until the reactor could be shut off.
By JACK McNEELY Kansan Staff Deporte
Oposition was written in the worry lines burned on an old farmer's craggy visage. It shone through a young mother's luminous cheeks as she smiled on her infant.
Even the children caught the somber attitude, the feeling of dread. They didn't quite understand what was going on, but they understood enough about unseen threats. The children were speaking of death. The children wore faces they might have worn at a wake.
The creased forehead and bristling eyebrows of a young radical from the city bespoke both his opposition to nuclear power and his frustration at being unable to
Without a cooling system, the temperature inside the reactor gets astronomically high and the nuclear fuel fuses into one lump, melts through the bottom of the reactor and releases radioactive particles.
Nolan said solar power was the long term solution to the country's energy problem, and conservation would have to do in the meantime.
Then came helium-filled balloons, and the children could contain their exuberance on
down occurs when a reactor's cooling system breaks down, and what was a controlled nuclear reaction becomes rapidly uncontrolled.
There has never been a meltdown at any large reactor in the United States, but the possibility exists. Experts can't agree on how large possible is.
The Atomic Energy Commission estimated that a major accident could cause 45,000 deaths, 100,000 injuries, $17 million in contamination of hundreds of square rules.
Any reactor's last defense against a meltdown is the Emergency Core Cooling System. In theory, if a reactor's normal core is overheated, it could cause an emergency system would flood the reactor
Gathered near Burlington were various kinds of people. "Just plain, Kansas people," one man said—people from Lawrence, Topeka, Emporia, McPherson, Village,lage, Gridley, Osage City, Yates Center, West Burlington, Burlington and Kansas City, Mio.
The balloons were a symbol for about 70 people who gathered at the John Redmond Reservoir to protest efforts to build a new dam that would cover three miles from where they were standing.
Attached to each balloon was a card saying that the flight of the balloon represented the flight of radioactive particles. If disaster ever struck the propelled plant.
longer. They rcmped in the sun and raised
their heads as they bagged on
another with the balloons.
Kay Nolan, league president, said that if the Burlington reactor malfunctioned during a temperature inversion like last week's, the radioactive fallout could be in a small area and could be concentrated enough to kill everything in the area.
"In the event of a reactor core meltdown, you would be contaminated by radiation," the card says.
The cards asked their finders to mail them to the Kansas League Against Nuclear Dangers, a coalition of nuclear protest groups based in Osage, Woodson and Anderson counties, with headquarters in Westphalia.
ANALYSIS
"Melted down" the word used to describe a nuclear reactor gone haywire. A melt-
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Wednesday, July 9, 1975
Notable to conduct camp music
By MARCY CAMPBELL Kannan Staff Director
Sir Vivian Dunn, retired conductor of Her Majesty's Royal Marine Band and School of Music, has returned to the University of Kansas for his eight consecutive year to conduct the orchestra and bands of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. Sunday.
Sunday afternoon, Dunn will conduct the symphony orchestra in the "Poloise" and perform "Eugene Onigin" by Tchaikovsky and "The Unfinished Symphony" by Schubert.
Dunn will conduct the two bands Sunday evening. He will conduct the concert band in a new English composition, posed and in a new English composition, "The Prince of Wales March" by Gordon Langford. Also, Dunn will conduct "The Queen of Saxony" and a Sabellus tone poem, "Philomela."
The Blue Band will perform "Orpheus in
Offenbach, under the
direction of Dr. Parnell."
The standard of play this year is as
improved as ever," Dunn said. "There appears to be a new approach on the part of young people in their ambition to learn and derive as much knowledge and experience as they can during their weeks at camp." The training emphasizes quality with quite charming manners."
Dunn became the principal director at the Royal Marines School of Music and principal conductor of the Royal Marines Band in famous recording organization in England.
Dunn is the only director to have been awarded the Gold Disc by EMI (Electrical Mechanical Industries), an English recording company. The award was presented to him for having over one million records sold.
As Her Majesty's music man, Dunn conducted the orchestra and bands in music for ceremonial and private occasions. He conducted music for the Royal Yacht during the coronation of King George VI in England. The kings were King Henry V, King Edward VIII, and King George VI. He
Dunn took part with the RMB in the Coronation procession for Queen Elizabeth II in London. He accompanied Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip on his six-month tour of the British Commonwealth from 1983 to conducting all the music for their ceremonies.
was conductor of the RMB during the reign of Queen Elizabeth II.
Dunn is the only man to be knighted for
his bravery and generosity in music. He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth I.
He was educated at the Royal Academy of Music in London and the Konseratum de Musselis, where he met his sister at Winchester and was one of the original members of the BBC orchestra.
He is an honorary member of the American Bandmasters Organization, and is under contract to record on the Polydor label in England. he said.
Dunn works with the top professional orchestras in England, such as the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and the Royal Conservatory.
Symphony Orchestra, and the Royal Liverpool Symphony Orchestra. He also has concerto work at The Royal Conservatory.
Dunn will be guest conductor at the Midwestern Music and Art Camp until Sunday. He plans to go to San Diego for a private visit and return to England July 22 to officiate at graduation ceremonies at the Royal Academy of Music.
Six new deputy positions in the highway safety and traffic control division of the New York County sheriff's office should be filled by new officers, a mission者 Mite Whitenth said yesterday.
County to hire 6 deputies
The new deputies are being hired because of increased use of county roads caused by Clinton Dam and other county building projects.
Recent approval of federal funding for the expansion of the sheriff's office has made
the hirings possible. The federal funds will pay 25 per cent of the new salaries and 50 per cent of the cost of new equipment for the expansion.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom—604-8110
Advertising—604-8328
Cirlcultion—604-7018
Editor Ward Harkavy
The federal money will help finance the expansion for two years, Whitneight said. After that, continuation of the program will depend on county funds.
Business Manager Jim Merrill
Published at the University of Kansas during the academic year 2013. Subscriptions by mail are # $6 scholarships at Lawrence, KS 65083. Subscriptions by mail are # $6 scholarships at Lawrence, KS 65083.
Whitenight said that the need for additional deputies was clear and that the county commission had made a "tentative program" to invite them to the program at the end of the two years.
"I don't visualize anybody being laid off," he said
the new deputies should be ready to start their work in early October, after a month of preparation.
Whiteiteng said the county would receive about $27,000 in federal funds.
By this time, he said, auxiliary equipment and uniforms should have been purchased. The new deputies will primarily patrol county roads, a job that receives only second-chance in nine deputies now employed and is not one of the duties of the state highway patrol.
KU track brochure judged 2nd in nation
The 1974-75 KU track brochure was judged number two in the nation last week, and the 1974-75 KU basketball game was rated among the top five in the country.
The competition was sponsored by the Coca-Cola Sports Information Directors of America.
In the track brochure competition, only Arizona State finished ahead of Kansas. Don Baker is KU sports information director. Bruce Carnnah, assistant sports information director, was in charge of the publication.
In the basketball program category, there were three placings and two honorable mentions. The University received one of the honorable mentions.
BASEBALL STANDINGS
By The Associated Press American League Feel
W W L Pct. GB
Boston 17 37 .57
New York 44 38 .37
New York 44 38 .37
Baltimore 44 38 .37
Baltimore 27 41 .481 %
Cleveland 27 41 .481 %
Detroit 34 40 .428 %
National League
9 Results
Detroit 0, Minnesota 6
Chicago 0, Detroit 0
Kansas City 0, Minnesota 1
Cleveland at Oakland
Cleveland at Oakland
Oakland 51 41 627 622 — %
Kansas City 61 39 614 614
Toronto 40 40 876 876
Chicago 38 49 469 469
Calgary 38 43 469 469
Minneapolis 77 46 469 469
KANSAN WANT ADS
East W L 32 Ptk. B10
Pittsburgh 40 32 68 60
Philadelphia 57 38 41 68
New York 42 38 325 7
Santa Clara 42 38 325 7
Chicago 39 40 699 10
Montreal 34 44 699 14
Cleveland 34 44 699 14
West 57 38 68 13
LA Angeles 48 38 58 13
San Diego 40 44 476 15%
San Francisco 40 44 476 15%
Seattle 36 47 414 19%
Atlanta 36 47 414 19%
San Diego 8, Chicago 6, 15 imitations
Los Angeles 2, Pittsburgh 0
Los Angeles 3, Pittsburgh 0
Chicago 2, Philadelphia 1
Chicago 1, Philadelphia 1
San Francisco 6, Louis 4
Moore . . .
From page 1
nature of the economic conditions compelling the NCAA to meet in five weeks.
Of last April's meeting on economy, Tow said, "I can't emphasize thoroughly enough the fact that the tone of the meeting was one of great seriousness."
"There was great unanimity that something has to be done," he said. KU will be represented by Walker and J. Hammond McNish, faculty member on the KU Athletic Board, at the special convention in Chicago next month.
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1974 Honda CB 190, Tpi top shape, 82-769
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1973 WU Super Belle, yellow. 4-aquad, 1 owner.
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Only one of its kind. Jayshawk W85
1967 Malibu, 3-dr ht, automatic, air bueeet
170 Chevrolet station wagon, automate, power
vehicle rack, drive rack, 45,000 miles. Hei-
hwak WV 843-222-81
Closest to 04 of 1917 Ww II and Restol case air
conditioner, Plymouth Fwy automatic air conditioned.
Plymouth Fwy automatic air conditioned.
197 Kirmann Gbla, glia. 4-speed, 34,000 miles.
Jayhawk VW. HV 843-2200. 7-10
1966 VW Bug, excellent transmission, two to
choose from; Jayhawk VW 843-220.
10 gallon kit alumina glass aquarium complete plus stand
$30.81-4387 after 5.
7-14
FOR RENT
Johnson Rental Company, Studio, 1 bedroom, 200 sq. ft., located in KU Medical Center, Kansas City, KS
Booms - Kitchen privileges. One block to quemple.
Room 842-507. Restrictive real restriction of 'f'
bathroom. 842-507 or 842-506.
Two bedroom apartment, all utilities paid, close
kitchen, full bath, fall furnished or if
furnished. 843-1993
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of rental housing available in Lawrence, Lawrence
Rooms furnished, single or with without cooking facilities for mark's orders KU and Near.
Need mountaineer, male or female, to share Tower
Nest, Mount Everest 1986, Great Bend, Kansas 6720
Withherb, 35th I986, Great Bend, Kansas 6720
House 2- story, three bedroom unfurnished. Bor-
dered apartment with couple俩. Couple俩.
No pets. No dogs. 843-756-761
Apartments: 1, 2, and 4 bedroom furniture
Borders KU and near town. Phone: 843-5767. !
Extra nice room with private kitchen. One
room has a patio and parking, utilities
Reasonable rm 632-979-3088
(1)
Subnet at Alyaskower Bay for the next accten-
mation may be month less than the host's
Cell 842-804-6049
7-14
1 bedroom unfurnished duplex, 105 plus utilities
2 close to campus. Call 842-7853.
7-10
Did you know that you can rent mobile homes at Webster? 842-7700. 7-17
Home Growin'
904 Vermont
WARNING
GAY COUNSELING
& RAP
for referrals:
info. center
or
864 3506
842 7505
IS YOUR CAR AS READY FOR
YOUR VACATION AS YOU ARE?
If not call
DON'S AUTO SERVICE
Quite one bedroom, furn. apt., utilities paid
For call, m/b-7279 Fri. after 3. A/N C-A, No
For call, m/b-7279 Fri. after 3. A/N C-A, No
900 New Jersey
JAYHAWKER TOWERS - 2-bedroom, all attic units with separate baths, en suite, parking, laundry
alongside W.
NOTICE
COST PLIB 85%-Stereo equipment! All major
components, including amplifiers, mixer,
or items or packages. Call Dave. Phone 842-750-9113.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT! Let us do your printing while you wait at the Quick Copy Center. $35.00 copies-$14.10, 1,000 copies-$19.90, want 2 business at the Quick Copy Center?
PHOTOGRAPHY Shooting Gallery Specializing in Personalized Portraits in natural surroundings. Weddings, portfolios, and numerous photographed items. 812-249-7300, www.harpercollider.com; 812-249-7300, www.harpercollider.com; 812-249-7300, www.harpercollider.com; 812-249-7300, www.harpercollider.com; 812-249-7300, www.harpercollider.com;
Executive-style gourmet parties planned, catered, and prepared for your event. A beautiful tailored private pool. For detailed call information please contact us at (804) 239-7561.
Monday night special at Sirlin Suekade—$1.89
includes the float, boat and choice of potato.
BEING 64 MEANS NEVER HAVING TO SAY
HELLO. Office Union, 7:30 a.m. and 2
Monday of each month. Union Office 1848 Union,
Office Union 1848, Office Union 86-566 for referrals for socializing, 843-
866
A POFTRAT OF YOU ON T-SHIRTS conceived in a culturist style in colour. Very pretty. Each shirt sends small pulses (returned), specifying the Gender $ postpaid, W. Sumaters, P.O. Number 7-10 Lawrence.
TYPING
Experimented in typing thesis, research papers,
photographs and manuscripts using typewriter.
Typewritten (carbon ribbon), lt. paper. Call 913-825-6400.
THISIS BINDING - The Quick Copy Coder is
a simple, user-friendly tool that allows
Our Queue in fast and efficient ways are reasonable
and easy to use.
IBM Selectic, pica or elite, recondition, exper-
iential, dielectric dices,折叠. Call Joan Mourn
842-9127
PROFESSIONAL TYPING at reasonable rates
Thesis, Theories, and Interventions
8:39-10:00
7-14
Experienced typist—term papers, thesms, mice,
mice, spelling, reading, spelling, mice,
483-5554. Mrs. Wright
Experienced typist will do those diatribals, at
forum for 844-7324 Days, 842-9978 Weeks,
7-22
Experienced in typing dissertations, theses, etc.
in Psych. Call Leslie, 843-8683. Reqs:
ideas/projects.
POTION PARLOR
Organic Bio-degradable Hair and Skin Care Products in Recycle-able Bottles
819 Vermont 12-5
843-9708 Essence Oils Mon-Sat.
Bottles
Madura Indian Shop
For the Finest in
Authentic, Handcrafted
Indian Jewelry,
Arts and Crafts
19 W. 9th
10-5:30 Daily
Thursdays 11:8
THE TGE CO.
THIS
WEEKLY BEER SALES
AND $2.60 KEGS
ALL SUMMER LONG
HOME MADE ICE
CREAM
SUPPLIES
616
Vermont
LOST AND FOUND
Lud: Monday AM M between Hearld & Summer
M in set of keys Heward, Baird, 864-420-100 or
Hood, Baird, 864-420-100
LOST. Pair of binoculars in grove behind Union.
Reward. Call 8613478 or 841-0588.
ARTIFIX A. OLSON III found your draft reqs for the book. Call UKD U.K. for some time ago. Call UKD offer, 843-259 - 7280.
REWARD - For return of silver and turquoise
leather lotion in Kansas Van. 842-7080. 7-10
Found: In grass near X. Zone; Octagonal persimmon sunglass lens. Call 833-1936. 7-14
Lost: Near 1100 Louisiana. Black male killer
named John Doe. Phone call recorder calls 954
or return to 1100 Louisiana. Phone call recorder
calls 954 or return to 1100 Louisiana.
Lost. Kitten 10 wks old, light caramel and
a white tenilite little fatter 200 block Tenn
Ash.
Found. Very tiny black knit in vicinity of 150 Tennessee Tenn. N82-4528. Keep calling.
Employment Opportunities
SERVICES OFFERED
TEACHER, part-time, rapid reading, BA plus
teaching. READING to READING. Glenway, IL. CA. 90320. 7-8
MATI TUTORING Competent, experienced tutor
152 116 109 116 109 116 109 116 109 116 109 116 109 116 109 116 109 116 109 116 109 116 109 116 109 116 109
Cali Reasonable rate Call
CUSTOM JEWELRY Reasonably Priced, prefabricated
handcrafted jewellery. Fully finished,
glossed beaded cut and polished. Tuxedo,
Safta and more. Free shipping.
Women, ages 65+ with training in one of 50 MPA programs. Army Reserve C1211 Skill Program. Only two Army Reserve C1211 students have your training at home unit. Earn minimum of $7,000 per year. Army Reserve Center 2100 Iowa St. 843-1851.
Male or female residence wanted to share house
for a small group of people. The family will
partly all income paid and close to campgrounds.
*CAMPING AREAS ARE AVAILABLE.*
JAMES LIQUORS
Cold Beer & Chilled Wine
9th Street Center
(Next to 'Hole in the Wall')
Penner's Cycle Barn
Norton Ducati
Moto Guzzi
Used Motorcycle
JULY CLEARANCE
71 Kawasaki 500 Mach III $395.00
71 Kawasaki 350 dirt bike $695.00
Like New
72 Norton Commando $995.00
71 Norton Commando $895.00
Kyber
64 Norton chopper Jardine headers $695.00
Extended forks
15 miles east of Lawrence on Hiway 10 585-1048
Mon.-Fri. 9:00-6:00
Sat. 9:00-3:00
Wanted: female nominee for July, August. $85.
* united,术名 Comme by 1800 Albert Abe*
* 1800年 阿尔伯特·阿贝尔*
Person to share large 3 bedroom displays for fall
for $7.33 per month. Call after gowns @ **28-
752-757**
Need female roommate for now and fall. Call
Ned, days, days, 843-369, and evenings, 843-895.
Ned, days, days, 843-369, and evenings, 843-895.
HELP WANTED
The Office of Instructional Resources is acceptance of the 1976-ida year. Qualifications include a high level of competency in statistics instruction, computer programming experience. Duties will involve computer programing and instruction Survey and assisting in the operation and development of the Survey. Applicant must demonstrate improvement of teaching through evaluation and mentorship. Position offered on Monday appointment. Starting date: August or September of each year. The Office of Instructional Resources, 409 Calley Street, Suite 230, Chicago, IL 60605. Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer.
to participate in problem-
solving group discussion.
'6 paid for 1 hour.
WANTED:
MARRIED MEN
Call 864-3076 weekdays between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m.
If You're Planning on FLYING.
If You're Mating on FLYING
IN THE SKY DO The LEWGOF For You!
(NEVER an extra cost
for airline tickets)
TACOS
1105 Massachusetts 843-9880
Casa de Taco
$3.50 per Dozen
YAMAHA
CR-1000 RECEIVER
the GRAMO PHONE shop YP.800 TURNTABLE
at the rear of KIEF'S DISCOUNT
RECORD AND STEREO
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
842-1544 SAVINGS ON FAMILY BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS
SUA / Maupintour travel service
Make your Summer Vacation Reservations now.
PHONE 843-1211
MOTO RACING
KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest-900 Mass
4
Wednesday, July 9, 1975
University Daily Kansan
Producer uses radio as memory tool
By THERESE MENDENHALL
Kansas Staff Reporter
Radio should be a tool for triggering memories and showing the listener his own capacity to understand his world, a KANU strong award for the station has said.
"Most people have a vast background of information and understanding," the producer, Mark K. Klugman said. "But they are so often unaware or afraid of their
Dispute . . .
From page 1
demolition", Clark said. "The way you say something is sometimes more important than the way you say it."
PLANS ARE BEING made to obtain a new city minimum housing inspector as quickly as possible. Williams said that the position had to be advertised for a week, then, if a qualified person applied the city can hire a new inspector immediately.
Watson said the items that weren't in compliance with the code should be looked at before the city issues any order threatening demolition.
"We're concentrating on the hill area now, but you have to remember that these inspectors also have to inspect construction sites, and will have to do housing inspection when they can get to it until we get a new housing insurer," Williams said.
"Are you going to tear a man's house down just because he doesn't have safety or a speaker or because he doesn't have a safety rail on his front steps?" Watson said.
Nemchock . . .
From page 1
Nernchock said he didn't think everyone would accept bodonic jewelry and feel comfortable wearing it because it forced a sort of "fourth-dimensional awareness" of the body, the jewelry and the environment on the wearer.
"Wearing it is a personal thing," he said.
"wearing it is a personal bung," the sait. Few people have actually had a chance to wear his space age creations in public. Only him, Patti, and a few friends have worn them.
Nemchock said he couldn't predict the future of electronic jewelry.
"I don't know where it's going to go," said Nermock.
He said that although he couldn't say bodonics would be the standard jewelery form of the future, he thought artists should be alert to the possibilities.
"Right now, this is filling a creative need (right now)," he said. "It's just my and my work."
nobleway that I must trick them to make them remember and feel good about it."
Klugman's one-hour program, "Charles Ives: The Unanswered Question," won first place last month in the music category of the Eleventh Annual Armstrong Awards.
The program is the first one in Klugman's series of nine programs about Ives being
Klugman said one of the most important techniques in his trade was editing.
25-year-old producer has worked at KANU three years.
PROFILE
broadcast on KANU, a University of Kansas FM station. Parts of the series, which was originally broadcast in October of 1974 as a centennial celebration of American composer Ives, have also been aired nationally by the National Public Radio network.
"I edit words, phrases and sentences and arrange them in ways that have the most impact."
Klugman's other honors include an award from the Corporation of Public Broadcasting for the Ives program, KANU's first portrait of American composer Aaron Copeland and special recognition when KANU won the Peabody Award in 1974. The
The technique of conveying the message through sound rather than content is exemplified by Klugman's program called "Cowboys and Indians," in which music is interspersed with readings from diaries of cowboys and homeboundesters that have been used to provide the pains of these people through his grueling effort to understand the readings.
Klugman said the listener's response to the program was, "My God, that was hell living through that era." This two-hour program will be broadcast Sept. 15 at 8 p.m.
In accord with Klugman's goal of stimulating people to understand the world through their own perceptions, he commented, "The most important person involved in a radio program is the listener; the producer is the least important."
LOOKING FOR
A NEW NEST?
HOME SWEET HOME
See
HOME
SWETTER
HOME
Jayhawker Towers Apts.
2-bedroom apartments on campus
furnished or unfurnished
utilities paid
swimming pool
air conditioned
on bus line
security
security guards
covered parking
bonded lock system
OFFICE OPEN DAILY
Monday-Friday til 5:30
Saturday til 4:00
CRAIG STOCK, WICHITA, was recognized as the outstanding journalism graduate at the University of Kansas by Sigma Delta Chi, the Society of Professional Journalists. He was one of 79 journalism students in the United States to receive the citation.
CHRISTINE DAVIS, LAWRENCE GRADUATE STUDENT, received a Fulbright-Hays Grant to study in Germany. Study at the University of Heidelberg.
SPECIAL ARRANGEMENTS HAVE been made for University of Kansas students, faculty and their families to attend Worlds of Fun in Kansas City, Mo. at a reduced admission charge. Those interested should contact the SUA office.
1603 W. 15th
ON CAMPUS
LRex
Lawrence, Ks.
Students from the Undergraduate Business Council started a petition drive and letter-writing campaign aimed at encouraging students to help them they thought the congeniality and convenience of the Hawklet were too valuable to lose.
The second round of a student campaign to save the Hawklet cafeteria in Summerfield Hall will begin this week, Ed Rolfs, student body president, said yesterday.
Hawklet proposals drawn
Rolfs said the senate would present three alternative plans for saving the Hawklet to Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor, later this week.
The Hawklet had been scheduled for remodeling this fall into a library and computer-work area. Supporters of the conversion, including Joseph Pichler, dean of the School of Business, said the library and work space were badly needed.
The three proposals, as outlined by Rolfs,
are:
—to convert one-third of the Hawlet into a key punch and computer work area, and to retain the other two-thirds for food service; would do away with the planned library.
to move an additional temporary annex to Summerfield, using it instead of the Hawklet to accommodate the planned changes.
—to move the computer programmers and key punchers to the military science building. This would free an annex near Summerfield for the planned library and work areas and allow the Hawklet to remain as it is.
Straw Hat Pizza Palace invites you to CLIP $1.00 OFF DINNER
(or any other time)
$1.00 off
any large
pizza.
offer good
thru July 9
Both offer
2515 W. 6th
50c off any medium pizza. offer good thru July 9
2515 W. 6th
841-2547
GOURMET
First Visit
□ Yes
□ No
Coupon
STRAW HAT
Pizza Palace
STRAW HAT Pizza Palace
First Visit
Yes
No
Coupon
University of Kansas Theatre Presents
LANDMARKS of the AMERICAN THEATRE
DAY DATE LOCATION
Fr. June 6 University Theatre
Sa. June 7 University Theatre
Su. June 8 University Theatre
Su. June 15 K.U. Museum of Art
Mo. June 16 Swarthout Rec. Hall
Su. June 22 K.U. Museum of Art
Mo. June 23 Sworthout Rec. Hall
Fr. June 27 University Theatre
Sa. June 28 University Theatre
Su. June 29 University Theatre
Mo. June 30 Swarthout Rec. Hall
Tu. July 1 Woodruff Auditorium
We. July 2 University Theatre
Th. July 3 University Theatre
Tu. July 4 University Theatre
Mo. July 7 Woodruff Rec. Hall
Tu. July 8 Woodruff Auditorium
Th. July 10 University Theatre
Fr. July 11 University Theatre
Sa. July 12 University Theatre
Su. July 13 K.U. Museum of Art
Mo. July 14 Swarthout Rec. Hall
Tu. July 15 University Theatre
Fr. July 18 University Theatre
Sa. July 19 University Theatre
Su. July 20 K.U. Museum of Art
Mo. July 21 William Inge Theatre
Tu. July 22 William Inge Theatre
Woodruff Auditorium
We. July 23 William Inge Theatre
Th. July 24 William Inge Theatre
Tu. University Theatre
Fr. July 25 University Theatre
Sa. July 26 University Theatre
Tu. July 29 Woodruff Auditorium
*Theatre Rally*
Auditions: John Brown's Body, The Time of Your Life, Oklahoma!
Auditions: John Brown's Body, The Time of Your Life, Oklahoma!
Exhibition: Regionalist Painters
Performance: Spoon River Anthology
*Lecture: The American Experience*
*Lecture/Concert: Music of the American Folk*
*Lecture: Regional Trends in American Art*
*Lecture: The Movie-Art American Idiom*
*Lecture "Come With the Wind"
*Concert: American Keyboard Music*
*Lecture: John Brown in Kansas*
Film: The General
PLAY: John Brown's Bcy
PLAY: John Brown's Body
PLAY: John Brown's Body
*Lecture: The Black Experience AND*
*Film: "The Learning Tree"
Film: Dark Skies
PLAY: The Time of Your Life
PLAY: The Time of Your Life
PLAY: The Time of Your Life
*Lecture: Another American Music*
*Lecture: The Indian Experience*
Film: Cheyenne Autumn
PLAY: Okahama
PLAY: Okahama
*Film: Junction City 1890-1915--Portrait of a Kansas Community*
PLAY: The Mirror Man (Theatre for Children)
Film: The Land
PLAY: The Mirror Man (Theatre for Children)
Plain: "The Plough that broke the Plains" AND "Grapes of Wrath"
PLAY: The Mirror Man (Theatre for Children)
PLAY: The Mirror Man (Theatre for Children)
PLAY: Oklahoma! (Beneft Performance for Lawrence Arts Center)
PLAY: Okahama
PLAY: Okahama
PLAY: Modern Times
- Indicates event FREE.
Monday, July 14, 7 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall: Lecture—The Indian Experience, featuring W. Stitt Robinson. ADMISSION FREE.
Sunday, July 13, 3 p.m., K.U. Museum of Art: Concert—American Chamber Music, featuring the Lawrence Chamber Players under the direction of George Boberg. ADMISSION FREE.
Tuesday, July 15, 7:30 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium: SUA Film—Cheyenne Autumn. (1965) ADMISSION, 75%.
THE TIME OF YOUR LIFE A Comedy in Three Acts by William Saroyan (Pulitzer Prize, 1940)
BEER
THURSDAY,
FRIDAY
AND SATURDAY
JULY 10, 11, & 12
8:00 p.m.
K.U. STUDENTS,
$1.50
OTHERS $2.50
THE TIME OF YOUR LIFE
University Theatre-Murphy Hall----864-3982
Z
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
No.159
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Dial-Drug's fate is on the line
Thursday, July 10, 1975
See page 4
CIA infiltration alleged; White House the target
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Select House Intelligence Committee has evidence that the Central Intelligence Agency infiltrated the White House and at least two federal agencies, two members of the committee said yesterday.
Rep. Robert W. Kasten Jr., R-Wis, a committee member, said yesterday that CIA documents indicated agency contacts had reported back to the CIA from their employees. In addition, the Management and Budget, and the Treasury and Commerce departments.
"I'm not sure spying is the right word." easten to listen as books as if she was looking at the cliff by the Clyde.
Kasten and Rep. Ronald V. Dellums, Kasten and Rep. Calif., the other member, said the committee also had evidence of CIA infiltration of the media—both broadcasting and agencies.
Kaster said that he had no specific names but that he had seen documents indicating there were CIA contacts in broadcasting companies and press companies.
He said he understood a small European company was operated almost entirely by the CLX.
Kasten and Dellums said they had few details on the CIA infiltration and were telling what they knew publicly in an effort to ensure that for keeping the select committees alive.
They made the disclosure as the House Rules Committee considered proposals to abolish the select committee, which has been removed and to replace it with a new committee.
Dellums said it was clear that what they said was CIA infiltration of the White House and other agencies occurred during former President Richard M. Nixon's administration.
But Kasten said the evidence he had seen indicated it was an agency practice over a long period of time and was not predominant in any one administration.
"It may still be going on," Kasten said.
"M may stay be going on," Klassen said. President Ford last December showed that
the major buildup of CIA's domestic spy
during early years of the Nixon administration.
The report, previously released but released by the CIA for the first time Tuesday night, also stated that quick replacements were needed to prevent the CHASO" program in the summer of 1972.
It said the volume of material was causing a "physical drain on the health of the group's officers trying to keep up with the enormous continuing volume of work."
"Operation CHAOS" was the code name for a program designed to uncover any foreign influence behind domestic unrest. It later turned to reporting on domestic activities of U.S. citizens, according to the Rockefeller Commission.
The report, comprising a six-page letter from CIA Director William E. Colby to Ford and 56 pages of documents, contains no major revelations of CIA activities beyond those documented by the Rockefeller Commission.
The Colby report was drafted in response to allegations published by the New York Times that the CIA had conducted a massive, illegal domestic war operation.
Librarian opposes collective bargaining
The image shows two men seated at a round table, each holding a glass of wine. They appear to be in a dimly lit room with a dark background. The man on the left is wearing a suit and a hat, while the man on the right is dressed in a suit and a cowboy hat. The setting suggests a social or professional environment, possibly during an evening event.
One White House official called the Colby report "historical fact of no particular importance."
Tall tales and dreams
The Colby report contained no mention of alleged CIA involvement in assassination attempts. The confidential reliable sources have said that the original report drafted at the insistence of Defense Secretary James R. Schlesinger during his brief interview with Colby was information on assassinations,
By JACK FISCHER
Canyon Staff Manager
University Professors, said he hadn't spoken to any faculty members who were fatly opposed to the establishment of a unit, but added that it was difficult to make an accurate evaluation because many faculty members were away for the summer.
University Theatre, William Kuhke (left) stars as Joe and George Weiss (right) portrays Kit Carson. See review page 4.
Indications of dissent to the proposed faculty collective bargaining unit have surfaced in the form of a letter written last summer by the president, associate Special Collections librarian.
Of the faculty members on campus, Griffin said, they are taking a wait-and-see attitude possibly because no major issues affecting them are being decided at present.
The Rockefeller report also documented the buildup of "Operation CHAOS" during the Nixon administration, and the Colby report offended the first detail account by the CIA of its own spy operation.
Mitchell wrote Donald Hoffman, examiner for the hearings, and Carl Leban, who originally petitioned for unit consideration, that no attention has been publicly given to faculty members who would prefer not to be situated in a collective bargaining situation.
The letter, dated July 3, reads in part,
. . . there is at least one member of the
University family who wants no part of
colleague training or anything remotely
remotely it.
William Saroyan's "The Time of Your Life" opens tonight at the
Liability insurance sought
"This is not a situation where the only way to be heard is to have a union," Mitchell said yesterday. "The thing that will be lost, far more important than money, is the family feeling that we're all in this together."
According to Leban, faculty members still have the options of not signing the petitions to select candidates to represent them in the final election, for no representative in the final election.
"The only tyranny that we all submit to is the one of a man like Leban. Is said in response to Michaela's charm."
Mitchell said the creation of a bargaining unit would formalize faculty-administration relations and cause the faculty to lose its sense of being equal with the administration.
"Nobody can oppress anybody by exor-
genating his rights under the law." Lehan said.
BY ALISON GWINN
kansas Staff Reporter
George Griffin, president of the local chapter of the American Association of
Leban, whose actions were cited in the letter, countered by saying Mitchell had from March through last week's hearings to exorcess his point of view.
Liability insurance for state officials, including all University of Kansas administrators and faculty members, may be purchased by an employer can make a contract with an insurance
Beware of letters bearing gifts
By KELLY SCOTT Kansas Staff Reporter
The common chain letter, once merely a maisons broken by all but the very superstitions, has grown into a big time story of the defense to the attorney general's office in Topeka.
Curt Schneider, Kansas attorney general,
issued a warning last week for Kansans to watch out for a chain letter circulating in the state. The letter promises a return of $1 million to one dollar membership fee to the first name on a list of ten at the bottom of the letter.
This type of chain letter is illegal under the clause in the state constitution prohibiting lotteries, Richard Shank, assistant attorney general, said Tuesday. The state's law does not require are subject to prosecution under the Kansas consumer protection laws.
Shank said the attorney general's announcement was prompted by an increase in consumer fraud in the state and a series of crimes by people who had received the letter.
Chain letters that don't involve money are legal. Shank said.
Chain letters that involve money are considered lotteries, he said, because they
have the three elements which characterize lotters under the law; prize, consideration
The letter circulating in Kansas is from out of the state, Shank said. He wouldn't be here for the meeting.
Shank said federal postal authorities and the attorney general of the state where the letter originated had been contacted in an effort to track down the person who initiated it.
The letter purports to help raise investment capital to start new businesses, Business 12.
The membership fee is legal, Shank said, just as entry fees required in bingo games are legal. The chain letter becomes illegal when the scheme itself meets the criteria for lotteries and is transported through the mails.
"I'm my opinion, they violate the deceiving
ide states," Barkley Clark, professor of lor-
gistics.
To constitute a deceptive consumer sales practice according to the Consumer Protection Act the practice must, among other things, pretend to have "uses or
The deceptive trade statutes are part of the Kansas Consumer Protection Act, which has limited
In order to fall under this statute it must be proved that the chain letter doesn't produce the promised money. Neither Shank nor Hugh O'Donnell, assistant attorney general of Missouri, knew of cases in which he did not receive bad no evidence that the letters didn't work.
Federal law outlaw chains letter that involve a "gift enterprise," such as the one in Karsas, as fraudulent use of the mails, Shank said.
Federal case law supports statutory prohibition of lotteries or gift enterprises
Once a chain letter is established as an illegal lottery or gift enterprise, the person responsible is in violation of federal post office regulations. The U.S. Mails can't be used to defraud.
The scheme to defraud alone isn't the gist of the offense, according to the law. Instead, the crime lies in the use of the mails for the scheme.
MARTINE SCHNEIDER
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
O'Donnell said a similar scheme was presently operating out of California and New York.
Tee time
AUGUST 26, 1985
benefits they don't have" or "intentionally use in any oral or written form, representation of exaggeration, innuendo, or ambiguity."
Mike Davis, University attorney, tees off on the first hole of the recreational service's summer golf tournament. Davis finished two strokes behind the leaders with a nine-hole score of 40.
O'Donnell said this letter told the recipient that because he had the same last name as some inmate, as some inmate in California, he might be eligible to receive a share of the dead person's estate. The letter said that for $15, this service would check the recipient's eligibility to receive part of the estate.
No complaints have been received by the Consumer Affairs Association about chain letters, Susan Smiley, president of the board of directors of the association, said.
The case is now in California probate court, O'Connell said.
Steve Shear, student intern at the Douglas County Legal Aid Society, said his office is helping families with legal issues.
The insurance would cover anyone working at the University who could be injured.
company, Mike Davis, University attorney,
said vester dav.
The state official who is sued would be provided with legal council and would be covered for certain amounts of money charges brought against him, he said.
Davis said the insurance policy was very important.
"We're asking administrators who serve on committees to lay their financial lives on the line when they make decisions, which isn't fair," he said. "We can't force faculty members to buy $100,000 insurance policies when they're donating their time."
Davis said that even if the accusations in a legal suit are groundless, the person sued would spend several thousands dollars for defense, even if he won the case.
"I think that a faculty member, administrator or even a student should be able to make a proper decision without knowing the difference might cost him money." Davis said.
He said that litigation was being used more frequently now.
"There are at least two major law suits at the Med Center right now," he said.
There are always several of these floating around, being threatened at any moment.
A University official might be audited for
slander, false imprisonment or
discrimination.
One case is a suit for $9 million against a department chairman and William O. Rieke, former executive vice chancellor for the KU Medical Center, he said.
Suits might concern salary increases,
dismissal of untenured faculty members or
committees faculty members and
committees faculty members
Anybody could be sued, Davis said. For example, someone not recommended for tenure might sue his entire academic department and members of the department can have a vote.
Don Hoffman, chief assistant attorney general for Kansas, said that the insurance would cover "everyone from the chancellor right down to the janitor."
No liability insurance exists now to cover university officials. They would be obligated to pay out of their own pockets if they lost suits, Hoffman said.
The legislature sometimes creates a special bill to pay for a particular claim, but it is not always correct.
The insurance will cover all state agencies, state employees and state activities, Hoffman said, because the state can now be held responsible for torts committed on proprietary functions (those performed by private institutions).
The state surety bond and insurance committee, comprising the state treasurer, state attorney general and all commissioners, will submit specifications for the insurance on July 2.
one time, the state and state agencies could not be used, but employees, agents and officials
The committee will now have to negotiate a contract with an insurance company. The company has insured immediately upon the signoff of the contract with a company, Hoffman said.
A total of 129 cases concerning liability are pending in the state, and most are for property damage.
Viets get local sponsor
Three local churches will sponsor the first family of Vietnamese refugees to arrive in Lawrence.
The Rev Paul D. Olson, pastor of Trinity Lutheran Church, said yesterday that Nguyen Ngoe Thi, his wife, three daughters and one son should arrive in Lawrence City.
Thoc, who was a physical professor at the University of Salign, will have a job with Lawrence Memorial Hospital when he arrives, Olson said. Plans for housing are pending.
In addition to Trinity Lutheran Church, Good Shepherd Lutheran and Emmanuel Lutheran churches are also sponsoring the family.
Rev. Olson said that this sponsorship was part of a national program by the Lutheran Chuch to find homes and jobs for the refugees.
House debates road bill
Bv THERESE MENDENHALL
KANSAS STAFF REPORTER
Federal funding for the construction of Clinton Parkway will be considered by the U.S. House of Representatives today as part of a general highway appropriations bill, a spokesman for Rep. Larry Winn said yesterday.
Late yesterday afternoon the Rules Committee voted by voice to grant an open rule on amendments, which meant that any changes would be made to the bill is considered by the full House today, and to waive points of order against the bill. There are points, none of which apply to Clinton Parkway.
The bill appropriates $10 million for the construction of "access roads to public
recreation areas on certain lakes "Clinton Parkway was one of six such projects given priority in the legislation, which authorized the lake access highways program.
Winn's legislative assistant said that to his knowledge there was no opposition to the bill as a whole or to the section on lake access highways funds in the House.
He said the Senate would consider its version of the bill later this month. The transportation subcommittee of the Apo Lawrence delegation presented its request for the funds two weeks ago, is scheduled to mark up its final draft of the bill July 18. The full Appropriations Committee should present it to the Senate.
Kansas congressmen hope the Senate version of the bill will appropriate the full $25 million authorized for the lake access highways program. The larger appropriation would improve chances for the lake to be allotted the $413 requested for it.
After the House and Senate agree on a
bill, it will be sent to President F.
President Ford.
Winn's aide said that although the administration was known to oppose the funding for the lake access highways, it favored the bill as a whole because the money it provided for the interstate highway program was needed.
He said he didn't think the President would veto the bill.
2
Thursday, July 10, 1975
Mayors want no defense cut with urban aid
University Daily Kansan
BOSTON (AP) — The nation's big-city mayors called yesterday for passage of three urban aid bills that would give states and cities $1.25 billion a year, in but a major victory for Republicans, refused to ask that they be financed by defense cuts.
In a second major triumph for Ford administration forces, the U.S. Conference of Democratic mayors met here and also rejected a bid by Democratic mayors from older and poorer cities to seek a greater share of federal revenue-sharing money for the neediest
In an unprecedented show of power, Republicans controlled all the major votes in one of the most heavily Democratic lobbying organizations in America. Their leader, Mayor Ralph Perk of Cleveland, said he had personally called 22 mayors Tuesday night in a last-minute lobbying blitz.
IN BRIEF
Day care will be discussed by a panel at a meeting of the League of Women Voters at 1:30 today at the Castle Tea Room, 1307 Massachusetts St.
Cheerleader camp to end with awards
Most Spirited Squad and a Grand Champion cheerleader will be selected today during the culmination of his basketball season, which he will meet at Allen Field House since Sunday.
Alan Grigg, director, said a movie camera would be awarded to the Grand Champion and a megaphone to the Most Soirited Squad.
The 111 cheerleaders represent high school and junior high cheerleading squads from Kansas and Missouri, Grigg said. Of the 18 squads at the institute, 16 are high school and two are junior high squads. The squads are living in Naismith Hall.
Less wheat, bread for Endowment Assn.
As far as the University of Kansas is concerned, the just completed wheat harvest was disappointing. Martin Henry, a spokesman for the Endowment Association, said yesterday.
The endowment association owns about 34,000 acres of farmland, much of which is in the wheat growing areas of southwestern Kansas. The land is rented to farmers who turn over a set percentage of the crop payment to the endowment association.
"Our current estimate is that we will have fewer bushels of wheat this year than last." Henry said. "And we don't expect to get as good a price as last year."
In the fiscal year ending June 30, 1974, the endowment association had a new farm income of $495,410.02, according to the KU Endowment Digest.
Henry said that his estimate was
nearly right. He said he wouldn't
be available for several weeks.
The crop suffered from the "normal rash of bugs and worms and mossic disease," Henry said, and from hull in some areas and wet June weather in other areas. Dry weather from fall planting until early spring from fall planting in the southwest corner of the state.
The price of wheat has generally fallen since last winter, although rumors of new Russian grain purchases have given the market some strength since Monday. Henry farmers association, like many farmers, would hold its wheat in hopes of higher prices.
The endowment association has an agricultural policy committee that will meet later in the summer to formulate this year's marketing policy, Henry said.
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841-2547
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By ALISON GWINN Kansan Staff Reporter
The earliest realistic date for the completion of the faculty handbook, to satisfy both administration and University governance, will be in late October, Gerhard Zuber, professor of English, said at the Senex meeting yesterday.
The handbook, a general guide for teaching, will be in a looseleaf notebook with entries heavily indexed but not in alphabetical order, he said.
STRAW HAT Pizza Palace
Faculty guide,union discussed by Senex
Valuable Coupon
Small substitutions can be added later and as much general information as possible will be removed and placed in two columns of comments, one for each campus. Zuber said.
Senex members also discussed a document on the appointment and tenure of department chairmen. They discussed general recommendations to be made in a letter to the Faculty Rights, Responsibilities and Privileges Committee.
Zuther mentioned a letter from a member of the American Association of University Professors which strongly urged that the handbook not be published as official policy unless the faculty had participated in determining its contents.
Proposals sent about upgrade of rural roads
Letters requesting proposals for projects to upgrade county roads are being sent to Douglas County's townships and smaller towns this week, Douglas County Public Works Director Dean Sanderson said yesterday.
Sanderson said he received word this week that Douglas County had been allotted $42,598 in a $4.9 million federal program for new construction on rural roads off of the river. The program matches every 30 cents of local money with 70 cents of federal money.
Each of Douglas County's nine townships and three cities of fewer than 5,000 is being given an opportunity to apply for some of the services of local importance. Sanderson said.
In order to receive the money each local unit would have to be able to finance the preliminary survey and engineering, 30 per cent of the construction and all of the state inspection (10 per cent of the construction cost) when the project is complete.
Sanderson said most Douglas County townships and small cities probably had a few old homes.
If the townships can't finance enough construction to use all of the funds, the county will use the money on projects of its choice. Sanderson said a $40,000 bridge is needed in location in the southwestern corner of the county in case there is money left over.
Deadline for the townships' applications is Aug. 1, he said.
John McAulay, assistant Kansas highway director, said counties must report whether they intend to participate in the program by the end of August.
City musicians to play music by Americans
Valuable Coupon
Twentieth century composers whose music will be played are Wallingford Riegger, Virgil Thomson, Walter Piston and Charles Griffes.
The Lawrence Society for Chamber Music is presenting the concert to complement the University Theatre's "Landmarks in American Theatre" festival and the Museum of Art's American Regionalist exhibit.
Scott Joplin and Louis Moureau Gottschalk are two composers whose works will be presented in the concert "Music of American Composers," which will be given Sunday at 3 p.m. by the Lawrence Chamber Players at the Museum of Art.
The concert will be conducted by George
associate professor of wind and percussion.
The concert will close with "Music of the American Revolution," arranged by Henry Cerami.
Arthur Breipohl, professor of electrical engineering, said he thought it was important that department chairman appointments be made for a specified term, and that they be evaluated at the end of the term.
Robert Casad, professor of law, said he thought six year periods of appointment were too long, and suggested less detailed annual reviews of administrators.
Frances Horowitz, professor of human development, said reviews were done.
Zuther said administrators could always be reviewed before the end of their terms.
Brevipole said he thought it was particularly relevant in professional schools that in reviewing deeds the opinions of the attorneys he dealt with would be considered. He said he didn't think it was fair to ask for money from the professional constituency and then not listen to them.
Senex members approved responsibilities for the Senate Libraries Committee. This was the last set of duties for University committees handled by Senex this summer.
Howitz said if a school had a dean who couldn't get along with the people in the state, the school's ability to function was impaired.
Members will review sets of duties during the next week that they individually wrote, compare them with committee reports submitted in the spring and make note of other suggestions to give to the organization and Administration committee.
Zuther and Adrienne Hyle, Manhattan graduate student, reported their meeting with Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor. At the meeting, Shankel was asked to review the PERB hearings, concerning the determination of a unit within the university to would work for the union of people working for the University to be formed.
Zuther said that Shankel thought the administration defended its position well against the engineering school's argument that it should not be part of the unit.
Hyle said that if a union were formed, salaries would be set by the union and members of the union would have certain duties to the union, such as paying dues.
LETTER
To the Kansan Editor:
Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's decoration of a national state of emergency and subsequent arrest of opposition political leaders came as no surprise to me as a member of the Ananda Marga society here. Our leader in India has been under detention for more than a decade and members there have faced government harassment since the late 1980s.
Mrs. Gandhi's recent actions are not new. She has often resorted to harsh methods to control the crowds of over 8,000 railroad union officials arrested to break the back of a national railway strike. She has employed similar tactics to the ones used by the Ananda Marga society in India.
Ananda Marga is an international sociospiritual organization. Meditation is instructed, and projects actively involved in promoting social change are in progress. Ananda Marga in India has been vocal in its denunciation of government corruption and mismanagement. The government has also been by harassing Ananda Marga workers.
The most blatant example of harassment came in 1971 when Shri Shril Amandamuri, leader of Ananda Marga, was arrested in Bihar state. The government charged him with conspiracy to commit homicide in connection with the deaths of former members of the Marga charge of murder. The government had trumped up charges against him in order to defame and disrupt the organization.
Since then Anandamarty has been held in a Bharar jail. He has to get receive a trial. He has been fasting for an incredible 202 days and is now in his treatment of himself and his followers.
I as well as other Ananda Marga members in North America have repeatedly protested this mistreatment. We have received the support of over 100 members of the U.S. Congress and the Canadian Parliament.
Yet the Indian government has neglected these pleas for justice and those of interested international human rights groups like Amnesty International.
E
Jim Sullivan
GERMAN WEEK
at the Eldridge. Come in
Monday through July 12,
and try some of these especially
delicious German dishes.
If you have a yearning for HOT GERMAN PATO TALAD
try our's during
THE HISTORICAL ELDRIDGE HOUSE
GERMAN WEEK
7th & Massachusetts 841-4666
—Baked Halibut
Hollandse or Bernaise
-For Val Collops Braunschweiler
-For Dessert, Apple Struedel
Monday-Friday
Monday-Thursday
Friday-Saturday
Sunday
Lunch
Dinner
Dinner
11 a.m. - 2:30 p.m.
9:30 p.m. - 10:30 p.m.
5:00 p.m. - 10:30 p.m.
10:30 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.
ON CAMPUS
THE KU BELLY D AT THE United Ministries
at 13:30 tonight at the UNited Ministries
ABOUT 50 REPRESENTATIVES from the aircraft industry, NASA and colleges and universities throughout the United States will gather all day Monday through Tuesday at the University of Kansas for a workshop on general aviation drag reduction.
A SEMINAR ON LIFE INSURANCE marketing will be all day Monday through Friday in the Big Eight and Walnut Rooms of the Kansas Union.
A FOREIGN STUDENT ORIENTATION
at 9 a.m. Monday in the Kansas
Union
Powder sold wasn't cocaine
A charge of illegal sale of cocaine against Kendal R. Hobson, 19, Baldwin, has been dropped, David Berkowitz, Douglas County attorney, said yesterday.
Hobson had been arrested June 16 after an investigation by Frances Kennedy, an investigator in the county attorney's office in charge of processing bar claim claims.
The great sound of CRAIG Car Stereo
A lab report on the substance didn't say what it was but Berkowtalk said it may have been.
Berkowitz said that the substance bought from Hobson by an unnamed agent proved not to be cocaine or any other illegal substance. The Kansas Bureau of Investigation laboratory
An outstanding warrants for the arrest of another man in connection with the same case, are being served.
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Worlds of Fun
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DISCOUNT PASSPORTS
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AT
SUA OFFICE
Now KU students, faculty, and family members may enjoy the Midwest's finest entertainment facility at a substantial savings.
SHEET 1
Through the SUA office, KU students and faculty members may purchase Passports at a $1.25 off the regular admission price of $7.50 per adult and $6.50 per child (3 to 11). These special Passports are valid any WORLD'S OF FUN operating day, and are good for all rides, live shows and special attractions all day long with no additional cost.
Worlds of Fun Talent Schedule
July 12-Jose Feliciano
July 19—Doc Severinson
July 19 - Doe Severinson
2004 Dec. Issue
July 20—Doc Severinson
July 27—Bobby Vinton
August 2—Blood, Sweat & Tears
LOOKING FOR A NEW NEST?
HOME SWETT HOME
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OFFICE OPEN DAILY
Monday-Friday til 5:30
Saturday til 4:00
1603 W. 15th
LREx
Lawrence, Ks.
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, July 10. 1975
3
ENTERTAINMENT
THE TIME OF YOUR LIFE--Excellent three-act comedy written by William Saroyan. Directed by David Lock. See Saturday in the University Theatre, and Saturday in the University Theatre.
ON STAGE
ORGÁN RECITAL -Delores Bruch,
Independence, Mo., graduate student,
will play works by J. B. Sach, Hindemith and
Melanie, At 8 tonight in Swarthout
Récital Hall.
MIDWESTERN MUSIC AND ART
8:30 p.m. Fridays in Swainston Recital Hall.
6:30 p.m. Fridays in Swainston Recital Hall.
ON SCREEN
LAWRENCE CHAMBER PLAYERS-
"Music of American Composers." Conchad
George Boberg. See story page
2. At 3 m. Sunday. in Spooner Art
Museum
MIDWESTERN MUSIC AND ART CAMP--Symphony Orchestra conducted by Sir Vivian Dunn and Concert Choir conducted by James Relaton at 2 p.m. and Balmoral and Concert Band conducted by Dunn at 5 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre.
Group prepares for 200th year
The University of Kansas Bicentennial Committee discussed possible projects for next year at their meeting Tuesday. W. Stitt, the committee chairman, said the man of the committee, said yesterday.
Some of the projects will be submitted to the American Revolution Bicentennial Administration in Washington.
INTERNATIONAL ANIMATION FESTIVAL—Including Miles "The Nose," a character from primitives from France, "The Nose," based on Gogol's story done on a pin board by Alexander Alexieff and Ionesco's Rhinoceros in Woolfaurd Audition at 7:30 n. in Woodruff Audition.
CHEYENNE AUTUMN—Liberal treatment by a conservative director fails to secure a job. The Cheyenne Indians trying to return to their Wyoming homeland after being thoroughly cheated by white Americans. With James Gore, the widow of Mark at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Wooldorf.
Check advertisements for correct time and place.
JAWS- Fourth terrifying week. Great story, fine acting. Directed by Steven Snoielberg.
THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MOUN-
TABLE, as we know it, those who ride the Good Ship Lollopp and like to swing on stars. With Beau Bridges and carlynn Hassen. Be sure to bring a ballet skirt.
BUG-A new low in entertainment. The film is supposed to be scary. When they showed the previews last week everybody in the audience nearly died laughing, Ugh!
ALOHA, BOBBY AND ROSE—More
ALOHA, BOBBY and Starring, Starring Le Ma付
Dinnipi, Dinnipi
THE APPLE DUMPLING GANG—Walt Disney at his comedic best. Three kids and a giant gold nugget--typical Disney fare. With Bill Bixby, Susan Clark, Don Knott, Tim Conway, Slim Pickens and Harry Morgan
THE EXORCIST and DELIVERANCE
One terrible and one great. Two bad they
are. One of the worst things ever.
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Stare at this picture for seven seconds and see if you can imagine in your mind the warm brown bun on the hamburger below; the succulent, juicy, red tomato; the melange taste of melted cheese; the allure of an all around perfect hamburger being stitched on the grill.
Time's up! Did you drown on the page? Well then, instead of getting excited about a picture to go to Sandy's at 1210 W. 8th and sink your feet into it?
Sandy's
2120 W. 9th St.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan and Rivier newspapers to color creep, or national origin. PLEASE INFORM ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
to run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
one time three times five
15 words or less $1.20 $2.00 $2.50
Each additional word .01 .02 .03
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall
FOR SALE
864-4358
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS--Regardless of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or close-out products, most of the components are sold at the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIEFS. *tf*
Western Civilization Note—New on Sale!
1. Makes sense to use them.
2. Makes sense to use them.
3. For class preparation
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Now we mourn merchandise close-outs, ee. New selling huge grocery stock from a Chicago supermarket retail price less 1/3 at checkout店. Open 8am, Monday-Saturday. Mount's her Valve's Salve Gorton, C28 Germany.
In Topkha, 1972 Barrington 14 x 64. 2 bedroom,
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$8,950
HIGH PROTEIN horse meat dog food, 24-14 oz.
easily case, no risk. Metzler Salmon.
Nikon F. body only. Best offer. 5 string barricade. Nikon Yashica 380. 2 learning. Battery 7-10 after 5900. 5 after 7000.
Macrae plant planters, pottery, planters, bottles,
planters. New low pep bottles. J177. 8'T, open 12.5'. J177. 17'F, open 12.5'.
17 Honda 500, excellent condition. Call 813-6848,
ask for Kena. Before 10 P.M.
1968 WB Van, converted to camper, ice box, bunk,
gas stove, Jawhawk WM 843-2250
www.wbmanufacturing.com
Squareback Wagons. Choose from three, from 1686 to 1971. Jayhawk V48; 833-210. 7-10
SONY Cable-Center-Dock Available AC 190-8 AC
AC 190-6 AC 190-5 AC 190-4 AC 190-3 AC
AM Solid State Bundle $30; Cali 843-1851 used
$25
1972 WV Super Beetle, yellow, 4-sided, 1 owner.
1973 Servicer agreement. Jawahir-7
Jawahir-7
Just arrived—shipment of Robbins and Sciroccoens,
come by for a drive test, Jawv. WWV-842-2210.
Jawv. WWV-842-2210.
Stereo Stargare: Marantz 46 speakers, 20-watt
speakers, BMZ automatic turntable,
Call 812-790-7981
1969 Pontia 4 dr. bt., power and air. Jayhawk
VW, B43-824J
7-10
19.70 Lencas Sport Coupe, air, automatic only
45.00 km. Javachin VWk 832-600 7-100
9-880
Did you know that *Webster* is a mobile Homes
wide mobile homes for sale in all cities? Webster
wide mobile homes for sale in all cities? Webster
wide mobile homes for sale in all cities? Webster
1968 Firebird, Red and black, 2 dr. automatic,
1969 Firebird, Red and black, 3 snow fires. 8620-
1831-1843 when 8620-1750. 8620-1750.
For Sale SALLY TC-758 tape deck. New heads,
excellent condition. Call 841-979-0938. 7-14
72 Husky -125MX Good condition. Must sell
475m firm. Call 841-3054 after 6. 7-15
Double-tasked Sun Queen Orthopedic mattresses
condition Call 841-3178 for 5 Also show the
condition Call 841-3178 for 5
1970 Pipmuth Mouth 2, d.hr. 7t, Red. Automatic. Save. Jayhawk W 843-8210. 7-10
161 Capri 4 speed, air conditioned, red, low
mileage. Jayhawk VW. 843-2210. 7-10
JAMES LIQUORS
Cold Beer & Chilled Wine 9th Street Center (Next to 'Hole in The Wall')
842-0722
GAY
For the Finest in
& RAP
GAY COUNSELING
Madonna Indian Shop
Indian Jewelry
TACOS
info. center 864.3506
or 842.7505
Authentic. Handcrafted
$3.50 per Dozen
Arts and Crafts
Thursdays 'til 8
Casa de Taco
1105 Massachusetts 843-9880
19 W. 9th
Come on out - Lots of shade and parking—to the antique furniture and other furniture antiques, antique wood furnishings, antique church pews. Canaplays cabinets whisky barrels, bottles, coo-ta cans, aromatic books and boxes, blogs, coo-ta cans, aromatic books and boxes, bread watermelon $19.99, Zucchini and Cinnamon watermelon $19.99, Zucchini and Cinnamon watermelon $19.99, Zucchini and Cinnamon watermelon $19.99, Zucchini and Cinnamon watermelon $19.99, Zucchini and Cinnamon watermelon $19.99, Zucchini and Cinnamon watermelon $19.99, Zucchini and Cinnamon watermelon $19.99, Zucchini and Cinnamon watermelon $19.99, Zucchini and Cinnamon watermelon $19.99, Zucchini and Cinnamon watermelon $19.99, Zucchini and Cinnamon watermelon $19.99, Zucchini and Cinnom
170 Chevette station wagon, automatic, pro-
gressive; rack, 45,000 miles, hwk,
hawk, WK 845-221-369
1966 Malibu. 2-dr. htr. automatic, airt rack
Built. Only one of its leaders. Jayhawk WV $400.
New in box.
Closeout of all 1974 Demo's and Rental cars, save
hundreds. Jawahir WAKH 8-62-210 7-10
1869 Pyromall Fury, automatic, air conditioned
Joshkawh Jackawk RV 832778 9:30
1791 Karmann Gliu, blue, 4-speed, 34,000 miles
jayhawk VW. HK-842-200. 7-10
10 gallon all-glass aquarium complete plus stand
831- 841-587 after 5
7-14
1924 Yarahu. Enduro 125, one owner, 3200 miles.
Jazhawk VW. W8-432-200
7-10
1966 WB Bug, excellent transmission, two to 70
from Jayhawk VWK. VW8-2320.
12-string guitar, excellent condition. Dy-
nanite guitar! Make me an offer! Cuit 7-17
Tulip 7-17
Siberian Huskys pup, ARC, males, shots. $60.
830-130 evenings.
Johnson Rental Studio. Studios, 1 bedroom, 2 bedrooms. Location: KU Medical Center, Kansas City, KS.
FOR RENT
Free rental services Up to the minute listings in Lawrence and Lawrence University in Lawrence. Rental Exchange: 842-259-3000.
Two bedroom apartment, all utilities paid, close to campus. Available this fall, furnished or unfurnished. Call 1-800-546-3728.
Rooms furnished, single, with or without cook-
ing facilities. Names RU and NU are
perfect. Phone: 843-767-9576.
Pet name: Pops. Phone: 843-767-9576.
Rooms - Kitchen privileges. One block to campus
$3s and up. AAA, possible rent reduction for
accommodations at other campuses.
Need teammate, male or female, to share power.
Need 15th, Great Bend, Kansas at 19th, Great Bend, Kansas at 24th, 7th, 6th, 8th, 10th, 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th, 15th, 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th, 20th, 21st, 22nd, 23rd, 24th, 25th, 26th, 27th, 28th, 29th, 30th, 31st, 32th, 33th, 34th, 35th, 36th, 37th, 38th, 39th, 40th, 41th, 42th, 43th, 44th, 45th, 46th, 47th, 48th, 49th, 50th, 51th, 52th, 53th, 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61th, 62th, 63th, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th, 68th, 69th, 70th, 71th, 72th, 73th, 74th, 75th, 76th, 77th, 78th, 79th, 80th, 81th, 82th, 83th, 84th, 85th, 86th, 87th, 88th, 89th, 90th, 91th, 92th, 93th, 94th, 95th, 96th, 97th, 98th, 99th, 100th, 101th, 102th, 103th, 104th, 105th, 106th, 107th, 108th, 109th, 110th, 111th, 112th, 113th, 114th, 115th, 116th, 117th, 118th, 119th, 120th, 121th, 122th, 123th, 124th, 125th, 126th, 127th, 128th, 129th, 130th, 131th, 132th, 133th, 134th, 135th, 136th, 137th, 138th, 139th, 140th, 141th, 142th, 143th, 144th, 145th, 146th, 147th, 148th, 149th, 150th, 151th, 152th, 153th, 154th, 155th, 156th, 157th, 158th, 159th, 160th, 161th, 162th, 163th, 164th, 165th, 166th, 167th, 168th, 169th, 170th, 171th, 172th, 173th, 174th, 175th, 176th, 177th, 178th, 179th, 180th, 181th, 182th, 183th, 184th, 185th, 186th, 187th, 188th, 189th, 190th, 191th, 192th, 193th, 194th, 195th, 196th, 197th, 198th, 199th, 200th, 201th, 202th, 203th, 204th, 205th, 206th, 207th, 208th, 209th, 210th, 211th, 212th, 213th, 214th, 215th, 216th, 217th, 218th, 219th, 220th, 221th, 222th, 223th, 224th, 225th, 226th, 227th, 228th, 229th, 230th, 231th, 232th, 233th, 234th, 235th, 236th, 237th, 238th, 239th, 240th, 241th, 242th, 243th, 244th, 245th, 246th, 247th, 248th, 249th, 250th, 251th, 252th, 253th, 254th, 255th, 256th, 257th, 258th, 259th, 260th, 261th, 262th, 263th, 264th, 265th, 266th, 267th, 268th, 269th, 270th, 271th, 272th, 273th, 274th, 275th, 276th, 277th, 278th, 279th, 280th, 281th, 282th, 283th, 284th, 285th, 286th, 287th, 288th, 289th, 290th, 291th, 292th, 293th, 294th, 295th, 296th, 297th, 298th, 299th, 300th, 301th, 302th, 303th, 304th, 305th, 306th, 307th, 308th, 309th, 310th, 311th, 312th, 313th, 314th, 315th, 316th, 317th, 318th, 319th, 320th, 321th, 322th, 323th, 324th, 325th, 326th, 327th, 328th, 329th, 330th, 331th, 332th, 333th, 334th, 335th, 336th, 337th, 338th, 339th, 340th, 341th, 342th, 343th, 344th, 345th, 346th, 347th, 348th, 349th, 350th, 351th, 352th, 353th, 354th, 355th, 356th, 357th, 358th, 359th, 360th, 361th, 362th, 363th, 364th, 365th, 366th, 367th, 368th, 369th, 370th, 371th, 372th, 373th, 374th, 375th, 376th, 377th, 378th, 379th, 380th, 381th, 382th, 383th, 384th, 385th, 386th, 387th, 388th, 389th, 390th, 391th, 392th, 393th, 394th, 395th, 396th, 397th, 398th, 399th, 400th, 401th, 402th, 403th, 404th, 405th, 406th, 407th, 408th, 409th, 410th, 411th, 412th, 413th, 414th, 415th, 416th, 417th, 418th, 419th, 420th, 421th, 422th, 423th, 424th, 425th, 426th, 427th, 428th, 429th, 430th, 431th, 432th, 433th, 434th, 435th, 436th, 437th, 438th, 439th, 440th, 441th, 442th, 443th, 444th, 445th, 446th, 447th, 448th, 449th, 450th, 451th, 452th, 453th, 454th, 455th, 456th, 457th, 458th, 459th, 460th, 461th, 462th, 463th, 464th, 465th, 466th, 467th, 468th, 469th, 470th, 471th, 472th, 473th, 474th, 475th, 476th, 477th, 478th, 479th, 480th, 481th, 482th, 483th, 484th, 485th, 486th, 487th, 488th, 489th, 490th, 491th, 492th, 493th, 494th, 495th, 496th, 497th, 498th, 499th, 500th, 501th, 502th, 503th, 504th, 505th, 506th, 507th, 508th, 509th, 510th, 511th, 512th, 513th, 514th, 515th, 516th, 517th, 518th, 519th, 520th, 521th, 522th, 523th, 524th, 525th, 526th, 527th, 528th, 529th, 530th, 531th, 532th, 533th, 534th, 535th, 536th, 537th, 538th, 539th, 540th, 541th, 542th, 543th, 544th, 545th, 546th, 547th, 548th, 549th, 550th, 551th, 552th, 553th, 554th, 555th, 556th, 557th, 558th, 559th, 560th, 561th, 562th, 563th, 564th, 565th, 566th, 567th, 568th, 569th, 570th, 571th, 572th, 573th, 574th, 575th, 576th, 577th, 578th, 579th, 580th, 581th, 582th, 583th, 584th, 585th, 586th, 587th, 588th, 589th, 590th, 591th, 592th, 593th, 594th, 595th, 596th, 597th, 598th, 599th, 600th, 601th, 602th, 603th, 604th, 605th, 606th, 607th, 608th, 609th, 610th, 611th, 612th, 613th, 614th, 615th, 616th, 617th, 618th, 619th, 620th, 621th, 622th, 623th, 624th, 625th, 626th, 627th, 628th, 629th, 630th, 631th, 632th, 633th, 634th, 635th, 636th, 637th, 638th, 639th, 640th, 641th, 642th, 643th, 644th, 645th, 646th, 647th, 648th, 649th, 650th, 651th, 652th, 653th, 654th, 655th, 656th, 657th, 658th, 659th, 660th, 661th, 662th, 663th, 664th, 665th, 666th, 667th, 668th, 669th, 670th, 671th, 672th, 673th, 674th, 675th, 676th, 677th, 678th, 679th, 680th, 681th, 682th, 683th, 684th, 685th, 686th, 687th, 688th, 689th, 690th, 691th, 692th, 693th, 694th, 695th, 696th, 697th, 698th, 699th, 700th, 701th, 702th, 703th, 704th, 705th, 706th, 707th, 708th, 709th, 710th, 711th, 712th, 713th, 714th, 715th, 716th, 717th, 718th, 719th, 720th, 721th, 722th, 723th, 724th, 725th, 726th, 727th, 728th, 729th, 730th, 731th, 732th, 733th, 734th, 735th, 736th, 737th, 738th, 739th, 740th, 741th, 742th, 743th, 744th, 745th, 746th, 747th, 748th, 749th, 750th, 751th, 752th, 753th, 754th, 755th, 756th, 757th, 758th, 759th, 760th, 761th, 762th, 763th, 764th, 765th, 766th, 767th, 768th, 769th, 770th, 771th, 772th, 773th, 774th, 775th, 776th, 777th, 778th, 779th, 780th, 781th, 782th, 783th, 784th, 785th, 786th, 787th, 788th, 789th, 790th, 791th, 792th, 793th, 794th, 795th, 796th, 797th, 798th, 799th, 800th, 801th, 802th, 803th, 804th, 805th, 806th, 807th, 808th, 809th, 810th, 811th, 812th, 813th, 814th, 815th, 816th, 817th, 818th, 819th, 820th, 821th, 822th, 823th, 824th, 825th, 826th, 827th, 828th, 829th, 830th, 831th, 832th, 833th, 834th, 835th, 836th, 837th, 838th, 839th, 840th, 841th, 842th, 843th, 844th, 845th, 846th, 847th, 848th, 849th, 850th, 851th, 852th, 853th, 854th, 855th, 856th, 857th, 858th, 859th, 860th, 861th, 862th, 863th, 864th, 865th, 866th, 867th, 868th, 869th, 870th, 871th, 872th, 873th, 874th, 875th, 876th, 877th, 878th, 879th, 880th, 881th, 882th, 883th, 884th, 885th, 886th, 887th, 888th, 889th, 890th, 891th, 892th, 893th, 894th, 895th, 896th, 897th, 898th, 899th, 900th, 901th, 902th, 903th, 904th, 905th, 906th, 907th, 908th, 909th, 910th, 911th, 912th, 913th, 914th, 915th, 916th, 917th, 918th, 919th, 920th, 921th, 922th, 923th, 924th, 925th, 926th, 927th, 928th, 929th, 930th, 931th, 932th, 933th, 934th, 935th, 936th, 937th, 938th, 939th, 940th, 941th, 942th, 943th, 944th, 945th, 946th, 947th, 948th, 949th, 950th, 951th, 952th, 953th, 954th, 955th, 956th, 957th, 958th, 959th, 960th, 961th, 962th, 963th, 964th, 965th, 966th, 967th, 968th, 969th, 970th, 971th, 972th, 973th, 974th, 975th, 976th, 977th, 978th, 979th, 980th, 981th, 982th, 983th, 984th, 985th, 986th, 987th, 988th, 989th, 990th, 991th, 992th, 993th, 994th, 995th, 996th, 997th, 998th, 999th, 1000th, 1001th, 1002th, 1003th, 1004th, 1005th, 1006th, 1007th, 1008th, 1009th, 1010th, 1011th, 1012th, 1013th, 1014th, 1015th, 1016th, 1017th, 1018th, 1019th, 1020th, 1021th, 1022th, 1023th, 1024th, 1025th, 1026th, 1027th, 1028th, 1029th, 1030th, 1031th, 1032th, 1033th, 1034th, 1035th, 1036th, 1037th, 1038th, 1039th, 1040th, 1041th, 1042th, 1043th, 1044th, 1045th, 1046th, 1047th, 1048th, 1049th, 1050th, 1051th, 1052th, 1053th, 1054th, 1055th, 1056th, 1057th, 1058th, 1059th, 1060th, 1061th, 1062th, 1063th, 1064th, 1065th, 1066th, 1067th, 1068th, 1069th, 1070th, 1071th, 1072th, 1073th, 1074th, 1075th, 1076th, 1077th, 1078th, 1079th, 1080th, 1081th, 1082th, 1083th, 1084th, 1085th, 1086th, 1087th, 1088th, 1089th, 1090th, 1091th, 1092th, 1093th, 1094th, 1095th, 1096th, 1097th, 1098th, 1099th, 1100th, 1101th, 1102th, 1103th, 1104th, 1105th, 1106th, 1107th, 1108th, 1109th, 1110th, 1111th, 1112th, 1113th, 1114th, 1115th, 1116th, 1117th, 1118th, 1119th, 1120th, 1121th, 1122th, 1123th, 1124th, 1125th, 1126th, 1127th, 1128th, 1129th, 1130th, 1131th, 1132th, 1133th, 1134th, 1135th, 1136th, 1137th, 1138th, 1139th, 1140th, 1141th, 1142th, 1143th, 1144th, 1145th, 1146th, 1147th, 1148th, 1149th, 1150th, 1151th, 1152th, 1153th, 1154th, 1155th, 1156th, 1157th, 1158th, 1159th, 1160th, 1161th, 1162th, 1163th, 1164th, 1165th, 1166th, 1167th, 1168th, 1169th, 1170th, 1171th, 1172th, 1173th, 1174th, 1175th, 1176th, 1177th, 1178th, 1179th, 1180th, 1181th, 1182th, 1183th, 1184th, 1185th, 1186th, 1187th, 1188th, 1189th, 1190th, 1191th, 1192th, 1193th, 1194th, 1195th, 1196th, 1197th, 1198th, 1199th, 200th, 201th, 202th, 203th, 204th, 205th, 206th, 207th, 208th, 209th, 210th, 211th, 212th, 213th, 214th, 215th, 216th, 217th, 218th, 219th, 220th, 221th, 222th, 223th, 224th, 225th, 226th, 227th, 228th, 229th, 230th, 231th, 232th, 233th, 234th, 235th, 236th, 237th, 238th, 239th, 240th, 241th, 242th, 243th, 244th, 245th, 246th, 247th, 248th, 249th, 250th, 251th, 252th, 253th, 254th, 255th, 256th, 257th, 258th, 259th, 260th, 261th, 262th, 263th, 264th, 265th, 266th, 267th, 268th, 269th, 270th, 271th, 272th, 273th, 274th, 275th, 276th, 277th, 278th, 279th, 280th, 281th, 282th, 283th, 284th, 285th, 286th, 287th, 288th, 289th, 290th, 291th, 292th, 293th, 294th, 295th, 296th, 297th, 298th, 299th, 300th, 301th, 302th, 303th, 304th, 305th, 306th, 307th, 308th, 309th, 310th, 311th, 312th, 313th, 314th, 315th, 316th, 317th, 318th, 319th, 320th, 321th, 322th, 323th, 324th, 325th, 326th, 327th, 328th, 329th, 330th, 331th, 332th, 333th, 334th, 335th, 336th, 337th, 338th, 339th, 340th, 341th, 342th, 343th, 344th, 345th, 346th, 347th, 348th, 349th, 350th, 351th, 352th, 353th, 354th, 355th, 356th, 357th, 358th, 359th, 360th, 361th, 362th, 363th, 364th, 365th, 366th, 367th, 368th, 369th, 370th, 371th, 372th, 373th, 374th, 375th, 376th, 377th, 378th, 379th, 380th, 381th, 382th, 383th, 384th, 385th, 386th, 387th, 388th, 389th, 390th, 391th, 392th, 393th, 394th, 395th, 396th, 397th, 398th, 399th, 400th, 401th, 402th, 403th, 404th, 405th, 406th, 407th, 408th, 409th, 410th, 411th, 412th, 413th, 414th, 415th, 416th, 417th, 418th, 419th, 420th, 421th, 422th, 423th, 424th, 425th, 426th, 427th, 428th, 429th, 430th, 431th, 432th, 433th, 434th, 435th, 436th, 437th, 438th, 439th, 440th, 441th, 442th, 443th, 444th, 445th, 446th, 447th, 448th, 449th, 450th, 451th, 452th, 453th, 454th, 455th, 456th, 457th, 458th, 459th, 460th, 461th, 462th, 463th, 464th, 465th, 466th, 467th, 468th, 469th, 470th, 471th, 472th, 473th, 474th, 475th, 476th, 477th, 478th, 479th, 480th, 481th, 482th, 483th, 484th, 485th, 486th, 487th, 488th, 489th, 490th, 491th, 492th, 493th, 494th, 495th, 496th, 497th, 498th, 499th, 500th, 501th, 502th, 503th, 504th, 505th, 506th, 507th, 508th, 509th, 510th, 511th, 512th, 513th, 514th, 515th, 516th, 517th, 518th, 519th, 520th, 521th, 522th, 523th, 524th, 525th, 526th, 527th, 528th, 529th, 530th, 531th, 532th, 533th, 534th, 535th, 536th, 537th, 538th, 539th, 540th, 541th, 542th, 543th, 544th, 545th, 546th, 547th, 548th, 549th, 550th, 551th, 552th, 553th, 554th, 555th, 556th, 557th, 558th, 559th, 560th, 561th, 562th, 563th, 564th, 565th, 566th, 567th, 568th, 569th, 570th, 571th, 572th, 573th, 574th, 575th, 576th, 577th, 578th, 579th, 580th, 581th, 582th, 583th, 584th, 585th, 586th, 587th, 588th, 589th, 590th, 591th, 592th, 593th, 594th, 595th, 596th, 597th, 598th, 599th, 600th, 601th, 602th, 603th, 604th, 605th, 606th, 607th, 608th, 609th, 610th, 611th, 612th, 613th, 614th, 615th, 616th, 617th, 618th, 619th, 620th, 621th, 622th, 623th, 624th, 625th, 626th, 627th, 628th, 629th, 630th, 631th, 632th, 633th, 634th, 635th, 636th, 637th, 638th, 639th, 640th, 641th, 642th, 643th, 644th, 645th, 646th, 647th, 648th, 649th, 650th, 651th, 652th, 653th, 654th, 655th, 656th, 657th, 658th, 659th, 660th, 661th, 662th, 663th, 664th, 665th, 666th, 667th, 668th, 669th, 670th, 671th, 672th, 673th, 674th, 675th, 676th, 677th, 678th, 679th, 680th, 681th, 682th, 683th, 684th, 685th, 686th, 687th, 688th, 689th, 690th, 691th, 692th, 693th, 694th, 695th, 696th, 697th, 698th, 699th, 700th, 701th, 702th, 703th, 704th, 705th, 706th, 707th, 708th, 709th, 710th, 711th, 712th, 713th, 714th, 715th, 716th, 717th, 718th, 719th, 720th, 721th, 722th, 723th, 724th, 725th, 726th, 727th, 728th, 729th, 730th, 731th, 732th, 733th, 734th, 735th, 736th, 737th, 738th, 739th, 740th, 741th, 742th, 743th, 744th, 745th, 746th, 747th, 748th, 749th, 750th, 751th, 752th, 753th, 754th, 755th, 756th, 757th, 758th, 759th, 760th, 761th, 762th, 763th, 764th, 765th, 766th, 767th, 768th, 769th, 770th, 771th, 772th, 773th, 774th, 775th, 776th, 777th, 778th, 779th, 780th, 781th, 782th, 783th, 784th, 785th, 786th, 787th, 788th, 789th, 790th, 791th, 792th, 793th, 794th, 795th, 796th, 797th, 798th, 799th, 800th, 801th, 802th, 803th, 804th, 805th, 806th, 807th, 808th, 809th, 810th, 811th, 812th, 813th, 814th, 815th, 816th, 817th, 818th, 819th, 820th, 821th, 822th, 823th, 824th, 825th, 826th, 827th, 828th, 829th, 830th, 831th, 832th, 833th, 834th, 835th, 836th, 837th, 838th, 839th, 840th, 841th, 842th, 843th, 844th, 845th, 846th, 847th, 848th, 849th, 850th, 851th, 852th, 853th, 854th, 855th, 856th, 857th, 858th, 859th, 860th, 861th, 862th, 863th, 864th, 865th, 866th, 867th, 868th, 869th, 870th, 871th, 872th, 873th, 874th, 875th, 876th, 877th, 878th, 879th, 880th, 881th, 882th, 883th, 884th, 885th, 886th, 887th, 888th, 889th, 890th, 891th, 892th, 893th, 894th, 895th, 896th, 897th, 898th, 899th, 900th, 901th, 902th, 903th, 904th, 905th, 906th, 907th, 908th, 909th, 910th, 911th, 912th, 913th, 914th, 915th, 916th, 917th, 918th, 919th, 920th, 921th, 922th, 923th, 924th, 925th, 926th, 927th, 928th, 929th, 930th, 931th, 932th, 933th, 934th, 935th, 936th, 937th, 938th, 939th, 940th, 941th, 942th, 943th, 944th, 945th, 946th, 947th, 948th, 949th, 950th, 951th, 952th, 953th, 954th, 955th, 956th, 957th, 958th, 959th, 960th, 961th, 962th, 963th, 964th, 965th, 966th, 967th, 968th, 969th, 970th, 971th, 972th, 973th, 974th, 975th, 976th, 977th, 978th, 979th, 980th, 981th, 982th, 983th, 984th, 985th, 986th, 987th, 988th, 989th, 990th, 991th, 992th, 993th, 994th, 995th, 996th, 997th, 998th, 999th, 900th, 901th, 902th, 903th, 904th, 905th, 906th, 907th, 908th, 909th, 910th, 911th, 912th, 913th, 914th, 915th, 916th, 917th, 918th, 919th, 920th, 921th, 922th, 923th, 924th, 925th, 926th, 927th, 928th, 929th, 930th,
Apartments: 1, 2 and 4 bedrooms furnished.
Buckets KI and near town. Phone 833-7567. fc
Extra nice rooms with private kitchens. One
room has a private parking, utilities pu
Reception room 843-7079
1 bedroom unfurnished duplex, 105 plus utilities,
close to campus. Call 842-7853.
7-10
Suhail at Jaajahower Towers for the next acces-
tion. Monthly month less than the stated
rate. Call 842-1043. 7:44
Did you know that you can rent mobile homes at Webster? **842.7700** 7-17
Quint one bedroom form. apt._utilities paid
$1,075. Two bedroom form. apt._utilities paid
$1,425. For rent call 842-729-719. No AAA
offer.
JAYHAYAW TOWERS 2 - bedroom, all upholstery
fitted, carpet, vinyl flooring, laundry,
laundry room, 1039 W. 18th, 449-999.
1039 W. 18th, 449-999.
COST PLB1 95%-Stereo equipment. All major
companies have a PLB1 or equivalent
or packages. Call Dave. Phone 862-240-7400.
NOTICE
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT - Let us do your printing while you wait at the Quick Copy Center. Each copy has $3.50 copies - $4.14, copies - $4.50, business at the Quick Copy Center.
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
15 East 4th 841-7656
Open 11 A.M.-Midnight
WAGON WHEEL 1401 Ohio
12-5 Monday-Friday 10-5 Sat.
Sandwiches, Delicatessen, Foods
IS YOUR CAR AS READY FOR
YOUR VACATION AS YOU ARE?
TUXEDO
If not, call-
842-0753
THE ICE CO.
WEEKLY BEER SALES
AND $26.00 KEGS
ALL SUMMER LONG
HOME.MADE ICE
CREAM
SUPPLIES
616
Vermont
Vermont
PORTRACHY SHooting Gallery Specializing in PERSONALIZED Portraits in natural surroundings. Weddings, portfolios, and commercial photograhpy. 811-249-6730, biography@biography.com. 812-249-6730, p.m. tues-fri, 12-pm. Tues-fri, 7-11am.
Executive-style gourmet parties planned, catered. o
beautifully shaded private pool. For details call
(612) 549-8700.
Monday, night special at Sirinla Stockade=1.89
includes the fletto,队衣 and choio of potato
BEING GAY MEAES NEVER HAVING TO SAY
HEARING TO YOU. (Hearings on:
INC, Gatherings, 7:30 t and 3rd Bed-
room each month, Union Office hbldg,
234-7506 or 842-7506 for referrals to socializing,
842-7506 for referrals to socializing)
A PORTRAT OF YOU ON T-SHIRTs conceived in a club style in colour. Very pretty. Each dress. Send snapshirt (returned), specimen garment. $ postpaid. W, Summers. POB 7-10. Lawrence
TYPING
Typing in my home. IMH selective with pixet type.
Tapping on the keyboard, and paper, and
matt typing. Call Fap, 842-5799
THEIS HENDING - The Quick Copy Center is located in the Bellingham area. Our service is fast and affordable, we are愿意为您提供快速和高效的服务。
Experimented in typing thesis, research papers,
reports and letters. In typed forms:
*powder* (carbon ribbon), *elite* (cell type, Nilpile 819).
*rubber* (carbon ribbon), *elite* (cell type, Nilpile 819).
IBM Selective, or oil; or reasonable, expert-
in disruption, discussions. Call Joan Caron 88-912-7178.
Experienced typist—term papers, paperbacks, meshes, tuxedo, formal wear. Spellchecker, spell-edit器. 843-7548, Mrs. Wright.
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Revision 7-14
WANTED
Male or female roommate wanted to share house
money, rent, utilities and meals twice a month,
or half of the paid load, close to campus.
Need female roommate for now and fall. Call
Susan days, 843-3699, and events 843-3899.
Roommate needed for now and fall. Call
Wanted: female roommate for July, August $85
units per month. Come by 1003 Alhambra,
Missouri.
Person to share large 3 bedroom duplex for
and aging. $7.33 per month. Call in 6 gm.
from the phone number.
Serious female grad students to share 2 bedrooms,
including one third of room ($60.00) included.
Students must be at least 18 years old.
The Office of Instructional Resources is accepted by all departments in the 19th-26th academic year. Qualifications include a high level of competency in statistics and computer programming experience. Duties will include providing curriculum and instruction Survey and assisting in the operation and development of the Survey. Applicant must have an improvement of teaching through evaluation and training, as well as at least one month appointment. Starting date: August or October of the Office of Instructional Resources, 409 Calley Street, Washington, DC 20007. Deadline: July 31. Equal Opportunity Employer.
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bread loaf little hard lart 587
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86 or return to 103 Louisiana.
Do The LEGWORK For You! NEVER an extra cost
Found: In grass near X Zone. Octagonal perennial sunluxe sealant. Call 813-1398. 7-14
If You're Planning on FLYING.
Found. Very tiny black kitten in vicinity of 1500 Tennessee St. Call 482-4528. Keep calling.
SERVICES OFFERED
Large kitten or small cat. Short tail. Calico.
The area of the University's Shop. Tail 7-15
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FEMALE KITTEN, white. Call with gold and gray.
half a tail. West Campus. Mail 813-292-97. 7-15
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4
Thursday. July 10. 1975
University Daily Kansan
Actors animate Saroyan dreams
By EVIE RAPPORT
THE TIME OF YOUR LIFE—A play by William Saroyan. Directed by David Cook. Designed by Greg Hill. Costumes by André Southerd. At p.m. 10, July 10, and 12 in 11am.
The audience will be invited to dance to music from the year 1939, featuring tapes of Duke Ellington, Glenn Miller and Artie Shaw from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. nightly.
**constantin Stanislavsky**, the great Russian director and producer of the 1960s film *By any means*, by saying,
REVIEW
"There are no small parts, only small actors."
Few plays illustrate the truth of this adage as well as William Saryan's "The Time of Your Life," which opens at 8 tion in University Theatre. All of the 23 parts demand sincerity from the audience, even a few of the youngest, requiring technical proficiency necessary to carry off any number of principal parts in other plays.
It's to the credit of this fine, strong cast that the technical proficiency abounds in all but a few cases. The play leaps back and forth to another moment of plexus plausibility and caricature. The actors have
--a firm grasp on just where their characters are in the jump—they seldom miss portraying the right degree of quirky madness or understated sentiment.
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"The Time of Your Life" is set in a dingy San Francisco waterfront saloon. It's 1939. The Depression is all but over, and the world hasn't yet disintegrated into the horrors of World War II. But somehow the American Dream of a good life has faded. They are unhappy, dissatisfied, angry because their lives are too brutally real.
The play is about dreams. Each person entering the saloon has a dream of success or love or achievement or peace. Each hopes his dream will come true; some hope he wins, others lose, guided by Joe, a lover with money, who sits center stage and dominates the action.
William Kuhlh, who plays Joe, is superb. He is by turns burnesensitive, sensitive, compassionate and cruel. The character represents Saroyan's viewpoint, which the author clearly states in a note: "Seek goodness everywhere, and when it is found,
bring it out of its hiding-place and let it be free and unshamed."
Among the other fine performances are Maureen Hawley's Kitty, a beaten whore who dreams of a big house with collies on the lawn; Mike Wise's Tom, Joe's go-for-, whose simple-minded love for Kitty is a sharp contrast to his despair surrounding them; and Steve Gilham's Nick, the saloon owner who insists on running "a good place."
Special praise should be given to George Weiss, who portrays, I think, the most difficult character in the play. It is Kill Carson, an old trapper who spins tales you cannot believe—stories of his love affair with a girl or of herding cows on a bicycle in Toledo, the other characters have stories to tell, but none are as wild and implausible as his.
Weiss's portraitary masterfully conveys an absolute sincerity which keeps this painting fresh and new.
Doug Wasson, a., waterfront cop; Barry Barkstein, a. a longshoreman-philosophist.
squad bully give sturdy, well-defined finances that illuminate the play's conflicts.
"The Time of Your Life" is a difficult play to perform, demanding intense concentration from the players. It's equally difficult for them to watch, touch and listen carefully. Act swirls, touch and focus change rapidly and dialogue from different stage areas overlap. David Cook, director, has choreographed the action and defined the focus so clearly that an attentive viewer won't miss anything. No small moment, when so much happens so quickly.
Greg Hill's set is simply marvelous— the atmosphere, aesthetically delightful.
I saw this play at a dress rehearsal, when the few remaining wrinkles and technical problems were solved. Those problems should be solved by tonight, so there's nothing to prevent the audience from losing a marvelous, professional performance in one of the delightful American plays ever written.
Council to decide Dial-Drug's fate
The Douglas County Drug Abuse Council will decide the fate of the controversial Dial-Drug phone service tonight when they meet at 7 in the Douglas County Courthouse.
Beyond the controversial nature of the project itself, internal disputes between members of the council may hamper rejection. If the council does not end last week, when its fund ran out.
Steve VonLutes, who assisted in running the service, said yesterday, "The lack of understanding may have led to some strife and cast a pill over the project."
sung Hart was the director of the Dial-phone phone service. Hart said that Nancy Hartman, planning coordinator of the drug abuse council, had delayed paying him his checks for his services during the three-and-a-half-month Dial-Drug project.
"I showed up on the day I was to receive my check and she demanded reports retroactive through the preceding weeks," he said.
Hart's contract didn't require the submission of reports.
Johnson said, "There is no formal agreement. But while I was on the ad hoc committee, it was at least my understanding that he would provide interim reports."
Both Hart and Alan Johnson, chairman of the council's research committee, said that
The ad boc committee acted as a laissez-faire between Hart and the council during the period.
Hartman said, "I delayed one of Hart's checks because he was refusing to submit written reports. I withheld the check because he wasn't willing to cooperate.
"We are satisfied with the project and the final report. But as for the little complaints, I'd be happy to discuss them with him in person." The author insisted on substance here to merit a public dispute. "
Another complaint Hart made' involved his attempt to initiate a meeting with Kansas Attorney General Curt Schneider to take a lawrence street drug analysis plan.
Hart said Hartman had given her approval to Hart's meeting with Schneider and then decided against allowing Hart to speak to Schneider.
Johnson said, "From my point of view, it was simply a misunderstanding."
Johnson said that Hart shouldn't have initiated the meeting with the attorney general because he wouldn't be able to represent the county with respect to its views on the question of creating the drug analysis program.
The final report of the Dial-Drug project, which was accepted by the council last month, was to be负负负负负负负负负负
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Johnson said that he and three other members of the council, who all work with him at Headquarters, had just received his salary. He said a local counseling and information center.
ESS.inc
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Diamond Needle Sale
pg 59.95-$10.95
now $5.95
The tournament was played on the 36 par
Jayhawk Nine at Alamar Hill Golf (Gila)
Mike Millikan, Salina graduate student, and Tom Weiss, associate professor of economics, the recreational service's summer golf tournament yesterday sponsored by the University health, physical education and recreation.
in team competition, there was a three-way tie of 38 for the top spot among Carl Irwin, Alistair Curran, and Mellikan; Wilson Tyson Jr., Topeka senior, and Warren Giddings, Leavenworth graduate student; and Mike Pratt Lawrence graduate student, and
Student, prof in first place tie at golf tourney
An award was given to Berklei Perico,
Lawrence special student, for the closest
shot to the pin on the par 3, 190-yard seventh
hole.
Team scores were compiled by taking the best shot per hole for each team.
Hart said he thought that the report would get to the council members too late for a valid decision to be made on the reinstatement of the project.
Miryam Kay, a member of the council's research committee, which last month voted not to recommend the continuation of the project, said, "It's absolutely critical that each person have plenty of time to read and Kay voted for continuation of the project.
SAVINGS
FAMILY
BRAND
LIVESTRIP COMPONENTS
Tom Donaldson, Wichita graduate student, also receive an award for the local high school's computer science program.
"I do think that we should have gotten it earlier and had time to read it carefully," Kay said of Hart's 100-page-final report. She said she hadn't received the report.
Publicized at the University of Kanaan building and published in examination periods. Second-class postage paid at Lawyers, Kanaka, Manitoba or $15 a year. Student subscriptions at either $20 or $15 a year.
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—864-4810
Advertising—864-4358
Circulation—864-2048
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Editor
Ward Harkavy
Business Manager
Jim Merrill
Hiking Boots 25% off
Summer Shoe SALE Selected Styles of Our
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PRIMARILY
LEATHER
The University of Kansas School of Medicine has received notice that full accreditation has been continued by the Department for Medical Education (LCME) in Chicago.
812 Mass. Lawrence, Ks.
KU Medical Center accreditation granted
The approval includes the branch of the school located at Wichita State University, established in 1971 by the Kansas Board of Regents to enable a part of each medical course to pursue the final training in Wichita rather than at the Kansas City Med Center.
LCME notified Chancellor Archie R. Dykes yesterday of the results of the report submitted by American Medical College to campuses October 21-24, 1974. LCME represents the Association of American Medical Colleges and the Council on Medical Education of the American Medical Association.
Accreditation is awarded on the basis of
appropriate balance between the size of enrolment in each class leading to degree and the total resources of the institution, including physical facilities and operating budget.
The accreditation committee's seal of approval is used by the state medical license boards in issuing certificates to practice medicine.
Dykes said he was pleased that the KU School of Medicine had received continuing accreditation.
On their first date they become lovers . . and fugitives
David W. Robinson, acting executive vice chancellor at the Medical Center, said, "I would say the report contains two major thrusts. One is a sanction of our three year curriculum, with some modification to teach students during the first 19 months of the Medical School implemented an accelerated three year program in 1971.
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Hillcrest
FROM: John House
Student Senate Treasurer
—NOTICE—
3. Obtain ADVANCE WRITTEN AUTHORIZATION for each expenditure from funds allocated to the organization.
2. Sign a CAPITAL DISPOSITION CONTRACT with the Student Senate.
TO: All organizations allocated funds by the Student Senate from the Student Activity Fee
1. Attend a TRAINING SESSION conducted by the Student Senate Treasurer. See the schedule listed below.
All officers who are to be responsible for the expenditure of allocated funds MUST:
No funds will be made available until these requirements have been met.
Treasurer's Training Sessions have been scheduled for the following times:
Monday, July 14 2:00 p.m.
Tuesday, July 15 10:00 a.m.
Wednesday, July 16 7:00 p.m.
Thursday, July 17 2:00 p.m.
Monday, July 21 10:00 a.m.
Contact the Student Senate Treasurer's Office at 864-3746 to sign up for one of these sessions, or for additional information.
NOTE: Additional sessions will be scheduled in the Fall for those organizations that do not require access to their funds this Summer.
Fri.: Tom Montgomery Trio
JAZZ THIS WEEKEND AT PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE
Music Starts at 9 p.m.
Call 843-8575 for Reservations
Sat.: The World's Greatest Oldtime Dixieland Piano Player, RAY EHRARDT, with the Gaslite Gang
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Open 4:30 p.m
Closed Mondays
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JINGLE
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
A LITTLE WARMER
No. 160
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, July 14, 1975
Clyde Walker profiled
See page 3.
Drug rider not restored
By TONI DIXON
Blue Cross-Blue Shield insurance policies won't contain overall prescription drug coverage next year, StudEx decided at its meeting last night.
In recent weeks StudEx considered the inclusion of a drug rider that would cover all prescriptions, but would increase the overall cost of the policy. StudEx also discussed an option with Blue Cross-Blue Shield to reduce the cost policy and provide prescription coverage through $1 and $2 deductibles, but voted against that proposal.
Steve Segrebhee, StudEx member who negotiated the reduced rate option, said the deductible coverage would cost the average $150 per month. The policy with total prescription coverage
Under the $1 deductible option, the policy holder would pay the first $1 on each prescription every time it was filled. The balance of the prescription cost would be covered by the Blue Cross-Blue Shield policy.
The $1 deductible rider would add $19.80
to the single student policy, $43.88 to
the parity policy and $54.84 to the family
policy.
A $2 deductible would add $12.84 for single student policies, $32.04 for two-party policies and $40.92 for family policies a year.
The average student buys six prescriptions a year, Segebrecht said. Considering the $1 or $2 deductibles and the cost of the policies, that option would come close to the original cost of the total drug coverage policy, he said.
"It does show a reduction in cost," it sobs. Sebrecht said it's "not you are an averaged student."
The Student Senate originally rejected the total drug coverage last April because of its high cost. After some debate, StudEx agreed that the additional $27.6 for single students, $55.32 for two-party and $86.84 for three-party prescription was too high.
The $1 and $2 options were rejected for the same reason
As the policy stands,the student will pay
the first $100 in prescription fees and 20 per cent of the next $900. Policy costs will be $84.44 a year for single families, $196.56 a year for married couples dependent and $301.24 a year for families.
The Blue Cross-Blue Shield policies will be available at fall enrollment.
In other action, StudEx continued its efforts to save the Hawklet by approving an alternative space proposal that will be delivered to the administration at a meeting today.
In the proposal, StudEx asked that the contents of Summerfield Annex B be moved to one of three unutilized areas in the Military Science building, and the computer system is moved there. Hawklet concessions area, be moved to Annex B, leaving the Hawklet as it is.
Bruce Woner, StudEx chairman, said he was concerned that the computer equipment he had been using would again be moved in two years to a computation center now being planned. He said there wouldn't be enough interest at this new facility in areas that the Hawklet now provides.
Space flight preparations smooth
CAPE CANAVERAL (AP)—Apollo commander Thomas P. Stafford sent a message of friendship to the Russian people yesterday and told his Soviet counterparts "we will see you in a couple of days" in space.
Launch preparations moved in an orderly fashion at two launch sites 9,850 miles apart on two continents for Tuesday's twin blastoffs.
Power flowed to the Apollo and Soyuz rockets, propellant tanks were filled with liquid hydrogen and oxygen. Most of the experiment equipment was in place.
Tennis
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
From the Soviet Union the report was the same.
"We are satisfied we are ready to carry out our part of the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project mission," said Chester M. Lee, the manager of a two and one-half hour readiness review.
Staffard talked with Soviet cosmauts Alexei Leenov and Valeri Kubasov by telephone Sunday morning, probably their first meeting. Next Thursday, 140 miles above the earth.
"All activities are being carried out acco-
ding to the time line of the prelaunch
flight."
Even as electrical power surged into the Apollo spacecraft, space officials were keeping a close watch on weather forecasts. The weather was cloudy skies with scattered thunderstorms.
A Soviet announcement said preparations were going strictly according to schedule.
The launch control centers at Cape Canaveral and Balkonur will be in round-the-clock communications a day before the scheduled 8:20 a.m. EDT tilt off for Leovyn Cochran to join the crew. Stafford, Vance D. Brand and Donald K. Stayton, the three American astronauts.
President Ford and Soviet Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin will watch the televised coverage in Washington of the Spacecraft, a White House spokesman said yesterday, Ford, Dobrynin, NASA head James Fletcher and members of the diplomatic corps will be at the State Department auditorium to watch the launch.
At the same time, in Russia, American forces are being sent to will be at the Soyuz launch site in Bukovnik.
After watching the televised Soyuz lift, Dobrynin and Fletcher will fly to Cape Cameralov, sea, see it, the Soviet official will be the first high-speed Soviet official to watch an American launch.
Sinales winner
Jean Mills returns a volley in the women's singles finals of the Lawrence Owen overseeing. Mills defeated Dawn Johnson 6-3, 6-4.
4. Bill Clarke defeated KU tennis coach Kirkland Gates 7-6, 6-3 in the men's finals.
Congress to discuss oil price cut
WASHINGTON (AP)—Congress will consider legislation this week to cut oil prices by more than $1. a barrel and also to bound authority for federal oil price controls.
President Gerald R. Ford has announced that he will propose a bill this week to remove price controls from domestic oil in a sudden increase in gasoline prices.
'Goat-gland doctor' part of folklore
By G. DAVID ROWLAND
Yet' deep in Kansan lore is the story of Dr. "Goat-gland" Brinkley, who was perhaps the greatest con artist of the 20th century.
Kansas, noted mainly for Dorothy, Toto, Alf Landon and more recently Vern Miller, has usually been thought of as a peaceful, respectable state where farmers work away at plowing the wheat fields and the state Senate refuses to allow liquor-by-the-drink.
Brinkley ran a radio station in Milford. He would prescribe drugs on the air and get kickbacks from local pharmacists if he didn't already own the pharmacy. He got his name from a famous operation in which he would take the intestines of a goat and transplant them into men who were worried about impotency.
Sherwood Parks, general manager of radio station KINA in Salina, has made a hobby of the famous "goat-gland doctor." His students attend a class at the University of Kansas.
"A typical show went something like this." he said:
"I've got a letter here from a Mrs. R. J. Conrad in Milford and she writes, 'What can I do about these incest backaches I've been having recently?' Well, Mrs. Conrad, I Conrad, you know! Brinkley's tonic number 11 three times a day. If this doesn't help you nothing will."
About this time Johnny Boy, a character on the show, would come running in and jump on the doctor's lap and they would talk about things Johnny Boy did during the day.
Brinkley supposedly graduated from Eclectic Medical University in Kansas City, Mo. However, some reports say he bought a diploma for $25 from a mail-order house.
After the planned interruption, Brinkley would resume his show by saying, "By the way you can pick up Dr. Brinkley's tonic at your local Dr. Brinkley's pharmacies."
After receiving his diploma, Brinkley moved to Milford, where he set up a radio station, KFKB (Kansas First, Kansas Best).
In the late 1920s, a Chicago magazine conducted a radio poll throughout the United States to determine which station was the most popular.
One of the largest stations of that time, WAFE of Kansas City, which was owned by the Kansas City Star, got 10,000 votes while the Milford assessed 235,000 votes.
After hearing the news, the Star began printing editors against the way Brinkley was using the public airways for medical diagnoses. Soon the Federal Radio Commission took away the doctors license for, "abusing the public airways."
Brinkley believed that by becoming governor of Kansas he could regain his license, so he started a massive write-in campaign.
In fact, when the votes were counted, Brinkley had won, but, according to Parks, 50,000 of the votes were disallowed for vote counting or dotting an 'I' or capitalizing a letter."
After being denied the votes and losing the election, Brinkley moved to Del Rio, Tex. He set up another radio station in Villa Acuna, Mexico.
Brinkley started paying the Mexican government $100,000 for the use of one of their international clear channels. In 1931 he began operating XER ("Sunshine station between the nations") at 50,000 watts and at later 100,000 watts.
His second problem required a little more finesse. With so much power being generated by the huge transformers Brinkley used, heat would emanate from the generator room and attract rattlesmakes.
Brinkley had two immediate problems. The first problem, financing the new station, proved to be only a minor obstacle. Brinkley offered a can of coffee and his price for $1.
"One guard said he killed four rattlers in the generator room one morning," said Park.
Brinkley died in 1942.
Authority for the present controls expires on Aug. 31. Under controls the price limit averages $5.25 a barrel on oil from U.S. wells that began production before mid-September, the price is expected to rise to the market level, now more than $12 a barrel.
Some officials have estimated that decontrol of oil prices over the next 18 to 24 months could increase consumer prices for petroleum products by at least six cents a
Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash., issued a statement yesterday saying that Ford "is trying to jam another huge oil price increase down our threats."
Ford said at a news conference in Chicago Saturday that his proposal would be a cost-cutting measure.
Jackson added: "Congress will not go with more huge windfall profits for the oil industry."
wouldn't cause a precipitous increase, but at the same time would offer encouragement for companies that were already aware of stress and improve domestic oil production.
Both Senate and House are expected to act this week on bills requiring the auto industry to more than double the fuel efficiency of new cars by 1985.
The Senate scheduled debate for today on bill that would limit federal oil contracts through Desert.
A Senate-House conference report concerning the roll-back of domestic oil prices to January levels will be ready for final approval. The report is virtually certain to be vetoed by Ford.
Under the system of price controls, the price of 60 per cent of American oil falls to $49.89 a barrel, Figure 3. The remainder sells at the world market price of more than $12 a barrel.
Parkway funds passed by House
By THERESE MENDENHALL
A bill containing a $10 million appropriation for the construction of highways such as the proposed Clinton Parkway was held Thursday at a vote of 392 to 13. Presentatives Thursday by a vote of 392 to 13.
After the bill was passed, Rep. Larry Winn, R-Kan., told the House that Clinton Parkway had been one of six similar projects to receive priority in the Federalal budget. The bill was according to a legislative assistant for Winn. The assistant said Friday that when the Department of Transportation prepared to implement the bill, the record of Winn's
statement would improve chances for Clinton Parkway to receive some of the $10
Winn said that if Clinton Parkway was
flooded, the road would be built by 1978,
fiscal 1980.
Winn's aide said the Senate would probably be ready to consider its version of the bill. But it differs from the House version, the differences will be settled in a conference committee. The aide said he expected the Senate to pass the bill and the President to approve it.
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
The House passed the bill with no amendments.
12
Posse leaders
Posse Couliatus members Ted Oakes (left) and Warren Redding discuss, at Oakes' movement to have motorcycle helmet laws declared unconstitutional. Redding is the house, what they call the fallings of the American system. Oakes is a leader in the manager of a mobile home park.
Posse for Constitution against big government
Kansan Staff Reporter
By JACK FISCHER
Strict adherence to the Constitution to reduce government influence over private citizens is the main goal of the Sheriff's Posse Comitatus of Wyandotte County, Warren Redding, the group's spokesman, said last week.
Unlike another group, the Johnson County pose, which wants to arm itself and patrol the Kansas-Missouri border to aid in crime control), Redding's group wants to return the country to strict rule under the Constitution.
Redding said the posse believed that if a law wasn't stated in the Constitution then no government at any level had the right to enforce it. The posse, he said, thinks nothing about protecting calling every phase of American life and they intend to fight against this control.
"We're not the wild-eyed people that schools and government would have you"
He said the posse planned to arrest people who violated the Constitution.
Rebuilding they hoped to achieve their goals by demanding jury trials for what they believed to be violations of their civil rights in placingpose members in legal procedures.
Redding, who ran for Congress on the American Party ticket against Rep. Larry Winn, R-Kan., said the public schools were places of propaganda where children's awareness of the Constitution's workings was blurred.
"Illiterates are easier to control," Redding said.
"He has gotten himself into a whole lot of dislavear in the courts by defending himself and his family."
Eldon Hagan, former assistant prosecutor for Wyandotte County, against whom the posse has filed suit for a deprivation of constitutional rights, said that although he wasn't a constitutional judge, he thought the posse's rights had been violated.
Francis Heller, professor of law at the U.S. Court for the Peace and little respect for the peace's arguments.
Since the Constitution clearly says it is the supreme law, the existence of other laws is in doubt.
He said the Constitution gave Congress the power to pass laws, provided for a tax on incomes and allowed the Congress to define what constituted money.
Heller said the Supreme Court didn't have a jury because it established facts rather than rules.
2
Monday, July 14, 1975
University Daily Kansan
NEWS DIGEST THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
No postal strike expected
WASHINGTON—Postmaster General Benjamin F. Ballar said yesterday he didn't expect it is agreed upon that he concealed there could be disruptions expected in an agreement with him.
The workers' contract expires July 21 and there have been threats of strikes. The state agency that runs a job area who led a demonstration in washington june 19 protesting the slow progress on the land deal.
If there should be a strike, Ballar said, the Post Service would suspend the service's monopoly right to first class mail and embargo all nonessential mail.
"But it would be very difficult to move anything like the total volume we're"
"all too tired to do."
Ford savs courts guardians
MACKINAC ISLAND, Mich.—President Ford told a group of judges and lawyers that the nation's challenge in its third season is to play "a major role in the independence of the United States."
Ford called the judiciary "the nation's standing army in defense of individual freedom," but said all segments of society must work together to make sure that
Ford spoke to the 6th Circuit Judicial Conference, consisting of lawyers and judges from Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee. He told them the nation had too often asked its federal courts to solve problems that should have been settled by other branches of government or the private sector.
Exxon contribution denied
ROME--The Italian Communist party denied it had ever received contributions from America's Exxon oil corporation and called for a full investigation into the
Exxon said Saturday that it had authorized its Italian affiliate, Esso Italia, to make political contributions of $3 million a year between 1963 and 1971. Another $19 million to $22 million had been made by the managing director of Esso on his own authority. Exxon announced in a statement.
a spokesman said the company found vouchers indicating that an unauthorized donation of $98,000 had been made to the Communist party. But he said he had no knowledge of the details.
Fed spendthrift, study says
WASHINGTON—A congressional staff study of Federal Reserve System expenditures" by the central banking agency, Ben. Wright Patman, D-Tex., said.
Expenses ranged from $89,000 for cocktail parties and dinners and $49,000 for "employe recognition" items such as jewelry and watches, said Patman, to $280,000 to move employees from bank to bank in the system "including $14,000 to one employee and his family for a move covering less than 700 miles."
The House Banking Committee has approved legislation providing for the Federal Reserve System to be audited by the General Accounting Office, auditing any
Portugal's Catholics protest
LISBON- Thousands of Roman Catholics marched through the northern city of Aveiro, demanding the immediate return of the church's national radio station.
The demonstration against the left-wing military government was one of the strongest since the revolution 14 months ago which turned out the long-time contender.
Led by Bishop Manuel Almeida Trinidad, who had just returned from the and United Christians can never be defended "the people" and "United Christians can never be defended."
Fan dispute ends in death
A 42-year Lawrence man was shot and killed Thursday in a dispute involving an electrician.
Arts center shapes fund-raising projects
The man, Vincent Smelser, 430 Missouri St., was pronounced dead at his home, where the shooting occurred, according to a police spokesman.
Two fund-raising are planned this week. The new Evans, center director, said last week.
In conjunction with the annual Lawrence sidewalk bazaar July 17, the arts center will offer a day-long program of entertainment on a stage in front of the First National Bank building, Ninth and Massachusetts streets.
A special performance of "Oklahoma!" in Murphy Hall July 24 will also provide funds for renovation of the center at Ninth and Vermont streets.
Evans said an additional $20,000 was needed to complete work on the building's foundation.
The sidewalk bazar will be in the downtown area and at shopping centers. Entertainment will be offered downtown by performers from the arts center, including music groups. Children's theater group, the Summer Youth Community Theater; and musicians.
The "Oklahoma" benefit will be presented by performers in the Landmarks of the American Theatre series at the University of Kansas. Season tickets to the series won't be accepted for the benefit performance.
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Douglas County Attorney David Berkowitz, who was called to the scene, said, "There was an argument, ostensibly, between the police and began to strike her. She got a gun and shot."
Betty Bord, 36, of the same address, was involved in the scheme and charged with involvement in manufacturing.
In another incident, a woman was treated at Lawrence Memorial Hospital's emergency room for a small-caliber gunshot wound on her knee.
The shooting occurred about 8:30 a.m. at the East 23rd Street Car Wash, 723 E. St. The names of those involved weren't released.
Bond was arraigned in Douglas County Court Friday and released on $10,000 bond.
The wife drove into the car wash and started to argue first with her husband, then with the woman. When the wife opened the women's car door, the woman shot the wife in the knee. The woman then drove to the police station and reported the incident.
According to police reports, a man was leaning against a woman's car and talking to her when the man's wife drove by and saw them talking.
Concert reflects America's past
By KATHLEEN PICKETT
No charges have been filed in the case.
One of the happier results of the United States Bicentennial celebration is the increased interest in American culture—history, art and music.
An example of the interest was the large audience attending the Lawrence Chamber Players' concert, "Music of American Songs" in p. m. yesterday in the Museum of Art.
The room was overflowing with people listening to a concert of purely American music.
revolutionary times to Wallingford Riegger, who died in 1961.
REVIEW
The entire concert was beautifully performed. Its only fault was that it lasted merely one hour. Perhaps some of the musicians were trite, but they were lovable unpleasantly.
The first number was "Scherzo for Small Orchestra," by Wallingford Riegger. The second, in 1933, the number in 1933. Though parts were harsh and shrill, the whole fit together in an appropriately joke-like manner. The instrumentation, inclined, especially the pizzicato notes.
The concert proceeded in reverse chronological order, from the modern, unknown compositions to the more familiar Scott Joplin and Francis Hopkinson.
The concert showed the wide diversity in composition that has typified American music. Our music may not have reached the heights of Mozart or Beethoven but, it in the case of the symphony connoisseur, has shown the originality that can arise in a country with diverse roots.
The next number was "Autumn—
Concerto for Harp, Strings and Percussion" by Virgil Thomson. This work was composed in 1929. Although Thomson lived and studied in the irreverent 1920s, his work is usually mellow enough to strike the interest of any casual music lover.
Walter Piston's "Lento and Allegro scherzando from Three Pieces for Flute, and Four Parts for Guitar," study in the contrasts of timbre and rhythm. The piece began with subdued color and structure reminiscent of Stravinsky, and then took off with combinations of the three
There were four parts to this piece, one sonorous and rich, another with lovely contrast of harp and orchestra bells, still with strings that end in the strings and long gillands in harp.
Exotic impressionism was represented by the "Poem for Flute and Orchestra" by Charles Griffes. Chages of moods were beautifully represented and were enhanced by a professional performance on the flute by John Boulton.
The most popular, and familiar, numbers on the program were Lousie Moreau Gottschalk's "The Banjo (Fantasia Groteque) Op. 15" and Scott Jolin's "Hellotrope Bouquet," which he wrote with Louis Chauvin.
"The Banjo" was slightly刻 in a few places, but nonetheless delightful, especially in its remarkable simulation of the sound of a banjo. The resemblance to a piano was so subtle that it played piece, when the piano played music similar to Stephen Foster's "Camptown Races."
Ward's rendition of the Joplin piece was done with such purity and elegant musicality that it easily surpassed many recorded performances by Joplin himself. It was a masterpiece but to play an encore and he naturally performed the popular "Mamelaile Rae."
The last three numbers were arranged chronologically among the composers in the United States. The
songs, all three from the revolutionary
typically physical and charming in style.
They were the well-known "Delia" by Henri Capron, written in 1733, and two numbers by Francis Hopkinson, who signed the Declaration of Independence. They were "Beneath a Weeping Willow's Shade," and they are delightful despite the monotone 64 rhythm, and "The Toast to George Washington," a stirring marital piece.
In all, the concert was entertaining, with the variety of instruments and styles used showing the variety of American musical heritage.
Marvin Tarpyr, 27, who pleaded guilty to multination of more than a dozen trees, was sentenced Friday to serve 90 days in the Douglas County jail.
He was arrested last month after police received a report a man was tearing down trench walls.
Five trees were destroyed and ten others were damaged.
ON CAMPUS
Tarryn entered his plea in Douglas County Court. He was also ordered to pay $280 restitution to the city. jail officials said Tarryn had been sentenced to sentence with the Lawrence Park Department.
W. STITT ROBINSON, professor of history, will lecture on "The Indian Experience," at tonight's Swarthout Recital at the Art Center of the Markdowns of the American Theatre series.
Tree trimming costs man 90 days in jail
Harris said that although seeded acreage
The Dial-Drug line, a drug information service, was operated by pharmacology consultant Bing Hart until its funding expired two weeks ago.
Dial-Drug program has uncertain future
The Douglas County Drug Abuse Council voted to disband Thursday. The council's dissolution left the future of the Dial-Drug information line uncertain.
DONALD M. MEDILL, Topeka graduate student, has received a Fulbright-Hays Grant to study at the University of Erlangen in Germany beginning in September.
The council cited "organizational and operational problems encountered during the current project period" as its reasons for limiting after only one year of existence.
MARK CORNHAUSER, midwest regional coordinator for the International Meditation Society, will lecture at 7 might in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Farmers wait for Soviets
However, confusion arose when the council later voted to establish another committee to study the feasibility of continuing the telephone service.
Speculation over a possible Soviet pur-
mium wheat estimate estimated local
wheat prices in the past week.
A recommendation of the ad hoc committee of the council to continue the Dial-Drug line with certain changes in its administration was passed by the council.
Earl Van Meter, Douglas County Agricultural Extension Agent, said this year's harvest was average, or slightly better than average. He estimated the crop yield to be about 18,000 acres Douglas County had about 18,000 acres seeded this year. Van Meter said.
Prices at the Farmers Cooperative Association of Lawrence jumped from $2.89 a bushel last Monday to $3.59 a bushel Saturday. The Farmers Elevator Company sold more than a hundred with a Saturday price of $1.51 a bushel, lower than $3 earlier in the week.
clarify some of the problems associated with the administration of the Dial-Drug
Harris said he thought farmers would continue to hold on to their wheat. If the Russians are sincerely about dealing for prices, prices could go up to $3 a bushel, he said.
According to the executive committee's resolution to disband, the council may be reestablished if a $10,340 grant from the state is received.
Rick Silber, another member of the council, said the interim committee, which would be appointed by the present planning coordinator, Nancy Hartman, would try to
"To be totally honest, I was a little confused," he said. "I voted for the proposal and my vote was in favor of the interim procedure." a refining b reporting procedures.
"I intend to get together with Nancy Hartman, but other people should be approached about being on it," Silber said of the interim committee.
Despite the enticing prices, local farmers have been reluctant to sell their wheat, choosing instead to store it and gamble on future deals with the Soviets.
Don Harris, manager of the Eudora elevator, said Saturday that his elevator had bought more than 47 per cent of the 112.000 bushels that came in.
Nancy Boswell, bookkeeper at the Lawrence elevator, said Saturday that only 25 per cent of a total of 160,000 bushels in the elevator had been sold by farmers.
If the grant is received, the Douglas County commissioners would decide on a new planning coordinator and would provide guidelines for membership on the council.
The new council would consider the recommendations of the interim committee and the former ad hoc committee regarding continuation of the Dial-Drug project.
There was a small amount of mosaic disease in the crop this year, Harris said. Much of the grain had a high moisture content because of the heavy rains that occurred at the beginning of the harvest, he said.
in the Eudora area had increased 29 per cent over last year, yield was down because of warmer temperatures.
The Lawrence elevator reported they had more weeds in the grain than usual because it was dry.
Dykes chooses outreach aide
In making the announcement Friday, Dykes said, "We are all greatly pleased that Dr. Mills has accepted these additional responsibilities. One of our primary thrusts in the months just ahead will be the development and expansion of our medical team," she added. We'd like someone of Dr. Mill's capabilities to head up this program."
Among his additional duties, which he will assure immediately, will be coordination with the University of Kansas Center's College of Health Sciences, including activities on the Lawrence and Kansas City, Kan., campuses and at the University of Kansas School of Medicine.
Russell C. Mills, associate chancellor for health affairs, will become special projects assistant to Chancellor Archie R. Dykes. He will present his position and responsibilities.
The University's outreach program in health areas is concerned with meeting the service needs of Kansans, Dykes said. Two of the major programs in this area are preceptorship and residency experiences in various communities over the summer. Students to study under a general practitioner to encourage small town practices.
Mills will also serve as liaison with federal agencies, work closely with the director of institutional planning and cooperate with Lawrence campus faculty and administrators to explore and develop joint programs in allied health care areas.
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Midwest Director International Meditation Society presents a Special Public Lecture
TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION
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Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
Also, Radio and TV Appearances:
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4
Monday, July 14, 1975
University Daily Kansan
PRESIDENT FORP IS A CANDIDATE.
Ford rejects job offers
President Gerald R. Ford's recent surprise announcement that he would seek the Republican Presidential nomination caught quite a few veteran White House observers off guard, according to a high White House source.
The source, Carleton Jennings Hume III, scion of a wealthy
COMMENT
New England family, has been a high White House source since the Kennedy administration. Hume refused to be identified
The source said that, contrary to popular expectations, Ford did not endorse (How else does a president consider?) other job offers.
One of the offers the source said, was to replace E. A. Carey, "I'll cry you" force; in men's magazine meerscham ads,
The President has also been considering devoting much of his time to the Transmogrificational Meditation Society, of which he recently became a member, according to the source. Ford's mantra is said to be "Oh-peck."
The President also allegedly is working on a new book which will be coauthored by Ralph Nader. The book is a study of the nation's economic problems and is tentatively titled "Unsure at Any Speed."
The best offer made to the President was a plan to have himself remaigned to the presidency, the source said.
According to the source, Ford said that, given the mediocre Democratic candidates already hateless and running, this move would certainly save millions of dollars of the taxpayers' money.
Ward Harkavy
It's bad enough that the athletic corporation repeats its tiresome complaints about not having enough money and having too many limitations. There is probably no unit of the University of Kansas that is comfortable, funded, and there are unanimously few pictures picture themselves as absolutely indispensable to the wellbeing of the school.
To the Kansan Editor:
I cannot accept the embarrassingly specious objections of our coach, whose universe is plainly a pre-polemical one in which we are surrounded around intercollegiate football.
He objects to using films to scout forcometrading adversaries because he can't tell how high his kickers bite the ball. Come on, Mr. Moore, is it really that important? Relative to books in the library or to research equipment, is it that important?
So I can understand, if not agree with, the corporation's constant cravings for a greater size of office. But, however, the seeming inconsistency of publicizing last semester the huge deficit of the corporation and at the same time obeyed rules designed to help reduce such deficits.
Instructor arrested
on narcotics charge
Faculty member raps Moore
Thea Lynn Clark, assistant instructor of English, was arrested Thursday and charged with possession of a controlled substance, according to Lawrence police
Police had been called to Clark's residence at 415 Elm St. shortly before 3 p.m. Thursday by a friend of Clark's who said Clark had passed out.
After Clark was revived at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, she was returned to her residence and police obtained a search warrant.
Police seized a number of syringes generally used by diabetics, seeds and unidentified powders that they said they thought were heroin and cocaine.
Clark was released from the Douglas County jail Friday after she posted $10,000 bond. She is to appear for arraignment at 4 p.m. Friday in Douglas County Court.
Motorists envy, despise joggers
This article is reprinted with the permission of the Sun Publishing Group. W. Scott is associate editor of the Sun.
Rv JAMES W. SCOTT
Something happens to a certain type of personality when it is closed in the steel and glass capsule of the motor car. Aggressions are unleashed. Simmering discontent
The long-distance runner isn't always lonely. Sometimes he has more company than friends, and he swerves suddenly, forcing him to the ditch or curb. Or those who scare him with a blast of the horn or a roar of the engine. A few seem to want to run, while some are worse, wrongly on the road.
COMMENT
Joggers and trackmen have been badly cut by glass from flying beer bottles. They have been hit by thrown cans. A ruler or a compass was thrown, probably was missed by a tire iron last year.
becomes a hostile display. The fist is
awake, secure in a blue cloud of exhaust
A few weeks ago on Mission Road in Prairie Village, a car cut a corner, just missing a runner who shouted in alarm, and the middle-aged driver leaped out.
and roared off, perhaps to meditate on the agility of the long-distance runner.
"What did you say?" he yelled, and hit the runner on the side of the head with his fist. The lad delivered a quick karate kick in front of the crowd, then drove side street. The driver got back in the car.
Nothing seems to make this personality go berserk quicker than the sight of a lithe, lean body jogging along the street. Something snaps.
Another college athlete, loping along Johnson Drive in Mission, was passed by a man in a large white Cadillac. The car stopped. As the young man drew drearest he could see the driver, red-faced and mouth open, apparently shouting, and inaudible behind the glass. The boy thought he was having a heart attack and the window could help. The window glided down and from the soundless mouth issued a roar:
"Get your f----a- out of the street."
The boy flashed a signal and ran on. Siron and red lights. The policeman asked what was the trouble. The runner was told that he needed treatment for displaying an "obscene gesture."
Runner: "Officer, I think this man should be given a breathalyzer test."
*rolieman*: "Have you been drinking?"
*Driver*: (Sweating from open window)
"Only a couple at my club. Nothing unusual."
The jerk was running in the street. Haul him.
Policeman: "In the street or at the edge?"
Driver: "No difference. He was in the car and up there and he was. No business in the car."
Policeman: "Both of you go home. You (to driver) watch the drinks and you (to passenger) leave."
Why do they run in the streets? Most casual joggers can get their exercise on a high school track or on side streets. But serious track people will run 10 to 16 miles a day in preparation for a meet and from 6 to 10 miles a day in the off season to stay in shape. They would go to a cross-circuiting a track for 10 miles, or staying in the neighborhood.
Anyway, some say, running is a joyful
thing not only for the muscles and the mind,
but also for the soul.
The hostility isn't limited to urban streets. A track team at a Kansas college jogging along a country road was decorated by a stream of yellow dust from a pickup truck. The crowd, including children and halted and two men were waiting with baseball bats. The runners dispersed.
sounds and smells over a variety of territories.
Some of the jogger-watchers are good natured. Girls occasionally shout, "Hi, sexy!" and amiable drunks will run along for a few steps, offering the runner a beer or a cigarette. Others will call out, "Hup, 2, 3, 4," or ask, "Who you chaniss?"
But the hostile ones are certain to find anvone who runs a lot. The odds make it
CARNOUSTIE, Scotland (AP)—Tom Watson of Kansas City won the British Open golf championship yesterday on the final hole of an 18-hole playoff when Australian Jack Newton missed a tying par putt by inches.
Watson, 25, finished the extra round in one-under-pair 71, held a 30-foot chip shot for an eagle on the 14th to take a one-shot lead, then bogeyed the 18th, tying him with his 25-year-old Australian challenger going into the 18th.
Watson victor in British Open
inevitable. Sometimes it must be the natural jealousy, the old feel toward the young or the dislike generated in the sedentary toward the active. Look at that idiot out there. A strange presence. A pedestrian. A runner! Get him!
There sits the driver, ensconced behind his 350 horsepower, florid,申购, short of breath. Cigarette sting stings his eyes. The aftertaste of a drink is sour in his mouth. He bites into a fat but lean. Tanned. Obviously self-disciplined. What an affront!
It was the fourth time since World War II that the British Open went to extra holes.
The editor of the magazine, "Runner's World," Joe Henderson, thinks that some people who work hard all day at physical activity are more susceptible to strenuously for the fun of it. They see running as an intellectual white-collar sport, a smoblish display or unnecessary exertion. Why that punk ought to be on a list? What can one do on a set of socks in a hot car. A real weirder.
But even Henderson doesn't divide the good and bad people of the world between runners and riders. He can understand why people got mad the time he accidentally ran up a steep hill, because of his own or why a farmer was unhappy when his cows left through an open gate.
But mostly the runners seem to be innocent targets of a violent impulse that is stirred by atavistic fears of what is different and strange, and therefore threatening. Envy can accelerate the destructive urge of mankind in some way carried out with impunity. In the end, the runner may win, but only when the planet has given up its last drop of oil.
1
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July 12—Jose Feliciano
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
July 20—Doc Severinson
July 19—Doc Severinson
July 27-Bobby Vinton
August 2—Blood, Sweat & Tears
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You object, Mr. Moore, to reducing the number of assistants coaches from ten to eight. Surely you could make do with only eight. The University student-faculty ratio is well above 15 to 1. And of course reducing the number of traveling players would reduce your "depth." It would reduce the depth, and the expenses, of every other team you play. You would just have to make sure you chose the right 48. Mr. Moore.
843-2535
Finally, I find spending $6,000 a season to quarter the team in Topeka before a supposedly "home" game absolutely, grotesquely wasteful. Everybody has to play on the field in Topeka Moore. You can't escape in Topeka. Or would you recommend shipping out the
I can understand that rich, powerful schools who field perennial winners might object to the proposed rules because they would have something to lose. But a school should not use them. And whose team lost to OU's third string last year ought to be a good thing when it sees it. The proposed rules would mean that next year OU would have to beat us with only their first and second strings. I hope that at least the faculty representative considers the best interests of the University as a place at the Chicago convention next month.
entire student body to Tonganoxie before final exams?
Oliver Finney
On their first date they become lovers . . . and fugitives
Oliver Finney Assistant Instructor of English
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TO: All organizations allocated funds by the Student Senate from the Student Activity Fee
FROM: John House
Student Senate Treasurer
All officers who are to be responsible for the expenditure of allocated funds MUST:
1. Attend a TRAINING SESION conducted by the Student Senate Treasurer. See the schedule listed below.
2. Sign a CAPITAL DISPOSITION CONTRACT with the Student Senate.
3. Obtain ADVANCE WRITTEN AUTHORIZATION for each expenditure from funds allocated to the organization.
No funds will be made available until these requirements have been met.
Treasurer's Training Sessions have been scheduled for the following times:
Monday, July 14 2:00 p.m.
Tuesday, July 15 10:00 a.m.
Wednesday, July 16 7:00 p.m.
Thursday, July 17 2:00 p.m.
Monday, July 21 10:00 a.m.
Contact the Student Senate Treasurer's Office at 864-3746 to sign up for one of these sessions, or for additional information.
NOTE: Additional sessions will be scheduled in the Fall for those organizations that do not require access to their funds this Summer.
University Daily Kansan
Monday, July 14.1975
3
Walker perseveres despite unpopular image
By MARK ZELIGMAN
Kansas Stati Reporter
If a poll were taken to choose the most popular brand, the maker would be highly on the high side, but it might be high on the low side.
As the University of Kansas athletic director since July 10, 1973, Walker has made decisions that haven't endeared him to KU students, fans and alumni.
Walker knows his public image hasn't been taken at KU. But he has one, didn't bother him.
"A public image is important to everyone," he said. "However, anytime you're in a position such as I'm in, you have decisions made that will decide decisions media are going to be popular."
His decision to increase student ticket prices for football and basketball in spring 1974 was the most damaging to his relationship with students.
"Probably this is the one thing that created any type of feelings that exist," he
PROFILE
said. "I felt that I got blamed for something that should have done 10 years ago on a man who was not even a criminal."
He said that decision was made for the same reason that all his other decisions were made: to improve the condition, both economically and academically, of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation.
In his short time at KU, Walker has brought the athletic corporation's finances under control, which he said was the accomplishment he was most proud of. He has reduced the operating fund deficits next year's budget even forecasts a profit
He has completely overhaulled his administrative staff, doubling the number of administrators. He has been criticized for this increase of personnel because of the added salaries. He accepted the criticism that he did it in the best interests of the program.
"I think sometimes you have to spend money to make money," he said. "The athletic department was considerably more successful than the organization is the key to success in any business and I think you need proper administrative personnel to accomplish this."
"If you make a decision, you will please some people and make some unhappy." Messer said. "But if you don't make decisions, you can't get things done."
However, to Walker's dismay most of his decisions have met with public disapproval. When he didn't extend the contract of football coach Don Fambrough and Fambrough resigned, public sympathy went to Fambrough.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Most of the men Walker has brought into the department came from outside Kansas, many from the South. Walker was an assistant athletic director at the University of North Carolina and has connections in the university's athletic department, he criticized him for bringing in outsiders.
Messer defended Walker's decisions and gave his description of Walker's job.
"The roses go to people in the limelight," he said. "Thorns to go to administrators who work with problems. If there weren't any, why wouldn't be a need for administrators."
Messer's analysis might be simplistic, but it caught an essential part of Walker's job. Walker has to run a business and make things operate smoothly in a program that gets a lot of publicity. This is why Walker's image suffers with the fans. Messel said.
Walker said he would prefer that his coaches get the training to use coffee and cup the program regularly.
"A man comes in, nobody knows him, he's a brand new," Messer said. "He makes decisions and gets some criticism. He's not confident, he must be a cold and distant person."
He doesn't try to create a favorable image of himself and therefore a negative one has
"His most important role is to run the most effective and efficient program that helps us get people to put him in a behind-the-scenes role. You want the coaches out front where they get publicity and can build a relationship with them. And I say,Hey, I'm great. Everybody come meet me."
"Anybody who does not know him thinks he's a distant person. He's really not. He's just very busy and businesslike. He doesn't want to be around shaking everybody's hand."
812 Mass. Lawrence, Ks.
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What Walker does is sit in his office poring over budgets with Messer and Jerry Kowalski, assistant director of the toilets to meet his meeting with other University officials. He meets with the head coaches to see how their programs are going and to see how much money they need.
"He's a guy who gets up in the morning and is running and thinking at 90 miles an hour," Messier said. "At the end of the day, he's running and thinking at 90 miles an hour."
Walker's slow, soft Southern drawl indicates his compore.
Mail Orders: Send self-add stamped envelope to: DIRECTOR'S OFFICE Municipal Union Fort Hays KSC Hays,Ks. 67601
"He tries to be as positive and as steady as he can." *Messia* said. "He doesn't have any confidence."
During 24 years of coaching and administering high school and college sports, Walker has seen the good and the bad sides in each game. He happily and wouldn't want to change anything.
if he does stay at KU as he said he hoped, maybe his image will change for the better.
Walker's secretary, Lorena Mast, has worked for three athletic directors during his tenure.
Published at the University of Kansas
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"I have no regrets about my profession or my life," he said. "I think athletics have been a great life. I've made a lot of friends and have met a lot of people. I'm completely happy in my job and I'm very happy here at the University of Kansas."
"He's the most optimistic person I've ever seen." Mast said. "I can't tell when
One of the worst problems might be his poor image among students. He said that when he first came to KU, creating a good relationship with students was important.
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom—684-4810
Advertising—684-4358
Circulation—684-2048
"You hope in the short run that people appreciate you as a professional doing your job. In the long run, if you're fair, honest and positive in dealing with people, it will show. Then, they will appreciate you as a human being."
As broad as his shoulders might be, no doubt he has felt that some burdens were well worth the burden.
athletics," he said. "This was my goal to get a lot of runs in this sport and not just to impress past this particular boy."
he is depressed. When things are bothering him, he just tries to overcome them. His
"It's very difficult for one person to communicate with every student," Walker said. "I have made a concerted effort since I've been here to meet and talk with any individual or groups of students to discuss our athletic program. I have never denied the fact that I will talk about our program or to try to straighten out any of their misconceptions."
Walker, reflecting on his position at KU, said he hoped to stay at KU the rest of his life.
"I think I'm as high as I can go in college
Associate Editor
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FOR SALE
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Come on out! Lots of shade and parkings to—the antique furniture and other furniture, antiques, antique vintage furniture and other furniture, antiques, church pews. Cantaloupe erates, whisky barrels, bucket baskets, ammunition pots, and thousands of other useful items and Zincite Cinnamon candy on set for 30 or so of your dinner parties. $10 for 150 Cucumbers; $2 for 500. Cod pots and cups, tins, casserole dishes, 12 oz. potatoes for $10. 12 oz. Cucumbers; $2 for 500. Cod pots and cups, tins, casserole dishes, 12 oz. potatoes for $10.
10 gallon all-glass aquarium complete plus stand
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Siberian Husky muscs, ARC, males, shoots $60,
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1970 Leman Sport Coupe, air. automatic, only 75
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12-string guitar, excellent condition. Dy-
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1966 Malibu. 2-dr ht. automatic, alr. buetc
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176 Opel Kadrit 2 dr standard, only $750.00
air, vinyl roof, Jaywah VWB 843-2210. 7-17
178 Ramada Classic, Automatic, 6 auto, $950.00
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168 VW Bus, converted to camper, ice box,
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ATTENTION BACKPACKERS. Frontline back-
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FOR RENT
Johnson Retail Company, Studio 1, bedroom 2,
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Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of Lawrence, Lawrence Rental Exchange, 842-250-1967.
Rooms - Kitchen privileges. One rent to campus.
One room for possible rent reduction for
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Two bedroom apartment, all utilities paid, close
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Room furnished, single, with or without cook-
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House 2—story, three bedroom unfurnished. Borders TG and rear town. Married couple prefers bedrooms with walk-in closets.
Apartments: 1, 2, and 4 bedroom furnished.
Borders KDX and near town. Phone 843-5767. fc
Subnet at California Towers for the next aecation. Call Jay-84-0100 at month less than the standard 144. Jay-84-0104
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Responsible rent: 435-707-8921
Did you know that you can rent mobile homes at 7-1782? **b42-7700.**
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Typing in my home. IBM SELECT with pics tweaked. Call Firm. 842-5799. and mif. typed. Call Firm. 842-5799.
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Room for rent in comfortable old home, south
west of the city with one female $80. Phone 843-651-
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Grade5 like privacy and good location for fall?
842-6458 after 6 p.m. daily.
7-21
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Experienced in typing themes, research papers,
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Plants or packages. Call Dave. Phone 852-
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Need female roommate beginning fall semester
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Found: Very tiny black blank kit in vicinity of 1000 Tennessee St. Call 842-6588. Keep calling.
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Found: in grass near X Zone. Octagonal pre-sterilisation sunless lens. Call 863 -1398. 7-14
Large lionkit or small cat. Short tail. Calico.
Large area of the University School. Shop
7781
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Large Black male puppy with whit, paws. Cata-
864.391-80 or 842.992 after 5.
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LOST
Lost: Near 1100 Louisiana. Black male kitten
9668 or return to 1100 Louisiana. Reward: 7-15
FEMALE KITTEN, white with gold and gray,
half a halft. West Campus. Call 843-929-7-15
Lost: Kitanen 10 wks wok laft, light caramel and
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Pekinese. She answers to "Fuzzy." Last seen near the country club July 4th. If you have a dog, 842-806 or make many people VRY happy!
HELP WANTED
Employment Opportunities
The Office of Instructional Resources is acceptance of the 1975-76 academic year. Qualification includes a high level of computer training, in multivariate analysis and computer programming experience. Dutton will supervise instruction and instruction Survey and assisting in the operation and development of instructional programs designed to improve the learning through evaluation and assessment. Starting date: August or month appointment. Starting date: August or month appointment. The Office of Instructional Resources, 409 Ballway, San Francisco, CA 94103. Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer.
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the ord ever whe Tl had
COOL
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
No.161
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
KU urged to join ASK
Tuesday, July 15. 1975
See page 4
Hawklet's future unclear
By ALISON GWINN
Kansan Staff Reporter
A meeting to reconsider the closing of the Hawlett resulted in a compromise that is no compromise at all. Ed Rolfs, student body president, said yesterday.
"We asked for lounge space, and they said they'd give us lounge space that already exists—in the Military Science Building," she said of a collection of compromises where we get nothing."
THEHAWKLET was to close at the end of the summer session. The area it occupied was then to be used to accommodate new computers, which will arrive in the spring of 1978, and a new addition to the business school reading room.
Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor,
said there was a good possibility that half of the Hawket area would still be used for additional library space.
He said he would meet with commanding officers of ROTC tomorrow to discuss the feasibility of using space in the Military Science Building for a lounge area.
ROLFS SAID that vending machines might be moved up to the Military Science
Building to serve the lounge area, but that they wouldn't benefit Hawklet users.
A Student Senate position statement presented to administrators at the meeting said that libraries were consistently placed on mystical academic pedestals, and that the University needed to recognize other types of educational requirements.
Joseph Pichler, dean of the business school, said the accreditation report, which is made every five years by the American Assembly of College Schools of Business, was very critical of the business school's reading room space.
HE SAID ACCREDITATION was important to firms that hired students from the school, students who sought higher degrees in other schools and administrators who were recruiting and maintaining a business school faculty.
Rulfs said accreditation had never been emphasized as a reason for needing more training.
Originally, the reason for changing the Hawley area into a reading room was student demand, and the administration has been making sure that new requirements as a reason, Rolfs said.
Officer resigns, says group fails residents
By LYNN PEARSON
Kansan Staff Reporter
Ray Dryz, Lawrence graduate student, resigned last night as treasurer of the East Lawrence Improvement Association (ELIA). He cited the association's failure to respond appropriately to East Lawrence and its support of the Haskell Loop project as his reasons for resiring.
He said the group hadn't shown a commitment to the邻居hood's working class and had focused only on promoting good public relations in the邻居hood.
"MUCH TO MY DISAPPOINTMENT, ELAIA has failed to show much interest in the problems of the poor or the working people of the neighborhood," Dryz said. "I can longer tolerate scientists in cities where I seem appear to tolerate them by remaining an officer."
Dryz has been a member of the association for two years and treasurer since October. He said he wouldn't resign as a member of the association at this time.
The east Lawrence neighborhood is bounded on the north by the Kansas River, on the south by 15th Street, on the west by 24th Street and on the east by the railroad tracks.
DRYZ SAID that he opposed spending federal community development funds for the Haskell Loop and that the loop would Lawrence a drive-through neighborhood.
Dryz said that by approving and supporting the Haskell Loop project, which is a controversial road project that would connect downtown Lawrence to the U.S. 95 bypass, the association had committed itself to developing the uncompensated deterioration of 20 to 30 others that will be trained in a proposed industrial zone east and north of the loop.
He said the poor people of east Lawrence deserved equality.
"We deserve grants and programs to get
what we 'worked for so far,' he said.
"FILA is a great employer."
DRYZ SUGGESTED several courses of action to the association's members. He said members should oppose the Haskell Loop, commit ELIA to be a voice of poor people and work toward providing these persons more and better cooperative housing.
Tom Patchein, chairman of ELAA's
housing Raising Committee, said he
discussed his draft "Dryer."
"We are kind of at the mercy of the federal government," Patcheen said. "If we can't get loans and grants to fix up houses, none of us can scrape up the money."
He said the association's work wasn't as visible as Dryz would like to be. But, he said, the group had had clean up days, installed street lights, helped residents clean up their yards, cleaned up every alley in the neighborhood and fixed sidewalks.
"I WISH we'd made *e* movie of how east Lawrence looked three years ago and then made one now," Patchem said. "I'd really ooen the ues of a lot of people."
He said the city's building and housing code had hampered some of the association's progress in rehabilitating residences.
"If we don't get the housing code changed, then we'll still be stymied," he said. "It takes too much money to bring some of these houses up to standard."
The reading room will then be maintained partly in its present capacity as a study area and partly to accommodate study resources. Some of them who are working on their Ph.D., he said.
Fischer said all the books in the present reading room would be moved to the library.
"Two times we have gone to every house in east Lawrence and left circulars explaining the 3 per cent loan program," Patcheen said. "We tried to tell them that the funds were handled locally and that it was just like going through a bank."
One of the association's projects, Patchen said, has been to inform residents of the 3 per cent loans available through the local community development office.
PEOPLE HAVE BEEN reluctant to take advantage of the loan program, Patchen said. Most of the reluctance has been due to the low level of government to cancel funding for the program.
Rolfs said, "In essence, they're moving 1,000 masters candidates and undergraduates out of the Hawklet area for 30 Ph.D. candidates."
Kyle Andregg, director of community development for the city, received word this week that the loan program would be continued for another year.
BRUCE WONER, CHAIRMAN of StudEx, who attended the meeting, said, "The thing that's perplexing to me about the whole situation, which didn't come out until the end of the meeting, is that we're on a really tight time schedule."
Concerning the Haskell Loop project, Patchen said he thought there would be no damage done to the neighborhood because the construction or the traffic it would attract.
"MOST OF THOSE houses affected would have had to turn down any way," Patchen said. "And they're going to put that road through whether we like it or not."
He said that since the schedule was tight, there wasn't enough time to look at options to the present plan. He said that if students had been allowed input at the beginning, more options could have been considered while there was time.
Patchen said he thought this assurance of lending you courageous requests to apply for jobs in India.
“There’s no reason for anybody not to fix in his house,” Patchen said.
The three-member student group presented a report to administrators reviewing several options that it described. The students studied the computation center and the business school.
George Elston, 825 New York St., agreed to the remaining three months of Dr. Kyle's work.
THEY PROPOSED that personnel located in Annex B of the computation center be relocated to the Military Science building; staff, now located in 108 Summer Hall, or the keypunching staff be moved to Annex B; and that plans for the expansion of the business school reading room be delayed until a faculty facility was built, in about two years.
It recommended that when the computer center was built, the business school would be guaranteed the use of two rooms in Summerfield Hall for expansion.
The report said the majority of business students preferred retention of the Hawklet to the creation of a reading room that would be open only during business hours.
The report said that over 2,700 square feet of military Science Building could be used.
The report also cited a survey of students and faculty members that was conducted by the Union's Committee on Planning and Long Range Development.
THE SURVEY indicated that of those students interviewed from a zone including Summerfield Hall, Murphy Hall, Watkins Hall and Wakefield Hospital, 70 per cent used the Hawklet for a food service area. The survey also indicated that over 15 per cent of all students used on-campus eating facilities as their primary food service area.
“It's either going to be an inconvenience to students or to administrators. There's no reason why students shouldn't have the entire Hawklet area,” Rolfs said.
(3)
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Potter prize
Seven-year-old Mike Boulton, son of John Boulton, assistant professor of music, observes with a pleasure small fish caught in Potter Lake yesterday. The fish was thrown back
Board of Regents studies college profs' work week
TOPEKA (AP)—The average public four-year college faculty member in Kansas spends 55 hours per week on professional duties, with about two-thirds of that time related to teaching, a new study by the state Board of Regents shows.
The study was made of faculty members at the University of Kansas, Kansas State University, Wichita State University, Kansas State College at Pittsburg, Emporia Kansas State College and Fort Hays State College.
The 56-page study, which has gone to Gov. Robert F. Bennett, memphis of the Board of Regents, presidents of the six state colleges and universities and legislative leaders.
The survey was prepared from data supplied last September by faculty members at the six schools. They filled out report forms showing how they need their time.
The study involved all unclassified employees of the six colleges, but none of the faculty at the AU Medical Center. It included part time employees and part time employees at the schools.
Thea Lynn Clark, assistant instructor of English, who was charged last week for possession of heroin or cocaine, was found dead Saturday in a pickup truck on a township road three miles north of Lawrence.
He said the cause of death would be established when reports from the state troopers were received.
The body of Mrs. Clark, 28, 415 Elm St., was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital where J. A. Sanders, deputy county coroner performed an autopsy.
was made public Monday by Bickford, Regents' executive officer.
Sanders said yesterday that the autopsy showed there were no broken bones. He said it was either an accident or a disease, for the death.
KU instructor dies,body found near Lawrence
Officers investigating said the woman may have been dead for 12 hours. Drug paraphernalia and an unknown substance, possibly heroin, were found with the body.
A similar study had been made three years before, because of demands by some legislators to learn how much work colleges professors were doing for the state.
Mrs. Clark's body was discovered by Douglas County Sheriff's officers after a person reported having seen the pickup truck at about 8 p.m. Saturday in the same place.
Douglas County Sheriff Rex Johnson said the name was withheld until about noon Monday while officials tried to contact Mrs. Clark's husband.
She had been an assistant instructor of English while she was doing graduation work here.
Mrs. Clark graduated from the University in 1974 with a degree in English.
Mr. and Mrs. George Listen, Burbank,
California. They are reportedly on route to awareness.
Mrs. Clark's body will be in Warrens-
ment until family members can reach Lawrences.
City parks dept to hire youths for trail project
sophomore level courses, $31.19 for junior-
senior level courses, $88.59 for master's
level courses and $100.10 for doctor's level
courses.
The Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department has received funding for a Youth Conservation Corps project for the last four weeks of the summer, Fred DeVictor, director of parks and recreation, said yesterday.
The conservation project, funded on an 80 to 20 per cent federal-local basis, will hire between seven and twelve youths, 15 to 18 years old, to work with the kids through Naimsh Park, deVictor said.
City can seek warrants
The program is not limited to youth of any particular social, ethnic or economic background. Children who will be paid $2 an hour for six hours a day. An additional two hours each day will be spent in educational sessions designed to acquaint the youngsters with environmental issues.
Kansas State had the highest percentage of its time spent on non-in instructional action, but only 14.3 percent of the inclusion of county extension personnel, who were classed as non-teaching, KU had 32.6 per cent of its time devoted to non-instructional action, and 59.7 schools had between 19 and 24 per cent.
The commission also decided to reaffirm at tonight's commission meeting the area included in the original Hill Inspection Area.
In a closed session with city attorney Milton Allen yesterday, the Lawrence City Commission decided that obtaining warrants from the district court to enter houses for inspection against the wishes of the owners was within its legal authority.
At all six colleges combined, 38.5 per cent of the faculty time is spent on formal classroom teaching, 24.9 per cent on non-instructional activities, 16.7 per cent development and advising students, and 34.5 per cent on non-instructural activities, such as management talks, research and
"It is the feeling of the commission and the feeling of the staff," Clark said, "that in order to enforce the housing code conditions, such findings where permission has been denied."
By LYNN PEARSON
Kansas Staff Director
"We hope to put them to work by Monday." DeVictor, said.
The idea of the project, he said, is to provide necessary conservation work on public lands and to develop in the workers the skills we need for our natural environmental heritage.
The controversy over whether the city had legal authority to sew warrantes to
He said that the Parks and Recreation Department would accept applications until November 2016.
The report also shows that professors conduct 20.4 per cent of the classroom in their institutions, associate professors 20.5 per cent, instructors 9.7 per cent, graduate assistants 20.9 per cent and others, such as administrators and guest lecturers, 3.3 per cent.
"We have ample authority to do this," said Mayor Barkley Clark, "provided the house is within a designated inspection area."
Clark has said that the city has the authority to seek warrants for housing inspection, but Allen and his staff have said that the city must show probable cause before seeking a warrant for inspection. At a city commission meeting two weeks ago, Clark said that the fact that a house was included in a detailed inspection request indicated probable cause and requested a memorandum from Allen on the subject.
The project is administered jointly by the Department of Interior and Agriculture, DeVictor Institute.
inspect both tenant and owner occupied housing began last fall when the city commission was faced with several owners in the Hill Target Area who refused to pay their inspection. Daniel S. Lang, associate professor of physics, was one of these owners.
Carl Mibeck, commissioner, has finished
The commission, according to Clark, is going to back up the warrants with misdemeanor charges if an owner refuses to bring his property up to the city's code.
Faculty salary costs for a student credit hour at the schools are $16.23 for freshman
The University of Kansas had graduate assistants doing the teaching 32.3 per cent of the time, and KU has twice as many assistants as the other institutions, Bickford said.
Clark said that the commission was going to enforce the code equally for everyone in each designated inspection area and that it would scrutinize the forms that the building inspector sends to owners of noncomplying property.
the first draft of a new city minimum housing code. Both the commissioners and the city administrators said that the new code would be more specific and easier to enforce.
"As far as I'm concerned, it was a bad decision," he said.
"We want to word the letters in such a way as not to upset the typical owner," Clark said. "We want to rehabilitate houses, not demolish them."
Clark apologized to the press for the closed meeting between the commissioners and an attorney.
Allen requested that the meeting be closed because of the privileged status of attestants.
Arts festival gets money
By KELLY SCOTT
Karsen Statt, Reporter
A $4,500 allocation from the Student Union Activities Board may make the difference between a successful 1976 Festival of the Arts and this spring's abortive effort.
Next spring's Festival will have this allocation to absorb losses before they're passed on to students in the form of internships. Mike Miller, MSA adviser, said yesterday.
PREVIOUSLY, THE FESTIVAL was budgeted by the SUA board to break even, he said. Last year, when SUA had financial problems, it closed its garden kird, and the festival had to be canceled.
IF THE FESTIVAL is to succeed, he said,
it will have to draw more townpeople.
Carol Poulson, director of the 1976 festival, said she hoped to plan events and attractions that would attract townpeople as well as KU students and faculty. Poulson also led by an advisory committee comprised of students, faculty and townpeople.
Poulson said she had written to faculty members asking them to keep the Festival
Poulson and Miller said they hoped the Festival would include informal, spontaneous events as well as big-name nightly entertainment.
SUA wants people to get away from the idea that the team's employees are supposed by SUA, Miller said.
in mind so that exhibits of visual arts and writing could be set up to supplement the
The ultimate goal, Miller said, is to obtain the offer of a relationship between KLU and ACME.commy.
Arno Knapper, professor of business and member of the advisory committee, said that until the residents of Lawrence were convinced that the Festival was intended as a joint venture, the people of Lawrence would continue to perceive it as a KU event.
KNAPPER SAID he and the other members of the advisory committee were being used merely as a "sounding board" to ensure any financial control over the festival.
Ann Evans, director of the Lawrence Arts Center and a member of the advisory committee, said she favored the use of the Lawrence Arts Center facility by Pedial events.
"It's time the Festival came down from
it's hill and into the community," Evans said.
The festival will take place from Sunday, April 4 through Saturday, April 10.
Admission to the festival will be offered through the purchase of coupons, as in prince William's 2015 event.
PULSONSAID she hoped to incorporate elements of the local observance of the American bicentennial into the festival, but she hoped the entire festival a bicentennial theme.
2
Tuesday, July 15, 1975
University Daily Kansan
NEWS DIGEST THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Joan Little pleads innocent
RALEIGH, N.C.-Joan Little, accused of killing a white jailer who she alleges was trying to rape her, pleaded innocent yesterday after last-minute defense motions slowed the start of her trial.
The plea cleared the way for jury selection in Wake County Superior Court.
The defense made several motions, including one for a mistrial after the state used its peremptory challenges to have two black men and one black woman arrested.
Late yesterday, Cornelia Howell, 20, a Raleigh waitress who is white, was seated as the first turor.
Little, a 21-year-old black woman whose case has been championed by civil rights, women's rights and prison reform groups, is charged with first-degree murder in the ice pix slaying of Clarence Alligood, 62, who worked at the Beaufort County jail.
Kelley admits FBI burglaries
WASHINGTON - The FBI burglarized foreign embassies and other places in the United States, and its former associates considered necessary for the security. FBI Director Clarence M. Kelly asked the
"Yes, the FBI has conducted surreptitious entries in securing information related to the security of the nation," Kelley and in response questions at a news conference.
He declined to say how many burglaries were conducted and described the number as only "a few" and "pot many."
He also declined to identify specific targets of the burglaries, and said that he could not discuss many details publicly because of the pending investigation by the police.
LISBON—The moderate Popular Democratic party decided to pull out of the Portuguese government and be a Democratic democratic guarantees. They join the other parties to the government.
An official predicted that Portugal would be under full military rule within 48 hours, ending any pretense of civilian government.
This move by the Popular Democrats leaves the Communists as the only civilans in the cabinet, but Premier Vasco Goncalves is expected to use the opportunity to name an all-military cabinet, a step advocated by radical military leaders unhappy with party squabbling.
OAS may lift Cuban embargo
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica—A first step toward an 11-year-old trade ban on American companies in a meeting of United States and Latin-American滴灌 in San Jose this week.
A majority of at least 12 of the 21 members of the Organization of American States who can vote on the issue are said to favor changing the organization's Mutual Defense Treaty, under which sanctions against Cuba were originally imposed, to make it revoke them. The meeting will begin Wednesday.
The United States is ready to go along with easing the trade ban, U.S. officials said, provided other changes proposed do not basically affect the inter-American trade agreement.
Kansas harvest nears end
TOPEKA - The 1975 wheat harvest rolled toward completion in the northwest state. The test, but tests continue to show the 75 crop is poor compared to the 1974 crop.
With dry weather prevailing across the state, the state Crop and Livestock Reporting Service said the harvest should be virtually completed this week.
The latest wheat quality report showed the protein content at 10.9 per cent. Last year's crop averaged 1.3 per cent in protein content.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Flia. (AP)—Apollo and Soyuz, built and manned by nations separated by ideology and distance, launch their adventure in detente Tuesday as they begin the first international rendezvous in space.
The Russian Soyuz, to be launched at 7:20 a.m. from the Bakurn cosmodrome, will be pursued by the American Apollo that lifts off from Cape Canaveral at 7:50 p.m. The ships are scheduled to dock over West Germany and then proceed to Hawaii, Thomson P., Stafford and Alexei Leonov, embrace and shake hands, the linkup will be
As the flight neared readiness, Cape meteorologists made an optimistic weather
"Despite all the attention and discussion,
"I think the weather will be fine," a launch
official said. He said any thunderstorm
probably would be over by launch time.
The American crew was described "in great spirits, smiling and talking to each other." Monday might. They were still practicing speaking in Russian.
Following a preflight tradition, Leonov and copilot Vali Kubasov visited the former homes of S. T. Korolov and Yuri Gazarin, two Soviet space heroes.
All the astronauts were to leave their crew quarters about three hours before their launch times to take their positions in the spaceships.
The launch centers were in constant
operation and easy to handle operations
problems develop.
The flight ends the space race that began 18 years ago when the Soviet Union hoisted
Space flight crews set to lift off
Ford announces oil price plan
WASHINGTON (AP)—President Gerald R. Ford announced plans yesterday to phase out price controls on domestic oil production over the next two and a half years, as the move would push gasoline prices up seven cents a gallon by the end of 1977.
Sen. Henry M. Jackson, (D-Wash.), a candidate for the 1976 Democratic presidential nomination and frequent opponent of the administration's energy proposals, said he would seek Senate disapproval of the Ford plan.
The administration is required under the Petroleum Allocation Act to set price controls on oil produced in the United States. The price level is established by the Federal Energy Administration, subject to congressional veto.
The price of about two-thirds of the oil produced in the United States is limited to $2.25 a barrel. The remainder can be sold at existing world prices, currently about $12.50 in the United States, do not per cent of the oil consumed in the United States falls under the $2.25 limit.
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FRYE
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We stock a large selection of fine quality Frye boots for men and women
PRIMARILY LEATHER
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Garb-age Apparel Shop needs talented clothing display person Please call 842-8831 to inquire
NOTICE
TO: All organizations allocated funds by the Student Senate from the Student Activity Fee
FROM: John House Student Senate Treasurer
3. Obtain ADVANCE WRITTEN AUTHORIZATION for each expenditure from funds allocated to the organization.
Sputink, an 84-mound ball and culminated with American walks on the moon.
2. Sign a CAPITAL DISPOSITION CONTRACT with the Student Senate.
No funds will be made available until these requirements have been met.
All officers who are to be responsible for the expenditure of allocated funds MUST:
1. Attend a TRAINING SESION conducted by the Student Senate Treasurer. See the schedule listed below.
"On the eve of this flight we can see: the continuing fruits of the cooperation of our countries and our spacemen," said GeorGIQ onboard a mananton training in a prelaunch briefing.
Treasurer's Training Sessions have been scheduled for the following times:
Monday, July 14 2:00 p.m.
Tuesday, July 15 10:00 a.m.
Wednesday, July 16 7:00 p.m.
Thursday, July 17 2:00 p.m.
Monday, July 21 10:00 a.m.
the rescue of the other should it become necessary.
"It represents a docking of technical ideas and styles of the people of the leading space powers, how we can solve many different international problems in an atmosphere of cooperation and understanding."
Contact the Student Senate Treasurer's Office at 864-3746 to sign up for one of these sessions, or for additional information.
NOTE: Additional sessions will be scheduled in the Fall for those organizations that do not require access to their funds this Summer.
"Our joint flight means detente in space," Leonov said.
an international space rescue would be far off, however. Tuesday's launch is the last for the Saturns, the boosters that hoisted all the Apollo flights.
The 1972 agreement called for development of a common docking mechanism to handle the 40-mile long canal.
Until the space shuttle is launched, four unmanned aircraft has planned no planned space missions.
Because this last manned launch for several years in the summer, local off-road teams have been involved.
TAKE A COUPON TO DINNER
SAVE UP TO 7.5¢
WITH THIS COUPON ON A
VISTABURGER
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Looking for a Roommate?
Houses
The Student Senate offers a program where students may file their needs and select a roommate.
The file will give you accurate information and better selection for your convenience.
Drop by or call the Student Senate office for further information.
Happy hunting!
Similar files are kept on students seeking carpools and/or tutors.
Name___ Phone___
Address___ Roommate □ Carpool □ Tutor □
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Bring to Student Senate office—105B Student Union 864-3710
Tuesday, July 15, 1975
University Daily Kansan
3
'Oklahoma!' has diversified cast
Community participation is the key to this summer's University Theatre production of "Theatre in Education."
"Oklahoma!," written by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II, is the first summer musical to be presented by the University of Kansas in about 10 years. It is probably one of the most familiar and popular of American musicals. Its advent on the musical comedy stage is often hailed as "the greatest" musical brought together drama, music and dance in a manner that gave the musical comedy its distinctive American character.
The bicentennial celebration is partly responsible for the choice of "Okahoma!" Paul Hough, director of the show and organizer of the event, said last week. The plot involves a community of people in Oklahoma territory who learn to work together. Hough said. Because the cast has more than 50 employees, he plans to open the production to the community.
The plot is simple enough; it involves love, jealousy and two lovers eventually getting back together. But it also has a rather frightening character and touches on issues of human frailty and sexuality in a world where modern today, shocked a few people in the past.
The cast is made up of KU students, teachers and administrators and residents of Lawrence, Kansas City, Kan., Leavenworth and De Soto.
The play is well-known for delightful sequences, especially the square dances. Members of Tau Sigma, an honorary dance fraternity, and two local square dance clubs, the Merry Mixers and the Barn Dancers, will join in the production.
Because the University Theater is being used for the production of "The Time of
A life insurance marketing seminar sponsored by the University of Kansas Division of Continuing Education will meet this week in the Kangas Union.
The seminar will be presented by the Life Insurance Marketing Institute of Purdue University, in cooperation with the Division of Continuing Education.
Insurance men gather in Union
The seminar will offer two courses of instruction, basic and advanced, to participate in life insurance underwriters, he said. All instructors will be from the Purdue University.
Bill Chestnut, spokesman for the division,
said Friday that about 100 insurance salesmen from all over the Midwest would gather for the annual seminar.
William Hughes, certified life underwriter and a graduate of Purdue University, will be the guest speaker for the five-day seminar.
Tapes for library depict Landon's life
In connection with the nation's bicentennial celebration, a series of taped interviews are being conducted with AflAFP's members and Alf 136R. Republican presidential candidate
George Griffin, curator of the Kansas Collection in Spencer Library, and Donald McCoy, professor of history, will conduct the interviews.
McCoy is the author of the book, 'London
Konson. He is planning a supply in
Switzerland.'
Six hours of interviews have already been prepared. Griffin described Landon, who is now 69 years old, as a "very smart young man."
The original tapes and transcriptions will become part of the Kansas Collection. Duplicates will be given to the state historical society.
Approximately 70 interviews are planned in hopes of extensively covering the former. Interviewers will be given
Slavic studies grant widens center's role
The grant was awarded by the U.S. Office of Education for Soviet and East European Studies, Washington, D.C.
A recently awarded grant of approximately $50,000 will provide funds for the Slavic and Soviet Area Studies program of the University of Kansas. The grant will support resources and research, William Fletcher, director of the program said yesterday.
A large proportion of the funds will be used to expand Watson Library's slavic collection, which is the only research library of its type in the Midwest, Fletcher said.
Your Life," the "Okahoma!" cast has been resembled in Hoch炉inium in an atmosphere that truly resembles a hot Oklahoma day.
Choreography is by Kristin Manley, graduate student in health, physical education and recreation, who is majoring in dance.
A former director of the KU dance program, Elizabeth Sherbon, plays the Madame of the can-can girls. Sherbon, who just retired, taught at KU for 15 years and is now a New York with Martha Graham, Hanya Holm, Jean Erdman and Walt Lathron.
Sheron said she especially likes this production because she can just be a dancer with no responsibility for the production. But she, say she, can just have a good time.
Even Doug Walker, Douglas County attorney, is in the cast. He is in the men's chorus and does some dancing. He hadn't done any acting since high
Karl E. Edwards, professor of curriculum and institution, will call the dana lesson in June.
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A very distinctive cast member is William M. Balfour, vicechancellor for student affairs. He is in the men's chorus. He tried out to add to the community participation, he said, even though he hadn't been on a stage for about 25 years.
Pam Horn, assistant dean of women, is in the chorus. She said she'd acted in high school but had never had the chance to do a musical. She said she appreciated the fact that rehearsals were arranged so that cast members who worked full time could attend.
Alfred Lata, lecturer in chemistry, is also in the cast. He's been a member of Voci di Camera, a local vocal chamber music group, and he's been in other KU productions, including the musical "Kiss Me Kate."
Although the community participation adds immeasurably to the quality of the cast, the main cast members remain important.
John Brust, Lawrence graduate student,
plays Curly, the handsome hero of the play.
His on-again, off-again lover, Laurie,
is now the Baxter, Leavenworth graduate student.
There is, of course, a secondary romance. The lovers, Will and Ade Aannie, are played by Jim Stringer, Lawrence sophomore, and Nancy Griffin, Lawrence graduate student.
La Donna Schmidt, the wife of the mayor of De Soto, plays Laurie's Aunt Ellen.
Jo Krause, Lawrence graduate student, and Evelyn Hakin, the travel salesman who nearly sold all of her real estate. Mr. Rapport, resident actor, is Annie's dad, who chases after her lovers with a car.
The villain of the piece, Jud, is played by Ted Adkins. Leavenworth.
George Duerksen, professor of music education, will direct the orchestra, which she has founded.
Mary Jane Sisk, a master's degree in costume design, is designing the western
Greg Hill, a professional designer who has worked at the Guthrie Theater in Minnesota and at the Starlight in Kansas City, designed sets at KU for his second summer.
"Okahama!" will play July 18, 19, 25 and 26 at the University Theatre.
There will be a benefit performance for the Lawrence Arts Center July 24.
E
Monday, July 15 thru Saturday, July 19 we are pleased to offer you the unique opportunity to enjoy these exciting
E Add a touch of exotica to your dining during POLYNESIAN WEEK at the Eldridge House.
Bites of Beef Tenderloin prepared with Chinese vegetables and served with Oriental Fried Rice 64.95
TABLE
Stirpes of Beef Marinated in a Polynesian Sauce, then charcoal broiled and served on Brochettes with Oriental Fried Rice $4.95
5 Spiced, Boiled Shrimp smothered in Sweet and Sour sauce, served with Oriental Rice $4.95
THE HISTORICAL ELDRIDGE HOUSE
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Dinner
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Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three months as such can be placed in person or simply by calling the UDX business office at 864-1538.
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Western Economic Notes -New on Sali!
Makes sense to use them—
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"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
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STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment, you will pay the lead and get the product; you will pay the lead and get the benefit at the GRAAMPHONES SHOP at KIEFS.
huge fire merchandise close-ups, etc. New selling huge grocery stock from a Chicago supermarket to checkout at checkout doors ‘Open 9 am-5 pm’ Closed Sundays. Mr. Galvano’s Salve Center, C828 Motown. tt
In Topaka, 1972 *Barrison* 14 x 64. 2 bedroom, 14 baths, a/c, skirtd, tiled down, patio, storage bay. Will share moving expenses. 86.950. 81st Street Terrace, Topaka. 7/12 7-17
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For Sale: SONY TC-368 tape deck. New heads.
sensitive condition. Call 814-0979-755, 7-15
78 Husky -125MX Good condition. Must sell
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Come on out! Lots of shade and parking—to the left, a large stone villa with antique furniture and other furniture, antiquities, antique chairs and tables, church pews. Contains crates where whisky barrels, biscuits, oatmeal, pots, buckets, bug pots, canned tomatoes, peppers and thousands of watermelons. $12.99. Zucchini squash, sweet potatoes. $12.99. Green beans. 3 lb. $1.25. Potatoes. 10 lb. $12.99. Blue beans. 3 lb. $1.25. Watermelon. Also fresh fruits and vegetable Grapes, pines, bungo蜜柑, retortables, lettuce leaves, gourds, pineapple, dates, pecans counted in stilh, sorghum, perilla, straw and alfalfa. Open to 8 a.m. to 7 days, 8 a.m.-4 p.m.
19 700 Lerns Sport Coupe, air, automatic, only
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840.7223
Sibirian Husky pups, AKC, males, shots, $60.
843-129 evenings
1966 Malibu 2-dr. Bdr. automatic, air blower
Only one of its doors, darkwax 7W-
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1974 Yamaha WD-250, one owner, 3200 miles. Jayhawk ENW 85-2200. 7-17
1972 Suzuki—Enjoy the summer on this 185-
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Squareback, Wagons. Choose from three, from 1978 to 1971. Jahawk VI, 845; 8210. 7-17
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1973 Cutlass S Coupe. Buckets, stereo tape, air.
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1972 Impala Custom, Cust., Automatic, air, vinyl
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1963 Rambler, Classic, Auto, 6 gtl. $195.00
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1968 WB Bus, converted to camper, liee box,
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1974 Vega Hatchback 4-psd A/C AM-FM
2000 Toyota Camry new radial shift 7-21
call Car, Dell 842-9211
Johnson Rental Company, Studio, Indyouth,
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Lenco Synerco LB 15 turntable with Share MRE
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1972 Yamaha 600cc, red and white, $700 or will
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Free rental service Up to the minute listings of
rentals in Lawrence, La. for residential,
Rental Exchange, 482-259.
Two bedroom apartment, all utilities paid, close to courthouse this fall, furnished and located 843-929-0922.
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Brooms - Kitchen privilges. One block to campus.
Laundry - possible rent reduction for烘衣 842-707-1396.
Bedroom - available at 842-707-1396.
Rooms furnished, single, with or without cooking equipment. KU and NU notets. Plates. Fame 843-7677
Extra nice rooms with private kitchens. One room is a heated parking, utilities paid, room number 843-8579.
Quint one bedroom farm, att. utilities paid
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Did you know that you can rent mobile homes at Webster's? **842-7700.** 7-17
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Boom for rent in comfortable older home, southwest of Chicago. 800-754-3922 or one female 890 mg. Phone: 841-635-8131.
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812-485-6439 after 6 p.m. daily.
7-21
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Person to share large 3 bedroom duplex for gifting and saving. $7.33 per month. Call us at (800) 254-1466.
Ned female roommate for now and fall. Call Suzanne, days 843-689-388, and evenings 843-895-689.
Northeast female grade student to share 2 bedrooms.
Northeast female grade student to rent $40.00 per unit, utilities included.
Northeast female grade student to rent $60.00 per unit, utilities included.
Female Subjects 16-25 for ½ hour experiment.
Payment is in the entry on a weekly lottery
to be entered by a guest.
Two female roommates 18:45 for hour experiment
room and six male roommates 16:03 for hour muddager for tree counselor
room.
Wanted: An upper class roommate to share Jay-
son's room for fall semester. 7-21
842-166-106. 7.9 per week 7-21
Ned formal roommate beginning fall semester. Baz 142-867 before Aug 1, or 843-867 after Aug 1.
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Executive-style gourmet parties planned, catered.
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Experimented in typesying these, research papers,
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FEMALE KITTEN, white, with call 843-9229, gray,
half a ball. West, wintch. Call 843-9229
Experienced typist will do those discussions;
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McDonald's has openings for part-time day help to support its operations. You can also be available this fall. Applicants in person at 917-284-3600.
Experienced in typing dissertations, thesis;e
in Psych. Call Listle, 843-8088. Recommend
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Penner's Cycle Barn Norton Ducati Moto Guzzi
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Experienced typist—term papers, theses, mice,
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Make your
The Office of Instructional Resources is accepting applications for a Research Assistant for the high level of competency in statistics instituted by the University of California computer programming experience. Duties will include training, instruction and instruction Survey and assisting in the operation and development of the Survey. Application improvement of teaching through evaluation and mentoring of students. Starting date: August or monthmouth appointment. Starting date: August or monthmouth appointment. The Office of Instructional Resources 469 Hall Ball Application deadline: July 15, 1992. An adverte
71 Kawasaki 500 Mach III
74 Kawasaki 350 dirt bike
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695
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72 Norton Commando
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1015 100a
11:30 Mon.-Fr.
8th Ave. N.W.
KU Union The Malls-Hillcrest-900 Mass
Mon.-Fri. 9:00-6:00
Sat. 9:00-3:00
GAY COUNSELING & RAP
for referrals
into center
844-3506
844-3508
LOSG--Small black and brown dog female, 5g. Pekinese. She answers to "Fuzzy." Last seen near the country club July 4th. If you have people to help, 843-8268 or make many 7-21 VRY happy!
PHONE 843-1211
Lost: Neary 1100 Louisiana Black male kittens
Return: Lennon 950 Louisiana Black male kittens
return to 1100 Louisiana. Weekends 7-15
FOUND
Last. Kitten 10 wks old, light caramel and
chocolate little fart. 1280 block Temp.
Call 843-2912.
Zeb, a white and gold German Stapelpup that
lived in Brooklyn. He returned 7-47 to ETM. Thank you, 7-17
4-78 - return to ETM.
Mini's smoking pipe at 4 th fireworks Up by Campanile. Call 842-4982 after 5 p.m.
Large Black male puppy with white paws. Call 842-310-814 or 842-2922 after $5.
Large kitten or small cat. Short tail. Callosa
the area of the University School. Tail.
7-15
Employment Opportunities
MATH TUTORING Competent. experienced tutor
115, 106, 115, 106, 121, 122, Reasonable rate. Call
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3 MONTH OLD CALIFIC KITTEN found on Eagle Hill near Camillus' residence. Call 843-362-8500.
CUSTOM JEWELRY Reasonably Priced, profeed.
Stones set and polished. Turquoise. Sailor
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4
Tuesday. July 15, 1975
University Daily Kansan
KU urged to join ASK
By ALISON GWINN
Kenan Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas' membership in the Associated Students of Kansas (ASK) would make the organization's lobbying efforts much stronger and would give KU a chance to influence the state legislature, as well as the executive director of ASK, said yesterday.
However, local students who have dealt with ASK in student government questioned whether ASK was the most effective way to ensure security had to influence the legislature.
The three-year-old organization, which, according to Miller, is the largest lobbying organization in Kansas, primarily serves to educate students in the工作的 state government and to lobby for legislation that affects students, he said.
ASK is made up of students from Washburn University and five Kansas Regents' Schools; Kansas State University, Wichita State University, Kansas State College at Pittsburg, Fort Hays State College and Erinoria Kansas State College.
The six schools pay a standard fee of 25 cents a student each semester.
The organization represents about 50,000 students. One person from each school serves on ASK's board of directors, and one representative for each 1,000 students who attend the program, thereby which determines what legislation ASK will lobby for. Miller said,
"The only new member we're capable of taking on, is someone with any other skill or might lose money."
Miller said he hoped that KU would join the organization to increase its funding and the size of its workforce.
"With another $5,000 or $6,000, we could do much more." he said.
"To be quite honest, KU is already benefiting from our efforts. But if KU joined, it would give it a chance for input. The organization has its own opinions and interests."
Most of the reluctance to join ASK stems from uncertainty of how strong an effect ASK's lobbying could have on the legislature, he said.
"I think we've had a tremendous response from the legislature," Miller said.
"Sometimes legislators say they're glad
that lobbying groups are there, then
said that about lobbying groups."
Last summer, the Student Senate took a survey of the state legislators and received responses from 106 out of 165, or 64 per cent of the legislature, Richard Paxson, Baxter Springs graduate student and former vice chairman of SenEx, said.
When asked it they had ever been contacted by ASK, 75 per cent of the legislators said yes, 22 per cent said no and 3 per cent had no opinion.
When asked it ASK had ever provided them with information that positively affected their vote on legislation, 17 per cent said so and 85 per cent said no and 1 per cent had no opinion.
John Beinser, student body president at the time the survey was taken, said there was a question of spending student activity support issues that didn't deal with education.
When legislators were asked if they thought mandatory activity fees from students at state universities should be used to finance lobbying in the state legislature, 6 per cent said yes, 90 per cent said no and 4 per cent had no opinion.
Beaiser said he thought personal contacts with legislators and the AURH legislative dinner were more effective ways of reaching legislators.
When asked if they would advise the KU Student Senate to join ASK, 26 per cent of the legislators said yes, 48 per cent said no and 26 per cent had no opinion.
Mary Lou Reece, body body vice president, said that letters were being sent to students from Kansas who were on student boards and committees, asking them to meet their legislators personally and urging them to attend the Higher Education Banquet on Nov. 16.
Miller said ASK was the only group that actively lobbied for a student advisory board to the Kansas Board of Regents. Legislation for the board, which is compulsory in recent past, body presidents from the six Kansas Regent's schools, went into effect on July 1.
ASK also lobbied for legislation that would require students' minimum wage, previously $1.60 an hour, to be raised to the federal minimum wage of $2.00 an hour, he said. KU already pays $2.00 an hour to students.
HOME SWET HOME
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This legislation creates about $700,000 and students throughout Kansas. Miller said,
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This summer ASK is lobbying for a state law similar to the Buckley amendment be said.
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ASK wants the Board of Regents to oversee the Kansas Regents' schools to insure that the provisions of the Buckley amendment are carried out, Miller said.
ASK is also lobbying for the Higher Education Loan Act for Kansas, he said, in which Kansas would be set up as the lending institution for student loans.
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Students could obtain more low interest loans under this act, Miller said, because banks frequently refuse to give students loans that are long-term and unprofitable.
ASK will run a poll of between 25 and 50 per cent of the student bodies of its six member schools during fall enrollment to determine their legislative priorities.
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Ed Rofls, student body president, said no decision had been made in joining ASK
Limit one coupon per person per visit. Void after July 21, 1975.
THE SUMMER MEMINAR ON CHINESE ART HISTORY, sponsored by the National Endowment for the Humanities, will show free films on Chinese art, history and art from 11:30 today and July 15, 18, 21 and 23 in the Lecture Room of Spooner Art Museum.
- "We do it all for you." T.M.
McDonald's
PHI DELTA KAPPA, education honors society, is sponsoring a Leadership Seminar from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union. The topic of the morning Auditorium will be at 9 in Woodruff Auditorium, will be "Critical Issues in Education."
BURGER
DONALD R. GLOVER, acting assistant professor of journalism, will direct a seminar as part of a series of Newspaper Management Identification programs. The seminar will be at the University of Kansas University and will be sponsored jointly by KU and the University of Nebraska.
ON CAMPUS
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4
MARISSA BURGER
THE KU ENDOWMENT ASSOCIATION has received a bounty of $20,000 from the fund to help provide low-income students for college loans for medical students. Mrs. Gosling of Kansas City, Mo., died March 24, 1974.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Prof involved in labor talks
Wednesday, July 16. 1975
No.162
See page 2
City may seek warrants to get inside houses
If the Lawrence Minimum Housing Code Board of Appeals doesn't receive permission from a property owner to inspect property thought to be substandard, the inspection team would conduct the inspection. Mike Wilden, assistant city manager, said yesterday.
Wilden said the process may be used on property at 1321 Tennessee St., owned by Daniel Ling, associate professor of physics and astronomy.
Wildgen said Works Director George Williams called Ling last Wednesday to ask permission for the board members to see the house. Ling said he would have a reply in 2016, but would have a reply in a few years. Williams hasn't heard from Ling since their talk.
Last Wednesday night the board of Appeal reviewed the Ling cases under a procedure that refers all cases to the board and indicates formation to raze a structure bsa beer罐.
The board ruled that a house at 1301 Ohio St. should be raided, but took no action on the house at 1321 Tennessee St. Board members said it was not yet inspected the house from the inside.
Board member Jane Eldredge said she wouldn't vote for the destruction of any property that she hadn't seen from the inside.
"I have been inside the structure at 1301 Ohio and I agree with the board's decision that it should be razed," she said. "But the board at 1301 Tennessee is completely boarded up."
Eldredge said that from just looking at the house from the outside she thought it was architecturally beautiful and should be saved at all costs.
"I would like to know if the city could not make the changes needed and costs to the owner," she said.
Williams is known to be reluctant to repair property in that manner. He has said that once repairs were made it would be difficult for the city to get money from the owner.
Death is redefined in a Michigan law
MARIA DE LORENZO
LANSING, Mich. (AP)—William Milliken, governor of Michigan, Monday signed into law a allowing doctors to prescribe drugs to a patient's brain has ceased to function.
The law provides a new definition of death which will be used in criminal and civil courts.
Under the new law, death can be announced by a doctor the moment spontaneous breathing and blood circulation cease irreversibly. The announcement will be based on ordinary community standards of medicine.
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Refuaees arrive
Eleven-year-old Yu Nguyen sought to the shoulder of his father, Ngoc Tho Nguyen, to refuge in Lawrence since the war ended. Nguyens are the first Vietnamese refugees to arrive in Lawrence since the war end.
Space launch successful
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP)—three American astronauts rocketed away from earth yesterday and began maneuvering towards a rendezvous with two Soviet ships in an adventure of cooperation between the space station and the Saturn rocket hurled an Apollo spacecraft into orbit in a blemish-free match to the Soviet launch earlier Tuesday.
Astronauts Thomas P. Stafford, Vance D. Brand and Donald K. Slayton were launched at 2:50 p.m., precisely on schedule, from the space complex at Cape Canaveral.
Two and one-half hours after the American launch, the U.S. astronauts unlitched their spacecraft from the booster. They spun the craft around and docked with an airlock housed in the rocket hull.
The astronauts then backed out, carrying on the nose of their spaceship the black metal tunnel in which the spacemen of the two countries will meet Thursday morning.
powerful service propulsion engine on the Apollo craft for less than a second in the first of a series of maneuvers that will carry the crew to the rendezvous with the cosmonauts.
A few hours later, the astronauts fired the
For the first time, an on-board television camera showed the astronauts' faces as the
At ignition, the astronauts could be seen shaking while the rocket rumbled momentarily on its nest before beginning its streak toward space.
Some of the first words spoken by Stafford after the launch were Russian: "Mee what?" Stafford said.
The successful day in space began at 7:20 a.m. when Soviet cosmonaut Alexei Leonov and Valeri Kubasov were launched into orbit on April 19, 2003, mid-atmosphere in a stark desert, in central Russia.
Only two small problems blesthem the otherwise perfect beginning of the Soviet Society.
As the spacecraft soared upward, the Soviet control center reported a "slight
overload," or acceleration force, greater than expected.
Later, the cosmonauts said one of four television cameras aboard the spaceship wasn't functioning. The spacemen began trying to repair it. The malfunctioning camera blocked a planned telecast showing the cosmonauts as they soared into orbit.
For the first time in history, a Soviet countdown and launch was broadcast live to the world.
The telecast, showing two hours of prelaunch activity, was viewed by thousands of Russians gathered around television sets in their homes and stores.
The telecast showed Leonov and Kubasov arriving at the launch pad. They smiled, waved and traded quips with the crowd of shirtless officials standing by.
"The crew of Soyuz is ready for the joint
wheel with the crew of spacepack Apollo
L4em. Leona"
Purchase of garage site stalled
A Russian voice called out "good luck" and Leovon replied with the traditional Soviets word.
By LYNN PEARSON
The city has reached a dead end in negotiations to purchase land for the city maintenance garage at 12th and Haskell,县 commission told the City Commission last night.
The land on which the garage is to be constructed is owned by Orvile Ray, 918 East 12th, and is north of Ray's Salvage Yard, 1146 Haskell.
Ray's refusal of the city's offer forced the commissioners to start condemnation proceedings to acquire it. They approved on October 25 that property for construction of the garage.
Watson said it would take about 60 days to acquire the land through the condensation
Judy Lumy, president of the Far East Lawrence Improvement Association, asked the commission whether there was a city where they could screen the south side of his salvage yard.
The screening of the salvage yard, either by a solid wood fence or by evergreens, was part of the plan that swayed many members of the association to endorse the placement of the city maintenance garage in their neighborhood.
Mayor Barkley Clark told Lemon that he was confident the entire commission was committed to effective screening of the salvage yard.
Watson said no such ordinance was in effect.
Commissioner Donald Binns said, "We should be able to make a man screen a junk yard. I think that we should remind Ray that there are other laws that can hurt him.
We could put him out of business in 3 years if we wanted to."
Ray's salvage yard is situated within a residential area.
The commission also set an Aug. 26 hearing date on property at 1301 Ohio. The property is owned by Daniel S. Ling, associate professor of physics. At that time, the commission will decide whether it should be demolished.
Ling has refused to repair the house and
Housing of Appeals has recom-
mended that the house be repaired.
“It’s a question of demolishing it or leaving it boarded up,” said Clark. “A few boards on the windows make a house a mansion. We have to get it out of the neighbor.”
In a discussion on the minimum age required to run for city commissioner in Lawrence, Commissioners Carl Mibbeck and Binns went on record as supporting the state law, which requires the candidate to be 18 years old and a registered voter.
To change the city's election requirements to a minimum age of 21 would allow voters to run for public office.
"You'll never get a 4-1 vote because Carl and I both believe that if a person is
qualified to vote then he's qualified to hold office ." Binns said.
The commissioners authorized Clark to appoint an ex-officio member to the Housing Authority Board. This non-voting member will act as liaison between tenants and the housing authority. During meetings, receive minutes and acquaint the board with tenant complaints and opinions.
Mike Wilden, assistant city manager,
told the commission that the city had
the authority to eliminate immediate safety
hazards such as uncovered, unused wells,
especially in residential areas. The cost of
inheriting these hazards, Wilden said, will
be added to the owner's tax assessment.
Removal must be initiated by a complaint,
be said.
In other action, the commission allowed Steve Allen, pastor of the First Assembly of God Church, to keep a mobile home on church property to house Sunday school classes during construction of the addition to the church.
The commission also decided to allocate $2,400 to the 1976 summer band concert program, $800 more than it allocated the past years. The increase will help the concert program to operate within its budget, said Bill Kelly, the band's director.
State seeks cost cut for $50 million clinic
Refugees aim for self-sufficiency
By STAN STENERSEN
By KELLY SCOTT
Kansan Staff Reporter
Although small and apparently vulnerable, the members of Lawrence's first Vietnamese refugee family insist that they must speak English so make enough money to support themselves.
NGOC THE NGUYEN, his wife, Nghia,
and their four children arrived Monday
night at the home at the host family, Mr.
Mars. Harold Siegler, 908 W. 20th Ter.
They needed some help, Mrs. Nguyen said
vestderay, but "only a little, not too much."
BOTH NGUYEN AND his wife read and write English as a result of their jobs in Saigon. Although they speak very little English, they were open in their efforts to describe their recent experiences in Saigon by refuge camps on Guam and in Florida.
Conversational English came easier to the Nguyen children, who blithely introduced themselves to reporters before entering Stegist yard to play with a litter of kittens.
Max Lucas, assistant to the chancellor,
said building codes didn't make clear
whether fireproofing of the steel truss
members was necessary if conventional
fireproofing was used in all floors and
ceilings.
University administrators decided yesterday to investigate the possibility of eliminating some fireproofing on the new facilities building at the KU Medical Center.
LIKE MOST OF Saigon's citizens, the Nguyens were surprised by the swift fall of the Vietnamese government and they had to abandon almost all their possessions to get on a helicopter as the Viet Cong closed in on the city.
Nguyen was an associate professor of physics at the University of Saigon, and Nghia summarized captured Viet Cong documents for the U.S. Defense Attache. She lost her job when the United States pulled out of Saigon.
They intended to leave the country when they became apparent the government would become the government, Mrs Nguyen said. Her job with the government necessitated that they leave or risk their lives.
The move would save an estimated $2 million to $3 million on the building. Bids on the construction, opened last week, were $4.5 million over the architect's estimate.
Thousands more wanted to leave but didn't have the means to evacuate, she said.
The Nguyens left saiigon by ship on April 23, the last day citizens were able to leave.
The Nguyens spent more than a month in a settlement camp on Guam until they were flown to Eglin Air Force Base near New York, where they worked for about three weeks, Mrs. Nguyen said.
Her government job paved the way for the evacuation, Mrs. Nguyen said.
State architects will look at two or three hospitals with construction similar to the
MRS. NGUYEN SAID conditions at Eglin
university taught her and her
nineunteers taught her and
her nineunteers taught her
Although most of Mrs. Nguyen's relatives have resettled in Philadelphia, where her younger brother attends school, Mr. Nguyen's relatives have remained in Viet Nam.
THE FOUR NGUYEN children, whose ages range from 6 to 12, will learn Lawrence schools this fall. They know little English, and most of them don't. They attended French schools in Saïon.
Mrs. Nguyen said she never planned to return to Vietnam. She said she hoped to become a naturalized U.S. citizen in a few years.
to evacuate all of the refugees on Guest because of the approaching typhoon season.
supporting Siergist said. The family will move to the apartment in three or four days.
Although he said he was qualified to physics and electrical engineering or to hold a job as an electrician, Mr. Nguyen said in order to become anything in order to become self-supporting.
Mrs. Siegrist has taught English to children of all nationalities and to foreign countries.
MRS. NGUYEN said she hoped that once their children started school and began speaking English they would help their parents' understanding of the language.
Siegstrat said that Mr. Nguyen planned to start work at Lawrence Memorial Hospital Monday. He will work in the housekeeping department.
Mrs. Siegrist will tutor the children in English. She said she hoped they would have a 1000-word English vocabulary when they started school.
The Nguyens ran a restaurant in Saigon after Mrs. Nguyen left her government job
IT MEANT SPEEDING up the placement of the families in homes, he said, so there will be room in the resettlement camps in this country.
A FOUR-ROOM APARTMENT in the Edgewood complex at 1600 Haskell Drive has been rented for the Nguyens. Since the Nguyens received a reduction in rent.
Local Lutheran church congregations will pay the Nguyens' rent until they are self-
Parkway may be funded for 1977
By THERESE MENDENHALL
Kansan Staff Reporter
Construction of Clinton Parkway may begin soon enough to receive federal funds for fiscal year 1977 if the project consultant accepts the proposal and denote their parts of the preliminary work.
County commissioners met with representatives of the state Highway Commission and the consulting firm yesterday to try to shorten the 500-day period planned by the consultant to complete preliminary survey and engineering.
County commissioner Pete Whitenten said the parkway project would have a better chance of receiving federal funds for fiscal year 1977 if local officials could show they would be ready to use the funds in that year.
John Frazier, managing partner of Finney and Turnipseed Consulting Engineers, the firm which will plan the parkway, said last night the period could be shortened if highway officials could review the firm's plans quickly.
"if we don't know how long they will take,
we have a hard time scheduling the work in
a timely fashion."
The preliminary engineering will be done in three stages, each of which must be
approved separately by the Highway Commission, said Whitenight. The consulting firm must wait for the commission's approval before it can proceed with the next stage.
A. D. Moret, field engineer in the Secondary Roads Department of the Highway Commission, said the department would wait for the consulting firm to determine time needed to complete the first stage before scheduling the review for that stage.
"There are too many variables to set a definite date vet." he said.
Frazier said the first part of the schedule may be ready next week.
Whitenight said if the preliminary work went as quickly as possible, local officials might award the contract for the construction of the parkway sometime between January and June of 1977. He said he hoped the following schedule could be kept:
Aug. 20—Public hearing on the parkway project;
Sept.-Completion of the three engineering and stage stages by the
Aug. 1, 1975 -Completion of the air quality and sound analyses by the Highway Council
April 15, 1978-Completion of the environmental impact study by Finney and Tinker
Jan. June-Awarding of the construction contract.
consulting firm and of their respective review periods by the Highway Commission, and beginning of the right-of-way purchase process;
Kansas rapist faces charge in Nebraska
A July 21 trial date has been tentatively set in Lincoln, Neb., for Al Byron Johnson, who was accused of assault with intent to rape.
If the bill passes and is signed by the President, an appropriation specifically for Clinton Parkway will have to be approved by the Department of Transportation.
The U.S. Congress is now considering highway appropriations for fiscal year 1977. The House of Representatives has passed a bill which appropriates $10 million for projects like Clinton Parkway. The Senate has consented its version of the bill next week.
Johnson is serving 5 to 20-year sentence in Kansas for a rape conviction. He was sentenced Nov. 8 in Lawrence after he threw a stone at a police officer. Two similar charges were dismissed.
clinical facility to see whether the beams have been fireproofed, he said.
Discussion at the meeting centered on what caused the unfavorable bids, said Lucas. The scarcity of bidders for the general construction contract created "unfavorable conditions" for good bids, he said.
Only two firms submitted bids for the general construction contract.
Lacas said the size of the project might have caused apprehension or misunderstanding on the part of bidders and potential bidders.
“This is a huge building,” he said. “If you turn a page a minute, it would take you seven hours just to get through the plans. Contractors concerned about the magnitude of the job and the time constraints involved are likely to be wary.”
Bidders probably had the expiration of labor contracts in 1977 on their minds as well, according to Lucas. If progress on the building were slowed, a contractor could be caught in a costly strike and costly wage increases.
Lucas said the meeting produced no definite plans to revise plans, cut costs or resubmit bids. Another meeting will be held next Tuesday.
Not all the bids at last week's opening were over the architect's estimate. Bids for elevators, electrical work and mechanical work were even with or below estimates. Lucas didn't say what, if anything, had been decided about these bids.
Initial construction of the clinical facility is already under way. Contracts totaling over $16 million have already been awarded.
Lucas said the present snags might not seriously delay its anticipated completion in time.
The clinical facility is the most expensive building ever planned for a Kansas campus. Its estimated cost is $50 million. When completed, it will add 700,000 square feet of space. The Med Center and will increase the hospital's capacity from 800 beds at present to 800.
The building will also contain a new emergency room, laboratories, diagnostic and treatment areas, outpatient facilities and other intensive care units. A "surgicenter" is planned that allows patients to have minor surgery and go home the same day.
2
Wednesday, July 16, 1975
University Daily Kansan
NEWS DIGEST THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Egypt demands peace effort
CAIRO-Egypt announced yesterday it wouldn't agree to an extension of the United Nations peacekeeping force mandate in the Sinai peninsula after it expired July 24 unless there were further moves toward peace.
Foreign Minister Ismail Fahmy said the last three-month extension of the mandate was intended to "afford peace every possible chance."
The decision came in a letter addressed to U.S. Secretary-General Kurt Waldemar and said the Egyptian's representatives the United Nations, Pakistan and is hurriedly summoned to attend.
He said Egypt "will not consent to further renewal of the mandate of the forces" if no stems towards peace were taken.
Israel has profited from the relative prevailing quiet to further its occupation rather than to assist the efforts aiming at achieving a lasting peace, Fahmy said.
Reagan will run, backers say
WASHINGTON—A committee to push Ronald Reagan's campaign for the 1976 Republican presidential nomination was formed and its chairman said he was confident that the former California governor would enter the race against President Ford.
"If we didn't feel that Gov. Reagan was going to be a candidate for the presidency, we would not be here today," the chairman, Sen. Paul Lazalt, R-Nev.
Laxalt said the former governor had consented to the six-person membership of the group, known as "Citizens for Reagan", and had made no effort to dissuade its members.
In a letter, Reagan reaffirmed the position that he would make a decision later in the year, on whether to challenge Ford.
Washington attorney John P. Sears said creation of the committee with Reagan's consent made Reagan "a legal candidate."
State housing authority urged
TOPEKA—the president of the Kansas Home Builders Association urged creation of a state housing authority to spur home building.
the president, Denis Stewart, 9551 Carrier Drive, Shawnee, said a similar program in Missouri had worked well. Such an authority could "meet the housing needs of people who are poor."
The Kansas Legislature's interim committee on federal and state affairs began hearings on a bill introduced in the 1975 session to set up a state housing authority.
The panel was told the cost of an average single-family dwelling unit in Kansas today was $34,000.
Discord delays conference
GENEVA-Discord over three key issues forced a three-day postponement of a decision on whether to convene a 34-country East-West summit meeting July 10 in
Russia.
The European Security Conference's coordinating committee gave itself until Friday to approve the July 30 target date.
A Swiss conference spokesman said it was generally agreed that if the outstanding questions weren't settled by then, "the July 30 date can no longer be missed."
The summit would bring together President Gerald R. Ford, Government General Admiralty, and the countries to give final approval to a 104-dose case on East-West detention.
The three issues which prevented accord on a starting date for the summit were the imminent decision to establish cooperation between East and West, and the definition of conference objectives.
Injury award is state record
WICHTA—A $750,000 judgment, thought to be the largest jury award in a national injury lawsuit in state history, was returned in the U.S. District Court at Dover.
The verdict in a medical malpractice suit awarded $750,000 in damages to a former chiropractic high school student was that the brain of the patient underwent a knee-jerk procedure at Wesley Medical Center in Illinois.
The award to the reacher, Lois Elaine Laptad, 38, brought total compensation to $1.125.000 when added to previous settlements.
Laptop is now a patient in Joplin, Mo., nursing home. Her injuries resulted in severe and irreversible injury which for all practical purposes has made her a valuable resource. We will assist.
The verdict was returned against Dr. Peter Torbey, now of Detroit, who was in charge of the x-ray procedure.
The Eternal Cosmos and the Life After
A talk, film, and discussion on an interpretation of the spiritual world as revealed to Rev. Sun Myung Moon
7 P.M.
JULY
15, 16, 17
Community Building Lawrence Room
Admission Free
By STANSTENERSEN
To most people, labor is labor, management is management, and never the twain shall meet. Lawrence city officials, a group of college faculty are trying to prove them wrong.
Talk easy for labor, management
Their method? Talk—amended by such adjectives as " frank," " honest," and " friendly." They hope that by talking problems out, the relationship between the city and the sanitation workers will be a cooperative rather than a hostile one.
"You know what words come up when you have a problem." Let's visit." said Ford.
Such hopes for honest talk are not new. They are the staple of international administrations. But Norman Foster, associate administrator, welfare and a union organizer for the past 25 years, said he had never before heard talk about managers that worked as well as this.
The talk began in May, when the sanitation workers, at Forer's suggestion.
asked for meetings with city officials. Sanitation workers had come to Forer a month before, asking his help in organizing them into a union.
Since May, talks have involved leaders of the sanitation workers; Buford Watson, city manager; Mike Wilden, assistant city manager; George Williams, director of public works; and Forer. The participants have discussed such issues as safety, efficiency of the work crews and a more systematized approach to trash packaging.
ANALYSIS
Some of the reasons for the success, he said, are fortuitous—a happy mesh of personalities, a common appreciation of candor. Other reasons stem from both sides' awareness that they are public servants.
"Very simply, the workers need the public," Forer said, "and so does the city management. The alternatives are either to do everything with the community cooperatively. If people believe that they
"At the outset, any kind of cynical
stance is evident. The side went by the
boards," and Forer."
The result, he said, is that city officials and sanitation workers have agreed to work on a comprehensive study to improve both conditions and efficiency of the department.
need each other—that they have a
interest-then what interest from
it is a cooperation pathway.
Again, comprehensive plans are nothing new. But Forer said he had seen too many such plans fall because they were actually presenting only one side.
"There's a contrast between objective data and how they are utilized," he said. "In a community situation, data are used to justify one position or the other. As an academic, wittingly or unwittingly you're working for a client."
Because of the cooperation between the two groups, Forer said, the workers are more willing to be observed by researchers and the city is more willing to provide data for the study. The result will be a more objective study, he said.
The five faculty members are Scott McGill, director of the center; Gary Wamsley, associate professor of political science; Steven Fawcett, assistant professor of human development; Judith Tolman, assistant professor of social welfare; and Forger.
The comprehensive study has brought more people from the University into the talks. The study is being conducted by five faculty members and six graduate students, and is being coordinated through the University Community Services Center.
Because the study looks at all sides of the department's operation, Forer said, it will try to determine how the department can do the best job for the people of Lawrence and also provide for the welfare of its employees. It also provides an efficient and efficiency, and inefficiency, absenteeism, wages and a "good accurate profile" of the average sanitation worker.
"It's tough to provide good service and still pick up six years of National Geographics in the middle of a hurricane," he said.
The study will also deal with the public's role in trash collection. Forer said it would probably make recommendations about the city's enforcement of trash collection ordinances and customers' packaging of trash.
Forer said he thought the involvement of the University Community Services Center
Group's goal efficient flight
The elimination of unnecessary drag in general aviation aircraft is the goal of a three-day NASA sponsored workshop ending at the Arkansas Hall, the Space Telescope Center.
The reduction of drag will significantly fuel consumer demand. Jan Rockan co-founder of the company.
Drag is the force that reduces the forward motion of an airplane. General aviation aircraft includes all planes except large passenger planes and military aircraft.
"We could easily knock off 30 to 40 per cent of fuel use," with only minor alterations in the shape of the aircraft, Rokam said.
Roskam is chairman of the department of aerospace engineering and director of the flight research laboratory at the University of Kansas.
Roskam said when there was no shortage of fuel, pilots didn't have to worry about drag. But shortages and the rising fuel prices that accompany them have now made military industry the new economic incentive to develop new ways to conserve fuel.
During the workshop, 50 representatives of colleges and universities, NASA and the aircraft industry will examine current research on drag and then formulate a research program aimed at significantly reducing drag in general aviation.
PrairieFestival
HAYS KANS
CHARLIE DANIELS
BAREFOOT JERRY
SOUTH OF THE TRACKS
FRIDAY, JULY 18,
LEWIS FIELD STADIUM, 8 p.m.
Fort Hays Kansas State College, Hays, Kansas
TICKETS: Advance $3.50
At Door $4.50
MAIL ORDERS: Send Money Order Only with
self-addressed envelope to:
Director's Office, Memorial Union
HKSC, Hays, Kansas
SPONSORED BY MEMORIAL UNION ACTIVITIES BOA
was in keeping with the idea of community involvement stressed by Chancellor Archie Dykes and accented by the Outreach program.
"This is one of the only projects of the university that provides any support for the university's staff, faculty, or students. University usually provides services for the government, management, or the poor. The blue-collar workers are the most numerous of the workforce and account as far as the University is concerned."
"We should do more to make working people feel that the University is actually their property. Most of these men were born and raised here, but they've never set foot on the University except to attend a sports event or pick up the trash."
Phil Bohlander, secretary of the sanitation workers' union, said the workers were surprised that the University would help them at all. There had been much pressure to get things over the talks began, he said, but conditions had improved considerably since then.
Ferer said conditions in Lawrence encouraged cooperation. Lawrence is small, has no concentration of power, and has a small number of friends. In larger, more fragmented cities, he said.
Perhaps the twain can meet. It's not often that you hear someone involved in labor negotiations say, as Fever does, "We make sure we work with the landlord and feel secure that the word is bond."
—NOTICE—
TO: All organizations allocated funds by the Student Senate from the Student Activity Fee
FROM: John House Student Senate Treasurer
All officers who are to be responsible for the expenditure of allocated funds MUST:
1. Attend a TRAINING SESSION conducted by the Student Senate Treasurer. See the schedule listed below.
2. Sign a CAPITAL DISPOSITION CONTRACT with the Student Senate.
3. Obtain ADVANCE WRITTEN AUTHORIZATION for each expenditure from funds allocated to the organization.
No funds will be made available until these requirements have been met.
Treasurer's Training Sessions have been scheduled for the following times:
Monday, July 14 2:00 p.m.
Tuesday, July 15 10:00 a.m.
Wednesday, July 16 7:00 p.m.
Thursday, July 17 2:00 p.m.
Monday, July 21 10:00 a.m.
Contact the Student Senate Treasurer's Office at 864-3746 to sign up for one of these sessions, or for additional information.
NOTE: Additional sessions will be scheduled in the Fall for those organizations that do not require access to their funds this Summer.
Sidewalk
Jay SHOPPE
Downtown
835 Mass.
Lawrence, Kansas
BAZAAR
Thursday Only—9:30 till 8:30
ONE GROUP
- shirts were up to '13
•knit tops
•pants $5.00
•shorts NOW
ONE GROUP
ONE GROUP were up to '22
- shirts
•knit tops
•pants NOW $10.00
Spring and Summer
- dresses
- pantsuits
nightwear
Now Reduced
swim wear
50%
and more
the **kerns**
the **kerns**
touch
the **had**
en-
nall,
as a
g.
in.
of ten
toen
hake
and
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, July 18, 1975
3
Food stamps issued through mail; office can't handle crowd BY BRUCE SPENCE
By BRUCE SPENCE Kansan Staff Reporter
Food stamp recipients of Douglas County are now receiving stamps by mail from Topeka rather than from the local welfare office.
The new policy, effective this month, was initiated to relieve accommodation problems of people coming in to purchase food stamps, John Derrick, director of the Douglas County Welfare Office, said yesterday.
Recipients must still meet the same eligibility requirements to receive food stamps, Derrick said, but will purchase the stamps directly from the Topeka central office of the Kansas Social and Rehabilitation Services.
Although food stamp distribution is administered through the welfare department, Derrick said, it is done so as a sideline affair for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and the no extra employees were added to handle the load.
The food stamps, he said, had been issued on the first two working days after the fifth day of each month and again for one-half day in the middle of the month.
"The problem was everybody wanted to come in and buy the food stamps the first day we sold them, and there was no way of distributing them all," Derrick said. "We just couldn't accommodate that many people in one day's time."
He said the department had tried to think of other methods of distribution, such as dividing the two and one-half days accounts by month. He decided the mail issuance would be best.
He said most of the districts in the state were with the central office mail issuance system.
The stamp distribution problem wasn't
presented by the Douglas County office,
Derrick said.
"The big offices like Wichita, Kansas City and Topeka were in even worse shape than we were because the same thing happened with ours," he said.
A representative of the food program section of the Kansas Social and Rehabilitation Services in Topeka, which handles the mail issuance, that said all the Kansas welfare districts will have turned any sales to the Topeka office by October.
The new system will also alleviate problems with parking and transportation to and from the Douglas County Welfare Office, Derrick said.
He said that since two and one-half days each month were allocated to food stamp sales, the new policy will give his office the power to deal with other duties and obligations.
Workshops to discuss woman-related issues
International Women's Year Workshop Day, a day-long program of workshops discussing woman-related projects and issues, is "by" for and about what women in the company are doing," Kathy Hoggard, director of the center, said yesterday.
The program, which will be Saturday at the Lawrence Community Building at 11th and Vermont streets, will provide five sessions of workshops featuring women speakers who will talk on issues peculiar to women.
After an 8:30 a.m. registration period, a session will begin at 9 a.m., in which Carol McDowell, lobbyist for both the Kansas Women's Political Caucus and the Kansas Trial Lawyers Association, will speak on lobbying for women's issues.
Marlene Mawson, assistant professor of physical education, will discuss the influence of Title IX on physical education during the first session.
Hogard said Mawson would tell women to attend school and educate programs for their daughters.
Linda Robinson, assistant dean of women, will speak about black feminism, and member of the Health Group Will promote health problems peculiar to women. Hoggard said.
At the 10:30 a.m. session, McDowell will common a communication argument against the Equity Right Amendment. A workshop on photography and a workshop concerning problems of art.
The 1:30 p.m. session will feature Donna tnitsis, an instructor at Avila College, who will teach the course in person.
Hogard said Reis would discuss "What is neurotic? If all men have behavior neurotic? How can you tell?"
The 1:30 p.m. workshop will also feature a talk by Marsha Palauad, director of the Lawrence Arts Center and the Lawrence Museum, with her focus on "Recycling Your Fraziles." There will also be a discussion by members of the Kansans for the Improvement of Nursing Homes, and a talk on socialist feminism sponsored by the Kansas City Women's Liberation Union.
The 3:00 p.m. workshop will offer a session on rape, sexual assault and self defense, in which basic defense methods will be deminstrated.
Kala Strop, dean of women, will present a talk, "Women and Assertiveness," which Hoggard said would discuss the differences between assertiveness and pushiness.
Bonnie Patton, director of Affirmative
How Affirmative? What Action? Why?
How Affirmative? What Action? Why?
At the 4:30 p.m. workshop, Deb Holmes, Lawrence elementary school teacher, will speak on what parents can expect for nonsexist teaching of their children.
A woman medical student and two women physicians, who Hoggard described as "resource people on women's health issues," will present a program on women medical care. There will also be a program entitled "Sexuality and Political Action."
The program was planned by a group of non-affiliated Lawrence women and is being sponsored by 12 local organizations and merchants.
Walt Disney's "APPLE DUMPLING GANG" Daily at 2:00, 7:30, 9:40
Gonadia
MUSIC INSTITUTE
CLINT EASTWOOD THE EIGER SANCTION A UNIVERSAL PICTURE TECHNICOLOR
Eve 7:20, 8:45 Sat. Sun.Mat. 9:10, 10:30
Varsity
MUSIC INSTITUTE
"RETURN TO MACON COUNTY" and "ANGELS UCHAINED"
County at 9:00 Augt at 11:00
Sunset
DAY OF THE LOCUST
Don Southerland, Karen Black
Daily at 1:05 and 8:00
Hillcrest
The terrifying motion picture from the terrifying No.1 best seller.
JAWS
PG MAY BE TOO INTENSE FOR YOUNG CHILDREN
Daily at 2:00, 7:20 and 9:45
Hillcrest
THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN
Daily at 1:05, 7:30, 9:45
Hillcrest
NEED A TUTOR?
Or would you like to tutor a student?
If so, the Student Senate keeps a file containing current information on students desiring to, or seeking a tutor.
SIMILAR FILES ARE KEPT FOR STUDENTS SEEKING ROOMMATES & COMMUTING STUDENTS SEEKING RIDES OR RIDERS.
If you need a tutor or if you want to tutor simply fill out the form below and include any information you feel is pertinent.
Name___ Phone___
Address___ Roommate □ Carpool □ Tutor □
Information___
Bring to Student Senate office, Room 105B Kansas Union
A Student Senate service financed with Student Activity funds
VOLLEYBALL
The University of Kansas Theatre Landmarks of the American Theatre Presents
Oklahoma!
Fr. July 18 University Theatre
Fr. July 18 University Theatre
Sa. July 19 University Theatre
Sa. July 20 K.U. Museum of Art
Mo, July 21 William Inge Theatre
We. July 23 William Inge Theatre
University Theatre Tu. July 22 William Inge Theatre Woodruff Auditorium
Th. July 24 William Inge Theatre University Theatre
Ff. July 25 University Theatre
Tg. July 26 Woodruff Auditorium
Tu. July 27 Woodruff Auditorium
- Indicates event FREE.
PLAY: Oklahoma! 8:00
PLAY: Oklahoma! 8:00
*Film: Junction City 1890-1915--Portrait of a Kansas Community 3:00
PLAY: The Mirror Man (Theatre for Children) 2:30
*Lecture: The Land 7:00
PLAY: The Mirror Man (Theatre for Children) 2:30
Films: "The Plough that Broke the Plains" AND "Grapes of Wrath" 7:30
PLAY: The Mirror Man (Theatre for Children) 2:30
PLAY: The Mirror Man (Theatre for Children) 2:30
PLAY: Oklahoma! (Benefit Performance
On Language Arts Center) 8:00
PLAY: Oklahoma! 8:00
PLAY: Oklahoma! 8:00
Films: Modern Times 7:30
Friday & Saturday July 18 & 19 8:00 p.m. K.U. Students...*1.50 Others...*2.50
Sunday, July 20, 3:00 p.m., KU Museum of Art, Film: Junction City 1890- 1915—Portrait of a Kansas Community ADMISSION FREE
Monday, July 21, 7:00 p.m. Swarthout Recital Hall, Lecture: "The Woodman's Confrontation With the Plains," Walter Kollmorgen, University Distinguished Professor of Geography, University of Kansas ADMISSION FREE
Tuesday, July 22, 7:30 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium, SUA Film: The Plough That Broke the Plains and The Grapes of Wrath ADMISSION 75c
UNIVERSITY THEATRE MURPHY HALL 864-3982
4
Wednesdav. July 16, 1975
University Daily Kansan
WHITE HOUSE REFUSE NATION ENQUIRY
1976: forward, not back
Is there anything else planned for this nation's 2009 birthday besides cake and wine?
We are already celebrating and of course
we are candies and cake and flags and
flowers and cookies and sweets.
COMMENT
there is also some serious study and thinking done.
A recent informal poll by the Lawrence Journal-World indicated that some people were ambivalent about the Bicentennial. One person said that if it was going to be just fireworks and glory it would be worthless. True.
But look round. Along with the building of monuments and the reprinting of warm-toned books, the city is a great place to explore.
People are going beyond the physical forms of our past, which are meaningless in themselves, and getting to the substance. The myths that bind us to a false history—"America was united in spirit during the Civil War," for example—are being broken down.
People are realizing that the country was divided in spirit then, that a lot of propaganda was used before any bullets, and that there were honorable people as loyal to England as the patriots were to the idea of a new nation.
More serious reflection about our past is needed. All we have to lose are stereotypes to gain a truer sense of the spirit of the nation; to expand the communication to the future—intellectual courage.
Perhaps people would get more excited about the Bicentennial if there were more emphasis on the substance of our heritage and its emphasis on the forms associated with it.
To give this emphasis means to look beyond the temporary and envision the future. Let's scale down our parades and collect every kind of local talent, time and resource for any of a number of worthwhile projects.
I can get excited about contributing to groups researching the practical application of solar, wind and thermal energy. I am especially interested in local tax structure might be made more equitable. Or determining how we might introduce efficient transportation into the community. Or planning how we might help elderly older workers provided for our elderly and our poor.
Coordinating efforts to change society in ways more fundamental than a fireworks display could do a great deal toward recreating the spirit of 1776.
And it could give something to get excited about.
—Peter Porteous
FTC rule smothers consumers
No doubt the Federal Trade Commission will soon be battling with Joe Narnath.
Namath has signed a reported $2 million contract with Faberge, an international cosmetics company. Namath will promote its products.
It probably will be long before one sees
Namah on the TV set flashing his dimple-
COMMENT
ridden toothy smile and saying how great some women's perfume is.
According to an FTC ruling passed in the spring, one has to use the products before he can pass judgment on them. Well, I doubt whether Namath will start using women's perfume, but I'm sure he will find a way to get by that ridiculous ruling.
It was too long ago that Narnath was endorsing panty hose. Now, one might ask
how the FTC can put up with that. Easy.
Although Namath did not wear the panty
hose, he was considered a reliable endorser
because he looked at women who wore them
and thought they helped the women's appearance.
The FTC probably had the consumer's best interests in mind when it passed the test, but its success was still resulled has been more red tape, more confusion and more loopholes. Let's face it: the FTC is going to have a hard time that endorsers use certain products.
In addition, viewers should feel rather insulted that the FTC thinks most people take Broadway Joe at his word anyway. Celebrities look good on TV and might help a product's appeal, but most people don't rely on the endorser's judgment.
Perhaps Zsa Zsa Gabor put the situation in its proper perspective when, during a commercial, she was asked why she was answered. "They paid me, darling." She answered.
I suppose the federal government thinks it must protect all the poor dumb people in America, but it appears more and more that they are protected from an overgrazed government.
In addition to the FTC ruling, the government has passed laws that forced an interlock system on cars and provided for a driver's license. It also outed to pollute more than the old ones.
Locally, motorcycle riders are bothered by a law that says they must wear helmets. It's ironic to see a rider wearing a helmet not but wearing shoes or a shirt.
Why have laws like these at all? People don't need a watchdog over their everyday affairs, especially one that is likely to bite a friend as easily as a foe.
In the meantime, it wouldn't be a bad idea for the FTC to rescind its ruling and allow celebrities to endorse products. The FTC doesn't seem to be able to enforce the tax laws if it does, so spending plenty of the taxpayers' money doing it. — Sol Aleksandr
Editor's Note: James W. Henderson writes a column on the arts for the Saginaw (Mich.) News. This article is reprinted with the permission of that newspaper.
BY JAMES W. HENDERSON
For犹豫 purposes I mention a difficulty correctly; the word "callicor" distortion." In simpler if more symbolic terms, the difficulty may be stated thus: "The wheel of life doesn't turn fast enough for individual evidence."
COMMENT
Let me try to illustrate from the field of theater review. In 1965, say, you saw a production of a play well called "Drama-10." Good or bad in your view at that time, in
1975 you see another production of "Dramma 10" by a different company. Try as you may, dig out the 1965 notes through you do, the two productions are too far apart in time and too dependent upon memory for you to make any beneficial comparison.
OR CONSIDER IT IN A context much larger than the theatre: life it makes the life span-at best is lamentably small in contrast to ongoing life as a whole. This makes possible at least two understandable but dangerous tendencies.
The first is the foreshortened perspective of the young, who simply haven't lived a large enough segment of the turn of life's wheel to command a valid observation of such things as progress or decay. The other suspect tendency is the propensity of the elderly to allude to "the good old days," as well as to "Ask with the matter reviewer, even though for the elderly the wheel may have made more than one full turn, any two are too far apart, distracted by affinity, or scented by nostalia to be quite valid.
IT IS UNDERSTANDABLE why the young think that color-TV, landings on the moon or computers are evidence of progress. For one thing, the scarcely known technology are not at all reluctant to claim such identity. And if not you're young enough to accept such claims and can count no track time before these developments, you very easily believe that "Bliss it was in that place, be alive, but to be young was very heaven!"
On the other hand, even the longer perspective of advanced age can be mistaken. The causes aren't, of course, the same. The older one is likely to have the old age are likely to cite the wrong evidence.
Don't lose perspective; it's long run that counts
There is no need to indulge in argument
Law student at KU to be county intern
The Douglas County Attorney's office has announced the hiring of Greg Law, a third-year law student at the University of Georgia as a legal intern for the rest of the summer.
The county attorney's office traditionally hires a summer intern. The interns receive $125 a week, most of which is paid under a federal grant. The county is required to pay social security and a small portion of the salary.
Justice will handle traffic offenses and assist other lawyers with their cases. He is authorized to practice law under a Supreme Court order to students to work under a licensed attorney.
Villages plan sun, wind energy
By BRAD JONES
Karisan Staff Reporter
Two Lawrence attorneys hope to equip a
binary child with alternative
energy sources.
By JAMES W. HENDERSON
Lance Burr, Douglas County director of Villages Inc., and Bill Ward, director of Great Plains Windsturies, Inc., have been working for six months on plans to build an offshore oil pipeline at the Topper-based Villages, Inc., a home for neglected and dependent children.
The Villages project, an offshoot of a five-cottage development for neglected children in Louisiana, will begin before the Lawrence-Douglas County Commission July 28. If the site is approved, the plan will then be submitted to the Lincoln County Commission for final approval.
IF THE SITE is approved by the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission and the Douglas County Commission, Burr and Ward hope to equip one of the two cottages proposed for the home with wind and solar generators.
BURR SAID ALL costs for construction and operation of the program would come from contributions by local residents. A letter to Mr. Burrow expressed interest in the program, he said.
One of the major considerations in the forest management villages in Tyokea as well as in Douglas County, Northwest is awareness of nature, Burr said. The location, near the northwest of rural roads, would make this possible.
"The roof of the cottage will have one or more glass plates built into it," Ward said. "Beneath the glass will be a network of tubing into which water will be continuously pumped. As the sun shines through the glass, heat will be absorbed by the heat heated the water in the tubing. Insulated water will then run down into an insulated hot water tank, where it will be stored until
The solar plates, built into the roof of the tentage, will act on the same principle that grids do.
Ward said he thought the cottage would make use of solar collector plates and possibly one or more windmills to produce electrical power.
Ward said the alternative power source would help build a "conservation ethic" in the community.
"It will be a great feeling for those kids to switch on the light, knowing that the wind is moving."
WINDSTRIES, a corporation formed by Ward and Burr in January to study alternative energy sources, hasn't yet agreed on how the cottage will be nowed.
Man burned aboard plane
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) — A bearded man in a T-shirt hunked to death after he apparently set himself afire in the restroom of National Airlines jet yesterday, police said.
William P. Smith, dean of the School of Engineering who has also been engaged in wind and solar power research, said yesterday that the Windindustries project was possible if an adequate amount of money could be raised for the project.
Smith explained that one installation could produce almost two-thirds of all the energy necessary. If Windstorms wanted to add several windmills and solar plates to the project, the project would come closer building 100 per cent of its needed energy.
However, because sunshine and wind aren't always available, Ward said, conventional utilities will have to be included in the act to act as an alternative power source.
"THE PROJECT is entirely feasible, from the standpoint of installing and maintaining the energy sources. What they must decide is how much of the possible amount of energy the building will need, can be produced," he said.
IN ADDITION, the cottage will be connected to a wind turbine powered by a windmil. The windmill will create power for electrical appliances. Ward said.
needed for steam heat, taking a bath or whatever."
"A five-room house, equipped with wind and solar installations can run in cost without a chimney."
Kennedy International Airport. No other injuries were reported.
The jetliner was over Wilmington, N.C., when the man entered the restroom, apparently dressed himself with a highly tinted goggles and left off, spokesman for National Airlines said.
"We need to get some useful projects going so that people can see the benefit in implementing alternative energy sources," he said.
The DC10, which was on route from New York to Jacksonville, was made an unscheduled stop at Jacksonville.
But costs for the project will increase accordingly with each addition, he said.
"There was a flash of light," another passenger on board the flight of Miami, said Marvin Bender, the Incubator in the incident.
WARD SAID Kansas was probably the most easily adaptable area in the country for switching from electrical and gas utilities to wind power.
The unidentified man was one of 58 passengers on board Flight 1601 from
Windies, which is run by membership donations, has two other projects for KKU.
agreed to look at plans to convert a generator in its fertilizer plant to wind power.
Ward also said that the city council of Garden City had approached Windstorms about building a demonstration wind turbine to provide the city's electrical power.
THE GARDEN CITY project is awaiting approval from the federal government, which may pay for the municipal improvement project, Ward said.
In Dodge City, Farmland Industries has
The reviewer's notes are a help, if they are kept and used; that is what in the slow turning of life is served by history and one-space speech. But even in such cases, encountering an artist is often it is illustrative. A few days ago I heard a singer announce her next selection as one of the new hits, attributing its status to a very famous songstress. She is, I suppose, too young as well as too careless in simple words. "Melancholy Baby" was a hit in 1925.
The reviewer of a play and the observer of life ought but seldom seem to do is to make people feel so uncomfortable too long and individual lives are too brief to make motor cars, electronics, the latest social cause or even Women's Labible relaxes of progress—or for that matter, of decay.
about whether "the good old days" ever really existed or were that much better. If they were, then I'd go to bathrooms, high-speed presses and free color printing with Indian runners and smoke signals, or Dobbin and a chase with the Pickens, if it could radicals, the conclusion is predictable.
ON THE OTHER HAND, if you remember rural quiet, very low incidence of crime, or a less freeticty and more leisurely life, you can fraternize and law scorning may be too predominate to allow less than a wistful and humble sense of age even memory of tenthoughts.
AS LONG AGO as the 16th century-a rather significant length of perspective,
please note—the historian Giorgio Vasari observed, "Once human affairs begin to deteriorate, no improvement is possible until the nadir has been reached."
The question for us to settle, it seems to me, is the truth or falsity of present deterioration in human affairs. Then we can determine whether the lowest point has been reached—or whether we may expect worse before it gets better.
BUT THERE ARE VALUES, there are fulcrums and there are indices of Vasari's "human affairs" which may have been lost, compromised and distorted. They have become electronic communication or the ballyhoo communication or the ballyhoo southavers and false prophets.
This is true in all aspects of life. If you are immature enough or susceptible enough to vauntings to think that Edward Abell, Neil Simon or Alan Ayckbour are impure Shakespeare, playwriting over Shakespeare, Shaw or a declaration this moment very heaven. If you dismiss the degradations of the drug traffic, the corruption of high office or the profitable ruin of the land as no more than phases of human error which money, and banner-waving clichés willgon reverse, then we aren't in much trouble at all.
They are well displayed in modern music, modern art and modern theater but so often the reviewer's notes are lost and we consult the most superficial evidence: the evidence of taste, creature comforts, lavender remembrance and analysts with a personal gain at stake.
Gas rate may reach $ 75^{\mathrm{c}} $ a gallon by fall
The last one at the nadir is a chump.
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK--Motors们 who recently saw gasoline prices pushed up three or four cents can expect to see them go even higher before the summer ends. Some estimates indicate the price of gasoline could reach 75 cents a gallon by fall.
By JOSH FITZHUGH AP Business Writer
Experts say price jumps of a penny or two are likely to dribble out during the summer, but there could be a major increase some time after September.
Nobody knows what the next move in oil pricing will be or how big the increases will be. The price paid by the motorist will be influenced by decisions in Washington, oil company headquarters, gas station offices and oil exporting countries.
There is the possibility that Americans will be paying 15 cents a gallon more if price controls are lifted at all once, one Senate committee says. In addition, oil companies and retail outlets could raise at any time the price by a combined total of $3 \frac{1}{2} cents by passing federal allowance increases. If regular gasoline would be 77.5 cents a gallon. The average current price is 59 cents a gallon.
President Ford has urged Congress to end domestic oil price controls over a 30-month period, a change which he could say could have cost of gasoline another seven cents a gallon.
Herbert Hugo, senior editor of Platts Oligram's Price Service, said gasoline prices should remain relatively stable throughout August. However, he also said that gasoline prices should increase to 70 or 75 cents a gallon by the end of the year.
Currently 60 per cent of domestic production, which is old oil, is controlled at $2.5 a barrel. The rest of U.S. production, new oil, represents oil production since 1972. New oil is freed from controls and has been sold for prices close to those charged by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)—just under $11 a barrel.
A summary of the situation follows:
"The Senate yesterday passed and sent to the Senate bill to extend current price controls beyond Bill to include price controls beyond Bill."
piration date. The Senate Interior Committee said an immediate end to federal price controls on old oil could raise fuel prices 15 cents a gallon.
OPEC is also likely to increase its prices in September, which would influence the prices of domestic crude oil as well. The States imports about 37 per cent of its oil.
-Economists also say that the oil industry has about $800 million in costs incurred but not yet passed along as permitted by federal regulations. This could increase prices another 1½ cents a gallon. Gas station owners are estimated to have an additional two cents of allowable increases they have not yet used.
County seeks plan consultant
Five consultants interested in developing Douglas County's comprehensive plan for unincorporated areas will be interviewed during the next two weeks.
Dick McClanathan, city-cityty planning director, said the field was narrowed from 15 applicants based on distance from Lawrence, experience and work portfolios.
McClanahan said that he wasn't at liberty to release the names of the candidates but said that two were from Kansas, two from Missouri and one from Nebraska.
The funds are to be administered through the planning and community development division of the state Department of Economic Development.
They will be interviewed by the executive committee of the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission. The group probably will have a recommendation ready for the commission during August or July or the first week of August, he said.
Local officials have been notified that they will have federal assistance in preparing the plan. A federal grant totaling 1000 has been approved for this fiscal year.
Douglas county will have to pay $250. It may take 9 years to complete the plan for the project.
1970
A raft of fun
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Finding the Smith pool too crowded, Tim Harris, Scott Butler and James Smith brought the inflatable raft to Potter Lake
yesterday. The leisurely outing soon degenerated into a splashing contest with Butler (center) absorbing most of the punishment.
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, July 16, 1975
5
Women grad students increase 25 per cent
By ALISON GWINN
Kansas Staff Reporter
The percentage increase of enrollment of women in graduate school between the 1973-74 and the 1974-75 school years at the National Kansas is far above the national average.
According to an Associated Press survey released last week, the national percentage of women in graduate school programs was up two to four per cent.
The enrollment of women in graduate school at KU increased by more than 25 per cent between the fall of 1973 and the fall of 1974.
That percentage increase represents a growth from 1,676 women students in 1973 to 2,105 women students in 1974. The figures include all women in graduate school, and exclude women in the law or medical schools.
During the same period, the total number of graduate students, both male and female, increased from 4,254 to 4,688 students, an increase of about ten per cent.
Women now make up almost 45 per cent of all graduate students at KU. That percentage shows a steady increase from 1958, when about 20 per cent were women.
The percentage of undergraduate women has increased by about 245 per cent since 1958, from 2,780 women students in the fall to 9,605 women students in the fall of 1924.
The 9,666 women students made up about a percent of total undergraduates at KU in the spring of 2015.
Since 1958, the number of women in law school has increased from 5 to 87, an increase of over 1600 per cent. The number of women in medical school has increased from 22 to 140 in the same period, an increase of more than 500 per cent.
Robert Ellermerle, associate dean of the graduate school, said, "At KU, opportunities for women have always existed. There just isn't room for bias. It's just that women have started taking advantage of the opportunities."
Ellermeier said women were finding employment much more easily than men, and they felt less resentful.
"I don't know whether this is because of societal acceptance or governmental pressures. I've talked to recruiters, and in the sciences particularly, they are instructed to make an offer to any competent woman who applies," he said.
Ellermeyer said that, given a man and a woman equal in all aspects yiring for the same object, it was impossible to
"So you can't say, then, whether a graduate degree, in and of itself, is beneficial to a woman in getting a job," he said.
Ellermeier said that no graduate schools
were given that HEW had called quotas
discriminatory.
Some schools, in particular engineering
schools, have offered to obtain women
graduate students, he said.
"It speaks well for an engineering school when it can attract women students, in this country," he said.
In Russia, Ellermeier said, almost half of the engineers are women and more than half of the physicians are women.
Ellermeier said KU gives financial support to graduate students in two ways, through employment as teaching assistants and through fellowships.
Only about 40 students, or one per cent of the graduate student population, are on fellowships.
Between 25 and 50 per cent of graduate students teach sometime during their graduate careers, and those who teach are working toward Ph.D.'s, he said.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas
Held on Monday, June 21st
holdings and examination periods. Second
Subscriptions by mail are $9.00 per semester;
Semester, paid through the student activity
semester, paid through the student activity
Editor
Ward Harkavy
Business Manager
Jim Merrill
LOOKING FOR A NEW NEST?
HOME SWET HOME
Jayhawker Towers Apts.
See
2-bedroom apartments on cam-
pursus or furnishbed or unfurnished utilities paid swimming pool air conditioned
on bus line
security facilities
security guards
covered parking
parking lot
omnate service
OFFICE OPEN DAILY
OFFICE OPEN DAILY
Monday-Friday 11:50:30
Saturday 11:40:00
LRex
Lawrence, Ks.
1603 W. 15th
--for
BURGER
beyond
$2.00
with this coupon
Big Mac
Offer good only at:
901 West 23rd St.
Lawrence, Kansas
Limit one coupon per person per visit. Void after July 21, 1975.
HAMBURGER
"We do it all for you." T.M.
4
BURGER
for
$2.00
with this coupon
KANSAN WANT ADS
Acommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansas City Postcard. Clerk or national origin. PLEASE BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
one three five
time times times
$1.50 $2.00 $2.50
15 words or less . . . . .
AD DEADLINES
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Thursday Monday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These can be sold in person or on phone to the LUK business office at 864-1525.
FOR SALE
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.—Regardless of any prices you see on popular hill equipment other than factory dumps or close-out products, you will be able to benefit from the ATMOMO PHONE店 at KIEFS.
864-4358
Western Civilization Notes - Now on Sale!
*New Analysis of Western Civilization*
*Makes sense to use them* ... 21
*For class preparation* ... 21
*For class preparation* ... 21
*New Analysis of Western Civilization*
*Makes sense to use them* ... 21
In Topeka, 1972 Barrington 14 x 64, 2 bedroom, 12 baths, a bath, skirred, tiled down,妒空,妒aining, storage shed. Will move moving expense. Stucco 80th Street Terrace, Topeka, Calla 8-75-112-74
Now fire merchandise close-outs, etc. New selling huge grocery stock from a Chicago supermarket at today's retail prices. 13 at checkroom, 25 at supermarket. 62 at Christmas. Mertz's Salvage Center, 628 Vermont. C98
Did you know that Webster's Mobile Homes has a complete selection of single and double-wide mobile homes for sale at all times? Webster's Mobile Homes 3409 W. elm. ht. 824-7700 - 717
HIGH PROTEN HAT meat dog food. 24-14 oz
$8 Vermont, no discount. Merger Salve
$8 Vermont
12-string Martin guitar, excellent condition. Dy-
namatic guitar. Make me an offer. Call 7-417.
1537.
19.70 Lemans Sport Coupe, air, automate, only 45.00 miles. Jayhawk JWV 843-2200
19.70 Lemans Sport Coupe, air, automate, only 45.00 miles. Jayhawk JWV 843-2200
Siberian Husky pups, ARC, males, shoots $60
843-139 evenings, 7-17
1974 Yumaha Yamaha 125, one owner, 2300 miles. Jayhawk WV. 842-630. 7-17
1966 Malibu. 2-hr dbt. automatic, alr. bucket
Only one of its neighbors. Jayhawk WV 843-
550.
1972 Sukumi—Enjoy the summer on this 185 use
342 Perfect for the town. Good condition.
7-21
Squareback Wagons Choose from three, from 1-88 to 1971. 灰雁kwk. 843-2210. 7-17
Just arrived—shipment of Rabbits and Seirocots,
for a test drive. Jiawayn WA, 2210
2210 W-7
7-17
161 Capri 4 speed. Air conditioned. red. low
mileage. Jawhavk WV. 843-220. ligh-7
TURBO
1973 Cullin S Coupe Buckets, stereo tape, air,
Jawkvah WW 843-2200 7-17
1972 Impala Custom, Cpe. Automatic, air, vinyl
1968 Opel Kod-Kdt 2 dr. standard, only $795.0
Jawkvah WV. 843-2300. 7-17
1963 Rambler Classic, Auto, 6 cyl. 495-00
1964 Hawthorne VW, B42-210, 7-17
202 best. Stock wheels. Excellent condition. $65 or
batter. 823-1928. 7-16
ATTENTION BACKPACKER5 Frontline back-
packing kit MTK-IDokudk rollout $7.00 Prices
available at www.mtk.com
1974 Vega Hatchback 4-5pt A/C/M-FM-
230 Vega Hatchback 4-5pt new radial FM-
241 call Dell, 845-821-9211
1968 VW Bia, converted to camper ice,
banks gas valve. Jawkah vwM4-230. 7-11
Closeout of all 1972 Downers and Retail cars,
huntreds.jaywalk.wwwk481210.502
***
6 healthy country. Collie pups. Pedigree-site-
white-7 weeks and male. Female #848-721.
7-21
JAMES LIQUORS
Cold Beer & Chilled Wine
9th Street Center
(Next to 'Hole in The Wall')
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOIN
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
TEXT BOARD
CUPBOARD
15 East 7th, 841-2456
12-5 Monday-Friday 10-5 Sat.
Leading Jewelers
--on Hiway 10 585-1041
- Expert watch repair
842-0722
- Fine jewelry
Lennon Synapse LB & Turntable LW with Shure MHRE
125 Call, CISL 842, 752-312 after 5 mins. 7-22
***
1972 Yanahu 6006e, red and white $700 or will
call. Call 843-7450. 7-30
743 Mass. 843-4366
Must kit 1723 VV. Wuns great. We large
cars-剿 reasons for selline 842-2098 on
6- 721
Honeywell Pentax Spatimac F w. F1.4 lens $200
Call 813-6979-8
7-23
Johnson Rental Company, Studiol, 1 bedroom, 2 bathrooms to KU Medical Center, Kansas City, KS.
Free rental services. Up to the minute listings of
vital housing locations in Lawrence
Lawrence County, N.J.
820-259-3600
Come on out! Lots of shade and parking—in the Country Shrub 3303 and other furniture, antiques, collectibles. Wooden boards, crates, wall bars. 11 bowled baskets, boxes, crates, wooden bars. 11 bowled baskets, boxes, crates, wood bars. 11 bowled baskets, boxes, crates, wood bars. 11 bowled baskets, boxes, crates, wood bars. 11 bowled baskets, boxes, crates, wood bars. 11 bowled baskets, boxes, crates, wood bars.
**Junk** fruits and vegetables of other useful items ("Junk"
FOR RENT
Two bedroom apartment, all utilities paid, close
care furnished. This fall furniture or furnished
rooms: 823-992
Apartment(s) 1, 2, and 4 bedrooms furnished
BEDROOMS KU and near town. Phone 843-7567, fc
fax 843-7567.
Rooms furnished, single, with or without cook-
ing facilities. Rooms RU and NU
and not. Pet nets. Phone 862-3950.
Sunday 10am - 4pm.
Rooms - Kitchen privileges. One block to campus
$35 and/or $60, possible rent reduction for
three bedrooms.
Quiet on a bedroom floor, fri. utilities paid.
Call to help with farm fri. if needed.
Appl. call 843-729-710. No 2. A/No. 2. A/No.
Dil you know that you can rent mobile homes 7-
Webster? #84-7700.
JATHAWKER TOWSR'S - 2 bedrooms, all utilities
insured. All rooms are carpeted, parking,
launaed. 100 sq ft. 100 W.
Bloom for rent in comfortable old home, south
side of town. 1 bedroom. $80 per month.
Phone 843-653-8131 or email bloom@bloom.com
Grade-1 like privacy and good location for fall?
Bullet 842-6858 after 6 p.m. daily.
7-21
The Office of Instructional Resources is accepted by all institutions offering the 1976-2016 academic year. Qualifications include a high level of competency in statistics and computer programming experience. Dawkins will be assigned to the Instructional Survey and assisting in the operation and development of the Survey. Application for improvement of teaching through evaluation and improvement of training must be submitted at least two months appointment. Starting date: August or January of the following school year. The Office of Instructional Resources, 409 Bailey Hall Application deadline; July 15th in the fall.
HELP WANTED
McDonald's has openings for part-time day help,
and you can work in their office available this fall. Apply in person at 976-582-3010.
Administrative Assistant, graduate program in Administration. Req. Bachelors deg or equivalent in responsibilities in general administration and production & attendance of meetings and conferences. Especially the Kansas M-A-P, program highly interested in Public Service Education Degree. Must have 12 month appointed training (unmediated) with Robert H. Dermack, Dept. of Political Science at Oklahoma State University to opportunity employee - Affirmative Action Employment
1015 Iowa 11.9 Mon.-Fri.
11:10 Sat.-Sun.
SIRLOIN STOCKADE
130 W. 12TH AVE. N.Y.C. 10024
POTION PARLOR
Organic Biodegradable Hair and Skin Care Products in Recycle-able Bottles
819 Vermont 12-3
843-9708 Essence Oils Mon-Sat.
THE ICE CO.
THIS
WEEKLY BEER SALES
AND $7.60.00 KEGS
ALL SUMMER LONG
HOME.MADE.IZE
CREAM
SUPPLIES
616
Vermont
TYPING
If You're planning on FLYING,
Do趴Maupfoot
Do The MORK for You!
(NEVER Forrest You!
for airline tickets!)
Typing in my home. IM selective with plexa type.
Typing in my home. IM selective with mat, and
matflet. Call Gail, B4E-5799
Experimented in typing systems, research papers,
tissues (cerebral cortex), elites (type. Cell 915),
carbon (titanium), elites (type. Cell 915)
THEIS BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is located on the second floor. Our service is fast and prices are reasonable. Our services in fair and cost are reasonable.
IMM Sleectic, pearl or elité, reasonable, requirem-
ations, illusions, theses. Call Joan H.
84-921-71.
Experienced typist—term paper, thesis, mime-
age, letter, brochure, MRS. Writing, spelling
843-5443, Mrs. Wrobbins.
Experimental typet will do these; deserts,
Earth 804-1823 Days, 842-9787 Earnings, 7-22
*
Experienced in typing dissertations, theses, ete-
says, Psych. Call Lestie, 843-868-868.
Respond to questions by email.
NOTICE
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT! Let us do your printing while you wait at The Quick Copy Center. It sells $21.44 copies-$31.44 copies-$41.44 copies-$61.96 you want. If business at the Quick Copy Center.
PHOTOGRAPHY Shooting Gallery Specializing in
Personalized Portraits in natural surroundings.
Wedding, portfolio, and commercial photograh-
tics. Photos by Jennifer Nolte, 811-236-9500,
811-236-125-3. ppm. Tues-Sat, tf
GAY FOLKS AGREE: TD RATHER BE A
FACILITY
Laboratories, Inc. Gatherings: 7:30 AM and
31st Monday of each month. Union office 104B Union;
Box 254, Lawn Park. Counseling 84-206; Forum
72, Lawn Park.
Executive-style coursework parties planned, catered.
Executive meetings planned for excellent, beautiful blind private pool. For detailed咨詢 contact us at info@executivesw.com.
WANTED
Person to share large 3 bedroom duplex for fall sales $73.33 per month. Call by 6 p.m. 842-1571.
Female Subjects 18-25 for $1 \%$ hour experiment.
Females with diabetes less weekly activity for a case of heat. Calls 686-3632.
Wanted: An upper class teammate to share Jay
Wanted: An upper class teammate to share fall暑
862-1666. After 7:00. T-721. T-721.
Two female remunerates 18-25 for hour expirement
and 16-30 for hourly work. Each plus one hour mandatory free course.
Note: There are no additional fees.
Home Growin'
904 Vermont
TACOS
GAY COUNSELING
& RAP
for referrals:
info center
864 3506
or
847 7505
$3.50 per Dozen
Casa de Taco
1105 Massachusetts
843-9880
Penner's Cycle Barn
Norton Ducati
Moto Guzzi
Used Motorcycle
JULY CLEARANCE
71 Kawasaki 500 Mach III $^{3} \text{ } 395^{00}$
71 Kawasaki 350 Mach T11 $393
bike Like New 350 dirt bike
Like New $695^{00}$
72 Norton Commando 5995⁰⁰
71 Norton Commando
Very Clean $895^{00}
66 Norton chopper
66 Norton chopper
Jardine headers
Extended forks
$695^00
15 miles east of Lawrence
on Hiway 10 585-1048
Mon.-Fri. 9:00-6:00
Sat. 9:00-3:00
LOST-Small black and brown dog. dog 5
PETKINSE. She answers to "Fuzzy." Last seen near the country club July 4th. You have seen her at 844-806-3000 and made many VERY happy!
SERVICES OFFERED
Zob a white and gold German Sheepard pup is
7-13. He is a little bit shy, but is willing to
return to 7 Elm. Thank you, 7-17
for your help!
LOST
Need female roommate beginning fall semester.
Call 842-1867 before Aug 1, or 843-1867 after
Aug 1.
FOUND
Roommate & alice to live for now & fall. *U* have both rooms, have own home bedroom close to campus: 841-206-9800.
CUSTOM JEWELRY Reasonably Priced, professionally matched jewelry. Great value and quality. Stones cut and polished. Turquoise. Sailor style.
Large Black male puppy with white paws. Calls 7-16 or 842-2928 alt.5 $
MATH TUTORING Comprehensive, experienced tutor
MATH TUTORING Comprehensive, experienced tutor
115, 116, 118, 31, 191, 122, 125. Responsible ratel
Catalyst
Employment Opportunities
3 MONTH OLD CALICO KITTEN found on Edge Hill near Carleen's residence. Call 843-363-6000.
Need extra氧气? An E-4 with 2 years makes
Reserve Center, 2100 Iowa St. @ 831-753-1110,
7-18 6am-10pm
Sandwiches, Delicatessen, Foods
PERSONAL
Open 11 A.M.-Midnight
Wanted: Female date for trip to Lake Henry
Box 14, Lawrence.
7-17
WAGON WHEEL
1401 Ohio
IS YOUR CAR AS READY FOR
YOUR VACATION AS YOU ARE?
If not, call—
Make your
842-0753 900 New Jersey
Truck
DON'S AUTO SERVICE
CR-1000 RECEIVER
Main Entrance
Laboratories
Restrooms
Madras Indian Shop
SUA / Maupintour travel service
Summer Vacation
the GRAMO PHONE YP-B00 TURNTABLE shop
YAMAHA
For the Finest in Authentic, Handcrafted Indian Jewelry, Arts and Crafts
19 W. 9th
10:5-30 Daily
Thursdays '11 8
at the rear of KIEF'S DISCOUNT
PHONE 843-1211
KU Union—The Malls-Hillcrest-900 Mass
Reservations now.
RECORD AND STEREO
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
842-1544 SAVINGS ON AMOUNT BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS
KANSAN WANT ADS
6
Wednesday. July 16, 1975
University Daily Kansan
Entertainment and broadcast to benefit arts
The Lawrence Arts Center and KLWN radio will provide entertainment tomorrow to shoppers and listeners in an attempt to raise money to complete remodeling of the center, which is to serve as a community building for the arts.
Ann Evans, center director, said yesterday that more than 40 merchants will be contributing to the KLWN benefit at the center, at 9th and Vermont streets.
The $25 that each merchant pays to KLWN for advertising that day will be given the center for completion of renovation of the center, she said.
The center will also provide entertainment in conjunction with the *awrence annual sidewalk bazaar*, which is held downtown and in shopping centers.
The show will begin at noon in front of the First National Bank, 9th and dassachusetts. Cliff Rakerd, KU student and ventrioloustr, will appear with his puppet, Eddle. Alice Sullivan, Lawrence undergraduate, will also give a puppet叫
The Stratford Gang, comprised of high school and junior high school students, will perform vaudeville numbers downtown and at the Malls and Hillcrest shopping centers.
The show will continue until 4:30 p.m. with the Seem-to-Be-players, a children's theater group, who will perform short segments of some of their productions.
KLWN will broadcast from the arts center until 7:30 p.m. It will then move to a tent show chataquaca in Central Park where E. C. Bucher, professor of speech and dance, will present "Canvas," which is based on traveling entertainment shows of the last century.
Exhibitionist shows himself to 3 women south of McCollum
Three Midwestern Music and Art campers, sunbathing south of McColum Hall Saturday, were the latest victims of a campus exhibitionist.
The three women campers described a man fitting the same general description as that given in several other indecent exposure incidents occurring since April.
They said that the nude man started running around them and laughing. He put his feet on one woman's buttocks and tried to pull the bathing suit top off another.
Capt. B. L. Ellison of Security and Parking said this constituted battery and was the first time that the offender had touched any of the women involved.
Ellison said that one person may or may not be responsible for all the occurrences. He said that investigators had a difficult time determining if the incident failed to promptly report the incidents.
One of the most recent victims said that the same man had exposed himself to her last Tuesday but she didn't bother to report it.
Ellison and Casey Eike, assistant dean of women, said in a joint statement, "One way the public can help in such matters is to immediately inform University security using the emergency number, 844-1100. Exact information given quickly increases the possibility of apprehending and prosecuting an offender."
Tommie Smith switches shoes
By KEN STONE
Tommie Smith, former University of Kansas basketball player, is trying out for the Kansas City Chiefs football team this week as a wide receiver.
Smith is one of more than 50 rookies trying to make the team at the Chiefs' rookie training camp on the William Jewell College camps in Liberty, Moe.
But the transition from sneakers to cleats has not been easy for Smith, who graduated in 1965.
"It's been kind of hard," Smith said in a telephone conversation yesterday.
"Yesterday I caught the ball and I was almost ready to dribble it."
Although Smith is no stranger to football—he was recruited for football out of high school by Notre Dame, Michigan and the Air Force Academy after being named all-state in Illinois—he said he was having some problems.
"It is frightening," said the 64, 210 lb. former Jayhawk. "They don't like you."
The rookies are required to memorize the Chiefs' 180-page play book as well as learn four or five new plays at a team meeting every night, he said.
Former KU quarterback David Jaynes, who returned to the Chiefs' camp a week earlier, said he was "surprised."
The Chiefs' curfew is 11 p.m. and there is little interaction between the coaches and athletes. Smith was charged with being withdrawn from feeling that everyone was out for himself.
helping Smith, but that's the only help he's
received. Smith said.
"Everyone is so tight and nervous here." I too am far behind. I don't know the olaa.
On the way the camp staff treated the
people so simply, simply said, "They treat
them like dogs."
"The first thing they did was make us run," Smith said. Every rookie was required to run a 40-yard dash and a 12-minute run for distance, he said.
Smith, who ran track in high school and as a freshman at KU, was told he run a 4.8 in the 40-yard dash trial. Smith said he had beaten his basketball shirt when he ran the trial.
Because the coaching staff has remained aloft, Smith said he was uncertain about the impression he was making. However, he said, he thought he had an even chance to make the cut although he didn't sound as if he was very concerned about it.
"I'm tired of this place," he said.
Confronted with what he called "a whole new system," Smith said he wasn't used to the tone of the camp. He said that in basketball there were close relations be-
Winn seeks support for Tall Grass Park
By MARTHA PERRY
Congressman Larry Winn is mailing letters to his colleagues in hope of gaining support for a resolution he will introduce at the White House. Grass Prairie National Park in Kansas.
However, Congressman Winn's legislative assistant, Rene Krey, said yesterday that it wasn't likely that the bill would be passed in this Congress.
It is the third attempt for such a bill. The previous attempts died because Congress failed to act. A resolution passed by the Kansas Legislature last session urged Congress to authorize the park and there oppose it to the park by Kansas cattle ranchers.
Raymond Hall, professor emeritus and member of the National Parks Advisory Board, said nine possible sites for the park in Kansas are being investigated.
"This summer reports will come out about characteristics of each area as regards its suitability for a Tall Grass Prairie National Park."
"These areas are under study by the Department of the Interior," Hall said.
Hall said that the proposed park would be natural area for preservation, research,
"All the National Parks have had a lot of opposition," Hall said. "It took from 1924 to 1968 to get the Redwood National Park in California. I don't know of any national park that has the National Park Service was created in 1916 that haven't run up against opposition."
Hall said he hoped the establishment of the park would not take too long because the flora and fauna in the area were rapidly being eliminated due to highways, power lines, cultivated fields and the planting of non-native grasses.
The tall grass prairies once covered the
lowlands of Iowa and Kansas, and parts of six
other rural areas.
National League wins, 6-3
MILWAUKEE (AP)—Bill Madlock ripped a bases-loaded, ninth-inning single which drove in two runs and helped the National League All-Stars to a 6-3 victory over the American League All-Stars last night in the 48th All-Star game.
Madlock, the Chicago Cubs' third baseman, who leads the National League with a .353 batting average, banged his left fielder off third baseman Gragnett's glove.
Reggie Smith of St. Louis opened the ninth iming against loser Catfish Hunter of the New York Yankees with a single that
Oakland's Claudell Washington almost caught
Then Al Oliver of Pittsburgh, batting for winning pitcher Jon Mataillack of the New York Metals, doubled over Washington's head into the left field corner.
After Larry Bowl of Philadelphia was hit by a pitched ball, Madlock hit his single.
Madlock and Matlock shared the Commis-
sioner's Trophy as Most Valuable Pole.
After the game, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, who had thrown out the first ball, visited the National League dressing room to congratulate the winners.
Rates down for dorm lots and 2 zones
Students who park in residence hall parking lots will pay less for a parking sticker this fall but they did last, according to the American Cancer Society which will become effective August 28.
A residence hall parking permit will cost
$35,000 per year. The same permit
cost $35 last year.
By ARNOLD LYTLE
However, those purchasing permits for Blue and Red parking zones will pay $30 rather than $27.50. Blue lots are on the main campus inside the area controlled by the traffic control booths. Red zones are primarily those on the perimeter of the controlled main campus, such as lot G between Haworth and Malott halls.
BY ARIEL LEVITT
Kansan Staff Reporter
Purchasers of an X- or O-zone permit will also pay less, but parks parking there without a permit will pay 25 cents at the entrance instead of last year's 20 cents. Permits will cost $2 for the year. Last year they cost $27.50.
Other regulations changes designate certain parking stalls in various lots as reserved for physically handicapped persons. The Parking Permit Employees company permits until they
A paragraph has been added at the end of the section on violations, fees and other penalties. It states: "Vehicles may be towed from the campus at any time for necessitating the efficient operation of the regulations other than those listed."
old wording was "vehicles owned by or in the custody of a member."
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Some wording has been changed in the regulations. The first paragraph reads, "All self-propelled vehicles owned or operated by a licensed staff, staff, or student body must be registered." The
Smith said he* would try for professional basketball if his attempt at football was unsuccessful. He said that Ted Williams had the basketball coach, had been advising him.
tween the coaches and athletes, but at the Chiefs' camp the opposite was true.
"Coach Owens told me to tryout for a week and give it my best." I know that knowing
receive their first pay check and allow residents of Daisy Hill residence halls the option of buying a permit for the lot west of the I. Wake Street overpass for only $5.
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Smith wasn't a football player, reacted to him in a strange way, he said.
812 Mass. 842-8664
"All I can do is try to catch the ball and try to block," he said.
"They look at me kind of funny," he said without elaboration.
Smith said he was ready for the Saturday scrimmage, which will determine whether he will compete later against the veterans for a spot on the team.
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-Theatre skits ever half-hour
Paul Gray's Dixieland Band
- K.U. Belly Dancers
- Moonwalk for the kids
PLAZING
BLAZING
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
No.163
Med technicians training course coming to city
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Thursday, July 17, 1975
See page 2
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
ALFRED HALL JOHNSON
THE NATIONAL CHORA
PRESENTED BY THE NATIONAL CHORA
GROUP OF CINEMAS AND FESTIVALS
Choral struggle
Brenda Ellison, Rising City, Neb., mulls an upcoming passage while pretending to "Touch" the band's open place will be performed Sunday afternoon at 2 by members of the Midwestern Women's Association.
Hawklet shifts; joins ROTC
BY ALISON GWINN
Kapan Staff Reporter
The Hawklet will close July 30.
But its spirit will live on, as a result of a compromise reached at a meeting among administrators, representatives of the computer center, representatives of the department of military science and a student representative.
The participants in the meeting agreed that the Hawklet would close, but that the military science annex would be used as a student lounge, concessions area and study.
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
said a couple of computer terminals and
a keypunch machine might be moved into the
anex, along with vending machines.
Shankel characterized the move into the office as a “challenge,” and opens in options we didn't have before."
He said some vending machines might remain in Summerfield.
Jon Josserand, student representative at the meeting, said, "Given the lateness of the time and the complexity of remodeling on campus, there is nothing else we can do.
"I see no reason why the Hawklet couldn't have been saved had certain options been considered by the administration. But no one could blame me. That's the thing I want to emphasize."
Shankel said, "Over a year ago, we had requests signed by the undergraduate and graduate business associations pressing the need for more library space. There has been quite a bit of student involvement in this for a couple of years."
He said a lack of information on Josserand's part had prompted him to say that options to the Hawklet closing hadn't been considered.
"About six months ago we had people all over campus looking for other places to put them."
"If you want to check that, go talk to the people in Spencer Research Library who were upset when we had the business school campus." It was an obvious joke for space to put the computers.
Joosandar was he upset with the way the administrators kept changing their arguments.
"We rebutted all their earlier arguments
then they came up with this accretion."
Shankel said the business school accreditation report wasn't received until a couple of weeks ago, so that it couldn't be used as an argument recently.
Commission studies KU teaching
By CONNIE BRUCE
Kansas Staff Demonstrator
Results of a study being done by the Commission on the Quality of Classroom Instruction will be available by Sept. 1, Ed student student body president, said yesterday.
The commission's purpose is to do research and recommend ways to improve classroom teaching at the University of Kansas. Research continuing the community with Bruce Woner, Hutchinson senior, and Dave Shapiro, Clayton, Mo., sophomore.
KU gives out bid descriptions for computers
Bid specifications for new computer systems for the University of Kansas were released yesterday to vendors by the Kansas State Division of Purchasing.
Bob Adams, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, headed the team that drafted specifications for the new research. Gil Dyck, deam of admissions and records, was in charge of the team that put together the administrative computer system.
The specifications, prepared over the past 40 weeks by two teams at KU, detail KU's needs for the computers it plans to purchase by early 1976.
The bid specifications were released to computer vendors at the division office in Topeka. Vendors will have until Aug. 1 to study the specifications.
On Aug. 22, vendors will be required to submit a monetary guarantee to the division if they plan to bid, Paul Wolfhe, head of KU's commutation center, said yesterday.
On Aug. 1, in Topeka, venders will have the opportunity to meet with division and KU administrators to ask any questions that may arise from the specifications.
Shankel said vendors may bid on either system or may submit proposals for an agreement.
The researchers will submit a report to Rolfs on their summer's work by Aug. 8.
Dil Shankar, executive vice chancellor,
said bids probably would be returned in 60 days, although extensions might be granted
for the future. He said he would be in
by the first week of October, he said.
A survey sent to faculty members last spring, to which 60 per cent responded, indicated that quantity of research ranks number one in importance at KU. Won said, Quality of research ranked second, quality of undergraduate teaching fourth, quality of undergraduate teaching fourth.
The majority of teachers who responded indicated that these four things should be reintroduced.
Two kinds of research were defined by the commission. Rofs said these were research conducted on the subject of the disease.
Woner said there had been a misinterpretation by many people who thought the commission placed teaching above research. He said there should be a balance of teaching, research and service for good teaching.
Excellence in classroom teaching needs to be a fundamental criterion when considering promotion and tenure. Woner said, not just quantity of publication.
"Research for publishing isn't necessarily secondary but it is not above teaching," Woner said. "We need to make the deal of emphasis is put on teaching."
The major discovery of the commission, Rofs said, is that research and teaching are not mutually exclusive functions. The commission found that research was a necessary end for excellent teaching, he said.
About 40 departmental heads, school dews, award-winning teachers and outstanding faculty members have been interviewed this summer. Shapiro said. Many of the students asked for a face on how to improve teaching at KU have been obtained from the interviews, he said.
Rfoa said a "publish or perish syndrome" had flourished at KU and attempts to achieve a balance between teaching and publishing would take a long time.
"It's the research for publication that we feel has been overemphasized." Rolfs said.
To compile further data, a survey was sent to a cross-section of the country's universities asking questions about faculty selection procedures, information on larger versus research, and instructors' selection and training. Shapira said.
Chris Iliff, Prairie Village senior and chairman of the seven-member commission, gave Wonet and Shapiro two main tasks: the development of a new instrument for teacher evaluation and the organization classroom on classroom teaching, Shapiro said.
"Right now we are searching for three outstanding classroom educators from across the country and we are in the process of finding information on various people," Sparrow said.
The Curriculum and Instruction Survey and ways to make it a better evaluative instrument for all teaching situations and departments are being studied, he said.
Ed Rolfs, student body president, said, "The whole thing's unfortunate. We tried as bard as we could and there isn't much more we can do. The only thing we can do now is pursue student representation in other matters."
The commission's proposals will be open to review by faculty, administrators and students before going to the Senate, Rolfs said. After they are processed by the committee, they will be chaired by Chancellor Dykes will officially approve or disapprove him, he said.
to place food and refreshment services where it's feasible, based on a real need. I think it's been ably demonstrated that there is a real need down there."
The educators will lecture in their teaching fields and evaluate the commission's proposals to improve classroom instruction. Education Week, Nov. 12, Shapiro said.
The educators are being sought to highlight the symposium on teaching.
Jossandier said, "It's a refreshing change to have someone say, 'What can we do for you?'
Joosserand said the lauge space in the annen was 842 square feet in area, as compared to 2,790 square feet of total usable area in the Hawklet.
Both Shankel and Josserand said the ROTO commanders were extremely comfortable.
"They're cutting us down extremely," he said. "The University promised to furnish air conditioning, drainage and water service in the future."
Shankel said plumbing would be available
this summer, and air-conditioning would be installed in the fall if it was needed.
Air Force personnel offices will be removed from the annex and built in the basement of the military science building, in what is now a garage.
Walter Wondrack, professor of Air Force ROTC, said, "It's a little inconvenient, but it's something that needs to be done. I think we can adapt."
Wendrick said no trace of the military science personnel would remain in the
"I think we should get out completely if they're going to use it for something else. If we've got to give up something and consider doing the military science building," he said.
Frank Burger, director of the Kansas Union, said. "It has always been our policy
He said there was a high probability that the union would respond quickly to the threat. "It was a very high chance."
The loss of operating time would be minimal, he said, if that move could be avoided.
NDSL shortage possible
By JENIFER OTWELL
Wondrack said he hadn't been told when personnel would have to move out of the lounge area in the annex, but they could move out by Aug. 30 if asked to do so.
For the first time in four years, not all eligible students who have applied for National Direct Student Loans (NDSL) may get them, Jerry Rogers, director of the office of student financial aid, said yesterday.
In the past few years any eligible student who applied for an NDSL was able to receive one at almost any time during the year, he said. This year anyone who applied for an NDSL would not receive a loan because lss money is available and more students have applied.
By June 1 last year, 3,560 applications for financial aid had been received, he said. As of June 27 this year, 4,134 applications have been filed, they then after the February 14 priority date.
The NDSL fund consists of a contribution from the federal government; plus one-ninth of this amount, which is provided by the Kansas Legislature through the University; and collections from students paying back old loans.
three per cent of the total is used for expenses and the rest is available for leisure.
Last year KU received $769,248 from the federal government. This year only $679,172 from the federal government.
KU received less this year because the U.S. Office of Education Regional Panel in Kansas City, Mo., reduced the amount that Roofers had estimated they would need, Rogers said.
The panel said that KU should make better use of the amount available through
HOUSTON (AP)—Today's highlights for
space mission space. Times are
Central Daylight.
Apollo—Soyuz docking plans:
11:11 a.m. -Wit television camera in action. Anello starts approaching Sowu.
12:49 p.m. - Seven-ninute Apollo telecast.
12:50 p.m. - Astronauts Thomas P. Stafford and Donald K. Slayton open hatch and enter Annoi docking module.
11:15 p.m. - Apollo docks with Soyuz while
136 miles above West Germany.
2:17 p.m.—In the first of four crew transfers between the two spacecraft, Stafford and Slayton move from the docking module to join cosmonauts Alexel A. Leonov and Valerian N. Kubasov in Soyuz for official missions, exchange of flags and letters. Teledvised.
4:31 p.m. -- Stafford and Slayton end first
crew transfer by returning to Anolo.
6:20 p.m.-Start eight-hour sleep by astronauts, 7½ hours by cosmonauts.
loan collection to increase its total funds, Rogers said. They said that all collections could be used except those collected during the last quarter of the year.
Rogers said there was a delay between the time the money was collected and the time it was available for use. Money collected at the beginning wouldn't be available for a loan at the beginning of the spring semester because the money must be on hand before it could be deposited.
The panel also reduced KU's estimated net need for each student, Rogers said. For the past 10 years they have allotted only $150 for books and supplies and $400 for personal expenses for a school year. KU had asked for more money in both categories.
There are several ways that this reduction of funds can be eased, Rogers said. There are always some students who cannot receive loans and those who have received loans who don't enroll.
One solution would be to disperse some of the loans at enrollment and the rest at the bank.
becomes available through loan collections, Rogers said.
Another possibility is that the amount of some loans may be reduced, and the student will become eligible for work-study money instead. he said.
Some students whose grade point is below a 2.0 will have their loans denied, Rogers
"The money has to go to the people who are making the best use of it," he said.
Although less money has been received for NDSL and for Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants in conjunction with the loans, more money is available through the Federal College Work-Study Program, Rogers said.
About $555,000 will be a 'available for work'
study next year. This is about $200,000 more
than the cost of a Master's degree.
However, Rogers said, he thought that KU students would rather borrow money and have more time to study than work while they are in school.
"The administration felt we should build a master work-study programs, so we applied for the program."
BY LYNN PEARSON
Kentan Staf Register
Commission ratifies park, treatment plant
The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission decided last night that a park planned to be positioned north of the proposed city maintenance garage site at 12th St. and Haskell Ave, was in compliance with the existing city comprehensive plan.
A new water treatment plant for Rural Water District No. 13 to be located north of U.S. 24-40 was also said to conform to the comprehensive plan.
The park area was part of a plan approved by the East Lawrence Improvement Association last month when it voted to endorse the city garage site.
Dick McClinanathan, city-county planner, told the commission that the park would contain a non-league baseball diamond, a few parking spaces and wooded areas and two small parking lots.
"The proposed Haskell Loop project will remove the park at the East Lawrence Recreation Center," McClanathan said. "There probably isn't any other use that can be made of this land as long as it is owned by the city."
The city is currently considering an ordinance condemning part of the park land and the land for the garage in order to acquire it from Orville Road, 918 E. 12th St.
In approving the water treatment plant for Rural Water District No. 13, the planning commission asked that the treatment building be landscaped. The plant will serve parts of Jefferson, Leavenworth and Douglas Counties.
The heavily wooded part of the proposed park belongs to Park Hetzel, Rt. 5, who has agreed to sell the land to the city.
The system will have two wells, a water
planet planar, an aeration basin and a re-
carbonation basin.
Representatives from the water district said the plant would cause no noise or odor problems and the building wouldn't intrude on traffic. Some workers left off from the Lawrence Municipal Airport.
The commission gave approval to the tentative 1976 Capital Improvement Program, which contains a plan for 1976 and a six-year plan extending through 1981. It also includes projects, construction of the Clinton Parkway and construction of the Haskell Loop.
The completion of Clinton Parkway is scheduled for 1977 at an estimated cost of $2,651,300. Haskell Loop, also scheduled for 1977, is estimated to cost about $2,544,000.
College associate dean appointed
By JACK McNEELY
Kansan Staff Reporte
Frances Horowitz, chairman of the department of human development and family life, yesterday was named an author of the College of the Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Robert Cobb, dean of the College, in announcing Horowitz' appointment said, "Professor Horowitz will bring to the College an impressive array of abilities and skills that are especially needed at this stage in the life of the College and the University."
After the summer session Horowitz will no longer be chairman of the department of human development and family life but she must continue to teach and research, Cobb said.
Her appointment is effective im-
mediately, but she will not fully assume her
role.
Howartz, who was a candidate for the deanship to which Cobb was recently appointed, said she was pleased with her success. "I am confident we plan to seek a higher administrative office."
She said she liked having a job that made her combination of professors and administrators.
Her duties as an associate dean will include faculty recruitment, generation of resources and development of the educational programs of the College.
Cobb said Horowitz would be taking over duties that had been shared last year by her husband, who is a doctor. Her appointment doesn't mean that one of the other associate deans will leave, Cobb
The department of human development and family life has been highly successful in getting federal grants and other money, Horowitz said.
It developed from a department of home economics under her leadership.
"A lot of good things go on at this
place. 'Don't have adequate support'
she said."
The search for financial resources, which will be one of her duties, is more than just asking for money. Horowitz said. It is generating ideas for new programs and improving existing programs to eye to attracting outside support, she said.
Howritz will develop the responsibilities of her job according to Jobb's expectations, her own interests and problems that arise, she said.
One of her interests is experimental education, which she defined as "opportunities or undergraduates who are not students they usually aren't." She named independent study,
work study and cooperative study programs as examples of experimental education.
"There are problems with regard to the whole concept of a liberal arts education in the United States."
She said she would seek ways to involve students in the process of education and to keep the faculty involved and satisfied with the University.
"A college of liberal arts ought to be a setting in which one can have exciting educational experiences," she said. "That is largely dependent on the quality of the faculty, but is also dependent on the atmosphere administrators create, she said.
Howell came to KU in 1981 after earning a BS in Physics from Ohio University Yellow Springs, Ohio, a masters degree in education from Goucher College, Towson, Md., and a PhD from Iowa State University.
Horowitz has attained renown for her work as a research scientist, Cobb said.
2
Thursday, July 17, 1975
University Daily Kansan
NEWS DIGEST THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Bailway bargaining advances
WASHINGTON - Negotiators in the railway labor dispute narrowed their differences, and John McMahon shook off the hopeful a strike could cause congressional congestion.
The Brotherhood of Railway and Airline Clerks has set a 12.01 a.m. Monday deadline for a nationwide strike. However, the Ford administration had said it would consider taking the impasse to Congress if an acceptable contract was not reached by last night.
Dunlap took his discussions with J. W. Ussery Jr., chief federal mediator, indulged in the differences were narrow and added, if the regulators worked hard.
Senate passes oil bill
WASHINGTON - A bill to cut the price of oil won final Senate approval after the Ford administration hinted at another round of gasoline price increases by Labor.
Passage of the bill on a 57-40 vote underlined the deep differences between Congress and the White House over energy policy. Although President Ford wants to raise fuel prices to encourage conservation, the Democratic bill would cut the price of 40 per cent of U.S. oil production by about $1 a barrel.
in testimony two Senate subcommittees, Frank Zarb, head of the Federal Energy Administration, said motorists can expect to pay two to five cents more for gasoline.
House keeps spy committee
WASHINGTON-Turning aside assertions that the House Select Intelligence Committee must intelligence agencies, the house overwhelmingly does not oblige it.
The 293-122 vote against abolishing the committee cleared the way for approval, possibly today, to replace it with a new panel headed by Rep. Oils G. D.N.Y., Pike, who headed the House inquiry into the seizure of the spy ship Fuelo, is now a candidate for the next House chairwoman, as chairman of the intelligence committee, which has been torn with dissension.
Supporters of the effort to abolish the committee included Rep. Samuel S. Stratton, D.N.C., Stratton said some members already had shown an inclination to leave the committee.
Fire strands NY commuters
PHIILAEPLIHA-Fire in a transformer killed the power to Penn Central round operations on its yesterday, stopping all service on the main rail line between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh.
Thousands of riders were stranded as trains already under way—both on intercity runs as well as commuter lines—deltated to a halt shortly before 2:30 p.m.
"We don't know how many trains are stranded," said a spokesman for the railroad, the nation's largest. "We're still counting them."
Nearly 70,000 commuters use Pem Central lines daily to get in and out of the city. The railroad did not have immediate plans for offering buses to the stranded commuters.
Cause of the transformer fire was undetermined.
Exxon admits secret gifts
WASHINGTON—The Exxon Corp. said it gave $40 to $1 million in secret contributions to Italian political parties during a nine-year period ending in early 2015.
Archie L. Monroe, Exxon controller, told Senate investigators that the "Italian situation was a unique airstrike" in worldwide operations of the oil company.
monroe testified at a hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee on multinational corporations.
Monroe said Exxon management never approved any contribution to the Italian Communist Party, although invoices turned up in an audition indicated that $80,000 of the funds were unclaimed.
House donation questioned
WASHINGTON- Several members of the House are quietly捐赠 donations that make no public accounting, sometimes treating the proceeds as personal income.
The stated purpose of the money is to defray official office expenses not reimbursed by the government, but the funds also serve a political purpose.
New questions are being raised about these funds because of the campaign finance law which took effect this year.
Common Cause, a lobby group, has asked the Election Commission to rule that all office funds be counted as political funds subject to the legal appending limits in Section 1056(a)(3).
By WILL DICKINSON Kansan Staff Reporter
Ten middle management employees of Munns Medical Supply Company, which sells medical supplies to hospitals and nursing homes, are on campus this week as a management seminar sponsored by the University of Kansas School of Business.
The program, in its first year, was set up at the request of President William Munns for middle management employees from the University of Washington, Wichita, St. Louis, and Kansas City, Mo.
The purpose of the seminar is to help middle management employees of the company broaden the scope of their knowledge and activities. The Pinet, School of Business and director for the School of Business and director for the program, said yesterday.
The School of Business sponsors several seminars of this type for interested companies. The program for each company is developed according to the needs of the particular management team as well as the grounds of the people involved, Pinet said.
Seminar participants have five classes daily, from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. When not in class, the participants prepare for the next day of classes. They are housed at Jayhawk Towers.
The seminar classes are: "The American Business Climate," "Finance and Control," "Law and the Businessman," "Marketing Behavior," and "Organizational Behavior and Administration."
Seminar instructors, all from the School of Business, are: John Tolleson, associate dean; Dong Tuggle, associate professor; Dave Shulenberg, acting associate professor; Pamela Piasek, acting associate professor; and Charles Krider, assistant professor.
E
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The course, which started last week, will be offered two more times to Douglas County residents during the next year, and expect expected about 100 persons to complete it.
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McFarlane said five of the 30 persons taking the course were employed by the ambulance service. The others are residents of Lawrence and other towns in the county who wanted to take the course in a serious professional and personal manner.
THE HISTORICAL ELDRIDGE HOUSE
Lawrence's first training course for emergency medical technicians should release about 30 of the technicians into Douglas County by the end of September, Ted McFarlane, manager of the Douglas County ambulance service, said yesterday.
A recent $21,279 appropriation from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare provides half of the funding for the course and several other new projects the ambulance service is planning. Douglas County has approved equal funding for the schools.
"The class should put enough EMT's (emergency medical technicians) into the community so that there will be somebody on the scene in more accidents who can
By THERESE MENDENHALL
7th & Massachusetts 841-4666
Class trains medical technicians
11 a.m. - 2:30 p.m.
9:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
5:00 p.m. - 10:30 p.m.
10:30 a.m. - 2:30 p.m.
Kansan Staff Reporter
Local talent welcome in the 'Open House'
BY PENNY CHILTON
Monday-Friday
Monday-Thursday
Friday-Saturday
Sunday
He said that the emergency medical technician training course was a new idea in Lawrence and that he expected more people to attend. He also said a new law required that after July 1, 1976, ambulance service employees within six months of the date they are hired.
The staff of "Cottontowood Review" will begin publishing this fall "Open House," a miscellaneous tabloid of articles, stories and poetry by local writers.
Michael Smitzer, editor of the "Cottonwood Review," said yesterday that "Open House" wouldn't be another "Cottonwood Review." It would be that localized in its choice of material.
One instructor for the EMT course was trained at the University of Kansas Mei Center through the new funds. McFarlane said a second would be trained soon.
keep the patient from getting worse until the ambulance gets there," Mf卡莱尔 said.
The two-and-one-half-month EMT course costs each student $10.
Individuals may purchase a year’s worth of "Melissa's view" and "Abbey House," for $4,000, made
"Open House" will be financed through "Cottonwood Review." Smetter said. "We plan to give out the first issue free and charge 25 cents each for the others."
The new appropriation will also finance a 10-month paramedic training course at the KU Med Center for several ambulance service employees. McFarlane said the service would greatly contribute to the emergency treatment the service could offer.
"An ambulance equipped with a paramedic becomes an emergency room," he said.
McFarlane said the paramedic could administer drugs as directed by a doctor.
"The main stress will be on articles" Snitzer said, with about one short story out of ten. "I don't like it."
Lunch
Dinner
Dinner
Coyler said "Open House" would complement both "Cottonwood Review" and "Rendezvous," a publication that will be published by the KU fiction writing classes.
Richard Colyer, assistant professor of English and "Cottonwood Review" adviser, said, "The tabloid will include the kinds of works that are so hard to find in including local poetry and film reviews."
He said he could foresee spotlighting one local writer in each issue and running a press release to get his attention.
Colyer said the tabloid would be sold both on campus and in downtown Lawrence.
In briefs filed with the clerk of the court, Clark's attorney, Edward G. Collier Jr., alleged that because the arrest was illegal, item 10 used illegally as evidence item 43.
Harold Clark Jr., convicted in Lawrence of rape in June 1974, has appealed his case to the Kansas Supreme Court on grounds he was illegally arrested.
Rapist appeals on the grounds of illegal arrest
Clark was convicted of raping a University woman in her dormitory room at Ellsworth Hall. He was also found guilty of misappropriation, which was seized during his arrest.
Collister said that the pretrial identification of Clark was done improperly, and that the state failed to prove the victim was forced into intercourse against her will. Thus, he said, the items seized couldn't legally be used as evidence.
Clark currently is serving a fiveyear sentence for the rape conviction and six months for the marijuana conviction. The sentences are to run concurrently.
"Cottonwood Review" received no funds from the Student Senate this year, but Smetzer said there were enough leftover to buy a new edition, which should be out next week.
The publishers of "Cottonwood Review" have applied for grants from the Kansas Cultural Arts Commission and the Coordinating Council of Literary Magazines, he
The case will probably be heard this fall.
He said that since "Open House" was
called to his work, he who wished
to submit his work should call.
"All fiction and poetry will be welcomed," he said, "and it will be open to all other forms of communication other than the traditional ones."
Smitzer told the editors of "Cottonwood bow" would also edit "Open House," but "buy now."
Hatfield asks court to shorten sentence
Terry J. Hattfield, who was sentenced to five to 20 years in prison in April for the shooting death of Sally Spears, has applied to the court for a modification of sentence.
Wesley Norwood, Hatfield's attorney,
filed a motion Tuesday in Douglas County
District Court to reduce the sentence to one
to 20 years.
Hattief pleaded guilty to a charge of voluntary manslaughter. He was sent to the Jail for four months (KRDC) following his sentencing. Kansas law allows the local judge to modify the sentence within 120 days of the sentencing, and in 120 days run out at the end of August.
The number of paramedics to be trained for the county is uncertain because the ambulance service has received less than 10,000 calls in which it requested for this purpose, he said.
Norwood sold in his motion that reports
he will recommend a loss confinement for Hattie.
No hearing has been set for the motion.
Douglas County commissioners will open bids at 9 a.m. aug. 13 for contracts on the first four of 50 bridges to be replaced in the rural areas of Douglas County.
The county is seeking consolidated bids for construction of four bridges in the Lecompton area, and consolidated bids for the approach grading for them.
Also financed by the recent appropriation was a modular ambulance, which will be the service's four vehicle. McFarland said a modular ambulance was made in two parts: the patient compartment and the chassis. He said since the patient compartment lasted three to five times as long as the chassis, a modular ambulance was more expensive over a long period of time than the alternative series of single-unit vehicles.
Contractors will be asked to itemize their bids for each bridge, but the contractor with the lowest lump sum bid will get the contracts for all four bridges. The bids for approach grading will be handled the same wav.
County to open bids on bridges
A two-way communications unit for the new ambulance as also provided by the new ambulance.
The bridge program was authorized by a countywide vote last November.
Author of "PSYCHO"
BOB BLOCH
ON CAMPUS
THURSDAY, JULY 17
Speaking at
7:00 p.m.
Forum Room (Kansas Union)
ROBERT BLOCH, author of "Psycho," she speaks at 7 tonight in Woodruff Auditorium.
"JUNCTION CITY—1890-1915," a motion picture picture by the Kansas Collection of the University of Kansas Libraries, will be on p. 150m. p. 150m. in the KU Museum of Art.
TWO KU PROFESSORS have received fellowships from the American Council of Learned Societies. Receiving the fellowships were: Melvin D. Landsberg, associate professor of English, for a thesis on *Bases*; and Phillip S. Paludan, associate professor of history for a study of American communities in the Civil War Era, 1850-1880.
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Thursday, July 17, 1975
3
City gets VISTA workers
By MARK PENNINGTON Kansan Staff Reporter
Most people probably wouldn't think that a prosperous city of 45,000 with a large university and numerous volunteer organizations would need the services of VISTA.
However, three VISTA volunteers will arrive in Lawrence Saturday to begin a year of service to the poor and underprivileged in Douglas County.
Although many people think VISTA volunteers are young men and women teaching English to Indians in New Mexico or helping to build houses in Appalachia, the group's work sometimes extends into cities that don't outwardly seem to need their help.
Ocoee Miller, one of the supervisors at
"Even when we do find someone who is willing to help us, it is usually on a very 'ify basis', she said. "The hours they can spend with us are very irregular because of their jobs or because they have to take care of their kids."
Penn House, said the reason VISTA was needed in Lawrence was that there weren't enough full-time volunteers to provide needed services for the underprivileged. Penn House is a local agency that provides social services for the needy.
Miller said the three VISTA volunteers
There'll be paid about $260 a year.
They'll bepaid about $260 a year.
Am Moore, coordinator of the community office of the volunteer clearing house, said the VISTA national office had called her to see whether she could use some people for
University Daily Kansan
Fulbright recipients arrive at University
By KEN STONE
Kansan Staff Reporter
Some of the more than 50 Fulbright-Hays scholars who are coming to the University of Kansas this week got one of their first headlines from a faculty member. Meadowlark room of the Kansas Union.
They talked about long trips from their native lands, their first impressions of this country and the subjects they had come here to study.
The students, from 25 countries are at the University to participate in 6-week orientation program designed to ease their transition from one culture and language to another.
J. A. Burzle, director of Foreign Study for the College and director of the Orientation Center for Foreign Students, said yesterday that the students were here to get assistance in English and to learn the methodology of American education.
"The purpose is three-fold," Burles said of the orientation program, which is now in place. "We want to equip them to the educational patterns of the U.S. institution of higher learning, we introduce them to contemporary American language and help to improve their English proficiency."
The Fulbright-Hays scholarship program was begun by the U.S. State Department in 1951 to encourage closer relations between students and teachers of different countries.
"The idea originally was to allow American students and faculty members to study abroad, supported by funds acquired during the second world war," Burke said.
"But when funds ran out, other countries thought the interchange was so successful
that the United States as well as other
contributors money for the continuation of
the program.
volunteer work in the poor sections of the city, where there was plenty of work for them in Lawrenz.
The orientation center at KU, which is one of four in the country today, was one of the original 28 established in 1951 to receive foreign students, he said.
More said the three VISTA volunteers, Jim and Olivia Hillman from Eureka, Calif., and Ann Haehl from Lawrence, were in Kansas City, Mo, undergoing last-minute orientation before coming to Lawrence for their year's work.
"And we're the only surviving one of the original 28 centers."
"The emphasis was originally on teaching the American language. It is shifted to the English language."
However, he said, the emphasis of the center has changed over the years.
Mary Davidson, one of four composition teachers at the orientation program, said the students attend composition classes in English and English as a language learning English in a lab during the afternoon.
She said that because of their lack of knowledge of American culture, the students hear a lecture on some aspect of American life every day.
Olivia Hillman said she and Jim applied
Olivia Hillman program while going to
college.
Davidson said the student later found out whv.
"All the instructors attend the lectures with students and we are prepared to talk with them."
She said one girl had asked her, "Why do we have air-conditioning when the climate is hot?"
Burzle said he thought the students' acclimatization to Lawrence and to this country had been smooth as well, except for those who have had problems with jet lag and food.
Their ability to adapt easily and to interact well with the other Fulbright scholars is a function of their high quality as students and persons, Burlee said.
Army scans dam project
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is investigating whether it has paid for rock that was never delivered to Clinton Reservoir.
Resident Engineer Kenneth Rowen said the only rock purchased for Clinton was used in the fall of 1972 for the access road and roads to the campus, which are involved in the two-mile Clinton Road.
The investigation began Tuesday after reports of apparent fraud in the nondelivery of rock to the Truman Dam and Reservoir near Warsaw, Mo., were published.
"We really didn't think we'd be selected for anything, but since we're both interested in this type of work, we thought we should give it a trv." she said.
Both of them are looking forward to their year in Lawrence except for one minor
It is assumed that the records of purchased rocks for Clinton are correct, Rowen
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"ir and I have never been around snow at all unless we went skiing," she said. "I understand the winters are pretty bad here now, but they aren't used to. Oh, well, it should be fun."
Moore said the volunteers would be working in three general areas.
"The people will work with Headquarters in helping young kids to find alternatives to drugs. And they'll also be recruiting people from the city to work as volunteers in hospitals and other areas, for people who perhaps have not seen themselves as volunteers in the past."
"They'll work with the council on aging at outreach personnel in making door-to-door contacts with the city's elderly," she said. "We want to make sure all these people know the different benefits and services that are available to them."
More said that for the first five days the VISTA volunteers are in Lawrence, they'll live with a low income family. After that they're headed to their accommodations on their own.
Prof sees Soviet side of detente
By JACK FISCHER
The U.S.-U.S.S.R. detain has had mixed repercussions for citizens in the Soviet Union, John Alexander, professor of history and civic and Study society areas, said
Alexander, who recently returned from a four-month research visit to Moscow, said he thought there had been much change since his last extended stay in that city in 2016, and the statement by saying that Moskow was far ahead of the rest of the country in most respects.
"I was fairly impressed with the external, "material comforts," Alexander said. "In general, there is obviously much more importance of the rattle despite the wrench over the trade bill."
However, Alexander said, to compensate the unpaid amount sent by the company, he would send "imperialals" a $10,000 secret letter.
increasing their propaganda campaigns.
"I found the amount of propaganda very
deep."
Alexander said that it was very difficult for Soviets to get a balanced picture of international events but that the propaganda was less effective because it was too blunt to be believed.
Alexander said the Soviets he spoke with in favor of deafness and hoped it continued.
He said although the Soviets had little understanding of Watergate they sympathized with former President Nixon and they said they could have fostered detente.
Alexander sailed the Soviets fretened detente
a masterly pursuit by the new admini-
istration.
Despite the official Communist party party that totoits the lack of inflationary policy, the Communist Party has not achieved this.
said, the Soviet Union has similar economic cycles. He predicted they would be faced with increased inflation as they became more involved in international trade.
Although his research wasn't affected by the Cold War, Russia didn't exist in the American scene.
He said there was close control over subject matter taught and a faculty member could be fired easily if he became involved in a controversy.
Students are required to engage in some form of community service in addition to their studies, Alexander said, and they could be dismissed from the university for not doing this work unless faculty members intervened on the students' behalf.
"Unless you meet someone with a critical mind there is very little to talk about," he said. "You're likely to get a straight party line."
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Thursday, July 17, 1975
University Daily Kansan
FEED & GRAIN
"BE OF SOME HEP?"
Actors spark wacky film
Rv WARD HARKAVY
SULLIAN'S TRAVELS — 1941 — Directed by Preston Sturges. With Joel McCren, Veronica Lake, Porter Hall, Franklin Pangborn and Robert Warrick.
There was once a golden age of comedy in Hollywood, the 20th "Sullivan's Trawler" musical. A 1964 film by
REVIEW
age, is surely a golden moment and an enjoyable one, too.
Preston Sturgis, director of "Sullivan's Travels," was a comic genius whose only creative period was from 1940 to 1944. He directed some of the wackest movies ever to emerge from the Hollywood film factory. McKenna, who worked with Mickey Mouse, the Lola Mouse, "Palm Beach Story," and "The Miracle of Morgan's Creek."
Though one of his lesser efforts,
through his work on the
funnest movies of the early 40s,
Joel McCrea, who is best remembered for his gritty and heroic roles in Westerns, plays Sullivan, a director who searches for "the truth." Sullivan says that he is sick of happy movies and that he is ready to make "meaningful" movies. So he leaves his house, finds a job as a doctor and tries to rough it across America to discover what the country is really like.
But enough about the plot. It isn't really that important to our enjoyment of the movie. What is important is Sturges' marvelous use of characters and his rapid-fire scattergun dialogue. He was a mad genius and his films show it.
Throughout his peak period, which incidentally was also his most productive period, Sturges employed some of the best character actors ever to appear in movies.
He gave these actors, among whom were William Demarest and Franklin Pangborn, scripts that exploited their best and most imaginative traits.
For instance, William Demarest, who appeared in "Miracle of Morgan's Creek," was the master of exasperation. His gravelly voice, aided by a Brooklyn acent, and his marvelous scowl were put to best use in the zany Sturgies movies.
Demarest played Hendra Fonda's valet in "The Lady Eve," Officer Kockenlocker in "Miracle of Morgan's Creek," a slogan selector in "Christmas in July," a tough sergeant in "The Conquering Hero" and Joel McCrea's bodyguard in "Sullivan's Travels"—all of which were movies directed by Preston Sturges.
That's the thing that remains in the memory after a sidesplitting experience of watching a Sturges movie—the character actors. If you've seen Eugene Palette as a character, you'll know that you're gonna you'll know what I mean. If not, watch the character actors in any Sturges film.
"Sullivan's Travels" also stars Veronica Lake, who is surprisingly good in a comic role, but whose performance is of secondary importance in this zany film.
The only real fault with the movie is the naive and sentimental ending. But it's not offensive; it’s merely a letdown after two hours of uffaws.
Though it's not *Sturges'* best movie, "Sullivan's Travels" is still one of the best movies to appear at KU this summer. It尾部 an appetite for more Preston Sturges films.
By CHUCK SACK
Kenton Receiver
Hollywood plague hits 'Locust'
"The Day of the Locust" is a very special and curious type of failure. It is suffocated
Day of the Locust—Directed by John Schlesinger. With Donald Sutherland, Karen Black, William Atheron and the novel. Based on the novel by Nanjuelo West.
REVIEW
by an excess of both money and interest that are rarely paired in large studio programs.
Based on Nathaniel West's novel of the same name, the film concentrates on the self-deluted grotesque that inhabit the Mecca of broken dreams, Hollywood itself. But although the novel succeeded in sketching the frustrated souls of untainted men, women and all losers, the film delivers only superficial glimpses of these characters.
In Burges Meredith, Donald Sutherland, Jonnie Blake and William Atherton, "The Day the Moon Collapsed" is an unnattractive cast of any major motion picture. Yet most of them look exactly right.
Only Aberthert, who looks too rawnoted to play Yale graduate Todd Hackett, is miscast. He's too bad about his ears and his ears on right angles to head and looks perfect as a pot-bellied accountant. Burges Merideth plays an old vaudeville man in "Batman" and gave to the Penguin in "Batman" on TV.
But the primary attraction in the film is Karen Black as Faye Greener. Faye is a tragedy, occasionally slipping into prostitution, but always clinging stupidly to her dream of becoming an actress. This character gives the role an appealing deserition.
While all of the males look right, they don't act right. Atherston isn't convincing
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because he lacks the self-confidence the role demands. M尔德 is much too tight in his hammesses, and Sutherland is simply too intelligent to convict us that he is a clod.
West powerfully depicted the lunacy of the Hollywood fringe by describing a disaster on a film lot in which several extras were hurt.
Schlesinger makes no attempt to minimize the scene.
The story moves toward a climax at a movie premiere, where people erupt in an outburst of unexpained enthusiasm unexplained. West's original satirical tone overpowers the sequence and throws the film out of balance. Instead of being distressing, the picture is merely distressing.
A thoughtful and intelligent director, he is at his best handling dialogue. But even this attribute works against the film. The characters of "The Day of the Locust" are, with the exception of Tod, witness people, who don't converse so much as they prattle.
The soundtrack is crammed with thirteen songs that make one nostalgic for the days before nostalgia. Worse yet, the details are so precise, cars with high-gloss wax, windows of glass and touches, that the seedy, pathetic ambiance that is essential to the story is lost.
This isn't because Schlesinger doesn't try.
"The Day of the Locust?" is a pastiche of good money and ideas that are misplaced. Ironically, that's how Nathanael West saw Hollywood.
KANU is applying for two grants which would enable the radio station to expand its coverage of local news, cultural and informational programs by five per cent, Paul Dahringer, KANU program director, said yesterday.
—NOTICE—
TO: All organizations allocated funds by the Student Senate from the Student Activity Fee
FROM: John House
Student Senate Treasurer
3. Obtain ADVANCE WRITTEN AUTHORIZATION for each expenditure from funds allocated to the organization.
The grants would allow KANU to hire two additional staff members, Dahringer said, thereby increasing local programing from 80 to 85 per cent of the total air time.
Richard Wright, station director, said he was of receiving the grants. *SU*'s chances were of receiving the grants.
1. Attend a TRAINING SESION conducted by the Student Senate Treasurer. See the schedule listed below.
2. Sign a CAPITAL DISPOSITION CONTRACT with the Student Senate.
All officers who are to be responsible for the expenditure of allocated funds MUST:
"The names are thrown in a hat and you cray." he said.
BY DAVID BARCLAY Kansan Staff Reporter
No funds will be made available until these requirements have been met.
KANU applies for grants
Treasurer's Training Sessions have been scheduled for the following times:
Dahringer, however, was more optimistic.
"I think we have a very, very good chance of getting the grants," he said.
Wright said he would know by Aug. 1, whether KANU would receive the grants.
whether KANU would receive the grants. One of the grants is a minority training grant for a two-year full time staff member, said Mr. Ward. The Corporation for Public Broadcasting with the stipulation that the university pay half of the salary, which the University of Florida owns.
Monday, July 14 2:00 p.m.
Tuesday, July 15 10:00 a.m.
Wednesday, July 16 7:00 p.m.
Thursday, July 17 2:00 p.m.
Monday, July 21 10:00 a.m.
Contact the Student Senate Treasurer's Office at 864-3746 to sign up for one of these sessions, or for additional information.
NOTE: Additional sessions will be scheduled in the Fall for those organizations that do not require access to their funds this Summer.
Wright said the other grant was funded by the Federal Comprehensive Employment Training Program and would provide 10,100 maximum salary for another full time staff member.
Competition for the grants is very high Wright said. We are competing with 160 other noncommercial radio stations for the grants, only about 12 such grants will be awarded.
The primary criterion for qualifying for the grant is the acceptability of the job description. The job description must be
Without the grants and the new staff that ANU could probably limp by, Writen said.
"We will have to rely on tape services
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Dahringer said he was tentatively planning several new programs for the fall semester in anticipation of additional funds, and he would program on the future of universities.
Dahringer said he intended to talk with students, consider the extent to which they were being educated by universities and discuss alternate methods of education.
A weekly international news summary is being planned that will focus on important world issues and events, Dahringer said. He told students would be interviewed for their role.
Dahringer also said a series of programs on the American Indian in Kansas, women
and other minority groups were also being planned.
The American Issues Radio Forum, a three hour long national call-in program on which experts discuss basic issues, and the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, will be conducting programs this fall regardless of whether KANU receives the grants, Dahringer said.
Programs that have been popular in the past will be carried over into the fall, he said. The Saturday Morning Jazz Scene, which has been at the top of the chart for earliness radio show, "The American awarding radio show," "The American" and Jim Searsh's "Opera Is My Hobby" and the Metropolitan Opera will all be continued. Dharringer said.
IMAGINE
Stare at this picture for seven seconds and see if you can imagine in your mind the warm brown bun on the hamburger below; the succulent, jucy, red tomato; the melting taste of meth cheese or all of an almost perfect hamburger being sliced on the grill.
[Image of a sandwich with a bite taken out.]
Time's up! Did you drow on the page? Well then, instead of getting the image from Sandy to Sandy at 1210 W. 8th and sink your teeth into the real thing.
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Reg. 30c
25c Shakes
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July 18-19
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F
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, July 17, 1975
5
If someone had told me a few years ago that there would be nudity on television during my lifetime, I would have said he was crazy. I was firmly convinced that television would be the last stronghold of the G-rated family entertainment to failure.
Public TV show exposes viewers to nudity
Then, along came "All in the Family," who with etiquette gabbed and a sound woman in each applique.
COMMENT
caught on and others like it quickly
stands up to the challenge of standing
labors of television programming.
If "All in the Family" got a foot in the tightly closed door of network censorship, a program that debuted last fall, "Hot 1 Baltimore." tried to break it down.
The show, with a cast that included prostitutes, homosexuals, pimps and assorted degenerates, was a dismal failure. It died an untimely death at the hands of the old little ladies and clean living citizens who used the networks to protest pollution of the airways.
Recently, however, the Public Broadcasting Service brought a historic first to television.
I sat down in front of my television one
Saturday night and tuned in channel 19,
totally unprepared for what I was about to
A message warning parents that the following program might be unsuitable for children flashed across the screen and then "Motty Python's Flying Circus" began.
I soon began to watch "Monty Python" every week. If the nudity in the first episode surprised me, the third show I watched was "Full Frontal Nudity," was really a shock.
The most startling aspect of the program was the nudity. In the first show I watched, there was a scene where an absent-minded business executive walked into a newstand and grabbed someone's phone before paper off the rack, paid her, turned and walked out without even hating an evelash
"Monty Python," distributed by the British Broadcasting Co., was unlike any American comedy I'd ever seen (Thank God!). The show was made up of several vignettes. Some had plots that contained funny twists. Others had no plot at all and seemed irrational, unless the viewer himself was in an irrational condition.
Symposium is slated for Higher Education
So far, "Monty Python" hasn't been banned in the Kansas City area. In fact a feature on the creators of the show and the growing cult of "Monty Python" lovers appeared in an issue of the Kansas City Star television guide.
By TONI DIXON
Higher Education Week at the University of Kansas will be highlighted by a symposium on teaching as well as lectures and consultation from three nationally recognized educators, Mary Lou Reece, student body vice president, said yesterday.
Higher Education Week, Nov. 12 to the 19th, combines efforts of Concerned Students for Higher Education and the legislators to legislators and stimulate more funding.
Semifinalists for the HOPE Award will be selected during the week and the award will be presented on Saturday, Nov. 12th, at the half-time of the KU-Colorado football game.
"The purpose of Higher Education Week is to gain awareness of higher education, to show people its importance and increase its support." Reece said.
Activities for the week include a banquet Sunday, Nov. 16, featuring speakers from the University, the state and the nation. The Higher Education Leadership Award for a state city, the Rusty Leaf Outstanding Education Service Award for members of the faculty and staff will be presented at the banquet.
The symposium on teaching will include lectures and classroom discussions with the faculty of our institution, consultations on ideas, methods and classroom teaching with KU faculty, adjudication of teaching materials.
Reece said invitations to the banquet would be sent to the Governor, all legislators, faculty and administration, the regents and alumni.
Bruce Wonen, cochairman of the Student Senate's Commission on the Quality of Classroom Teaching, said the symposium and the visit of the three consultants would
be "the culmination of the Senate's commission."
Woner, and David Shapiro, cochairman,
have been conducting interviews the last few
months for the selection of the three
seminars on the topic of water purification.
Final decisions haven't been made.
Woner said the Senate commission would review the proposals made by those consultants before presenting them formally to the administration.
One of the major purposes of Higher Education Week is to raise funding and awareness for students, and student senators. Ed Rolfs, student body president, asked that each senator get in touch with his home legislator, to show how the importance of higher education in Kansas.
"This will be a very challenging year for University state funding," Rolfs said. "The higher education budget has come under increasing criticism by the legislative team. It is important that they understand the rationale behind our requests."
Reece said the concerned students organization and members of the Student Senate would be visiting state legislators in the coming months in an effort to increase interest and encourage more participation in KIU's 1975 Higher Education Week.
This will be the third annual Higher Education Week at the University. It was named by former governor Robert Docking and was sponsored by Concerned Students for Higher Education.
Room to rent?
Advertise it in the Kansan
864-4358
--from All Over the World
Haas Imports
??
??
??
?
See It Happen Today Right Before Your Very Eyes.
This Bottle & More Will Be
This Bottle & More Will Be Filled with Wondrous Sand
For some time, people have been suggesting that some type of pay television system be developed. With such a system, people who were tired of clean, wholesome family entertainment could subcribe to TV that carried R- and X-rated sex and violence.
Lawrence Sidwalk Bazaar!
I think the existence of even one show like The Points of View to possibilities for the future of telecommunications
such programs were carried on commercial television stations, they might be imposed on people who had no desire to them. Pay television would eliminate this problem because only those who wanted to see such programs would be able to.
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom - 664-4810
Advertising - 664-4328
Circulation - 664-7948
Published at the University of Kansas
and used for research holidays and examination periods. Second-
ly, Subscriptions by mail are $2 a semester or
$10 per quarter. Subscriptions by semester,
paid through the student activity
The PBS was developed primarily to offer different types of programs from those presented on commercial television. Many of the programs far have been cultural and educational.
I think it's possible that the PBS might be the foremerant of pay television. Before this could happen, PBS would have to become a private enterprise instead of a public service. Somehow, I just can't see the government subsidizing "Full Front Nudity."
"Monty Python," however, exemplified the freedom from censorship that PBS stations possess in certain areas of the country.
Haas Imports 1029 Mass.
sins—lewd jokes, nude bodies and crude words—are beginning to appear in all types of programs. The dirty joke is becoming a popular form of humor shows, with the prime time programs taking the slyty suggestive approach and some of the late night ones taking the "Ha-ha" style.
I think television will inevitably follow in the footsteps of motion pictures and expand its G- and PG-rated offerings to include R-and X-rated attractions.
If this happens and other shows follow the lead of "Monty Python's Flying Circus," television will forever be doomed to remain a boo tube.
Business Manager
what television had regarded as cardinal
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Assistant Business Managers ...Cindy Long...Jerel Kadel
Promotions Manager ...Dan Spencer
Advertising Manager ...Gary Burch
Editor
Ward Harkavv
KANSAN WANT ADS
Acknowledgments, goods, services and epiphanies
of the authors are gratefully acknowledged.
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FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These aid can be placed in person or at 643-5481 the DPS business office at 643-5481.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
FOR SALE
864-4358
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LBSs - Regardless of the equipment you use, you'll always get a better feel when you will play on your best stereo and get the most from it.
In Topeka, 1972 Barrington **14 x 64**, 2 bedroom,
14 baths, a kitchen, skid tied, roof,妒awing,妒awing,
shed. Will move moving save. See ait
$8,950. 8th Street Terrace, Topeka. Call 6-7-17
$6,950.
*Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!*
*New Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!*
*Makes use of them in note*
*Book 1*
*Book 2*
*Book 3*
*For per preparation*
*"New Analysis of Western Civilization!"
*"New Analysis of Western Civilization!"*
Did you know that Webster's Home Housekeeper offers mobile homes for sale at all times? We offer large home windows for sale at all times! We are also offering free installation.
HIGHER PROTEN horse not meat dog food. 24-14 ounces, $49.40 each. not meat dog food. Merge Salver-5
Now we merchandise close-outs, etc. New selling huge grocery stock from a Chicago supermarket at today's retail prices 1/3 at cauckooftail or 1/4 at the local grocery store. Mayfair's Salve L'Orange Center, 628 Vermont.
12-string guitar, excellent condition Dy-
namite guitar. Make me an offer. Call
7-17
1970 Lemans Sport Coupe, air, automatic, only
10.5 miles. JAYHawk. WV 843-2200.
Siberian Husky pupies, AKC, males, shots 86,
843-130; evenings.
1974 Yamaha Yasha-125 125, one owner, 3200
miles. Jazwak-HW, W43-843 7-17
1972 Sukii -Enjoy the summer on your 185 cm
**Perfect for town. Good condition.**
7-21
1966 Malibu, 2-dhr. dht, automatic, airtel, bucket
Only one of its neighbors, Jinkywah WV 843,
Berkshire
Squarebuck Wagons. Choose from three, 7-18
1068 to 1921. Jawahver Jawah. 843-2210. 7-17
Just arrived—shipment of Habbits and Seircoeens,
come by for a test drive, Jawhawk WAY
7-17
1971 Capri 4. speed, Air conditioned, red low humidity. TWBH UNW JWK 8,921,710
1623 Ramber Classic, Auto., 6 cyl. $495.
Jayhawk V45, W43-2210. 7-17
-
1974 Vega Hatchback 4-apd A/C/AM-FM
2000 Jaguar New radial window 7-21
call Dell, 842-6411
Closeout of all 174 Demo's and Rental cars,
save hundreds. Jawville VW, 843-2210. 7-17
1973 Cuttman S Coupe Buckets, stereo tape, tape
844, A30-2900 7.17
1972 Impala Custom, Cipe. Automatic, air vibr,
jawkvv JAWKW v 845-8210. 7-17
1968 Opel Kadett 2 dr standard, only $795.00
GAY COUNSELING
O O
1968 WV Bun, convert to camper, ice box
7-15
WV Burns, jashawk WV 843-200-761
Sandwiches, Delicatessen, Foods
Open 11 A.M.-Midnight
WAGON WHEEL
1401 Ohio
Madhura Indian Shop
GAP COMMUNICATIONS &
RAP
for realtors
into center
864-3504
844-7505
For the Finest in
---
19 W 9th
Authentic, Handcrafted
Indian Jewelry,
ATTENTION BACKPACKERS: Frontline back-packing kit KIT-Kodak model $20.00. Point $65.00.
Arts and Crafts
6 healthy, Country Collee pupils. Pedigree-nable
& white-7, weeks, male & female: 8482-71-251
Lenovo Senseo-Lab RB 58 Turbo板 with Shure M9ME
B21C. $Call 821. RB-452-3712 for 5 m. 5-2m.
Thursdays'til 8
10-5:30 Daily
1972 Yamaha 600ce, red and white. $700 or
notigate. Call 843-7450. 7-30
must sell 1973 VW, Runs great. great large
c-mas-uses-in-age 842-2008 numbers 6, 7-21
Come on out. Lots of shade and parking - to the Country Show, 30% of 8th, 20% discount on all collectibles. Wooden products nails kegs, NFT fittings, pottery tools, kitchen utensils, 1 bucket labeled, ammo boxes, apples boxes, other useful items "Junk," fruits and vegetables, each ix. 2 for $2, each ix. 4 for $6, each ix. 8 for $12, each ix. 16 for $32, grown potatoes, hea. ix. 4 Cold pop and beer, seed potion, honey potion, lettuce, onion, cabbage, orange, apple, banana, roasted salted peppers fresh food eggs,泡腾 straw and airtight. Open free shipping on all collectibles.
Honeywell Portax Spotmate P w. F1.4 lens $200
Call 843-6799
Phone: 843-6799
SALE: AR3A Speakers (Reg. $255) $236.50.
j put a JWR A3A 250 each per M14 apron.
j put a JWR A3A 150 each per M14 apron.
pass wchan per room. how many other space per room?
at Ray Austin & Recycled Sound. 13 Rm.
each at Ray Austin & Recycled Sound. 13 Rm.
each at Ray Austin & Recycled Sound. 13 Rm.
68 Dodge Coronet A.T. Many parts new, $480.
842-192-692
7-24
Leaving town! Panasonic Quad unit-furniture.
1 speaker, earphones. $175.00 or less.
2 speakers, earphones. $349.00 or less.
1966 Rambler Classic 6 cyl. automatic, new tires,
70 kilometers. $450. Call 814-8067. 7-24
FOR RENT
Johnson Rental Company, Studio 1, bedroom 2,
Room 3, Suite 4, to be furnished to KU Medical Center, Kauai City, Kauai.
Free rental service Up to the minute listings in Lawrence and in Lawrence, Lawrence Rental Exchange: 842-259-3000
Two bedroom apartment, all utilities paid, close to campus this fall, furnished or unfurnished. 843-909-0720
Rooms - Kitchen privileges. One block to two.
$30 add up. A girl, not possible reduction for
room with a couch or bed.
Rooms furnished, single, with or without cook-
ing facilities. Residence KU and NU,
no pets. Phone 843-767-601
Apartments: 1, 2, and 4 bedroom furnished.
Borders RU and near town. Phone 8635-767 fc
Phone 8635-767 fc
block from Union, Private parking, utilities pd
Reasonable rent. 843-9579
Did you know that you can rent mobile homes at
Welder?** 842.7700 7-17
JIAWHAWK TOWERS-2 2-bedroom, all off-stairs
bathroom, water closet, parking, laundry
barber shop, kitchen, laundry room.
Grade 5- like privacy and good location for fall?
824- 84268 after 6 p.m. daily.
7-21
Saintpaulia country living - 3 bedrooms, basement
with a full bath, kitchen, laundry room,
family room, grand foyer, preferred
open plan layout.
NOTICE
Executive-style gourmet parties planned, catered.
Executive-designed beautiful private pool. For details call (800) 572-3696.
SIRILOIN STOCKADE
1015 Iowa 11.9 Mon.-Fri.
1015 Iowa 11.10 Sat.-Sun.
TACOS
$3.50 per Dozen
Casa do Taco
1165 Massachusetts 843-9800
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT! Let us do your printing while you wait at The Quick Copy Center. Our printers can print $8-$51, 500 copies - $8.41, 1000 copies - $9.19. Want your business at the Quick Copy Center.
WANTED
IS YOUR CAR AS READY FOR
YOUR VACATION AS YOU ARE?
GAY FOLKS, AGENCY: TD RATHER BE. A FRUIT TOWN THAT IS NEGATIVE TO GAMES. Gatherings: 7:20, 10: and 3rd Monday of each month, Union office 104H Union; Box 254, Lawnerville, Cumming 842-366-1978; Box 255, Palmetto Park, Cumming 842-366-1978.
PHOTOGRAPHY Shooting Gallery Specializing in
Personalized Portraits in natural surroundings.
Weddings, portfolios, and commercial photograh-
raphy. 811-236-0500, www.photographer.com,
811-236-0500, www.tuesdaysatf.com
Fish Platter, salad, and potato $12-28-
Monday night at Sirion Stockade.
Female Subjects 18-25 for 14 hour experiment
before a case of fever. Case 864-3033
Person to share large 3 bedroom duplex for flat payment $7.33 per month. Call for pts @ 825-727-697
Wanted: An upper class roommate to share Jay-
hawker tower apartment for fall semester.
7-21
Two female roommates 18-22 for four hour experiment
with a computer. If you stay at $1 each, please one hour mandatory free course:
https://www.wiley.com/wileyid/9780471831557
Need female roommate beginning fall semester.
Call 832-2512 before Aug. 1, or 843-1867 after
Aug. 1.
Reorganize & place it to live for now & fall Up.
Choose a new room for the family.
have own bedrooms close to campground 8412
have own bathrooms close to campground 8412
Help Pay Aug. Rent. Want to subdue fully furnished
home during Mid August. Cpu 841-1843 after 5 MF $979.
HELP WANTED
McDonald's has opening for part-time day help, but it is not available this fall. Apple in person at 817-392-3450.
DON'S AUTO SERVICE
Administrative Assistant, graduate program in occupational health and management in general administration and production & attendance of meetings and conferences especially the Kansas M.P.A. program highly interested in Public Service Education Degree. 12 month apprenticeship, start immediately should contact Ibert H. Diernan Dent or employment opportunity employer - AHRM Action Employee.
842-0753 900 New Jersey
TYPING
JAMES LIQUORS
Typing in my home IHM selective with pixet types. IHM selective for color, paper, and mime? Calling Calp, 842-5799.
Cold Beer & Chilled Wine
9th Street Center
(Next to 'Hole in the Wall')
842 0733
Penner's Cycle Barn
Norton Ducati
Moto Guzzi
Used Motorcycle
JULY CLEARANCE
71 Kawasaki 500 Mach III **$3950***
74 Kawasaki 350 dirt bike **$1675**
74 Kawasaki 350 dirt bike
Like New $695^{00}$
12 Norton Commando $'995^{00}$
72 Norton Commando '995∞
71 Norton Commando
71 Norton Commando
Very Clean 589500
Very Clean
66 Norton chopper
Jardine headers
Extended forks
Jardine headers $695^{00}$
Extended forks
on Hiway 10 585-1048
Mon.-Fri. 9:00-6:00
Sat. 9:00-3:00
IBM Selectric, pica or citr, reasonable, reusable. Call Joan at 843-917-31
843-917-31
THISIS BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is designed to help you bind quick copies of your QC files in fast and efficient ways. Quice copies are randomized, not relied upon by users for reference.
Experienced in typing dissertations, theses, etc.
Psych. Call Lestile, 843-868-2021
Resonance 21-57
Experimented in trying these, research papers,
books, articles and journals. Type 1159.
type carbon (ribon), type 1158.
type carbon (ribon), type 1157.
Experienced typist—term papers, theses, mice, textbooks. Send resumes to 843-6543, Mrs. Wright.
LOST
Experienced typhlet staff will do these, dissortations,
for Jolie 84-9284 Days, 84-9287 Weeks, 7-22
for Jolie
SERVICES OFFERED
LOST-Small black and brown dog female. 5
Pekeshe. You see them in "Fuzzy." Last seen
near the country club July 4th. If you have seen
them, 842-802-6986 or 842-802-7931.
VERY happy!
Zeb. a white and gold German Shepherd pup in a black coat. He's 843-784 to 737 Ebb. Thank you. 7-17
Lost Prescription glasses; silver frames; black frames; red banded case; Reward: 84-724 or 864-606.
FOUND
Found Ladder "Taurus" holder with Ford keys.
Found Ladder "J.R.P. John Calcit" Scott 25
5 p.m. 834-9071
CUSTOM JEWELRY Reasonably Priced. Professional quality jewellery. Stone cut and polished. Tortured saffron. Salted lily. Jewelry cut and polished. Turquoise
3 MONTH OLD CALKCIL KITTEN found on Edge Hill near Chancellor's residence. Call 845-385-3910
PERSONAL
MATH TUTORING Competent. experienced tutor.
153 156 158 161 162 122 123 Reasonable rate Call
0747-232-2912
POTION PARLOR
Organic Bio-degradable Hair and Skin Care Products in Recycle-able Bottles
Wanted: Female date for trip to Lake Henry,
Box 14, Lawrence.
7-17
819 Vermont 843-9708 Essence Oils Mon.Sat. 12-3
SAMSUNG
YAMAHA
CR 1000 RECEIVER
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the GRAMO PHONE shop
at the rear of KIEF'S DISCOUNT
RECORD AND STEREO
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842-1544 SAVINGS ON GRAMO PHONE
the GRAMO PHONE shop YP.800 FURNITABLE
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842-1544 SAVINGS ON FAMILY BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS
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Bike Riding
KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest-900 Mass
6
Thursday, July 17, 1975
University Daily Kansan
Guests to conduct camp concerts
ny MARCY CAMPBELL
Kansan Staff Reporter
Two distinguished men of music will conduct the Sunday afternoon and evening concerts of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp.
Rodney Eichenerberg, director of choral affairs at the University of Washington, and
Cor. Arnold D. Gabriel, conductor of the United States Air Force Band and Symphony, will be guest conductors for Sunday's concerts.
Eichenberger is also a professor of music at the University of Washington, Seattle, where he supervises the graduate choral conducting program.
He conducts the Seattle Chorale, the official choral group of the Seattle Symphony Orchestra, as well as the University of Washington Chorale.
The University Chorale has performed in
participated last year in the International
Choral Festival.
Australia. While in Australia, the chorale
toured Sydney, New Zealand and Brisbane.
It also toured New Zealand.
In 1973, the University Choral was selected as one of the 10 choirs in the United States' entry to the International Choral Festival, held at Lincoln Center in New York.
Eichinger received his bachelor's degree from St. Olaf College, Northfield, Minn., and his master's degree from the University of Denver. He has done doctorate work at the University of Iowa and the University of Washington. He has been at the University of Washington for 12 years.
Gabriel is the conductor of the United States Air Force Band and Symphony in Washington, D.C. It acts as the official band of the government and conducts two national tours each year. It also gives a concert series in Washington.
Gabriel received his bachelor's and
master's degree in music education from Ithaca College in Ithaca, N.Y. He has been in military service for 27 years, 24 years in the Air Force.
The Sunday afternoon concert at 2 will feature the concert choir and the symphony orchestra.
The concert chor, under the direction of Eichenerbon, will sing "Riddle Me This," a series of musical riddles by William Bergsma that contains three sections: The Snow, the Egg and the Cow. They will also play "To Saint Cecilia" by Norman Dello Jio.
The symphony orchestra will play "Capriccio Espagnol" by Rimsky-Korsakov, under the direction of Geraid Carney, professor emeritus of music education from the University of Kansas. In addition, they will perform "Suite from the opera 'Der Rosenkalavali,'" by Richard Strauss, under the direction of Gabriel.
Sunday evening at 7, the Blue Band, under
Kansans rejected Lincoln
By G. DAVID ROWLAND Kansas Staff Reporter
With all the political activity of the upcoming presidential election surrounding us, it's somewhat interesting to relax with a story of how campaigns used to be.
Just such a story comes to us from Kansas history.
When the extremely tall, sad figure of a man left the St. Joseph-Elwood ferry at
FOCUS
Elwood, Kan., he was met by two men who were to come to where he was to give a
the sad face and long arms that extended almost to his knees, was.
As the three walked down the main street of Elwood towards the Great Western Hotel, they noticed a man walking on the sidewalk.
Fifteen months later they would have their sons. Abramah Lincoln would be 10th President.
When he came to Elwood, Lincoln was virtually unknown, except in his home state of Illinois where he was in the state he served and served one term in Congress.
The year before his visit Lincoln had lost his seat in Congress to Stephen A. Douglas, author of the Kansas-Nebraska bill, a compromise to slavery.
As they walked down the street, a town crier was shouting, "Abraham Lincoln to speak at the Great Western Hotel at 8 p.m., tonight. All welcome."
Elwood was one of the first stops on Lincoln's trip to speak out against slavery and as such became the testing ground for many of his later speeches.
This wasn't the end of Lincoln's visit to Kansas, only the beginning.
In Troy, only 40 people showed up to listen to the speech; in Atchison, the chairman of the meeting forgot Lincoln's name and had to refer to notes in his pocket to remind himself. Lincoln also gave the same speech in Leavennight where he added a little to it.
"We are not trying to destroy slavery," he said. "The peace of society and the constitution of our government both require we should let it alone and we are letting it alone."
Despite his efforts, members of the Republican National Committee from Kansas voted for another candidate. Kansas did serve a purpose though.
This same antislavery speech that fared so poorly in Kansas was met with great enthusiasm at Cooper Institute in New York and the University, and it parvel his way to the White House.
State educators study leadership
By PENNY CHILTON
Educators in American public schools will lead the way in solving the world's problems "humanely," Jack Frymer, professor of education at Ohio State, told a group of Kansas educators at a leadership seminar in Woodruff Auditorium yesterday.
Frymer used a slide and film show he had produced to outline the critical issues facing teachers and administrators for approximately 50 educators from across the country.
The leadership seminar, sponsored by the University of Kansas chapter of Phi Delta
Kappa, the fraternity of professional educators, and the KU Division of Continuing Education is part of Phi Delta Kappa for the celebration of the birth of the Bicentennial.
How schools can promote both individual initiative and social responsibility.
District conferences of Phi Delta Kappa in 1974 identified three areas of concern for
- How educational systems can adapt to the demand for alternative routes to adulthood not well served by traditional secondary school programs.
- Who should control public education.
Part of Frymer's audio-visual presentation dealt with the national success of special education for the slightly mentally retarded, one of the options in the secondary school curriculum. They open classes and mini-courses in secondary schools were also successful options.
"I've heard that during the course of 12 years of school a youngster learns about one-billionth of all the facts, knowledge, concepts and principles that have been generated since the beginning of time," she says. "I make the decision about what is learned?"
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The Blue Band will also perform "Dahoon for Marimba and Band" by Thomas Brown, March and Polonaise band, Tumpani and Jamboree, and Tumpani and Jamboree" by Payo Yoder. These numbers will feature percussion solos by George Boberg, associate professor of music from
the direction of Dr. Lee Mendyk, assistant professor of band at KU, will play "Irish Tune for County Derry" by Percy Grainger, "Sinfonia Nobilissima" by Robert Jager, and "Knightsbridge March" by Eric Coates.
Garbiel will conduct the Blue Band in "Selections from Porgy and Bess" by George Gershwin, arranged by Robert Russell Bennett.
Gabriel will conduct "Overture-The Drum-Major's Daughter" by Offenbach, and "Jerico Rhapsody for Band" by Morton Gauld.
The Concert Band, under the direction of Robert E. Foster, associate professor of band, will play "Departure One Concert March" by John M. Higgins and "Invocation of Alberich from 'Rheingold' by Wagner. James Barnes, staff arranger of the performance, the evening performance of "Rapscallion Overture-Scherzo" which he composed.
APPLE DUMPLING GANG—Typical Walt Disney fare. Actually, the Donald Duck cartoons that accompany the feature are more fun to watch than the feature.
All concerts are in the University Theatre.
ENTERTAINMENT
California to work the harvests. Labor exploitation and the killing of a deputy cause the family to continue to move continually.
THE DAY OF THE LOCUST—Directed by John Schlesinger. Starring Ken Black, Donald Sutherland and Burgess Meredith. See review. page 4.
OKLAHOMA!—Based on the play by
ORKAL Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein.
One of the most famous musicals of the
world, it is based on a book by a
assistant instructor of speech and drama. A weekend highlight. Don't miss it. At 8 p.m.
tomorrow and Saturday in the University
of Oklahoma.
ON STAGE
"THE PLOW THAT BROKE THE PLAINS," a 1936 documentary directed by Pare Lorentz, is the cofate. This is one of the finest American documentaries. The film follows a group of young men in the Dustbowl period. Score by Virgil Thomson. At 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Woodruff.
SEEM-TO-BE-PLAYERS—The Dragon of Tung Thing" and "The Adventures of Tang Thing" will be held on Saturday at the Lawrence Arts Center. Midwestern Music and Art Camp--See
THE EIGER SANCTION - Fine action
from the first film by Clint
Eastwood, With George Kempeddy.
Midwestern Music and Art Camp—See story, page 6.
TIDE--A1.38 p.m. Saturday at the Free State Opera House.
ON SCREEN
Check advertisements for correct time and place.
THE MIRROR MAN- WRITTEN by Brian Way, Directed by Rhonda Blair, Warren, Minn. graduate student. A children's play in which the audience is part of the action. At 2 p.m. Monday through Thursday in the William Inge Theatre.
THE GRAPEES OF WRATH - John Ford's excellent 1941 film based on John Steinbeck's novel. The Joaof family is ruined in the Oklahoma dustbowl and migrates to
SULLIVAN'S TRAVELS -Directed by Preston Sturges, Starling Joel McCrea and Veronica Lake. See review, page 4. At 7:30 d.m. tomorrow in woodruff Wooldraft
JAWS-Fifth week of frightening entertainment.
THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN- Sloppy-sweet. A story about an unbelievably brave girl—so brave it makes the audience either skeptical or sad.
RETURN TO MACON COUNTY and ANSWER UNCHAINED—the less said the better.
SUA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Summer Films
FRIDAY, JULY 18 SULLIVAN'S TRAVELS Written and directed by Preston Sturges, the talented director of sharp, cynical satires who revitalized the American comic tradition in the forties. A famous movie director (Joel McCrea) disguises himself as a vagabond and sets off to search for the meaning of poverty. He meets a young blond (Veronica Lake), is accused of his own murder and is sentenced to a chain gang before he proves his identity. This eccentric satire of a protean director of musical comedies who wants to make social treatises (with titles like—Brother, Where Art Thou?] is Preston Sturges's best film. It is also something of a self-justification: after watching the prisoners laugh at a 'Mickey Mouse' cartoon, the director decides he can better achieve his social aims through comedy than through "pretentious" social dramas. (1941)
THURSDAY, JULY 17 James Dean in THE UNLIGHTED ROAD and LENNY BRUCE AT BASIN STREET WEST. The first feature, THE UNLIGHTED ROAD, is a drama in which James Dean plays the pawn of truck hi-jackers, and is the only live TV show of his that was recorded on film. The Lenny Bruce film was made "on location" during a regular nightclub appearance, before a live audience. Lenny Bruce does his thing, using all the so-called "dirty words" he customarily used in his acts.
DO YOU COMMUTE?
If so, why not share the costs and driving with other commuting students?
A carpool file matching students commuting from particular areas is available in the Student Senate office, 105B Kansas Union.
SIMILAR FILES ARE KEPT FOR STUDENTS SEEKING TUTORS AND ROOMMATES.
If you would like to take advantage of these services simply fill out the form below and include any information you feel is pertinent.
Name___ Phone___
Address___ Roommate □ Carpool □ Tutor □
Bring to Student Senate office, Room 105B Kansas Union 864-3710
A Student Senate Service Financed with Student Activity Fees
1. What is the circumference of a circle with radius 4 meters?
2. If the diameter of a circle is 8 meters, what is its circumference?
MOM
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
No.164
Solar power discussed
Monday, July 21, 1975
Sec page 4
Talks defer postal strike
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)—There will be no immediate nationwide strike by postal workers, James H. Rademacher, president of the National Postal Union of Letter Carriers, said yesterday.
"We are not prepared for any nationwide action until we send something out in written form to our members," Rademacher said.
However, postal workers here have worked two years under "unbearable working conditions" and definitely support a strike against the U.S. Postal Service, which is growing worth President of the National Association of Letter Carriers, Branch NO. 30.
Local leaders realize a strike would be illegal but the leadership is willing to risk everything, including a jail term, Bosworth said.
If wildcat strikes broke out in other cities, a meeting would be called here, he said.
"One or two small places wouldn't make much difference," he said. "But if it was made of stone, it would be very seriously. Would we very definitely be extremely serious. In that case we would probably follow."
Bosworth said union membership here was slightly over 1,000.
Another union official, Morris Biller, head of the American Postal Workers Union local in New York, said he was telling his colleagues that he was negotiating as negotiations continued early Monday.
"But if negotiations break off tonight without a tentative agreement, I don't see
how there's any way of holding them back," Biller said.
Postal workers in New York City were in the forefront of wildcat strikes in 1970.
Rademacher and other officials agreed that progress had been made during talks yesterday but said there was still concern. The Postal Service and its four unions.
"Any job action would have to be taken on the national level, and it would have to be organized in advance," he said. "We're not going to risk losing our job, and an agreement would be reached in time."
Union leaders have said that there would be no nationwide walkout unless there was agreement among the unions to do so. Top union negotiator Bernard Cushman said that no instructions have been issued to union members to leave their jobs.
The Postal Service has plans ready to move the mail if there is a strike, including a halt in mail delivery.
Federal troops were used in 1970 when union members in some parts of the country
Cushman said there were a substantial number of issues still to be resolved in the work rule.
Rademacher said any strike would try to be fair to the public.
"We have to consider that the public is intrinsically more concerned in consideration in addition than said."
carter yesterday, Radacher had said,
"It does appear there will be a contract by
midnight tonight, but only if that agreement wage and job security for letter carriers."
The chief negotiator for the Postal Service, Darrell F. Brown, said in a statement at midday yesterday that the talks were about that many critical items had been resolved.
"We continue to remain hopeful that we'll succeed," she said, issues before midnight tragic," he said.
Other unions in the contract talks are the 250,000-member American Postal Workers Union; the National Rural Letter Carriers Association, with some 47,000 members; and the mail handlers division of the Labor International Union.
James Lapenta, chief negotiator for the mail handlers, said of Labor International, "What I call the gut issues are still there—the economic package, the five or six major and complicated work-rule issues and, of course, the real big one: the nolayoff."
The postal unions succeeded in *gaining the no-laoyoff clause* in their last contract. Lapenta said it "would be committed to benefit that benefit—something we’re not going to give up."
The postal unions succeeded in gaining the postal law clause in their last contract.
Although Lapenta and other union officials said they hoped they could reach a tentative pact to put before their rank and file before the midnight deadline, they also agreed that they would need a contract might be extended for a few days to allow extra time to work out details.
Peron aide exile may help labor
But few doubted that his departure spelled his final defeat after a political struggle with the conservatives, all the opposition parties and even the officially neutral armed forces.
BUENOS AIRES (AP)—Argentine labor is likely to have more power after the reorganization of Isabel Peron's government, following the virtual exile of the once influential Jose Lopez Rega, reliable sources said yesterday.
Reliable sources said the remaining backes of Lopez Rena in the cabin were
The Argentine government said Rega, a former social welfare minister and confidential secretary to the president, was en route to Europe as "ambassador extraordinary" to perform negotiations "with foreigners" and international organizations."
1972
Lopes Rega, whose conservative advice on the economy split the Peron administration from its usual labor backers, flew to Rio de Janeiro aboard Peron's plane, but the couple was accompanied by more than a dozen bodyguards and a large amount of luggage.
The government's strong turn to the right following Peron's death was attributed to Looper Rega and also to the organization of a feared secret terrorist organization, the Argentine Anti-Communist Alliance, held responsible for the assassination of more than 200 Marxists and leftist Peronists in the last year.
expected to quit their posts in the next few days.
The Lopez Rega group included his son-in-law, Raul Lautlert, chairman of the house of judges at the U.S. Supreme Court.
The powerful labor movement increasingly became annoyed at the alleged isolation Lopez Rega imposed on the president by denying interviews and meetings with her requested by other Peronist groups.
official Peronist magazine, "Las Bases"; at least five of Mrs. Peron's eight ministers in her previous cabinet; and other key officials.
Lopera Rega, 58, is a former police corporeal nicknamed "The Wizard" because of his spiritualist and astrological inclinations. He was the power behind the 44-year-old Peron, who became president a year ago, the death of her husband, Juan D. Peron.
Peron had hired Lorea Rega in the early 1960s, during Peron's exile, to serve as a confidential secretary, a function he continued to perform with Mrs. Peron. His additional post as social welfare minister helped him serve Argentina's huge federal patronage.
Most opposition parties, which had given Juan Peron's administration "critical support," claimed that Lopez Rega was moving toward a "fascist state." The armed forces viewed him with growing dislike.
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Guest conductor
Rodney Elchenberger, director of choral affairs at the University of Pennsylvania, leads a Camp choir in an afternoon concert at the University
Theatre yesterday. The choir performed "Riddle Me Tha!" to "Saint Cecilia" by *norman Dellor* John. To perform "T
New IEC director plans change
By STAN STENERSEN
Dissidents threaten civil war in Angola
Kansan Staff Reporter
UNITA, the third Angolan liberation
party, and apparently has
stayed out of the conflict.
LUANDA, Angola (AP)—One of three rival liberation movements called Sunday for full mobilization of its forces, threatening to plunge this Portuguese colony into civil war three months before its scheduled independence.
The mobilization order was broadcast by the Peking-backed National Front for the Liberation of Angola (FNLA). Forces of the Sovet-backed Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA) have 800 officers and stage in a La Moka harbor fortress.
The FNLA charged that Porguegine troops, violating pledges of neutrality, were fighting beside MPLA soldiers to hold off advancement of FNLA reinforcements on the capital. Persistent reports say that a 5,000-man FNLA column is marching on Luanda from the north. It reportedly was halted near Caxto, only 36 miles from the capital.
Foreign students studying at the Intensive English Center probably can expect a more individualized and more specialized pattern of instruction than they may have received in the past, according to its new director. Michael M. T. Henderson.
Efforts to arrange a cease-fire collapsed Sunday when MPLA troops poured heavy mortar into the FNLA. Pedro do Barra was处 near the FNLA soldiers have been under siege since third time.
Henderson, who will move to Lawrence in mid-August to take up the position, was at the University of Kansas for several days last week to meet with IEC staff members. He is assistant editor of the Dictionary of American Regional English, which is being compiled at the University of Warwick. He sat on Saturday, he talked about his ideas for the center.
The IEC has been criticized by some foreign students who say it has been intentive to their problems. Henderson said that although some criticism was inevitable, the teacher could be reduced if students tailed more to each student's needs and interests.
"Some students are bound to see the study of English as a barrier to their progress," he said. "A student who wants to be a doctor doesn't want to spend a lot of time learning English, even if he needs it for his college work."
One way to meet each student's needs, Henderson said, is to assign each student to different sections of grammar, reading and language laboratory according to his ability, in each area. Students are currently assigned a single section for all parts of the course.
"It presents terrible headaches in scheduling to switch to different sections," he said, "but it seems to be worth it. It means we can tailor the program to
PROFILE
strengthen students' individual weaknesses"
Henderson said that he didn't know whether the change in policy could be made by the start of the fall semester but that the staff would trv.
Another change being discussed is to make more of a student's work in the IEC applicable to his intended area of specialization and to help him embrace opportunities to work with a number of departments at the University to develop such specialized programs. In
addition to making most students feel more comfortable, said, such specialization helps them.
Some foreign students have complained about the IEC's use of graduate students to teach classes. Henderson defended the use of online instruction to strengthen the quality of instruction.
One probable change, he said, is that an in-service training program will be developed for graduate assistants, who are currently required only to take a basic linguistics course and a course in the teaching of English as a second language.
Henderson said an in-service program would bring teachers together to discuss the issues.
Teaching English to a foreign student is similar to teaching a foreign language to an American. Henderson said he. Also he hopes that students will also other language departments on campus.
Henderson has been teaching English to foreign students since 1965. From 1965 to 1984, he served as the language center in Afghanistan. He returned to the United States to teach English to foreign students at St Louis University. He taught English to foreign students his PhD. in linguistics from the University
of Wisconsin in 1972, he went to Tripoli,
where he was director of the special courses
division of the English Department at the
University of Libya.
Henderson said people who taught English to foreign students should be aware of the exceptional abilities of many of their students.
"These students are often the cream of their country's intelligence," Henderson said. "It happens to be their fortune that they have to learn English before they can do what they came to do. The fact that they don't know English is essential. Many of these students are older and have already held positions of authority."
Adapting to an American university is often more than simply learning English, Henderson said. Many students come from educational systems that don't emphasize a continuous flow of tests and assignments. Instead, students study on their own and take major exams. But they need help, as a result, he said, they often need help with everyday study skills or with such unique American institutions as the multiple-choice test.
Students visit reservation to observe Indian culture
By BRUCE SPENCE
Kansan Staff Reporter
One of the field trip participants, Rick Stewart, Overland Park graduate student, said, "It was the first time I had really prolonged contact with native Americans, and I learned a lot about their life styles and value systems."
Five University of Kansas students returned this month from a three-week field trip to New Mexico, where they studied soil and social problems in Indian reservations.
The field trip, which concluded a one-year training program for teachers of minority students, was supervised by Akiba assistant professor of anthropology.
Another participant, Kathy Escaillance,
Lawrence graduate student, said the trip
comprised visits to many different reser-
ter sites in New Mexico, Navajo,
Hopi, Zuni and Mescalero Apache.
The graduate students stayed overnight at a Bureau of Indian Affairs (BI) board-
digned school in western New Mexico, which served Navaho and Zuni students.
"It was good for us," Escamilla said, "because we got an idea of the educational problems that a lot of American Indians face."
She said students at the boarding schools were away from home for months at a time, which caused hardships because they had to work on their studies in community life during their school year.
many or the reservations, Escamilla said, and they brought through the sixth grade, but many of the teachers, students must attend the boarding schools. Stewart also said that problems resulted from the new curriculum.
"When you come from a very small community of perhaps only several hundred people and haven't travelled extensively, you're going to risk your security can be devastating," said Stewart.
The U.S. government established boarding schools, Esamilla said, because on campus there were so many children.
houses were as far as 80 or 90 miles apart. This distance made busing students back and forth to school every day a big problem. We went to school by the time they got to school, she said.
As a result, many students are now biased during the school year, said Sapid.
"it solves the problem somewhat but not really," she said.
Stewart said that whenever possible, students attended their own community schools or went to school in the nearest town. He said this was a far better situation.
The BIA boarding schools are plagued with many runaways, a problem only partly caused by the loneliness of being away from home. In most cases, the students have to contend with stringent regulations.
The amount of education that Indian children may attain, however, isn't determined as much by their earlier educational experiences as by their parents' attitudes toward education, be said.
She said the field experience had a strong effect on her.
Escalamila said living and economic conditions varied from reservation to reservation, but many Indians had a very poor life. Some families lived in one-room cottages.
Esculamir said the realization of this problem has much more sensitive to students.
"A lot of people can't understand why a let of kids come to Haskell, stay two weeks and go home," Esencilla said. "Now I can understand the differences in life styles. This place must seem completely foreign to them."
She said she thought teachers usually reacted to minority students in one of two ways: either the teachers considered minority students incapable of what white students could accomplish and, therefore, didn't expect anything better; or were completely insensitive and tried to impose their own values on the students.
"I don't think either way works very well." Esamilla said.
Field experiences are an excellent method of making teachers more aware of their teaching needs.
The one-year training program, directed by Peter Johnsen, associate professor of educational psychology and research, was supervised by Dr. Daniel Garcia and Spanish-speaking community college students. It involved several out-of-class experiences, including six weeks of teaching at Haskell Indian Junior College in New York City and American community college in Garden City.
She said it was also less expensive for minority students to go to community colleges because many of them were enrolled. Students could commute and live at home.
Baccalaurea said the program dealt with junior college students since more minority students ended up there than at four-year colleges because their basic reading skills were poor.
Although Escamilla, who is majoring in Spanish and English bilingual education, was more interested in the Spanish speaking aspect of the program, she said, the studies of Indian populations had been very interesting.
"I've been through New Mexico many times, and I had no idea that all those Indians were there," Escamilla said. "I had never observed the different life styles there."
"We had classes where we read about a lot of situations in a book," she said, "but the situations become real to you until you see them first hand."
Stewart said, "The field trip was highly beneficial. There is only so much you can learn from textbooks, and the direct_experience of teaching is academic studies this past year very well."
"You can see exactly how they live and what kind of social structures exist, in order to get an understanding of where your students are coming from."
See FIELD TRIP page 4
2
Monday, July 21, 1975
University Daily Kansan
NEWS DIGEST THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
India expels newsmen
NEW DELHI—The Indian government ordered the expulsion of three foreign diplomats from India to sign pledges saying they would abide by compliance imposed under the country's constitution.
Those given 24 hours to leave the country were Peter Hazelhurst of the London Times, Peter Gill of the London Daily Telegraph and Loren Jenkins of Newsweek. The expulsions came a day after the government began asking the more than 50 foreign newsmen in New Delhi to sign the censorship pledges.
Officials said the government decided to require the signed pledges because of widescreen violations of the censorship regulations.
Aid to Turkey protested
WASHINGTON—About 15,000 Greek Americans gathered at the U.S. Capitol to protest a military rescue aid to Turkey.
Speakers urged that a ban on military aid to Turkey, imposed following the Greece-Turkey clash over Cyprus, remain in effect. Yesterday was the first an-
In May the Senate approved restoration of arms aid to Turkey and the House is expected to vote on the measure this week.
"There are many members of Congress who bear their hearts with you," Rep. Gladys Spellman, D-Md., told the crowd. "No number of breakfast meetings at the White House and no number of greetings by the secretary of state can change our winds about what is right."
The rally, organized by the Pan Hellenic Emergency Committee, attracted participants from more than 40 states and Canada, organizers said.
Help for railroads possible
WASHINGTON-The Ford administration will support the reorganization of financially alling Northeastern railroads only if the government is allowed to sell the new system to private railroads later, Transportation Secretary William T. Coleman Jr. savs.
"We are not going to let Con-Rail (the corporation that would run the restructured rail system) be set up as an independent corporation not under the control of the government but having the right to call upon the government for billions of dollars." Coleman said in an interview.
The U.S. Railway Association, the government agency established to restructure the Northeastern railroads, will submit its final system plan to Congress on
Oil slick threatens beaches
KEY WEST - A sheet of thick, sticky crude oil at least 65 miles long drifted toward the airport threatening to cover the beaches and pollute fishing grounds. Coast Guard as a
"We're trying to get a visual picture of how long the thing is." Key West duty officers say, and "We don't know where it came from, but who did we not like it."
Coast Guard cutters were trying to circle the oil slick late yesterday. Walker could easily reports the spill from about 200 yards to mile wide.
Walker said the spill was first reported yesterday morning by skin divers off Key West, who complied of thick, sticky oil globules.
Little jury selection resumes
RALEIGH, N.C. *Selection of the final four jurors to hear the Joan Little murder case will begin today, clearing the way for testimony to start, probably by*
Eight jurors were chosen during five days of slow-moving questioning last week as the defense tried to screen panel members on their attitudes toward race and
Little, a 21-year-old black, is charged with first-degree murder in the icepick stabbing of white Beaufort County jailer Clarence Allgood, 62.
The state contends she killed Alligood while trying to escape from jail in Washington, N.C., where she was awaiting an appeal on a breaking and entering conviction. Little contends Alligood used the icepick in an attempt to force her to have sexual relations with him.
Women knife rape suspect
DAYTONA BEACH—Six women, described by authorities as " vigilantes," arrested and accused rapist before he could be arrested. Davytona Beach police said.
John Dotson, the victim, was reported in satisfactory condition at a local hospital after being placed under police guard. He was charged with sexual bat-
Dotson was working in his front yard about 2 p.m. Friday when six women attacked him, slashing his knees. He suffered wounds in the stomach,
Officers were going to Dotson's home to arrest him when the attack occurred. A Daytona Beach woman wilted a constrictor two hours earlier naming Dotson as the assailant.
"It appears to be an action carried out by women vigilantes—they took things into their own hands," Sgt. Robert Sharp said.
County welfare office gets permission to fill vacancy
The Douglas County Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services (SRS) has been permitted to hire one employee to fill a vacancy in its income maintenance unit.
SRS hadn't been able to hire anyone to fill the position for three months because of Gov. Robert F. Bennett's freeze on hiring civil servants.
Barbara Gaines, supervisor of the income maintenance unit, said last week that the new employee would be put to work immediately on processing applications for welfare.
Gaines said the governor's office was notified a month ago that the department had another vacancy in its services unit. SRS hasn't received a reply, she said.
It is extremely important that the
it is not changed since the data
since the services unit employee was
Gaines said two or three more of her employees would resign soon and she said she was afraid she would have to go through a process of granting permission to hire replacements again.
required by federal law to conduct a youth service program, it was illegal for the government to do so.
"We can't afford to waste the time calling the governor's office and then waiting for a reply," she said. "I really think that we've written Topeka enough that there is an outside chance they'll let us hire imames, our people resign. But nothing is certain."
Gaines said the department was keeping up with welfare applications better now. "We're doing that and we're going forward," he said.
Winn sponsors prairie park bill
"We've gotten out of the rut," she said, but we still need to fill the positions that manned the mine.
Among the sponsors were Rep. James Symington and P-Mo., and a large number of others.
The bill differs from other bills he has sponsored on the proposed Prairie National Park, Winn said. It eliminates reference to the 60,000 acres which has been proposed.
Under the terms of the present bill, the size of the park is up to the National Park.
said it appeared Winn had ignored opposition to the National Park Legislature. It also planned a national park.
Whittaker said a resolution passed by the Kansas House and Senate asked Congress not to establish a Prairie National Park unless it did so on federally owned lands. It was approved by large majorities in both houses of the Kansas Legislature, he said.
State Rep. Robert Whittaker, R-Augusta,
"By any definition, that was an overwhelming vote by the people of Kansas through their elected representatives and senators that we did not want a 60,000 acre area removed from the tax rolls," Whitaker said.
Group fighting ERA rescission
Efforts by state legislators to rescind Kansas' ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment probably will continue, Carol Winslow, a Democrat Women's Political Caucus, said Saturday.
By KELLY SCOTT
Department of Stats Reqster
McDowell was in Lawrence for the International Women's Year Workshop Day, which was Saturday at the Lawrence Community Building.
on this year and will come up again in the 1976 session, McDowell said.
House Concurrent Resolution 2009 called for reservation of the ratification measure. It was sponsored by Rep. Ted Lindsahl, R-Plevna, would place the question "Should the Kansas legislature resign its ratification of this amendment?" on the 176 general election ballot.
Two resolutions regarding the status of the ERA in Kansas were brought before legislative committees in the most recent session.
She said proponents of the ERA were against Lindahl's resolution because it would result in an expensive, time-consuming campaign that would keep women from participating in the campaigns of local, state and national candidates.
The referendum resolution wasn't acted
McDowell said the votes of individual legislators on rescission, should the referendum results call for it, would depend on the vote in their home districts.
The result of the referendum wouldn't be binding, McDowell said. Legislators wouldn't be bound to rescind if the referendum called for it nor would they ignore rescission legislation if the referendum results were against it.
As long as states keep defending the ERA and others vote to rescind it, the possibility exists that Kansas legislators might rescind their 1972 ratification. McDowell said.
She said it was important to the status of the FRA in states like Missouri and Illinois that a bill be passed.
sorry they ratified the amendment because of their unfavorable publicity it has recently
The constitutionality of rescission by state legislators of their ratifications hasn't been ruled on by the courts, Deanell Tacha, associate professor of law, said.
Missouri and Illinois both defeated the Era in the past legislative sessions after the 1974 midterm.
The Supreme Court might rule that rescission is unconstitutional, and the states that have rescinded ratification will be counted as having ratified it, she said.
No pending cases concerning rescission ase on the Supreme Court docket, Tacha se
McDowell said it would be hard to predict the outcome of a statewide referendum on the amendment.
A November 1974 Gallup Poll indicated that 80 per cent of all Americans supported
"It would depend on the national status of the ERA at that time," she said.
Ideas on fantasies only fantasies
By BILL KATS
Kansan Staff Reportes
COMMENT
Lowers of gouls and demons met
the night when Ibob Blach, Hollywood
screenwriter, appeared in *The Beverly Hill*
spoke in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union
Bloch's brief talk skimmed the subject of the science fiction and fantasy film. While it was not a sequel, it did offer some insight.
ment to such a broad topic. Bloch's lack of
frasping for ways to tie the subject
together
Broad statements abounded: "Impressionism is the anthesis of science fiction," "All films are fantasy," "Film offers a larger than life-size image." The director is a telling it to it is," and "The secret of classic films lies in their symbolism."
But throughout Bloch's talk, a clear understanding of what science fiction and fantasy are was lacking. If, as Bloch suggests, all films are fantasy, one can't distinguish between the fantasy of "Hearts and Minds" and that of "2001."
Reader criticizes Rolfs
I find it highly amusing that the commission would publish such research, especially since Mr. Rolfs has stated that the publication has been overemphasized."
If one assumes that the results of the Commission on the Quality of Classroom Instruction will be made available in some manner, then one must assume that those results will be published in one form or another.
I have noted that Bruce Woner and Dave Shapiro are being paid to do research on the improvement of classroom teaching. The results of their research will undoubtedly be incorporated into the final report of the commission.
We should recognize that a university cannot exist without communication and dissemination of information. After all, that is the main function of an institution of higher education. We are merely two different forms of communication. An instructor communicates with students by teaching in the classroom; he communicates with his colleagues via telephone or by e-mail to draw an artificial boundary between teaching and research, and it is even more
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
To the Kansan editor:
presumptuous to distinguish between research for teaching and research for publication. In essence, Mr. Rolfs is telling me to communicate more with students and teachers.
I really wonder if the commission realizes how an instructor prepares a lecture. or how do they think textbooks are written? One does not just draw a lecture or a chapter for a textbook out of thin air. He must spend a great deal of time gathering information from the published works of others, drawing pictures, writing a few letters to some friends to inquire about data which might not yet be in print.
Teaching and research are synergistic at a university. The way to improve teaching isn't to deemphasize research. I suspect my approach would have the opposite effect.
I have long suspected that the commission has been chasing its own tail, and apparently it has succeeded in catching it. I do not know why this should be known where one's head will next be found.
Robert Chiovettl
Robert Cimoveta
Lawrence graduate student
Assistant Instructor of
Human Anatomy
City to open Kaw bridge bids
The city may be able to open bidding on construction of the proposed two-swan Kaw River bridge at 6th and Massachusetts counties. Mayor, Mayor Barkley Clark said last week.
They were also concerned with expediting Congressional appropriation of funds for the Clinton Parkway project, which will extend the border of Iowa. Street to the new Clinton Lake.
After the Washington trip, city and county officials made a trip to the regional Coast Guard officers in St. Louis where they presented their proposal and again urged Coast Guard officials to permit the bridge to be built without an environmental impact study.
The opening of construction bids was delayed in June by a 45-day review period required by the U.S. Coast Guard to determine whether the bridge's enclosure of 1,700 feet of Robinson Park on the Kaw River banks would have any environmental impact. Mike Wilden, assistant city manager, said last week.
to lobby against an extended federal environmental impact study that could have delayed the bridge construction by 18 months.
Although the Coast Guard hasn't received criticism of the project from agencies or officials, its regional office has said that it has some questions of its own to ask city and county officials. However, the Coast Guard requested the study and probably won't, Wilden said.
When it was discovered in May that the Vermont Street span of the bridge would cut off 1,700 feet of the park, Clark, City Manager Buford Watson, City Commissioner Donald Binns, County Commissioners Art Heck and Pearle Whiteenhit and Lawrence Chamber of Commerce member Charles Fisher went to Washington
U. S. Coast Guard officials in the regional St. Louis office sent copies of the bridge proposal to all federal state and local agencies involved in the project. These agencies and selected fictions all over the United States were asked to comment on its potential environmental effects.
"The Vermont Street span will be built first," he said. "That should take about 18 months to complete. Then we'll start on the second." He continued, "that another 18 months of construction."
If the study isn't demanded, the city should be able to open bidding on the project.
Walt Disney's "APPLE DUMPLING GANG"
Daily at 2:30, 7:30, 9:40
Granada
CLINT EASTWOOD THE EIGER SANCTION
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE TECHNICOLOR
Eve 7:30, 8:15
Saf, Saon, Mast
at 1:20
"RETURN TO MACON COUNTY"
Country at 1:00
Angels Unchained
Sunset
DAY OF THE LC CUSTI
Don Perriman Nate Black
Daily at 1:45 and 8:00
Hillcrest
The terrifying motion picture from the terrifying No.1 best seller.
JAWS
PC
MAY BE TOO INTEGRITY FOR VOLUME CHANGE
Daily at 1:20, 7:20 and 9:45
Hillcrest
THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN
Daily at 3:05, 7:30, 9:35
Hillcrest
Bloch emphasized that teachers of science fiction writing should instill in their students a respect for the workings of the imagination.
"Anything that stimulates the constructive imagination is important." Bloch saws.
McDowell said a statewide coalition had been formed to resist rescission efforts.
the ratification of the ERA. Only 73 per cent of Midwesterners supported it.
He said imagination manifested itself as a source of problem-solving beyond the means of technology, as the precursor of technical, developmental and as an inspiration.
be more formative to BJ's research efforts.
He has a strong interest in and hopes to include all organizations in the state that have said they supported its ratification.
McDowell said the group wanted action from organizations like the previously said company to help with the issue.
DAY OF THE LOCUSI
Dan Sutherland, Karen Black
Daily at 1:45 and 8:00
Hillcrest
The terrifying motion picture from the terrifying No.1 best seller.
JAWS
PG
MAY BE TOO INTENSE FOR YOUNG CHILDREN
Daily at 1:00, 2:00 and 9:45
Hillcrest
Kala Stroup, dean of women, is in charge of literature for Kansans for ERA.
ENDS TUESDAY
ENDS TUESDAY
PG
Today's writers and film viewers are more sophisticated because of the inspiration provided by television and film, he said.
Bloch suggested that some old films, such as "Frankenstein," "Dracula" and "King Kong," have remained典籍 because of their timeless symbolic references. But one might wonder whether today's drag movies were underperformed or terrapeted that the pale, slow-moving Dracula is a symbolic member of today's drug culture.
At times exhibiting the qualities of a stand-up comedian, Bloch, chain-smoking cigarettes through a white cigarette holder, and using an account in history of the mystery horror films.
For example, Bloch said of Dracula, "He was dead for a hundred years but he had
Bloch began writing in the 1930s and became known as a member of the H. P. Lovecraft circle of writers. After writing his first book, *The Wormwood* moved from Milwaukee to Hollywood because of the success of "Psycho," which was filmed by Alfred Hitchcock in 1960. He became a screenwriter and two years ago wrote the Mystery Writers of America.
Bloch said the two greatest problems in making science fiction and fantasy films for motion pictures or television were lack of time and money. There is no lack of imagination in film-making, he said, but it was never as difficult as no longer feasible because of their cost.
Children's show asks crowd to participate
The audience sits on the floor, separated from the stage by only a masking-tape circle. A low white stool and a blue and a white shirt with a make-believe "mirror" are the set.
"Listen, listen everybody!" are the first words, spoken directly to the audience, who are such an integral part of the play that they must be present at trees rehearsals.
The author, Brian Way, is a British playwright who specializes in creative children's drama. He has written several other plays including, "The Clown," "The Dog and the Stone," "The Ladder" and "The Key."
Creative, or participation, dramatics requires audience participation in the action of the play, Blair said. The artificiality of a play disappears, she said, when the audience of children speak to and influence the actions of the characters.
Thus begins "Mirror Man", a play for 5- to 8-year-old children that will be presented at 2:30 p.m. today through Thursday at the Mural Inge Memorial Theater in Murphy Hall.
The doll, named Beauty is played by Roberta Brown, Centerville senior. She requires a resounding "oof-plank" to the audience for her to be able to sit down, a "plank-oof" to stand up, and a series of "pom-poms" to walk across the room.
It is being done as one of the master's degree requirements for its director, Rhonda Blair, Warren, Mich., graduate student and in conjunction with a drama class taught by Jed Davis, professor of speech and drama.
The fairy-tale plot of "Mirror Man" involves a toymaster, played by Dgo Ghebe, Lawrence graduate student, who makes a walk and talk with help from the audience.
It seems that a nasty witch, played by Danielle Fowler, was trying to steal his magic of magic.
The toymaker's reflection, or mirror man, played by David Shestak, Maryville, Mo., graduate student, comes from behind the room to the room to help the toymaker.
The audience helps to defeat the witch by hiding the magic book and by telling the toymaker and the mirror man about a spell they were out of the room. Beauty while they were out of the room.
A motion to modify a 5 to 20-year sen-
ience was denied Terry J. Haffield last week as
daughter Wendy J.
After the vanquished witch goes walling off the stage, the mirror man returns to his room, and the witch shows before him his appreciation by making ability able to talk and move without help.
**Division 1 District Court Judge Frank Gray denied the motion after reading reports from the Kansas State Diagnostic Office from state probation officer A. D. Davidson.**
Haftef originally been charged with second-degree murder in the shooting death of a fellow officer, amnesia, or...
Police Blotter
Hattfield pleaded not guilty to the second-degree murder charge, but pleaded guilty to the third.
Hatfield told police he and Miss Spears
had been arguing about her intention to up with him when the shocked occurred.
Lorraine Turner, 21, of 160 Haskell Ave., was arrested by sherriff's officer last week on a warrant charging her with shooting Ruby L. Plymer on July 10.
Turner was released on $5,000 bond to appear for arraignment July 25. The warrant was issued after Plymer signed a complaint at the county attorney's office.
Turner is accused of shooting Plymer in the knee during a quarrel concerning Plymer's husband. The shooting occurred at the East 23rd Street Car Wash.
LOOKING FOR A NEW NEST?
See
HOME SWEEK HOME
Jayhawker Towers Apts.
2-bedroom apartments on campus furnished or unfurnished utilities paid swimming pool equipped
on bus line
security guards
security guards
covered parking
bonded lock system
camera system
OFFICE OPEN DAILY
Monday-Friday til 5:30
Saturday til 4:00
1603 W. 15th
LR&
Lawrence, Ks.
University Daily Kansan
Monday, July 21. 1975
3
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
'Python' comment draws a hiss
To the Kansan editor:
A recent Kansan comment by Jain Penner bemoaned the fact that KCPT, Channel 19, a Public Broadcasting system affiried, ailed "Monty Python's Flying Circus," a British comedy show. Penner mises scenes, calling it "shows a show's mide scenes, calling it 'irrational,' but yet she 'soon began to watch' Monty Python's every week."
Despite the fact that Penner watches programs which "shock" her, and does so
voluntarily, she states that pay TV is a reasonable alternative to commercial television because "if such programs were carried on commercial television stations, they might be imposed on people who had no desire to see them."
I won't discuss the merits of 'Monty
Potter' because it once and found it
mildly entertaining.
Nobody forces anyone to watch a TV program, but the watch who watches television does so voluntarily.
Black professors say KU alienates minority facultv
By CONNIE BRUCE Kansan Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas has been losing some minority faculty members because they haven't been encouraged to make a career of professional education, according to Harold Washington, a black assistant professor of social welfare.
Washington said recruitment of minority faculty was very crucial in encouraging minorities to become a part of the University community.
Four or five years ago, Washington said last week, the federal government was exerting pressure on colleges and universities to recruit minority faculty members. It seems the momentum isn't as strong now as it was then, he said.
"The matter of promotion and tenure is very crucial too," Washington said. "I would have to say with a great deal of emphasis that the percentage of minority group faculty, and particularly blacks, is ridiculously low."
In fiscal 1975 there were about 940 faculty members employed on the Lawrence campus, according to the Office of Academic Affairs. Fifty-three were faculty members, of which 19 were black, according to the Office of Minority Affairs.
"We need to remove the barriers that work against these persons" he said.
Minority faculty members moving in and out of universities aren't able to adjust and make worthwhile contributions to education, Washington said.
If a person teaching at the University isn't given tenure after six years, he must leave, and if he is not being given tenure, syndrome," he said, is that when a person approaches this academic threshold and doesn't surmount it, he never becomes an associate member of the University community.
James Harris, a black assistant professor of psychology, said that often there was only one student per class.
"This syndrome prevents the University from bringing in minority group members and black faculty who are interested in a career." he said.
"The University can be an instrument of "social change," Harris said. It is a heavy issue, the legacy of slavery. We are not very far removed from slavery, and the psychological effects of slavery are still with us.
Harris said that it was sometimes difficult to communicate with colleagues in a Parisian setting.
"I am in somewhat of a social prison here,
I try to try to assert your person, your beliefs,
your self-identity."
"I try not to compromise myself, but I try to coexist." he said.
A particular problem for black faculty
Harris said that if there were enough black faculty members in Lawrence, they would gather in an area of town over a community and create a feeling of community.
Black professionals aren't necessarily concerned with living in an all-black community, be said, but they want social interaction so their children will be exposed to all groups of people.
members is the lack of a black professional community in Lawrence. Harris said.
Because his family didn't want to live in north or east Lawrence, Harris said, they often had to drive a mile to see another black family.
Many people eventually leave Lawrence for the sake of their children, Harris said.
"We couldn't keep our children in a safety situation, we were very positive about themselves," he said.
Although some say problems exist that discourage minorities from teaching, others say that action is being taken to overcome these problems.
Bonnie Patton, director of the Office of Affirmative Action, said her office checked and recruited women who were recruited and considered minority groups and women. The office also checks on whether available positions are advertised to women or hired in hiring procedures are followed, she said.
Ed Rolfs, office body president, said officers of affirmative action were examples of the federal government's trying to make something that couldn't be legislated
Affirmative Action's responsibility is to develop plans to help employ minorities and women, Patton said, but the obligation to grant the plans is up to each department.
David Holloway, a KU graduate, will be joined by Ruth Welling, New York opera soprano, for the second program, and Joshua Reid, a professor who received his bachelor's and master's degrees from KU and was a member of the music school faculty at age 22. He spent six seasons with the Kansas City Lyric Opera in Chicago and the Western Opera Theater in 1970.
"They have set up a legislative bureaucracy of paperwork and timetables and they haven't got to the heart of the problem at all." Ralls said.
If it weren't for red tape, Patton said, the office would have no way to evaluate what efforts were made to provide equal opportunities for everyone.
"If you change behaviors of folks, then the attitude change is likely to follow." Patty
Patton said minority faculty members could recruit other minorities and encourage them more effectively than anyone else.
Clarence Dillingham, assistant director of affirmative action, said he hoped the day would come when everyone was following the guidelines.
Concert Series to offer a variety of performers
The responsibility doesn't rest solely with the minorities, Dillingham said. It should be a joint effort of the community and an interest concerned with affirmative action, he said.
Jones, the arranger, has worked with songwriter Gerry Mulligan and has written several songs, including "Mean What You Sav" and "Don't Ever Leave Me."
By JENIFER OTWELL Kansas Staff Reporter
Next year's Concert Series will be a really big show.
Little Kira will perform here December 3. an artist-in-residence at Texas Christian University. She is also a teacher. 1. She was in Budapest and entered the Royal Academy of Music at 8. she studied
He has also sing for the Chicago Lytic
1973-74 season with the Metropolitan Opera
The series will begin with the Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Orchestra on October 17. This big band began performing in 1968 and has been playing at various venues in Japan, Lewis, a drummer, has played with Stan Kenton, Ray Anthony, Tex Beneke and Benny Goodman and Dazzy Gillespie with Benny Goodman and Dazzy Gillespie.
Tickets won't go on sale until August, but some people have already sent in their checks, Preston Sisk, manager of the University Box Office, said Friday.
He said that the checks that have been received would be held until August. University of Kansas students with DWs will bemitted free to all but one of the six schools.
Cellist Matsislav Rostropovich has been allowed to leave the Soviet Union for a tour for the first time in several years, and will perform at KU on March 26. The son of a cellist and a pianist, he was composing and playing the piano at age 4. He was a student of the compositions composition under Shostakovich. A $1 admission will be charged to KU students.
The concert brochures were sent out early this year to patrons other than students because of the appointment of a new dean for the School of Fine Arts. However, the box office didn't expect such an immediate response, Sisk said.
The Mazoswize Polish Song and Dance Company will perform February 26 as part of its fifth U.S. tour. It was started in 1948 and consists of 100 dancers, singers and orchestra members who perform regional Polish dances in national costumes.
there under Zoltan Kodaly and Bela Bartok At 20 she was a full professor at the Vienna Academy. She has made many tours of Europe, South Africa, the Orient and Australia.
Last year 24-year-old violinist Eugene Fodor became the first string player of the Western world to win top honors at the World Championship in Moscow, where he shared a silver medal with two Soviet violinists. Two years earlier he became the second American to win the Eurovision Song Contest Competition in Genoa. His performance on April 14, will close next year's series.
Kansan Classifieds Work For You!
The point is, however, that it is no more unreasonable for PBS to show frontal nudity than it is for other networks to expose us to images of naked bodies, while wholesome family entertainment(") as doctors who never lose a patient, lawyers who never lose a case, cops who never lose their cool. Morris the cat and Mickey Mouse would never be able to gun into the air with reckless abandon.
I don't favor censorship, but if we are to begin to protect the public, Ronald McDonald and Mr. Whipple are my candidates. I don't want to find the best way to avoid muddy on television is to stop watching it and start reading a pornographic novel every week. I would find nothing more entertaining than a Kansas editorial advocating book burning.
Barry M. Shalinsky Overland Park senior
TWO NEW THEATER AND DRAMA courses, "Literature as Drama" and "Communication Aesthetics," will be offered this fall. The first will center on the relationship between performance and criticism and the second will center on language and symbolization as processes that are primarily aesthetic.
WALTER KOLLMORGEN, University distinguished professor of geography, will lecture the Land-The Woodsmans in the university's Plains at 7 onight in the University Theatre.
Kansan Telephone Number-
Newroom-864-4810
Advertising-864-4358
Circulation-864-3045
ROBERT C. BEARSE, associate professor of physics and astronomy, will join the Office of Research Administration to associate dean half-time beginning Aug. 16.
ON CAMPUS
"KANSAS CIRCA 90," has been cited for innovation by the *Compass Group* and for KWTLU or KTWLU.
GEORGE LAWNER, director of the University of Kansas Symphony, is visiting professor at the Mozartium in Salzburg, through Aug. 23. He is teaching a course in opera and will conduct several performances with the Mozartium staff.
Channel 10, of Topeka by KU students in the radio-TV filmming sequence of the School of
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas
and held at holidays and examination periods. Second-
Subscriptions by mail are $8 a semester, or
$14 for a three-month semester, paid through the student activity
semester, paid through the student activity
GARY L. WAMSLEY, associate professor of political science and director of the Institute of Public Affairs, is a contributor to the book "Growing Metropolis: Aspects of Development in Nashville." The book contains 11 studies analyzing the reciprocal state and public decisions at various levels of government, and his work was sponsored by the Vanderbilt Urban and Regional Division Center and funded by the Ford Foundation.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Editor
Kard Harkawy
Business Manager
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care for patients with complex medical conditions.
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FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LISSE - Bagged-radiation
components for the LISSE and GSX systems, produced
by Tecno Instruments. (LISSE) GSX (GSM-X), 2840
MHz, UHF band, dual-channel, digital modem.
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make sense out of Western Civilization?
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1. Basic guide
2. For class presentation
3. For new material on Western Civilization
*New Anabalico guide on Western Civilization*
Available now at Town & Country.
10
Now fire merchandise closes-out, etc. New selling huge grocery stock from a Chicago supermarket at 10am on Sat and at checkout站。Open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the salvage's Salvage Center, 628 Vermont Mount.
HIGHBOT PROTEIN horse horn dog food. 21-14 oz
case, no discount. Merge Salve; 68%
Vernon.
1972 Suzuki--Enjoy the summer on tusk
Perfect for your good condition.
7-21
7-21
1974 Vega Hatchback 4-5pD A/C/M-FM-
CAM Vega, new radial sail, 482-8421
842-8421
6 health县 Collie pups. Pedigree-sal-
white-7 weeks, male and female 84-523 7-21
ATTENTION BACKPACKER. Frontline back.
kit TIF+Rodik node. Backline phone:
843-9427.
1972 Yamaha 650cc, red and white. $70 or will
call. Call 843-7450. 7-30
Lenco Syncoer LB-15 Turntable with Shure MK8
$25. Cail KR, 482-512-3 after 5 p.m. 7-22
www.lenco.com
Must sell 1732 VW. Runs great. Two large cat-
ers—reasona for sale 842-509-680, 6-721
Come on out-Lots of labs and parking-to-the artisanal antique furniture and other furniture, antiques, collectables. Wooden products, nail kegs. 4 I K. 1 brass basket hulks, annex boxes, apples boxes, 10 baskets, annex boxes, apples boxes, of other useful items like fruit and vegetables, 15 aubergine, each 2 for $2. 25c baskets, by lb or oz
Honeywell Pentax Spotmatic F w/F14 lens $200.
B33-6493-8799. 7-23
SALE: AR3A Speakers (Reg. $250) $250.15. Use
many of the different models. $72 each. AT A Table XA $(600). $1.00 per wch per unit, now $200. Many other prices are available. Each AT Audio Audio. 13 F. K. Each AT Audio Audio. 13 F. K.
Leaving town? Panasonic Quad unit-turntable receiver, 4 speakers, earphones IT$75.00 - $89.00
66 Rambler convertible - automatic, excellent comfort bed needs some work. Must sell it for $499.
1661 Ramder Classic 6 cyl. automatic, new tread
70,000 miles. $450. Calibration 644-8097. 72-24
86 Dodge Coronet A.T. Many parts new $480
Call 842-1962 7-24
1968 Opel Kodick 2 d. dr. standard, only $792.00
Jayhawk VW 843-2200
$459.00
Briman Leading Jewelers Fine jewelry
GAY COUNSELING & RAP
for referrals
into center
BAA 406NA
- Expert watch repair
743 Mass. 843-4366
Central air units for sale. Mobile installation
Webster's Webster. Mobile Homes 7-24
W 6th, 842-770-9111
Closeout of all 1974 Demo's and rental cars, sale
hundreds. Jayawk WV. 843-2210. 7-24
Yamaha RD5 1952 REC. 1872, 2050 Actual muscles. Beaucoup d'œil et de la lumière. Motif du motif du m
1968 VW Bus, converted to camper, box. bax.
704, gas bus. Jayhawk W 845-220-728
Squareback Wagons. Choose from three, from 168 to 171. Jayhawk W. 845; 832-210. 7-24
Just arrived—shipment of Fabrics and Selcocews
come by for a test drive. Jawkwv YAW-843-2210.
www.jawkwv.com
1972 Impala Custom, Pc. Automatic, airt, wirn
油, jayhawk VW, VM-832-210
7-24
1971 Carli, 4 speed. Air conditioned. low
little mileage. Jawkwell. WV 83-2210.
1974 Yamaha Enduro 125, one owner, 3200 miles.
Bake a 1974 WU Bur burg, Balance of factory
warehouse. Never, Never. Tie-up Call, T24
Jayhawk WU 843-220-8300
1970 Pontiac T37 2 dr, ht, auto, PS, air, wiring
Javhack JWV 843.2900 7.24
1971 Datum 'Lil Hunter P J, white, 4 speed,
Jawhack Yahwk V: 84.250-724.
7-24
WV Bwrk, from 1864 to 1974, all colors —4 speed
Bwrk, from 1864 to 1974, all colors —4 speed
Jayawk, WV 833-2000, T-724
Jayawk, WV 833-2000, T-724
11-64 Goodman Jr. like new. New Wilson
Cavani Rocket; Medium 4 5/8" Cyl. 7-25
832-544-154
Pentax 163 F1.8 fex 1000 shooter, $70 Mint condition.
163-5455 day, Jack. 7-23
Double bed, frame, springs & mattress. Call 843-7651 after 5 p.m.
Did you know that Webster's Mobile Homes have
multi-family homes for all of all types of Webster's
mobile homes for all of all types of Webster's
mobile homes.
FOR RENT
Johnson Rental Company, Studio, 1 bedroom, 2 bathrooms to KU Medical Center, Kusan City, Kansai.
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of renting住房 available in Lawrence, Lawrence
Two bedroom apartment, all utilities paid, close to campus. Please make this furnished or unfit used. 843-929-9011
Rooms - Kitchen privileges. One block to campus.
Bedrooms - 842-509-1833 or 842-509-665.
Bathrooms - 842-509-1833 or 842-509-665.
Rooms furnished, single, with or without cook-
ing facilities. Known Ku andNUen,
no pets. Phone 843-7567.
Apartments, 1, 2, and 4 bedrooms furnished.
Borders KU and near town. Phone 843-7567. fcf
Extra rice rooms with private kitchens. One
room has a private parking, utilities,
Reasonable rent: 843-957-99
JAYHAWKER TOWERS- 2-bedroom, all utilities furnished,
parking space, pool, barbecue grill, free parking, laundry room, kitchen, fire alarm.
Spacious room living-3 bedroom basement
flipper, four-bathroom room, full-fellowship
flipper, family room, fiddle fellowship
bedroom.
Grades~like privacy and good location for fall~
Bate 842-6458 after 6 p.m. daily.
7-21
New spacious apartment, Furnished, all electric appliances, entrance, air conditioned. 7-28
1555 or 93-1199
WANTED
Did you know that you can rent mobile homes?
**Website?** 82-700, www. Canter Mobile Homes.
For Rent: Ideal third floor apartment in private
building. 2-bedroom, 1-bathroom, 1 bedroom,
a bedrooms. 1 car rental. Master student. Furnished.
30% down payment.
Person to share large 3 bedroom display for fall
decor $79.33 per month. Call in @ b - 825-
842-7573
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CUP BOARD
12-5 Monday-Friday 10-5 Sat.
SIRLOIN STOCKADE
FINE HOME FURNISHING
1015 lowa
11:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
11:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m.
SIRLOIN STOCKADE
Windy Weather
IS YOUR CAR AS READY FOR
YOUR VACATION AS YOU ARE?
...
842-0753 900 New Jersey
If not, call—
Female Subjects 18-25 for ½ hour experiment.
Male Subjects 18-30 for ½ hour experiment, weekly
logistics for a case of berry. Call 864-363-3833.
DON'S AUTO SERVICE
Wanted. An upper class roommate to shareJAY.
Wanted for fall semester at 842-166-108. After 7 a.m.
Need female roommate beginning fall semester.
84-292-201 first before Aug. 1, or 84-367-361.
84-292-201 second before Aug. 1, or 84-367-361.
Two female roommates 18-45 for hour experiment
with a glass basin. Each has one hour mandatory free coupe
for $25.
Rosmanth and & place to live for new & fall. 821-635-9704
have own bedroom close to campus. 814-296-9000
Help Pay Aug. Rent. Want to sublease full furn-
ance or lease space from you. Call Mid August
Mid August Cell 841-784-3298 after 3:30 m
Roommates wanted for apartment. Call Mark,
842-7498 after 5.
NOTICE
COST PLUS 35% -Stereo Jack. At no additional cost.
Items or packages. Call Dave. Phone 812-679-0120.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT - Let us do your printing while you wait at The Quick Copy Center. You'll receive a $35.00, $53.00 copies - $84.10, 1,000 copies - $13.90, or want your business at the Quick Copy Center.
PHOTOGRAPHY Shooting Gallery Specializing in Personalized Portraits in natural surroundings. Wedding, portfolios, and commercial photography for wedding guests. 811-249-3055, www.811-249-3055.com. 811-249-3055, 12 p.m.-5 p.m. Tuesday. tsf
Fish Platter, toad, salad, and potato $1.29- Monday night at Sirius Stockade.
TYPING
HOMOSEXUALITY PRESENTS PROBLEMS
INFORMATION GAV LIBERATION. IG, Gathering: 7:30 a.m.
and 3rd Monday of each month. Union office
on campus. Applicants must have BS or
843-306 for referrals; 843-925 for
referrals.
IBM Selective, picrate or elitre, reasonable, expert
discussion, or discourses. Call Joan Mearns:
845-9127.
Typing in my home IMH selective with pixes type.
Taking the phone number, and paper, and
calling, Call Fam. #42-5799.
Experienced in typing themes, research papers,
reportings, articles, and other materials.
Typewriter (carbon ribbon), keyboard. Call 913-854-7222.
THEISI BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is the only service offered to clients. Our services to fast and price are reasonably priced.
Experienced typist—term paper, sheets, mule.
Experienced typist—writing, spelling, illiteracy.
843–854. Mrs. Wright.
Experienced typist will do these, dissertations,
and other duties. 842-976-2095 for
Jillua; 842-976-2095 for
Julia.
[Drawing of a female figure in a flowing dress with long hair, holding a fan and wearing earrings. She is surrounded by trees and plants.]
Home Growin'
904 Vermont
WAGON WHEEL
1401 Ohio
Open 11 A.M.-Midnight
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15 miles east of Lawrence
on Hiway 10 585-1048
Mon.-Fri. 9:00-6:00
Sat. 9:00-3:00
4
Monday, July 21, 1975
University Daily Kansan
THE ALL-NEW CATACLYSMIC PERVERTER
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Postal patron perturbed
According to latest reports, U.S. Postal service employees aren't going to strike today.
Actually that is a real surprise to me. If the mail service I've been getting latey is any indication, someone has been on strike for some time.
Last Wednesday, in anticipation of my dear dad's birthday, I mailed a present to him.
COMMENT
he would reach by him Saturday, his birthday,
time for a package to go 100 miles by mail.
Well, I was wrong. Sunday morning I was in the kitchen and she said She wondered where dad's present was. To the best of my knowledge it is still floating in limbo somewhere between Lawrence and Paris.
But there is even more to my diatribе than that.
Being in a impoverished financial condition, I used to look forward to a CARE package from home. The last one, which I received a week ago, was five days late.
The package contained, among other items:
What really irks me is that I had to borrow the money to afford his present.
Two rotten tomatoes that my mother had proudly packed. They were the first fruits of her labor in garden under the trees, and her heart to tell her what had happened to them.
A - sponge cake that was so dry that I set it on the floor to soak up the water the landlord's refrigerator generates whenever it attempts to defrost.
"A can of preserved meat that sent me running to the bathroom, hand clasped desperately over my mouth, in the middle of the room. And after I ate it, I lost a good night's sleep."
As a result I am still trying to explain to mother who I don't want any more CARE.
But wait—that's not all.
Not too long ago when I was covering a bad check I had written to the Kansas
Union, I made the mistake of sending my payment through the mail.
I didn't realize what a mistake I had made. I know now that I should have paid the bill. I didn't pay the bill the bill took 10 days to reach the Kansas Union from my home in Lawrence. For 10 days I had to cash checks at the First National Bank. They charge 50 cents each.
Perhaps I shouldn't complain. After all I probably saved money by writing fewer checks than usual. And the stale sponge in my basement job is making up water from our leaky refrigerator.
I guess that I could start sending my mail by bus. Even Pony Express would be faster than the service the post office has been providing, but I don't think that there are many pennies available these days. Too bad. My office could stand a little competition.
I the meantime I'll hope the government does something to speed up service. I wonder if they have ever considered carrier ownership—and so is the present postal service.
Ian Kenneth Louden
Med Center sponsors classes
Two classes for severely emotionally disturbed children will begin in August in the Shawnee Mission public schools as a joint project of the KU Medical Center's department of special education and the Shawnee Mission public schools.
Local police break check forgery ring
Lawrence police last week arrested three men, a woman and a baby, allegedly and possession of forger devices.
A stub found in a search of his car led police to a room at the Holiday Inn where the two others, Nona Lewis and McArthur Myres, were arrested.
One of the three, William Stewart, was arrested on the Kansas Tumpike after he attempted to cash a forged check at University State Bank. He became suspicious when a cashier hesitated to cash the check. Stewart then fled.
Items found during a search of the motel room included 110 blank checks drawn on Frontier Airlines, blank Social Security cards, blank Colorado driver's license, a Colorado driver's license and two forged Frontier Airlines identification cards.
The license and one identification card were made out to James R. Robinson and Myrtle's picture on them. The other licence was made out to Harry Ingersoll and had Lewis' picture on it.
According to police, Lewis earlier had attempted to open an account at University State Bank in the name of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Robinson. She reportedly showed required identification and said she and her husband had just moved to Lawrence
A bank clerk became suspicious when Larry gave an address in the 9200 block of W. Street, and attempted to cash what they said was a payroll check from Frontier Airlines to J. E. Robinson for $1600. They left hurriedly the cashier hesitated to cash the check.
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Richard Simpson, assistant professor of special education, said last week that he would work with Richard Whelan, educational director of the department of special education at Ted Gray, director of special education for the Shawnee Mission public schools.
Funding for the project comes from a contract awarded by the Bureau of Education for the Handicapped of the U.S. Office of Education.
Simpson said that about $100,000 a year for three years had been granted for the work.
It will involve children whose emotional conditions have made them ineligible for most public schools and who can't be integrated easily into existing programs for the disturbed because of the severity of their conditions.
the United States. The classes, to be located in one of the Shawnee Mission schools, will serve no more than 15 elementary-age children at a time.
The program will demonstrate procedures found to be effective with the severely emotionally disturbed, he said. It is important that people use in similar situations in other areas of
Referrals to the program will be accepted from educators in Shawnee Mission schools. Students must have a Master's degree or equivalent.
The educational program will be a highly structured, highly individualized program, designed to enable teachers to select applications of materials for each student. Simpson said.
The children will be instructed in specific academic work, he said. The goal will be to increase productive behavior of the severely disturbed child.
In addition to classroom instruction, a counselor will work with parents, so that the parents eventually will be able to function better in their therapists with their own children, he said.
The staff will include two experienced master's degree teachers, two paraprofessionals, a learning specialist, an art therapist, a physical therapist and the parent counselor.
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Solar energy could be the solution to the nation's energy problems, William P. Smith, dean of the School of Engineering, said last week.
Although a large amount of fuel costs could be saved in the long run, he said, the high initial costs of buying and installing new equipment can care many people away from buying them.
By BRAD JONES Kansan Staff Reporter
Burger
Smith said that a solar-wind combination energy system would cost between $5,000 and $10,000, depending on whether the market is cheap or most expensive materials available.
Sun may be energy solution, dean says
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A solar installation which costs $3,000 could save about $100 a year in fuel costs and produce about 65 per cent of the power to run a home, he said.
But windmills used for converting the wind to electricity couldn't produce a significant amount of energy, he said. Storage batteries to save energy for times when the wind didn't blow were too expensive to be practical, he said.
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Some state legislatures have already introduced bills that give a tax credit to homeowners or prospective builders who energy generators to their homes. Smith said.
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If a builder could bear the initial costs, barring an unforeseen maintenance difficulties with the solar installation, he could make his money back in 10 or 20 years, he said. If fuel costs continue to rise, he might do it sooner.
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Smith has been interested in the potential of solar energy for many years. Last spring, he and a group of engineering graduate students finished a study on the feasibility of converting a rural residence from electric power to wind and solar power.
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"We actually found out something we already knew," he said. "We wanted to learn about the technology available today, without using new technological material. We were successful, but we also became very aware of the precipitous costs that solar energy can cost."
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Solar converter plates are the most common of the many different forms of solar conversion systems, he said. They consist of a glass or metal outer surface, a black metal insulator on the inside and a metal system, copper tubing sandwiched between them.
Water is pumped through the tubing as sun shines on the glass or metal outer casing of a canister. It uses the "greenhouse" effect, allowing the heat of solar radiation in and then trapping it. The water is heated at it passes through the canister when it runs into an insulated storage tank.
The water then could be used for steam Smith said, it could be used to produce
electricity. In the study, Smith found that solar collectors could provide the energy to heat and air-condition a home, about 85 percent of the energy used in homes.
The remaining 15 per cent could be produced by a windmill, connected to a turbine, to produce electricity for appliances, he said.
Smith said that because sunshine and wind weren't constant energy sources, large storage facilities had to be built. Storage batteries for electricity produced by solar panels were said, but batteries to store power for several days could cost as much as $10,000.
He estimated that nearly one million homes were being built yearly in the United States, and about 1,000 of these were equipped with solar energy collecting systems so that would be lowered, he said, he thought that the number would increase.
Smith said a single solar installation, as was developed in the study, could store enough water for two or three days. This technology needed to heat the house, he said, if the sun doesn't shine enough every day to heat a tank of water to keep the storage tank full.
"In order to achieve 100 per cent solar energy, the installation must have enough square feet of collector surface and a large supply of power. The water supply, or about 25,000 gallons, on hand," he said. "As more installations are added, the collector surface is increased and larger storage tanks are installed until finally, that supply is sufficient for the last at least until the next sunny day."
Smith said there would be disagreement on which type of solar converter could give higher efficiency.
But, he said, as more installations were put into the system, the costs multiply. An installation that provides 65 per cent of the heating supply, for example, is financially more practical than an installation that supplies 100 per cent of the heating supply, he said.
Rather than more research, Smith said, advocates of solar power need to encourage homeowners to produce more economical components in their homebuilders can afford the expense. This would bring solar equipment down to a reasonable price, and homeowners would have to compete for sales, he said.
There might be other than financial problems.
"In different parts of the country, different types of installations will work better," he said. "A solar installation in Arizona wouldn't have to do quite as extensive a job as it would in Minnesota. We can perform with performance and capabilities that will happen soon as scientists and manufacturers develop a little expertise in the product."
Although he wouldn't estimate when the nation could become solar and wind powered, Smith said an increasing number of studies were being done to curb costs of installing solar and wind generators for the home. He said the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the University of Arizona were two of the groups doing such studies.
For example, he said the state of Florida, in the early 1940s had no fuel producing minerals or gases to supply power. As a member of solar energy devices were used.
"The federal government is also patting in a fair amount—maybe $50 to $100 for new wind turbines and creasing thinking, with fuel costs rising as they are, that solar energy is an attractive
He also said that there were no obvious solutions for maintenance problems. There are examples to be a trial-and-error understanding of surfaces such as corrosion of outside surfaces.
supplement," he said. "However, we really don't need the high level research anymore. We know what the potential of solar energy is. There have been studies going on, and actual practical use of solar energy since before World War II."
"The so-called hardness and softness of water may cause some unforeseen problems," he said. "Hard water, like what we in Lawrence, tends to corrode pipes than can soft water. When hard water is heated, corrosion tends to occur more rapidly."
The plumbing costs could be phenomenal, he said.
From page 1
Field trip . . .
Indian children are reared differently than white middle class children, he said, so a teacher wouldn't want to use the same teaching methods.
"With field experiences," he said, "you see how children are taught and disciplined at home so you can use those types of methods in your classroom."
Stewart said Bill Burgess, dean of instruction at Haskell, and been instrumental in helping students learn.
"He helped set up the trip and spent some time with us while we were out there," she said.
He said Burgex also up set of many of the group contacts and suggested many places.
The other three students who attended the field trip were Phyllis Buford and Lucille Forester, Kanaas D. Doe, Kan., graduate of DePaul University, Dr. McCullough, Lawrence graduate student.
Looking for a Roommate?
The file will give you accurate information and better selection for your convenience.
Drop by or call the Student Senate office for further information. Happy hunting!
The Student Senate offers a program where students may file their needs and select a roommate.
Similar files are kept on students seeking carpools and/or tutors.
Name___ Phone___
Address___ Roommate □ Carpool □ Tutor □
Information.
Bring to Student Senate office—105B Student Union 864-3710
ku ?
ku ?
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
No. 165
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Tuesday, July 22, 1975
Students and food stamps
See page 2
Mail union wins raises for 3 years
WASHINGTON (AP) - Postal workers won a three-year contract that will provide scheduled raises totaling $1,500 over three years. The company says no additional, nostalgic sources said yesterday.
By the third year of the contract, which covers about 600,000 workers, the additional cost to the Postal Service will be $900 million a year.
In the two-year contract that expired at midnight Sunday, the cost-of-living feature added $70 million to scheduled increases, and added $500 a year for the average postal worker.
There is no way to calculate the value of the cost-of-living clause, however. It provides, at six-month intervals, increases in consumer price index, and a point increase in the Consumer Price Index.
In terms of the effect on postage rates, the Postal Service could raise $900 million by increasing the first-class rate 1/4 cents. However, higher increases than that are needed, the Postal Service says, to cover other expenses that have risen because of the cost-of-living increase of the earlier cost-of-living increase. The contributed to a deficit that totaled about $850 million in the fiscal year that ended June 30.
The average postal clerk, postman or pickup truck driver now makes about $13,500 a year at top scale, plus fringe benefits.
Also won in the contract was a provision protecting workers against layoffs, an incentive to increase employment.
I am a fan of the movie "Toy Story 1." It's so much fun to watch. I love the characters and the songs. I'm going to buy it soon.
Sources said the increase will occur in four steps: $400 a year immediately, $250 a year later and $100 a year November 1976, and $800 a year on July 21, 1977. The Postal Service also agreed to increases in some fringe benefits, including health insurance and allowances for workers.
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Agreement on the contract was reached early morning, more than two hours after the old contract expired, averting threats of an assault against handlers, which would have been illegal.
The agreement must still be ratified by the four unions involved—the National Association of Letter Carriers, the American Postal Workers Union, the Laborers International Union, and the National Rural Letter Carriers Association.
In addition to its union work force, the Postal Service has about 100,000 nomination
Cheer up
Members of the Yates Center cheerleading squad practice their yells in front of Templeium. KU's host to 178 cheerleaders in a week-long cheerleading clinic which ends Thursday.
Loop fight stirring again
Kansan Staff Reporter
By LYNN PEARSON
Last week, Dry Ray Dyz, Lawrence graduate student, submitted his resignation as a director of the School.
The proposed Haskell Loop Project, which received approval from the city commission last fall, is the object of a simmering controversy for the second time
Dryz has said that it will make the neighbor a drive-through, not live-in, neighborhood.
ANALYSIS
provement Association because of the group's continued support of the Haskell Loop project and what he called its neglect in working class people in the neighborhood.
City Commissioner Carl Mibek said last week that he wasn't sure that the Haskell Loop was the most desirable thing for the people of east Lawrence.
The land around the loop will deteriorate and will probably be rezoned commercial or residential. But he wouldn't happen with this commission, he said, because it is committed to keeping the area residential. But, he said, there is a future commission of a future commission from rezoning the land.
The Haskell Loop, which is funded through the Community Development Act, was planned to improve the transportation system through east Lawrence.
The loop is designed to provide access to downtown Lawrence from the proposed U.S. 59 bypass, and will sweep through east Lawrence.
Binns, agreeing with Mibeck, said that he had many reservations about the loop project, but that he was approaching the issue with an open mind.
Three new commissioners were elected in April, two from the east Lawrence neighborhood. The two, Mibek and Donald Bins, added to Fred Pence who was selected by the commission, compose a three member majority from east Lawrence.
The new commission will put the Loop project to a vote, probably in September.
Mayor Barkley Clark said last week that he thought it would pass the commission.
The city commission authorized City Manager Buford Watson to begin land acquisition for the Haskell Loop project in October 1974. The plans for the loop have been made and books since the 1964 Compete Project, Plan included it in its long range goals.
Watson said that the loop was necessary to the city because there are no arterial streets running north and south in east Lawrence.
Watson also said the new road would separate industrial land to the east of the city.
residents circulated a petition opposing the loop and got more than 50 signatures. They presented the petition to the city commission and asked for a public hearing on the issue.
In fall 1974, there was considerable controversy centered on the Haskell Loop
The commissioners agreed to attend the next East Lawrence Improvement Association meeting rather than to hold a hearing on the proposed association vote to endorse the loop.
The city has almost finished the land acquisition for the Haskell Loop.
"A lot of people over here would like to see the city spend that money on housing instead of the Haskell Loop," Dryz said. "We're trying to keep with the city and feel helpless to stop it."
Mayor Clark said that it would be more economically unsound to bake the cookies.
U.S., Soviets make 3rd major grain deal
NEW YORK (AP)—The third major U.S.-Soviet grain deal of 1975 was reported yesterday as Continental Grain Co. announced completion of an agreement to sell 5.6 million metric tons of corn and barley to the Soviet Union for more than $800 million.
Two other grain exporters announced last week that they had sold 3.2 million metric tons of wheat to the Soviet Union, a move that brought some protests from urging and longshoremen who are considering refusing to load the grain for shipment.
Agriculture Department sources have said repeatedly they don't expect the sales of their bulk of souring prices that followed the bulk of export deals involving 19 million metric tons of grain. They say the United States expects harvests this year and can afford the exports.
The sales price of the 4.5 million metric tons of corn and 1.1 million metric tons of
barley involved in yesterday's deal was not announced, but a Continental spokesman said the transaction was worth more than $600 million.
Agriculture Department spokesmen in Washington confirmed that the corn and barley sale had taken place. A spokesman said it was "absolutely confidential." Continental, but couldn't confirm the fact.
A Continental spokesman said the grain would be shipped starting with the new harvest in October. He said the shipments probably continue through next August.
The grain could come from any part of the company's international operations, the spokesman said, but added, "We are boping corn can largely originate in this country."
The Agriculture Department said the sale was reported as an "all origins" contract, meaning the grain may come from a country selected by the exporter.
American farmers are expecting record harvests this year of 153.6 million metric tons of corn - up 30 per cent from last year's total - and 59.5 million metric tons of wheat.
That would be equal to six billion bushels of corn and 2.2 billion bushels of wheat.
Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz has said Americans would use about 800 million bushels of wheat for domestic consumption, export and to build up depleted stocklines.
USDA officials have said that the Soviet Union, hard hit by bad weather in its grain belt, may buy up to 10 million metric tons of grain this year from all sources. Other industry experts say the total could be 15 million tons or more.
The Canadian Wheat Board announced last Thursday that the Soviets had bought two million long tons—slightly more than 4.5 million short tons—from Canada, with shipment to start in the fall.
Dockmen balk at grain loading
★ ★ ★
MIAMI BEACH (AP)-AFL-CIO President George Meany offered conditional support Monday for an expected refusal by longshoremen to load American wheat on ships destined for the Soviet Union.
Meany, here to address a convention of the International Longshoremen's Association, said that while he was not completely familiar with the resolution
being offered to delegates, he would support the union's decision.
"I haven't been asked about it, and I don't know all the details. But if the union votes that way, I would support it," Meany said in an interview.
Earlier, ILA President Thomas Gleason said he expected passage of the proposal that the union's 132,000 members from Maine to Texas refuse to load about 3.2
million tons of grain planned for sale to the Russians.
Gleason said he expected to ask to meet with Ford Administration officials if the resolution was approved tomorrow or Thursday.
"Why should we sell them wheat at all?" Meany asked. "This is an act of cooperation to help them out. But I'd like to see a two-way street."
Top grain seller indicted
NEW ORLEANS (AP)-A federal indictment issued yesterday accused Bunge Corp. of New York, one of the world's largest grain exporters, and 13 present or former executives, of cheating on grain shipments to foreign customers.
Burge is one of several grain companies being investigated in a federal inquiry reported to involve millions of dollars in short-weighting and misgrading of grain.
For 12 years, the indictment said, the Bunge employees stole grain by short-weighting cargo that was loaded onto ships in waters in Destrehan, La., and Galveston, Tex.
said a grand jury is continuing the investigation.
Assist. U.S. Atty. Cornelius Heusel, coordinator of the wide-ranging investigation,
Top executives named in the indictment were Vice President Walton F. Mulloy, head of the company's office in Kansas City, Mo., and Clayton E. Wilcox of Hindsley, Ill.; assistant vice president and regional director Jorge's St. Louis and Destrehan offices.
All persons indicted were charged with conspiring "among themselves and with other unrained parties to embezzle, steal and convert to themselves large quantities of goods from the country to foreign ports during the 12 years covered by the indictment."
Among other things, the indictment said,
there were 33 fictitious sales between 1965
Clinical facility cost to be studied
Max Lucas, assistant to the chancellor, and last night that representatives of the University of Chicago's chitcet's office and the state department of health would fly to Washington, D.C., early next week to inspect a hospital whose clinical facility's believed similar to the clinical facility's.
University officials will try next week to determine whether about $3 million in fireproofing costs can be cut from the new clinical facility at the KU Medical Center.
At issue is whether the clinical facility's steel truss system must be completely fireproofed. The hospital in Washington has only partial fireproofing of its skeleton, Lucas said, and KU officials want to determine whether it meets Kansas
building codes and whether its construction is similar enough to allow the same
The change is important, Lucas said, because if the University can save $3 million by changing the fireproofing, it can perhaps bring the project into line with its budget by making other relatively minor changes that improve the plans may be necessary, he said.
Bids for construction of the $50-million facility exceed the architect's estimate by $4.5 million and the appropriated funds by $9 million.
Lacas said the group hoped to complete its study in time for administrators to discuss it at a meeting next Wednesday at the Med Center.
and 1970 of 857,449 bushels of corn, wheat,
soybeans and sorghum valued at more than
$3 million.
Short-weighting was accomplished by manipulating the elevator scales during loading, then issuing false weight certificates and falsifying records.
Maximum punishment would be five years in prison and a $10,000 fine.
★ ★ ★
Grain export frauds protested by Butz
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)—Secretary of Agriculture Earl Butz said yesterday that fraud "is going to stop being a way of doing business in the U.S. grain trade."
Butz said he had been told that such business should be overlooked.
He said he had instructed his department to look into every aspect of the growing grain fraud and added that any tinge of corruption was too much.
Commenting to newsman on grain frauds that have been uncovered in Houston, New Orleans and other ports, Butz said he had issued instructions two years ago, when the fraud began to surface, that every case was to be investigated thoroughly.
Asked whether grain inspection at such ports might be taken over by the federal government, Butz said he favored some type of "uniform posture" for grain inspection, but he refused to endorse a strictly federal program.
Electrified car will not go far, but it's clean
By BRAD JONES Kansas Staff Reporter
Construction of an electric car will be a research project for some electrical engineering classes next year, Art Brempel, director of electrical engineering, said Friday.
Breehl said the engineering department had just received the body of a 1953 MG-1100, bought in Topeka, which will be equipped during the year with four electrical motors and 18 to 24 car batteries for power.
THE CAR WILL BE the project of two semesters of a senior design class taught by Dale Rummer, associate professor of electrical engineering.
Although the $7 required to buy the car body came out of department funds, Breiphol said, he asked Kansas City Power and Light, Kansas City, Mo.; Kansas Power and Kansas Gas and Electric; and the Center for Research, Inc., to help pay for the project.
The exact number of batteries to be used to power the motors, he said, will be a decision of the students. Since the batteries weigh nearly 40 pounds each, students will have to decide how much weight the car can hold and still make efficient use of stored power.
restoring parts for the car, with the assistance of a mechanic. Two technicians in the department.
This summer Breipohl is finding and
Pate said the vehicle would use four electrical airplane generators that were converted to motors. The car would have two motors and an electric drive, with two motors on each wheel.
BREIPHOL, SAID that after the batteries had been charged overnight by being plugged into a conventional electrical socket, they were moved to 50 miles at a speed of 30 to 35 miles an hour.
"It will be built with the thought in mind that it will be confined to use in the Lawrence area," he said. "Because of the gravity of the situation, we need recharge, and because in order to get that
many miles, the car must be driven at slow speeds, electric cars for long distance travel are, at this point, somewhat imprical."
Pate said electrical power for automobiles was impractical because Americans were more interested in fast, powerful cars that could travel hundreds of miles than the conservation and occasional disadvantages that electric cars present.
BREIPHOL, SAID that, in the long run, if fuel costs continue to rise, electric cars will become less valuable because cost much to recharge the car every night, he said, and the car would produce no air or noise pollution. As research continues, he hopes that we can store energy for a longer period might help.
"It comes down to a question of economics," Pate said. "As people continue to pay the high fuel costs, the inconvenience and cost of electric cars may become accepted."
Breiphol said cars used in the early 1900's before gas became economical were built on the same essential plan that electric cars are today.
Rose has been working on a secondhand okakwane, which he hopes will run for 30 months.
"I helped refurbish an old electric car that the city owned while I was mayor," he said. "It was just kind of an interesting thing to do."
"It is very easy for people to develop their own plans for a car," he said. "We are not the first group to build one in a research sense. The University of Florida at Tampa has been involved in electrical automation for a number of years."
JACK ROSE, FORMER Lawrence mayor, has been working on his own electric car for the past five months. With a couple of months work left, Rose said the major problem he had thus far was furious about parking fees and few local auto parts stores carried them.
"I started checking how many miles I drove every day. When I found out that I rarely drive more than 20 miles, I decided to try to build myself a commuter car. If I can drive, I should be able to commute that a soak. But I think all the hills around here might cause a great loss in range."
BREIPHOL SAID converting the car to electrical energy wouldn't be the last stage
"Ultimately, we want to try to make our car solar powered in some way," he said. "But the current state of research on the idea, but it appears to be somewhat impractical. Still, we want to do more thinking along this line of utilizing energy sources, and solar energy would be one of them."
George Brown, a technician in the department, said that as plans for solar automation appeared now, it would take a month in the sunlight for a car adequately built with solar conversion equipment to build up energy to propel it for one day.
2
Tuesday, July 22, 1975
University Daily Kansan
NEWS DIGEST THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Twins get new kidneys
KANSAS CITY, Kan.-Identical twins from Wichita celebrated their 24th birthday yesterday at the University of Wichita Medical Center, after they received
The man, Gerald C. and Harold R. Linnen, suffer from Alport's Disease, a congenital kidney alienat that is often fatal. In a five-hour operation Sunday, kidneys from a Wichita man who died the previous day in an auto accident were transplanted into the twins. Physicians said the operation was the first of its kind.
The kidneys were flown to Kansas City by a special medical team and kept functioning by a miniature heart-lung machine.
Doctors at the medical center said the brothers were doing well and the transplanted kidneys were starting to function in each man.
Ford apologizes for death
WASHINGTON—President Ford personally apologized to the family of Dr Frank Olsen, who died after he was given a dose of LSD by CIA agents in 1953.
Ford met with the Olson family and it was announced afterward that he told them that he would make information on the case available and that he had asked the attorney general to meet with their legal representatives "to discuss the claims they wish to assert against the CIA by reason of Dr. Olson's death."
The White House also distributed a statement at the request of the Olson family in which they expressed their gratitude that Ford was supporting their effort to become fully informed about Frank Olson's death "and to obtain a just resolution of this entire matter."
WASHINGTON—Sen. James Pearson, R-Kan., said he and five other congressional leaders would make a 10-day visit to the People's Republic of China next month.
"There are many questions I would like to ask, but because I represent one of the greatest agricultural scientists in the world, I see and enjoy efforts in China to increase agricultural production," Pearson said.
The invitation to visit China beginning Aug. 20 was extended through the Chinese People's Institute of Foreign Affairs. Pearson recently completed a trip to Russia.
Joining Pearson on the latest trip will be Robert Byrd, D-W.V, and Sarn Numma, R. Repa. John B. Anderson, R-III, John Slack, D-W.V, and Edward Murney.
Oil slick moves on Keys
MIAMI—Slightly shifting winds began pushing thick blobs oil toward shoreline beaches along a 25-mile stretch of the Florida Keys, the U.S. Coast
"Beaches from Boca Chica to Big Pine Key are being directly threatened," Coast Guard spokesman Steve Xrasier said.
"Scattered streamers 25 yards wide by a half-mile long are only yards from shore," he said.
The Coast Guard deployed oil containment booms and called other units for more personnel and equipment.
Coast Guard spokesman had no idea who might have spilled the crude oil. The civil penalty for spilling oil is a $5,000 fine against a ship's owner. Failure to report it was also a $2,000 fine.
Rangers fire manager
ARLINGTON, Tex.—A red-eyed, sleepsleep Billy Martin, known as baseball's bishop, was fired as manager of the Texas Rangers, the third club to dismiss of him because of his wrongdoing.
The announcement preceded a news conference at which majority owner Brad Corbett confirmed the decision. Also fired were pitching coach Art Fowler and
"I recognize this will cause a trauma with the fans . . . the fan reaction will be tough." Corbett said.
"As a student of the game, Billy was one of the finest," Corbett said, "but there are causes for his firing beyond his won-loss record."
Film developing is taxable
TOPEKA—The developing of film is a service that is subject to the Kansas sales tax. Atty. Gen. Curt Schneider said.
He said that when film is developed outside the state and returned to a Kansas user, the transaction is subject to the Kansas commensal tax.
Schneider said his opinion was prompted by an inquiry from State Sen. Edward F. Reilly. R-Leavemworth.
He said Reilly had made the inquiry after a constituent questioned the legality of an amount equal to the Kansas sales tax being charged to him on film developed in
Scheiner said that under the circumstances outlined by Reilly, the retailer "not only may collect the compensating tax from the consumer, but he must collect it where the consumer is using the company's photographic developing services outside this state."
Lunchtime bus scheduled
The Lunch Bunch Express, a bus service to bring the Hawklet lunch crowd up to the Kansas Union during lunchtime each day, will be available this fall, Steve McMurry, transportation committee chairman, said yesterday.
"This is one of the things the Senate feels to alleviate the problem caused by the Hawks."
The bus service, which is part of KU on Wheels, will follow a circular path along Nalismh Drive, Sunyside Avenue, the Inn and Jayhawk Drive, McMurry said.
Ed Rolfs, student body president, said, "The Senate is more or less responding to the need to preserve energy on campus. The closing of the Hawklet would have caused more people to go home for lunch, thus using more gas."
More than 800 people bought food from the hot food service counter in the Hawket each day during the school year. The Union can handle the new traffic. McMurry said.
Frank Burge, director of the Union,
agreed. "I have the assurance of the food
supply," he said.
Mayberry's homers slay Tigers royally
DETROIT (AP) - John Mayberry blasted a pair of home runs last night to lead the Kansas City Royals to a 3-2 victory over the Detroit Tigers.
Mayberry bower in the first and third innings, giving him 11 in the month of July.
Mayberry hit his first horner off loser Mickey Lolich, with two out in the first iming. His third-inning blast scored Frank White, who had singled.
The bus will leave Robinson for the Union four times an hour between 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. and will follow one route. the fare will be 20 cents, as it is on regular bus routes, and bus passes can be used, McMurry said.
Dennis Leonard hurried a seven-hitter for the Rangers with last-out relief from Steve Mitrigoris.
accommodations to handle these people," Burge said. "I think the crowd will spread itself out, if you've got one basaloid of people who want to eat in your restaurants. It is a pretty good idea."
"We want to enable people to get on the bus, get to the Union within seven or eight minutes and get back to their work, within the lunch hour," he said.
The service will cost the Senate about $17 million to cut down service along existing roads but be
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
While Congressional legislators in Washington grapple with the imbroglio surrounding abuses by college students of the food stamp program, the director of the local welfare office said he considered it all much ado about nothing.
Published at the University of Kansas
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By BRUCE SPENCE Kansan Staff Reporter
John Derrick, director of the Douglas County Welfare Office, said yesterday,"I understand that the program—maybe a few occasionally, but there are abuses in all federal-state agencies due to the massiveness of the operations. There's no way to get around
Jerry Rogers, director of financial aid at the University of Kansas, said whether a student received food stamps wasn't taken into consideration by his office.
Editor
Ward Harkavy
There are a small number of people on any program, be it food stamps, public welfare, social security or whatever, Derrick said, who will make a study and beat the system. He said that student abuse was virtually nonexistent.
"They come here to go to school," Dennis pointed to chisel on the food stamp program.
Associate Editor Pete Porcupine
Campus Editors Kenn Louden,
Copy Editors Caty Benz, Richard Pasdon,
Photo Editor Kathy Stecher, Tim Dillon
Don Pierce
Food stamp abuse said to be low
The Department of Health, Education and Welfare said this spring that financial aid figures were based upon expected family contributions and other resources but that food stamps weren't to be considered a resource.
Business Manager Jim Merrill
Rogers said HEW probably thought that if
Assistant Business Managers Cindy Long,
Jerril Kadel
Promotions Manager Dan Spencer
Advertising Manager Gary Burch
News Adviser Susananne Shaw
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students on financial aid qualified to purchase food stamps, they had only a small amount of money.
Rogers said he thought this policy was unfair, because once a student purchased food stamps, it improved his economic standing; such students should receive less aid, he said.
Rogers also said any decrease in a student's mental aid would result in an increase in the need for psychotherapy.
Derrick said he thought the legislators had gotten involved in a controversy between the U. S. Department of Agriculture and HEW over which department should have jurisdiction over the food stamp program and had confused the issue.
Rogers said that although he didn't have any statistics to back up it, he thought that the situation was not life-threatening.
The proposed legislation he has heard about, Derrick said, such as a policy requiring students to verify that they aren't receiving more than half of their incomes from households ineligible for food stamps, is impractical.
"Who's going to determine what half that support is?" Derrick said.
It appears impossible to determine what 50 per cent of a person's income is because of such difficulties as deciding whether a certain problem be considered as part of incipence, he said.
Derrick said that three or four years ago the policy had been to declare a student ineligible from school.
supported him and claimed him as an income tax deduction. That policy was struck down by the courts as unconstitutional after six months of enforcement, he said.
New proposals appear to be heading that direction again, he said.
"I think there is going to be an overhang in the good stamp program whether it is good or bad."
In January of this year, the Department of Agriculture announced a policy that parents were not allowed to leave the parents weren't, but Derrick was the central office in Topeka had never received word from Washington to effect the policy. The new policy had never been initiated.
Under the Kansas welfare programs administered by his office, Derrick said, a person who can adult at age 18 and be candidate for drawing benefits of all types.
"It it's entirely feasible that his parents could be multimillionaires, and this 18-year-old, and I'm not necessarily talking about a student, could be in here for direct aid if he didn't have income of his own," Derrick said.
Presently, a student applying for foodamps is not different from anyone else, he maps.
Students must meet the same income requirements as nonstudents but are required to have a 2-year job.
income—whether parental aid, salaries,
when determining eligibility for stamps.
Students are required, however, to have an affidavit or note from the parents to aid in determination of income. Derrick said, "I am always kept in the case files for auditing purposes."
"The letter helps determine income, the amount of tuition and how it is paid. It doesn't penalize the student, but just shows any income from the parents."
A bill that would appropriate $10 million for projects like Clinton Parkway will be discussed by the Senate Appropriations Committee today and will probably reach on the Thursday, an assistant for Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., said yesterday.
Clinton funding bill approaches decision
Derrick said the number of students receiving food stamps increased considerably each year, but added that this was the case with all recipients.
Although the food stamp program is administered through the welfare department, Derrick said, stamps are available to anyone who is qualified.
Suel Starr, supervisor of the nonpublic assistance food stamps, said eligibility requirements set a $1,500 resource level for a single person. This level, she said, is not sufficient to cover all deductions for such things as working expenses and medical expenses.
Once qualified, a single person can purchase $4 of food stamps with the purchase price proportionate to income. In other words, a single person making $200 a month will pay more for his stamps than someone making $125 a month.
The bill, reported to the transportation subcommittee last Friday, appropriates $10 million for the construction of lake access but doesn't mention any specific projects.
if it becomes law, the final decision on funding for Clinton Parkway will be made by the Federal Highway Administration, which funds the funds, said Dale's assistant, Bob Dowen.
Dowen said discussion in the transportation subcommittee of the Appropriations Committee indicated that senators regard Clinton Parawas as the lake access highway project that has priority over similar projects in other states.
The reason the parkway project had priority was that it was in a later stage of planning and would be able to use federal money sooner. he said.
County Commissioner Pete Whitenight said that if preliminary engineering is not done, the county will lose money.
the right-of-way would begin in the fall of 1977 to be awarded during the first half of 1977.
The county is eligible to receive federal funding for construction, but whether right-of-way acquisition will also be federally authorized is unclear. The administration after the bill becomes law,
The bill states that funds appropriated for lake access highways must be spent by Sept. 30, 1978. Local officials requested $4.13 million, which is 70 per cent of the estimated cost of the project, including the right-of-way acquisition.
Downen said Karsas senators Dole and James Pearson and Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., chairman of the transportation subcommittee, would hold a colloquy on the Senate floor when the bill was discussed this Thursday.
The colloquy will become part of the Congressional Record and will indicate that the Senate considers Clinton Parkway a project with priority. Downe said.
The House version of the bill was passed July 10. Downeen said the bill would be sent to a conference committee after it passed in February and some parts of the two versions conflicted.
Golf scholars move into former fraternity house
The Evans Scholars Foundation has purchased the Theta Tau fraternity house, 1942 Stewart Ave. for, use as a scholarship hall, Cape Shelden, vice-president of the university (WGA), said Friday. The association provides scholarships to golf caddies.
Mike Graham, corresponding secretary for the fraternity, said the house was sold to the association because plans for building a new house were under way.
The Evares Scholars Foundation is sup-
ported entirely by individual contribution.
Shelden
It was established in 1831 when noted amateur golfer Chick Evans won the National Open, a professional tournament. As an amateur golfer, Evans didn't accidentally find funding. He used it to start a scholarship fund to encourage golf caddies to go to college.
The former fraternity house will house 34 men this year, Shelden said. The foundation, which has been associated with KU since 1854 when the Kansas City Golf WGA, became affiliated with the WGA, has grown 44 students from KU on the Evans Scholarship.
University in Chicago. Today, approximately 850 men attend college in 21 universities throughout the country on the Evans Scholarship. If the student attends school for four years, maintaining a 2.5 grade point average, the scholarship amounts to from $4,500 to $5,000, Shelden said.
In 1831, the first two students on Evans scholarships were sent to Northwestern
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Telephone survey to poll drug abuse views in state
By STEVE McMURRY Kansan Staff Reporter
Telephones in about 2,300 homes throughout Kansas will ring in the next few weeks in an effort to discover the views of Kansas residents on drug use and abuse.
The callers will be University of Kansas graduate students in counseling who are working on a project funded by a grant from the Kansas Drug Abuse Commission. Diane McDermott, assistant professor of cognition, is director of the three-month study.
The homes called will be selected from telephone books. The number of people called in a particular area will be based on the size of the area. Calls were to have started today.
The telephone survey is the first step in a three-part study to be conducted under the grant. The second phase calls for researchers to ask questions about staffing to drug abuse and to compile data about the numbers and kind of drugs cage treated each year.
The third phase will be intensive personal interviews with 500 drug users from across the state. The interviews will be conducted by private citizens in the community where the drug users are found. Police agencies won't be used.
Private citizens who are familiar with drug users and their problems will be more effective in obtaining the kind of information desired, McDermott said.
"There are a lot of myths and a lot of realities concerning the drug picture," she said, "and we want to see what it's really like."
"Some of the misconceptions people have about drugs need to be explained away," she says. "Everyone who uses drugs is a habitual, sloppy-looking addict. The truth is, some people are only weekend users and hold down to 5 job during the rest of week."
She said the purpose of the third phase was to develop a profile of drug users—when and why they started using drugs, whether they moved on to harder drugs and what the extent of any resulting disability was.
McDermott said the overall purpose of the study was to determine public attitudes toward drugs and whether adequate help was available for drug users. The study will also show whether the state is spending enough money to combat the problem.
The results of the study will be used by the state legislature in making decisions during the state budget process.
"The legislature needs this kind of information to make fiscal decisions like how much money will be spent on drug treatment, and how much money will be spent on rehabilitation of drug offenders," she said.
"This is a chance for people to have input in the policy making of the state. It's their chance to say something that might mean something."
Walt Disney's "APPLE DUMPLING GANG" Daily 2:30, 7:30, 9:40
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CLINT EASTWOOD THE EIGER SANCTION A UNIVERSAL PICTURE TECHNICOLOR
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RETURN TO MACON COUNTY—and—"ANGELS UNCHAINED" Country 11:30, 1:00
Sunset
DAY OF THE LOCUST
Dan Schneiderland, Karen Black
Daily 2:00, 7:30, 9:40
Hillcrest
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PG MAY BE TOO INTENSE FOR YOUR UNDERCLIENT
Daily at 1:00, 7:30 and 9:45
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READS TUESDAY
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BUSINESS
BUSINESS
Tuesday, July 22, 1975
University Daily Kansan
Hilltop Center funding questioned
By BRAD JONES Kansan Staff Reporter
A controversy about whether the Student Senate will continue to allocate rental money to the Hilltop Child Care Center still raises many questions.
Hilltop is a nonprofit day care center for
nasal health. It serves students in
students, teachers and staff training.
For three years, the Student Senate has allocated money to Hilltop so that the center could rent Wesley Hall, a privately owned building. Allocations were agreed upon through a section of the affirmative action plan that reads: "The University should make every effort to insure that quality child care is provided to students and staff exist on or near campus."
The controversy has centered on whether the Student Senate has the responsibility to continue funding for the rental fee for students to get a student body president, said yesterday.
"When we first allocated funds for
Hilltop, it was understood that the University desperately needed a good day care center," Rolfs said. "Now that the University administration fully recognizes this need, the Senate is curious whether it or the administration should continue the funding."
In April, Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, suggested that a plan be submitted to the Board of Regents requesting the Kansas Legislature buy Wesley Hall.
Shankel said yesterday that approval to buy the building hadn't been granted yet by the Kansas East Conference of the LDS church, the owners of Wesley Hall.
Molly Lafly, chairman of the Hilltop board of directors, said Friday that if permission to buy the building was granted, the regents wouldn't make a final decision until September. If approved, the proposal would be submitted to the legislature in the next legislative session for final acceptance.
He also wrote about the basketball team and the student spirit at basketball games,
She said Alves had written about student
sites and about the gay gilet
movement.
Catherine Ward, Route 1, Lawrence, and her daughter, Sandra, a KU sophomore, visited Alves in June during a trip through the town. Her family had met Alves, who was he at KU.
Pila Mae Coudal, 1244 Louisiana, a sister of Alves, said Alives had written about KU's sororities and fraternities. Portuguese sisters don't have fraternies and sororities.
The University of Kansas and Lawrence
are major topics of a book published in
London.
Although American students study more subjects than Portuguese students, Alves wrote, Portuguese students are required to study subjects more intensely.
Portuguese KU grad writes of U.S., KU
"The book is in its second printing in
the United States," so "it has gone over
real well there."
Robert Foster, associate professor of music and director of bands, has proposed that the KU Symphonic Band make a concert in honor of the Biocentennial Celebration.
Foster said he thought it would be fun to recreate one of Sousa's tours.
Foster said yesterday that the idea had occurred to him a couple of years ago when the Symphonic Band had been on a concert tour of Western Kansas. The grandmother student in the band said the performance had been as good as those given by Sousa.
In 1927 the John Philip Sousa Band made one of its final tours, through 18 states and 4 Canadian provinces. In Kansas, the band played at the Kansas City Jazz Festival and Lawrence, Torpedo, Ernestia and Salina.
The tour would stop in Hays, Salina, Wichita, Emporia, Topeka, Lawrence, Kansas City, Mo., St. Louis, Indianapolis, Cincinnati, Columbus, Ohio, Pittsburgh and Penn, with the final performance in Philadelphia, New York City or Washington.
Foster said he would like to play the same numbers as the Sousa band.
FLORA SILINI, assistant professor of piano and coordinator of group piano instruction, and Karl M. Rosen, assistant professor of classes, will present papers next week on the humanities, sponsored by the Center for Humanities Studies of Angelo Poleziano, in Montepulciano, Italy. The Congress will study music and literature of 14th century Italy, with emphasis on Giovann Boccadrino, who works include the "Decameron."
Band ponders Sousa tour
The project has been endorsed by the Kansas Bicentennial Commission, the National Bicentennial Commission and the KU Bicentennial Committee.
Smith was an honorable mention All-
America player player in high school.
practice, has been made assistant dean for pharmacy affairs at the Med Center.
Those organizations aren't funding agencies and won't be able to provide any of the $71,000 that will be needed for the tour, or the liabilities for funding are being investigated.
"Chiefs head coach Paul Wiggin told me my main fault was that I haven't been playing for four years," Smith said vetteday.
Tommie Smith, a former University of Kansas basketball player who had a tryout with the Kansas City Chiefs football team in 1983, scored 46 points out alone with 13 other rookies last Friday.
scrimimage to have another chance to impress the coaches.
Smith said he had wanted to play in the
Wiggin was impressed, however, with Smith's efforts in practice and told several newspapers that Smith would certainly have been a starter on the KU team this fall and waited a semester to graduate. Smith graduated in May with a journalism degree.
"I wished I had a little more time," Smith said.
Wiggin has said that he would recommend Smith to Al Attles, the coach of the National Basketball Association champion Golden State Warriors. Attles, Wiggin said, appreciates "toughness" in his basketball players.
Smith takes cut in stride
FRATERNITIES at the University will have formal rush for the fall semester Aug. 15-17. A kickoff banquet for all rushees and fraternity presidents is planned, followed by meetings at each fraternity house. Rush participants will stay at the Holiday Inn during the program. Registration by Aug. 13 is requested.
A SPECIAL PRESENTATION OF "OKLAHAMA" will be given at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the University Theatre. Benefits will go to the Lawrence Arts Center. The ticket price for all elementary, secondary and college students has been reduced to $150. Others will pay the regular price of $2.50.
Ten bridges that join Douglas and Franklin counties will be inspected in the near future as the result of the collapse of a bridge on the county line south of Baldwin.
GRANTS TOTALING $109,519 have been awarded by the Kansas Heart Association for 13 research projects at KU, Med Center and Kansas State University. The research projects deal with the heart and the cardiovascular system.
Faulty span forces check
"At this point, the Senate will be allocating $7,000 for this school year to pay for part of the rent for the building," she said. "In addition, I expect the University administration, as it did last year, to also give us $4,000 for rent."
A deck section on a bridge connecting two counties that hadn't been examined is the first step.
Martin Henry, endowment association property director, said that the idea had been brought up but that it was still under discussion.
He said the majority of the county's businesses will under FAS and were impacted every year.
“If certain county bridges aren’t a part of the Federal Aid System (FAS), there is no law requiring inspections be held,” Dean Wheeler, Douglas County engineer, said yesterday.
"This bridge south of Baldwin was just plain overlooked for three years," he said. In the last inspection report on the bridge in June, 1972, the inspector said that masonry abutments were cracked and starting to break away.
Sanderson said the bridge should have been checked yearly and probably closed earlier, but the county hadn't been aware of the deterioration until the deck section collapsed.
Sanderson said the bridge south of
the town was built and would be
rebuilt in about a month.
Sanderson said that although no law existed requiring an inspection of bridges on county lines, they were examined occasionally, when engineers were in the area.
The two reports of exhibitionists came from opposite sides of campus Saturday and were 11 hours apart. The first report came from a woman who said she saw an exhibistian white walking up 41st Street morning. She reported ran to the Union morning. She reportedly ran to the Union and called Security and Parking, but officers were unable to locate the suspect.
The county line bridges weren't part of the bridge replacement program.
The organization's operating budget comes from a fee that parents must pay for the school.
Another plan, which proposes that the kite be flown over a large area, has been delayed. Wearley, Walsh, has also been delayed.
Security and Parking has two suspects for the indecent exposure incidents that have occurred on campus recently, the Kansan night from a source close to the investigation.
Because Hilltop is a day care center for children and isn't organized to study behavior, he said, it would be unwise to place an infant in the child entertainment to child research.
HAROLD N. GOWIN, director of
Center and associate professor of pharmacy
The other county line bridges have recently been inspected or will be inspected in the near future.
Henry said that if the Endowment Association bought Wesley Hall the rent would be kept to "little" or "no cost" if possible.
Lafinlain said a formal agreement between hospital and psychology department had been reached. He said that the agreement meant only that the psychology department would serve as a doctor.
ON CAMPUS
Hilton was considering a research proposal from the department of psychology that would set up research and behavioral studies. He said he thought that would be unwise.
Capt. B. L. Ellison of Security and Parking said yesterday that officers had questioned one man believed to be involved in an exposure incidents near campus Saturday.
One of the suspects is a former mental patient, the source said.
About 9:30 Saturday evening a woman was walking her dog in Pioneer Cemetery, west of Daisy Hill, when she said, a nude man on a motorcycle rode by her. She knew the cycle and Security and Parking officers number to locate and question the suspect.
Exposure incidents tied to 2 suspects
Before any type of research study can begin, she said, the proposal will have to be to include psychology or research committees and the HIV program, half of which is made up of parents.
Rolfs said it was his understanding that
No arrest was made, however, Ellison said.
Ellison said further action may be taken.
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Jayhawk WVH 843-2200
Yorkie WVH 843-2200
Yamaha R50 1972 RC, 2502 RC, 2505 Actual miles. Beaucoup de détails. All video B14 816 good pack for rebuidhion or new stock. All items in excellent condition.
Buy a 1974 VW Bur today. Balance of factory
warranty. New, Never刻渍, Call No. 8210
Jayhawk VW 843-2200
VW 843-2200
Central air units for sale. Webster * Mobile Mines 364
W 6th, 842-7700. Webster * Mobile Mines 364
W 6th, 842-7700.
Just arrived—shipment of Rabbitis and Sicerocois
come by for a test drive, Jaywaw. JW-834-2210
www.jaywaw.com
Ivy
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CARRIER
15 East 8th #4123D
12-5 Monday-Friday 10-5 Sat.
Home Growin'
904 Vermont
Squareback Wagons. Choose from three, from 1888 to 1971. Jaywah KW. 843-2210. 7-24
1972 Impala Custom, Pee, Automatic, alr. vipr
Jawshock, Jaywash VW 843-2210
7-24
1974 Yanaka Enduro 125, one owner. 3200 miles.
Jayhawk WV. 843-2200. 7-24
1971 Capri, 4 speed. Air conditioned. red, low
lance. Jawkav. Wash 843-2710.
Nosewet of all 1974 Demo's and Rental cars, save
drenches. Jayhawk WM. 843-2210. 7-24
1968 WV Bu, converted to camper. ice box. 7-24,
gas stove, Jayhawk WV 843-220-290
1970 Pontiac T37 2 dr. hr., ht. auto, PS, ar. vitr.
yachawk JW 843-8200. t-24
v-24
WAGON WHEEL
1401 Ohio
Open 11 A.M.-Midnight
sandwiches. Delicatessen. Food
1921 Datum 'Lal Huntter PJ, U. white, 4 speed,
dayjack Yahawk VH, 832-2000
7-24
1968 Opel Kadett 2 dr. standard only $750.0
Jayhawk VW 843-2200. -$124.0
FT-114 Goodwin tier; like new. New Wilson
Tennis Bracket; Medium 8" Call: 723
842-5644
Pentax I3 18.7 f18 uses 1000 shooter. $70. Mint condition.
645-834 d5 day. Jack. 7-23
Double bed, frame; springs & mattress; Call 843-
5014 after 5 p.m.
DID YOU KNOW that Webster's Mobile Home has two mobile homes from all at all! Webster's Mobile Home offers a fully furnished mobile home for $16,000.
Hang Glider, Bill Bennett Delta Wing 222B. Many
Extall, Call 843-6079.
7-29
Waterbed for sale: King size, black fur
frame, and mattress. $50. 843-1912.
7-24
FOR RENT
Mutt sell 1927 Kusawara 256 Trablinke and 1974
Friedman 320 Kusawara 256 Trablinke and
condition. Call Russell of Railroad at 81-51-239.
Custodian: A. B. E.
Johnson Rental Company, Studio. 1 bedroom, 2 bathrooms in KU Medical Center, Kansas City, KS.
Two bedroom apartment, all utilities paid, close
furnished. This fall, full furnishment or if
furnished. 843-693
Rooms – Kitchen privileges. One block to campus.
Bedrooms – Bedroom privileges. Red rent reduction for
842-507 and 842-846.
Rooms roomed, single, with or without cook-
ing facilities. Rm 187 to KU and nw-
tertown. No pets. Phone 843-2576-717.
Apartments: 1, 2, and 4 bedrooms furnished.
Borders KU and near town. Phone 833-7587. fcf
Extra nice room with private kitchens. On
block from Ufont. Uniform parking, utilities
are available.
JAYHAWK TOWERS 2 - bedroom, all utilities
10th floor, parking, parking, parking,
facilities 10^3 W, 15^4 B, 18^4 C, parking,
launches.
Spacious room living - 3 bedroom basement
Master suite - 2 bedrooms
Wayfare, family room, kitchen, lobby, welcomes
friends.
For Rent: Ideal third floor apartment in private
building; 1 bed/1 bath; a bedroom; a bedroom;
1. bedroom; a male student; Furnished
student room with balcony; 2 baths;
400 sq ft.
New spacious apartments. Furnished, all electric furnaces, entrance, air conditioned. 7-28
1855 or 631-1199
WANTED
Did you know that? you can rent mobile homes at Webster? 827-7200, Webster's Mobile Home
Person to share large 3 bedroom duplex for fall
payment $73.33 monthly. Call after 6 p.m.
842-727-527
SIRLOIN STACKADI
TIEN SALAS INFORENCIA
Roommates wanted for apartment. Call Mark,
842-7498 after 5. 7:28
SIRLOIN
STOCKAGE
BROOKLYN, NY
1015 10th Ave.
8am-5pm, Friday
11:10 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
TACOS
$3.50 per Dozen
Casa de Taco
Female Subject 18-25 for ½ hour experiment,
subject number 6. Weeks' total weeks' totals
for a case of bake. Phone: 643-3033.
Two female commuters 18-49 for hour experience are required. Employees must hold a B.E.H. diploma, one hour mandatory free compulsory, and at least five years of experience.
Need female roommate beginning fall semester:
Gatil 843-2921 before Aug 1, or 843-1687 after Aug 1.
1105 Massachusetts
Roommate & play to the live for & fall. Buy
own a room, go to campus, have own bedroom closet to campus: 841-206-6930
Wanted: A female upperclass roommate to share
a bedroom for fall semester. 842-192-7500,
After 7:40 p.m.
Help Pay Aug. Rest. Want to sublime full tuition
through Mid August. Call 841-1884 after 3:50 m.
843-9880
NOTICE
Executive-style gourmet parties planned, catered.
Executive chef's private events. For details call
beautiful headed private pool. For details call
COST PLUS 16%~Stereo equipment. All major
models are offered with a choice of
form or package. Call Dave. Phone 812-395-
6000.
TYPING
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT! Let us do your printing while you wait at the Quick Copy Center. We have a $3.90 office card ($8.41, 1000 copies) + $13.90. We want your business at the Quick Copy Center. It
HOMOSEXUALITY PRESENTS PROBLEMS
Gregory Gay Liberation, Inc. Gatherings: 7:30 l e t and 3:00 m on each month Union office meeting: 8:30 a.m.
843-356-2006 for referrals; for socializing, 843-922-0
Fish Platter, tater, salad, and potato $1.29--7-24
day at Nitrilion Stockade.
PHOTOGRAPHY Shooting Gallery Specializing in Personalized Portraits in natural surroundings. Weddings, portfolios, and commercial photography. Mail resume to: MK Photography, 81-239-2600, mkphotography.tf www.mkphotography.tf
Expertised in lye tying these, research papers, catalogues, databases, and other materials (carbon ribbon), elite type. Call 815-296-7030.
Experienced typist—term paper, papers, meshes, mice.
Required: 844-730-6250, Mrs. Wright.
spell corrected, 844-730-6250, Mrs. Wright.
Typing in my home . IBM selective with plex type.
Typing in my home . IBM selective with plex type,
and not . Typing Call. Pan, 842-5799.
TREISH BINDING—The Quick Copy Center is designed to allow our Service in fast and prices are transitional. We can provide the same level of service.
Experienced typist will do theses, discussions,
for June 442 and 843 Days. 842-978 Evening. 7-22
for Julie 650.
Experienced in typing dissertations, theses etc.
In Psych. Call Leisle, 845-908-8621
- Resumes
If You're Planning on FLYING
Let Maupittour
E GWORK For Your
(NEW) Airbus for
for Airline tickets
Organic Bio-degradable Hair and Skin Care Products in Recycle-able Bottles
POTION PARLOR
819 Vermont 12-5
841-9708 Essence Oils Mon-Sat.
JAMES LIQUORS
Cold Beer & Chilled Wine
9th Street Center
(Next to 'Hole in the Wall')
842-0722
ARMADILLO
BEAD CO.
710 MASS.
Now Reopened
10-5 p.m.
Beads.
Bead Kinds.
Silver
Turq.
Chain.
Leather.
Chokers.
Indian Jewelry
50% off
Earrings
/ Maupintour travel service
Make your
Summer Vacation
SUA / Maupintour
Reservations now.
T
PHONE 843-1211
KU Union—The Malls-Hillcrest-900 Mass
Employment Opportunities
FOUND
Photographic Models. Earn $10 per photograph.
telephone number, and photograph to Box 2525.
Telephone: (800) 346-7999.
The University of Kansas, office of the Financial Aid is seeking a half-time assistant for the 2017-2018 academic year. The degree and be admitted to graduate study at the University of Kansas. Student employment consisting of personal interview with the University and Community employee and application should submit a resume and two end-of-year student Financial Aid. 26强 Hall, University of Kansas Equal Opportunity Employee/Affirmative Action Office
Found Leather "Taurus" hardcover for key dogs. Cost of jacket of J.B.P. Call Scott 814-343-5047.
LOST
Found New Trailhead Apartments--daring
projects in a beautiful 49-acre lot with brown markings, white edge
paint, 182-800 phone, and more.
Found White kitten, about 10 year old. Gray
pet. Call Jane Marker at 2 p.m. jane.marker@ucl.edu
SERVICES OFFERED
Laris Prescription glasses; silver frames; black frame; red band case; Heward 843-7640 or 844-6566.
Tues. July 15, 15 male simile cat. Vetianity
offered. Call 841-7500 to "Whalake" **R23**
offerd. Call 841-7500
MATH TUTORING Competent, experienced tutor
MATH TUTORING Competent, experienced tutor
MATH TUTORING Competent, experienced tutor
Call 1-800-267-5454 Reasonable rate. Call
Wake-up service available July 28-August 5. Send one or more calls, name, number and when to call O. Box 1964, Belfast, Ireland.
HELP WANTED
Occasional day labor, skilled and unskilled
Leave name at 842-7257. Equal Opportunity **tt**
YAMAHA
CR-1000 RECEIVER
the CRAMO PHONE shop YP-800 TURNTABLE
at the rear of
KIEF'S DISCOUNT
RECORD AND STEREO
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
ON
842-1544 SAVINGS BRAND
STEREO COMPONENTS
THE ICE CO.
WEEKLY BEER SALES
AND $2.00 KEGS
ALL, SUMMER LONG
HOME MADE ICE
CREAM
SUPPLIES
616
Vermont
4
Tuesdav. July 22.1975
University Daily Kansan
READ
Cobb efficient but affable
By JAMES EISELE
Korean Staff Reporter
If there is a good-guy club—a place where men of good humor gather once a year to smoke cigars and joke about politics, then there is a liberal liberal Arts and Sciences, should belong.
Cobb is one of those rare people who works hard to achieve his objectives, and at the same time he maintains his sense of humor.
There is the time he was discussing the length of term papers with Gerhard Zuther, acting chairman of the English department. He also met and conversed with a fellow University of Michigan graduate
PROFILE
student who wrote an 80-page term paper.
When the student got his paper back, there wasn't a single mark anywhere but at the bottom of the page. Read you: You used the colon well -B+us.
"I know he has a very good sense of humor." Zuther said. "He's soft spoken and has a rather subdued delivery. He's a very艰责 reacteur.
"He used to be my first office mate 17 years ago in 1988 when I first came here. He'd just been here a year. We became close. He's very patient. He's extremely patient and considerate."
Jerry Lewis, associate dean of the College
of Liberal Arts and Sciences, was one of Cobb's childhood friends in Salina.
"He was just enough older to be like a hero figure," Lewis said, referring to Carrie.
Lewis said Cobb was selected as outstanding boy of Salina—an award given by high school officials to the all-round outstanding person in each graduating class. Cobb was accomplished at sports as well as academics. Lewis said.
"He's an all-night good-natured guy. He's always been respected by his colleagues and friends."
Summing up his 12 years of professional experiences with Cobb. Colew said:
"He's done a little of everything we do in the College office. I was very pleased, as were all my colleagues, that he was chosen to be dean."
Cobb isn't resting on this vote of confidence. He said he wanted to maintain a high level of morale and inspiration within the department.
When he finds the time, Cobb enjoys fishing, back packing, golf and playing an out of practice flute, but he devotes most of his time to administrative duties, he said.
He was born in Arkansas and spent most of his youth in Salina. He completed his Ph.D. in English from the University and received his M.A. and Ph.D. in English from the University of Michigan. He taught at Baylor University for two years before receiving a degree to be an assistant professor of English.
Cobb said he wasn't worried about falling into the administrative stereotype of being a victim. "I think I was really wrong."
"But in any bureaucracy," he said, "one runs a constant danger that people may feel that the bureaucracy is unconcerned and might be working against them."
Cobb said there was nothing very personal built into the Lincoln-Mercury assembly line he worked on one summer in Wayne, Michigan.
"Sometimes people are intimidated by an enterprise of great size," Cobb said. "Institutions this size must guard against being unconcerned about the welfare of individuals, an institution demands total involvement in the institution will eventually die."
Optimistic, patient and empathetic, Cobb is taking his new job in stride. He is by all appearances a good guy who defies the maxim that says nice guys never win.
"I'd like this to be the best university that can students, faculty, and administration can build."
LETTER
Editorial satirical
To the Kansan editor:
I started to object to object Penner Fens's comments on "Monty Python's Flying Curcus" but after reading her statement that "Monty Python" was so horid and lewd that she watched every show, I commented that the whole article was a satire on prudishness.
Paul Bylaska Lawrence junior
Bike crash data scarce
By KEN STONE
Almost everyone who has ever ridden an accident is now accused in which he was involved.
But it's hard to determine the exact number of bicycle accidents in Lawrence each year because few people keep count and results very.
The Lawrence Police Department can say how many bicycle accidents involving cars occur each year. The local hospitals can give a rough estimate of emergency entrances each week. And a buke mechanic will examine rims and forks he sees within a month.
But the number of bike accidents in Lincroft this year is an indeterminant reality.
Miguel Garcia, head of the Lawrence Police Department's traffic bureau, said yesterday that most bike collisions with drivers of riders and drivers to obey, traffic laws.
He said he was surprised that no more than 25 or 30 Lawrence bicyclists were reported as having accidents with cars each year.
"We're lucky we don't have more, the people drive and disregard basic driving rules."
From 1970 through 1974 120 bile accidents involving cars were reported, according to police records. Thus far in 1975, 14 bile accidents of this nature have occurred. The year with the most accidents was 1974, with and the year with the least was 1973, with 20.
Many bike accidents don't involve car crashes.
Peggy Reed, head nurse at Lawrence Memorial Hospital's emergency room, said the hospital received two or three bikers a day, injured in accidents not involving cars.
"Most accidents involve injuries to the extremities; acessions, abrasions or cuts."
That statistic would increase the number of bike injuries recorded to more than 100 a year. However, that isn't a true estimate of the number of bike accidents.
Although police records indicate that the number of bicycle accidents has been
The most injury prone age group is children between the ages of 9 and 13, Reed said. One fatality has occurred this year. A car accident when he rode his tricycle into a car's path.
But most bicycle accidents involving children are much less severe.
constant in the past few years, Wes Jackson, a bike mechanic at Gran Sport, said he thought there had been a definite increase in the number of bike accidents during the four years he had worked at Gran Sport.
Repair work on bike rims and forks,
one indicator of a bike's being involved in a
safety issue.
"People are becoming aware of the value of their bikes," he said. "When people become aware of their bike as a piece of equipment, they toy, they'll take better care of their bike."
aware of everything around him at all times, he said.
He said this was why people have been bringing their bikes in for repairs.
The kind of bicycle helps determine the number of accidents, Jackson said.
To avoid accidents, a bicyclist must be
Ten-speed, racing style bikes with hand brakes that are easy to grasp and control, are usually as safe as other kinds of bicycles. Jackson said.
The common Stingray bicycle, a small,
durable device, encourages children to ride numerous
As modern technology advances, more and more people are becoming concerned about the delicate balance between the need to develop and the need to preserve natural resources.
"It's designed and sold as a piece of equipment that is supposed to be abused, but that's not what it's meant to do."
But the most dangerous thing about the kids that operate them, Jackson said, is
Although it may seem that bird watchers and birth controllers have little in common, these organizations share many goals and objectives.
HOME SWEEP HOME
All of the organizations have pledged support to one another. The walls of the Jayhawk Audubon Society headquarters in the reading room of Dyce Hall are filled with photographs of birds and wildlife, but with Zoo Population Growth stickers as well
By JAIN PENNER
Kansan Staff Reporter
LOOKING FOR A NEW NEST?
The organizations work cooperatively on several projects. They put out a joint newsletter six times a year and have con- tinued sending it to the Douglas County Fair each summer.
Jayhawker Towers Apts.
Ecological focuses vary, but groups share goals
See
on bus line
security guards
security guards
covered parking
bonded lock system
bonded lock system
Some of the organizations are working for common causes. For example, the Audubon Society and the Sierra Club and both have chapters in New York City; a proposed by Rep. Larry Winn, R-Kan.
Zero Population Growth is an organizational member of the DCEIC and the two organizations often work hand-in-hand on conservation projects.
2-bedroom apartments on campus
funkshirts or unfurnished
utilities paid
swimming pool
or auditioned
OFFICE OPEN DAILY
Monday-Friday til 5:30
Saturday til 4:00
1603 W. 15th
According to a pamphlet, the purpose of the Jayhawk Audubon Society is to promote the conservation of wildlife and the natural environment by providing a relationship to the environment.
LREx
Jayhawk Audubon publicity chairman Kerren Albendr, Lawrence senior, said yesterday that the group supported local environmental preservation projects; the group also sponsored such as the channelization of Mud Creek by the Army Corps of Engineers, he said.
Lawrence, Ks.
Jayhawk Aukubu activities include field trips, bird watching, lectures and films,
He said the local chapter, founded in 1970, named him the president. The president is Jeffrey Cox, Wichita, Ksia.
Although the Lawrence chapter of Zero Population Growth is still in existence, it is less active than it has been in the past. Mr. Robinson, who joined Robinson, Lawrence graduate student.
Robinson said the chapter had been active from 1969 to 1971 and had gotten Paul Ehrlich, author of 'The Population Bomb' and 'Population, Resources, Environment':
Issues in Human Ecology," to speak in Lawrence.
The number of active student members decreased sharply, however, when student dues were raised to $8 a year, according to Robinson.
He said that at last count, there were 260-300 members, but they were from all parts of northeastern Kansas, so general meetings were infrequent.
Robinson said that, in general, his organization supported the stand of the National Board of Directors of Zero Population Growth.
The Board favors the right to safe and legal abortion, the elimination of illegal immigration, the perfection and increased availability of birth control methods and the development of U.S. growth, land use and population distribution policies.
The board encourages publicizing the consequences of population growth, advocating small or childless families, promoting understanding of U.S. resource consumption and promoting equal rights and job opportunities for both sexes.
The Sierra Club is another active Lawrence environmentalist group.
A Sierra Club spokesman, Tom Snyer, Lawrence graduate student, said his organization was involved in several local activities, including mapping and blazing trails for the proposed Riverfront Park and sponsoring an outdoor conference, complete with bluegrass music, to support the proposed Prairie National Park.
Snyder said the local chapter had about 70 members.
A recent Sierra Club newsletter announced the group's support of the People's Energy Project in the fight against the nuclear power plant at Burlington.
The Council is divided into four committees, according to Robert Umholtz, associate professor of mechanical engineering, a DCEI member.
The Douglas County Environmental Improvement Council (DCEIC) is a broad, multistrict group concerned with the environmental assets in Douglas County.
KU to show fossil find
The bones of old—very old, very old—de-
veloped over time, coming to the
Natural History Museum.
a stratified history of animal life since the latter years of the most recent ice age.
The curator of the museum, Robert Hoffman, has visited the discovery site of the fossils, which are 13,000 years old, and helped in scheduling their exhibition.
The sinkhole was 20 feet in diameter and about 80 feet deep, he said. The animals that entered the sinkhole were wild.
Hoffmann said the specimens had been found in a sinkhole cave, 35 miles northeast of Lovell, Wyo., in the foothills of the Bighorn Mountains.
Sinkholes are created when the roof of a cave collapses, leaving a cylindrical pit.
The chief organizer and scientist of the expedition was B. Milne, from the University of Columbia.
Gilbert, Robert Patterson, a vertebrate
cologist in the museum, and several other
practitioners.
The group had had trouble excavating and identifying the fossils they had found and had requested that a second group be involved. A museum administrator assistant at the museum said
A second group of about five KU instu-
tors and graduate students in palestine
in paleolithic age left July.
Spencer readied for records
"We'll probably start bring them over to end up on our backs, Griffin, paragon," she said, gesturing.
The staff of Spencer Research Library is rearranging its stacks for the transfer of a collection of old county documents from Douglas County Courthouse.
Griffin had requested that the records be moved from the courthouse attic to the controlled atmosphere of Spencer Library to preserve them better. A legal agreement authorizing the transfer was drawn up between the county and the University.
The records, which include tax rolls, criminal trial dockets, records of indictment, district court journals, civil appearance documents, real estate mortgages, county commissioners' journals and indexes to deeds, date from 1858 to 1939.
Griffin said the staff had inspected the collection and expected to clean and dispose of it.
He said the records should be read for public use in the two weeks after they are used. Spend some time with them.
Or would you like to tutor a student?
NEED A TUTOR?
If so, the Student Senate keeps a file containing current information on students desiring to, or seeking a tutor.
If you need a tutor or if you want to tutor simply fill out the form below and include any information you feel is pertinent.
SIMILAR FILES ARE KEPT FOR STUDENTS SEEKING ROOMMATES & COMMUTING STUDENTS SEEKING RIDES OR RIDERS.
Name___ Phone.
Address___ Roommate □ Carpool □ Tutor □
Information___
Bring to Student Senate office, Room 105B Kansas Union 864-3710
A Student Senate service financed with Student Activity funds
SUNSHINE
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
No. 167
Another family of Viet refugees comes to the city
Wednesdav. July 23, 1975
See page 4
Stricter gun control proposed by Ford
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Ford administration yesterday proposed FBI checks on people who want to buy handguns or bullets, an agency who commal a crispe with a dangerous weapon.
The proposals were contained in an outline given the Senate juvenile delinquency subcommittee by Atty. Gen. Edward Levi. He said the administration's gun control bill would be submitted to Congress soon.
Levi said the proposal contained neither a regionally triggered ban on the sale or possession of weapons, as he had suggested in his speech. nor a national gun registration provision.
Instead, the bill would authorize 500 more U.S. Treasury Department agents to combat the black market for guns in 10 metropolitan areas where the problem of handgun violence has reached crises. Levi said. He didn't name the 10 areas.
The bill also would eliminate "Saturday high specials," a type of gun Lavi described as "cheap, highly concealable, inaccurate, dangerous." The bill would give the possessor and to the citizenry at large.
The bill would ban importation, domestic manufacture, assembly, and sale of
their products.
Levi said the administration wanted to require handguns to have a manually operated safety catch and a minimum length and height.
The weapons would have to be at least four inches tall and at least six inches long (except for the rifle).
Revolvers would have to safety a test痒 to assure that they wouldn't fire if dropped. They would have to have at least a four-inch barrel and four-inch frame.
FBI Director Clarence M. Kelley said he was assigning two FBI agents to each of four areas in what he called "a new assault on crime."
The program, announced after new FBI statistics showed an 18 per cent rise in the nation's crime rate, is designed to provide FBI assistance to local police in enlisting citizen aid in the fight against crime.
The areas are Wilmington, Del., Birch Grove, Camden County, Ga., which covers much of Alamance.
Levi told the subcommittee that the administration's gun control bill would tighten up the purchasing process by requiring gun buyers to wait for 14 days before delivery. The delay would give the dealer time to clear the sale through the local police, who would run an FBI name check on the potential buyer.
The proposal would also ban the sale of two or more handguns to an individual within one month and would tighten security for becoming a licensed gun dealer.
Med Center hopes to nip malpractice suits in bud
BY IAN KENNETH LOUDEN
Kansas City, Kan.—The University of Kansas Medical Center is considering an ombudsman system to help prevent future malpractice suits.
Lee J. Dumr Jr., legal counsel for the Med Center, said yesterday, the system would include a rigorous internal policing of the doctors and strong patient advocacy program.
"The patient advocacy program would be a mechanism by which patients who are
Hathaway in clinic; position in question
However, the spokesman denied reports that Hathaway submitted an official letter of resignation and said that Hathaway would remain in office.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Interior Secretary Stanley K. Hathaway is undergoing psychiatric treatment at Bethesda Naval Hospital for "moderate depression" and made internally offered his resignation. Mr. Ford, an Interior spokesman said yesterday.
Asked whether Hathaway informally offered to resign the spokesman, "1 answer was that I am not."
White House spokesmen declined comment.
A statement released by the department said Hathaway himself decided that he required treatment. Doctors at the hospital "have advised him he is suffering from physical exhaustion" session brought about by physical exhaustion and fatigue," the statement said.
A hospital spokesman was quoted as saying Hathaway is "progressing well and is making progress."
Hathaway, former governor of Wyoming, was sworn in June 13 as Interior secretary, 43 days after he was nominated for the post. His confirmation was prolonged by op-eds and environmental groups and he underwent questioning in the Senate hearings.
still in the hospital could take their complaints to a go-between," he said. "This way, patients would solve their problems in the hospital instead of going to lawyers."
Dunn said he was working with representatives from the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston and the New York City hospital, who have had a successful ambulance program.
Earlier in the day Dunn appeared before a special interim Kansas legislative committee on medical malpractice in Toneka.
Dunn told the committee, which is headed by Sen. W. H. Sowers, R-Wichita, that most of the proposals he had seen that were allegedly designed to deal with the malpractice problem didn't come into play until after the injury had taken place.
He recommended that methods be developed to prevent injuries from occurring in the first place. This would involve the internal policing of physicians.
Dunn said that proposals to limit the amount of injury awards in malpractice cases, to shorten the statute of limitations, and to restrict the extent of contingency fees were all designed to treat the symptoms
"Thebasic cause of malpractice litigation is medical injury, not all of which is the responsibility of the doctor."
WASHINGTON (AP)—The House rejected yesterday President Ford's gradual decontrol program that would have controlled theoline at the pump. The vote was 262 to 167.
White House officials said gasoline would go up to about seven cents a gallon by the end of 1977 if the plan were passed, but critics cut the figure as high as 15 cents.
House rejects Ford's oil plan
"As long as medical injuries exist, medical malpractice suits will exist, and treatment of the symptoms alone won't alleviate the problem."
After the vote, Democratic Leader Mike Manfield said that Congress and the President "have a duty to get together" to break the deadlock.
Dunn said he was surprised by what he called a virtual nonexistence of sponsored loss-prevention programs in the medical malpractice area.
He pointed out the loss-prevention programs that are traditionally conducted in industrial accidents and fire insurance companies.
'One wonders how an industry can bemoan a crisis when it does little to help.'
Let's look at the first word in line 2. It is 'bemoan'. The 'o' and 'n' are not italicized, but they are clearly written.
The second word in line 2 is 'crisis'. It is also clearly written.
Wait, the prompt says "Maintain the original reading order."
So I should start with the boldest words.
One wonders how an industry can bemoan a crisis when it does little to help.
One wonders how an industry can bemoan a crisis when it does little to help.
Dunn said that few malfunction actions had included the Med Center as a defendant, mainly because governmental immunity rendered the center immune to suits by the court. However the law was upset on June 9, 1975, by a Kansas Supreme Court decision.
He said he thought some kind of tort claims act or some other kind of statutory protection for valid governmental functions would be appropriate.
HAWK
CLASSIC
1970
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Ten-year-old Russell Williams gets the upspit of the situation yesterday when he releases one of the sorters that feed the Chi Omega fountain.
Keepin' cool
Commission shuffles post of inspector
The Lawrence City Commission last night authorized City Manager Buford Watson to switch the position of minimum housing code inspector from the public works department to the community development department. The position was vacated three weeks ago by Ed Covington.
By LYNN PEARSON Kansan Staff Reporter
The purpose of the move, Watson said, was to make the housing inspection program more efficient.
He said the expertise of Kyle Andregg, director of the neighborhood development project, would help the housing inspector, since Andregg deals daily with housing rehabilitation in various Lawrence neighborhoods.
"With the new housing ordinance being prepared by Commission Mibeck, we feel that close supervision of the housing inspection program will make a needed improvement." Watson told the commission.
In time, the entire inspection program will be developed in development department, Watson said.
Mayor Barkley Clark agreed that community development and housing inspection
"Many of the grants and loans sought by residents of the neighborhoods through community development are for bringing houses up to the code," Clark said.
With housing inspection in the same office as community development, he said, persons who are having difficulty keeping their houses up to city standards can obtain insurance and pay a per cent loans and outright grants available through community development.
The addition of an administrative assistant position, which will be filled by a KU law student, was another change asked by the department for inspection program Watson asked for.
The commission unanimously agreed to
position Watson expects to fill it
it sometime.
The law student will be responsible for checking procedures in housing inspections to ascertain that all items specified by ordinance have been completed.
"When things are not followed to the letter, we have difficulty in conducting训语."
Campus Vets fight new GI Bill
By CONNIE BRUCE
The latest version of the G.I. Bill doesn't extend benefits for graduate students-a situation Campus Veterans are trying to change.
An amendment to the G.I. Bill last December extended benefits to individuals.
Some veterans at the University of Kansas and many vets across the country would like to see the deletion of the word "veterans" in substitution of the words "all veterans."
Federal legislation has been introduced in both the House and Senate to amend this eligibility provision. Paul Bylaska, the vice president of Campus Veterans, said Monday.
"They are giving us the money but they're not helping the people who would be most helped by it, namely, graduate students." Bylaska said.
Most students finished in 36 months, Bylaska said, and veterans who are able to finish within 36 months are punished by this bill.
Nine months of financial assistance would be a great help to graduate students, he said, because the initial year is very important.
Tom Donaldson, member and past president of the Graduate Student Council said the council strongly supported the graduate students under the G.L. Bill.
More and more people are opting for further education, Donaldson said, and a
graduate degree is not the luxury many people once thought it was.
Bylaska said that the bill had financially insured that an undergraduate degree could be obtained by veterans, but that graduate students were left out.
The Campus Veterans office is doing several things to promote an awareness of the equity to graduate students in the last amendment (Public Law 93-088). Bylaska
Graduate students who are veterans are encouraged to write letters to their congressmen explaining their personal situation and why they need the benefits, shanka said.
Campus Veterans is compiling a list of the people who have been cut off by the bill.
Bylaska said he would help anyone write
to a senator or do anything that could rectify the situation.
"We would also like to assure that people who were cut off originally get benefits," he told reporters.
Donaldson said the only way to make a change in a democratic system was to be open and accountable.
Enlightening people of what graduate school means would be another way of being educated.
Besides the 45-month entitlement of funds to undergraduate students, the bill that became law in December provided a 23 percent increase in assistance, a $600 loan program and an increase in tutorial assistance.
The amendment was retroactive to Sept. 1, 1974.
Alcoholism among KU students an unknown quantity
By BILL KATS
The phenomena of the beer blast and the weekend drunk are well-worn traditions of college life. But whether or not there is really a student alcohol abuse problem at the University of Kansas is somewhat of a mystery.
While administrators, student researchers and health authorities at KU all admitted that a problem existed, the scope of the problem isn't readily apparent.
Pam Byer, graduate student in counseling and guidance, said Friday that she thought the problem of student alcohol abuse was increasing.
Byer said her masters thesis would deal with the problem of alcoholism in residence halls. The thesis will include results from a study on alcoholism in residence hall staff members, she said.
The survey will also present resident directors', resident assistants' and other staff members.
done and what proposals I can make," she said.
Although similar research on the problem has been conducted at Yale, the University of California at Berkeley and at the University of Indiana, Byer said she wasn't aware of any official study ever having been done at KU.
I'm trying to show that there is a problem of alcohol abuse, what is being
Higgins is currently working on a study of alcohol use. He is examining what conditions increase alcohol use and the motivation for its use.
Higgins said he thought there had been an increase nationally in the use of both alcohol and drugs such as marijuana. While in the past the tendency was to use either one or the other but not both, the situation has changed, he said.
Ray Higgins, assistant professor of psychology, said that drinking was high in sugars.
"How many universities want to publish that they have a problem?" she said.
Dean Kerkman, clinical psychologist at the Mental Health Clinic at Watkins Hospital, agreed that there was a student alcohol problem, but said identifying it was
Some of those who previously used only other drugs now have become the heaviest users.
While college-age students are a little more open than others in seeking help, the Mental Health Clinic still has seen few alcohol cases, he said.
"We don't know the dimensions of the problem yet," he said.
Alan Johnson, a volunteer at Headquarters, said that although Headquarters code calls a few calls for help, the college probably very few students came in for counseling.
Most are referred to the Mental Health Clinic and other professional organizations.
The Douglas County Citizens Committee on Alcoholism, Inc., is a state and locally financed guidance center and clearinghouse for information on alcohol abuse.
It has sponsored several educational and rehabilitative programs for people with disabilities.
halfway house for alcoholics, a series of classes for those who have legal problems connected with alcohol use, a program for inducing a ministerial alliance and local church
David Turner, counselor and head of the citizens committee's office, said that they were seeing only a small percentage of those students who have a problem.
Turner estimated that the is University had alcohol abuse patterns similar to the rest of Douglas County, about five per cent more severe and or would have serious alcohol problems.
The citizens committee hasn't been seeing more students because many refuse to admit they have drinking problems, Turner said. He said that although friends or relatives of abusers may call for inquiries, the authorities have until the person admitted he had a problem.
said. The rest have been referred to them, he said.
Kerkman that in the course of seeing students for other problems, the Mental Health Clinic would uncover alcohol abuse and its impact on the lives served by the clinic come in on their own, he
Boyer agreed that evidence of alcohol abuse was often discovered when working in the kitchen.
University life often exerts pressures upon students to participate in a social scene where patterns of heavy weekend drinking is socially acceptable, Higgins
Byer said continued drinking would affect one's life one way or another. The number
Higgins said the majority of student drinkers could be called social drinkers But there are forces within the University that have been working to ensure they had a social drinking problem, he said.
Carly Smith, acting dean of women, said the pressures to participate in the syndrome of Saturday night drinking were especially acute for vount students.
Higgins said some problem drinking was bound to occur in the University simply because of the stress involved. Alcohol is a common issue, he said, increasing in periods of strain
of poor grades and social problems caused by alcohol in the student community is still not well understood.
There are several University organizations for students with alcohol
The Mental Health Clinic at Watkins Hospital has free medical facilities staffed by psychiatrists, social workers and clinical psychologists.
The Psychological Clinic in Fraser Hall University Counseling Center in Bailen Hall
In addition, the student may choose from several outside local organizations such as Headquarters, Alcoholics Anonymous and County Citizens Committee on Alcoholism.
Smith said two training programs were held here in February in conjunction with the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.
The programs were designed primarily to make residence hall staff and student leaders more aware of how to handle potential problems, she said.
2
Wednesday, July 23. 1975
University Daily Kansan
Lively 'Oklahoma!' cast enhances familiar roles
By IAN KENNETH LOUDEN
Karen Steff Member
OKLAHOMA!-Music by Richard Rodgers. Book and lyrics by Oscar Hammersstein II. Based on Lynn Rigg's "Green grow the Lilacs." Stage direction by Paul Hough. Musical direction by George Duerksen. Scenic design and lighting by Greg Hill. Costumes by Mary Jane Sink Choreography by Marie Makeup by Andrea Sumner. "Oklaham!" will be Sunday, Friday and Saturday in the University Theatre. Tomorrow's show will be a benefit performance for the Lawrence Arts Center.
REVIEW
an elaborate set, group enthusiasm and clever revisionism have made the
University Theatre's production of "Oklahoma!" was a welcomed success.
In 1943 "Oklahoma!"—created by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II—revolutionized the American musical dance and its symphonic songs.
"Oklahoma!" conjures scenes of laughter, images of lovely ingemens and handsome cowboys, lush melodies, a few sentimental tears and an insidip plot.
"Oklahoma!" has no message and criticizes no one. It is pure entertainment—if you like it, you can watch it.
1re, as it was aged, the musical has changed, and the new production has made more noise among its characters have gained new sides and angles. Paper dolls have become flesh-and-blood characters. Ideas that were taken for inspiration from real life have been named "Oklahoma!" have been didactic.
It is apparent that the people in charge of production took Curly's quote literally: "The country's changing and you got to change it." The play has been changed for the better.
For example, no character controls "Oklahoma!" Each player is an extension of the play. There is an emphasis on the whole. Enthusiasm is strongest when many cast members are singing or dancing together.
Curly, robustly played by John Brust, is the prototype of the young, handsome Jonny Mulligan. The production isn't the idealized western hero of the 1943 production. Curly can be silly and bewildered, especially when confronted with an actor who also be very cruel, as when he leases Jud.
Carly plays especially well against Laurie in the number, "People Will Say We're in Love." This is perhaps one of the most lush numbers that Rodgers and Hammerstein ever wrote. In the past it has been played straight. In this production
instead of Curly and Laurey cuddling up to each other in a Jeanette MacDonald-Nelson Eddy style,Curly ignores Laurey for a while before she starts stage thus adding a good comic touch.
Ted Adkins's wonderfully underplayed version of Jud has released this character with a lightness and maturity unsuspected. He has been driven to his antisocial position by his peers. In his first confrontation with Curly, Jud comes off as a fool, but is the teasing Curly who appears
Connie Baxter has the difficult role of Laurey. It is easy for Laurey to be stereotyped as a sweet, cardboard caricature of an innocent ingenu, but Baxter manages to put some life into the character.
The characters' singing abilities vary. Brust's range is perfect for his difficult singling role. Adkins's voice is strong and mellow as would suit Jud. Baxter, however, though strong on the high notes, is weak on the low notes.
Nancy Griffin as Ado Annie and Jim Stringer as Will Parker, her sometimes boyfriend, provide the usual comic relief, "All an尔Tirn," their duet, is the funniest number in the play. Ado Annie is a plum role, and Griffin makes the best of it. Her singing is good and her acting perfect. Stringer is well-perpetual and entertains. His daring is light-footed, sometimes his singing, especially in the group number "Kansas City," 'inn't strong enough to match the brouhaha that surrounds him.
LaDonna Schmidt's Aunt Eller goes about as far as she can go. Aunt Eller can easily be overplayed and she can overpower the rest of the cast. Schmidt wisely restrains him, and he can be idealism and pragmatism. Joe Krause looks and sounds as if he would be a perfect Alkah but sometimes his delivery is off, and his lines, which include the best in the play, fail to come across as they should. Michael Rapport as Andrew Carnes, Ado Thunberg as is the stepped out of a The Hark Benton show, as the perfect foll to Krause and Stringer.
The dance numbers in "Oklahoma!" are part of its armor, but they vary in quality. The "Kansas City" number is a great dance number because of the cowboys' enthusiasm, but the simple ballet in "Many a New Day" seems trite. The "Kansas City" number takes full advantage of a revolving stage and an excellent set, which is one of the finest and most intensive the University Theatre has ever bed.
The set and the revolving stage are put to their best use in the ballet sequence at the end of the first act. In 1943, this sequence helped revolutionize the American musical. It was the first time ballet had been incorporated into a musical comedy.
in the ballet Laurette falls asleep and dreams of her relationships with Curly and
How often have you heard someone say,
"I can't stand 3.2 beer! All it does is run
right through me. I really get off on 6 per
cent, though."
It's quite possible that getting drunk is 98 percent psychological and 2 per cent physical.
Beer labeling causes perpetuation of myth
Although many people may think that 5
businesses can handle 1.8 per cent more
people than 3.2 per cent more
people.
Another common falsehood is that Canadian beer, rated by proof spirits, is stronger than domestic beer. Most Canadian beers are eight proof.
Five per cent beer is determined by volume, while 3.2 is determined by weight.
"I know there isn't much difference in alcohol, but they sure taste different," said Chindy Meyer, Schaumberg, III. junior. "3.2 beer tastes a lot more watery."
When someone makes such a statement, he is perpetuating two of the world's greatest myths about American beers. First, that 6 per cent beer contains almost twice as much alcohol as 3.2 and, secondly, that there is 6 per cent domestic beer.
Blackburn provided this formula for comparing the alcoholic content of the two: 8.0 per cent alcohol by weight. Thus, 5 per cent beer contains only .8 of one per cent more alcohol.
According to a Kansas City area Budweiser distributor, Glenn Blackburn, 12902 W 77 Thur, Lenexa, domestic beers must contain either 5 or 3.2 per cent alcohol.
Despite the little difference in alcoholic content between 3.2 and 5 per cent beer, several people still insist that there is a difference.
Jud. in the University Theatre's production the technicians reign supreme. Every mood is accentuated by the lighting and the costumes.
One of the most misunderstood aspects of the brewing industry is that of alcoholic content. Alcoholic content is measured in terms: by proof spirits, by weight or by volume.
Dan Newman, Onaga sophomore, said he liked 5 point beer much better.
While some of the dancers appear to be lead-footed, their pantomime excels. Clever innovations such as dance hall girls descending ladders from the sky add illusion to the ballet, which is the highlight of the show.
"Oklahoma!" maintains its original enthusiasm. It is a play that plays to the audience, and the audience loves it. It was written in New York, even New York, and the audience would like it as long as they could recognize the characters. For example, Bill Balfour, vice chancellor for student affairs, got a round of laughs when he stage and saved one line. But why not?
By JAIN PENNER
Perhaps as a synedrode of the American Dream, the story line of "Oklahoma!" suffers through revisionism. Curly isn't all good; Jud it isn't all bad. Aunt Eller isn't even all-wise. And if Will and Ado Annie want a little roll in the bay, who cares?
"Oklahoma!" ends on a mixed note. In the standard production Curly marries Laureen and the killer evil Kid. Since he has been on the prowl, he riddles it of an evil entity, he gets off in time to go on his honeymoon. But Jud isn't really evil, and one wonders about the mock trial where Curly is proclaimed innocent. Even the sacrosanct Aunt Eller suffers in this scene.
She said letters had been sent to all department chairmen and some other faculty, asking whether they would be interested in sponsoring mixers in their homes. The Senate office has received many positive responses, she said.
"One is rated by volume and the other is rated by weight," she said.
Greg Sherf, Leawood sophomore, said he thought 'hat almost all beers tasted the same, whether they were 5 per cent or 32.
"That 3.2 beer just runs right through me," he said.
"Okahama!" is a hit. If you don't believe it, just take a stopwatch to the play. You'll find that the audience's applause takes up half an hour of the production.
Halle Uter, Augusta sophomore, said she didn't think there was any difference.
Not everyone interviewed thought 5 per cent beer was stronger, however.
Lovers of vines are torn between beauty and decay
By DAVID BARCLAY
Vancouver Staff Reporter
The removal of Virginia creeper vines from the walls of five University of Kansas buildings has made some people who use the buildings unhappy.
Profs to host new freshmen
"I'm unhappy that they are being removed, but at the same time it is absolutely necessary that it be done." Philip S. Smith wrote in *Natural History*, said last week.
The University Theatre benefit performance of *Oklahoma!* for the Oakland County Correctional Center overnight and not tonight as originally reported. Tickets for all students will be $1.50.
"A beer is a beer is a beer is a beer, until you've tasted Hamm's." said Sherrf.
Groups of 10 to 15 freshmen will be invited to the homes of faculty and department chairmen to increase contact between students and faculty.
Mixers for faculty and incoming freshmen are being planned by the Student Senate, Mary Lou Reece, student body vice president, said Monday.
"The purpose of the mixers is to give freshmen a personal touch with professors." Reece said. "I think it is something that needed."
Reeve said the mixers ideally would be on a departmental basis so that freshmen could meet with faculty from their potential environment, and possibly with their own advisers.
But at the same time they acknowledged
the vine removal was the lesser of two
eases.
Student seminars or other volunteers will meet with the students of faculty members with each mkker, as she said.
"I think it's horrible," said Sara Jo Melander, an administrative assistant in the division of biological sciences in Snow. "The snow is such an ugly building anyway."
Reece said the mixers would begin the first month of the fall semester.
Reece said the number of freshmen who could be involved would depend on the number of interested faculty members willing to hold mixers in their homes.
The vines are being removed to repair damaged masonry and to waterproof portions of Dyche Hall, Snow Hall, Watson Library, Hong Auditorium and Strong Hall.
CORRECTION
The vines had to be removed for the work
of Harold E. Bitch, supervisor of
grounds and landscapes.
The damage to the buildings wasn't done by the vines but by chemical weathering, the seasonal freezing and thawing of the masonry, said Dave Hawes, a worker for Kelly Waterproofing Inc., who is helping to make the repairs.
Major water seepage damaged the reference, microforms and serial sections of Watson Library, as well as the directors office, and made the removal of the vines necessary, said Bob Malinowski, assistant director of Watson Library.
Malinowski said that minor water damage had also occurred in other parts of the house.
"I like vines on buildings," Malinowsky said, "and I hate to see them come off."
Natural History, said that although the vines had concealed some of the museum's interesting architectural features, he was sorry that they were removed.
The museum was modeled after the Cathedral of Saint-Trophine in Arles, France, and is a national and historic landmark.
Alfred E. Johnson, another curator of the museum, said he was glad the vines had been cut.
Coaches, staff cram for NCAA assemblv
By KEN STONE Kansan Staff Reporter
"I think it is evidence that the University and the citizens of Kansas are willing to take care of old historic buildings," Johnson said.
Mini-summit meetings are being held at NCAA member schools across the country to consider the stands each school will take at what athletic directors are calling the most important NCAA convention in history.
But he did defend the intent of the Big Eight proposals that would leave football and basketball untouched by cuts or restrictions.
Frank B. Cross, curator of the Museum of
The special NCAA convention, which will be held August 14 and 15 in Chicago, will consider 73 proposals relating to limits on financial aid, recruiting, the size of athletic squads and coaching staffs and income distribution.
Walker declined to comment on specific proposals, saying, "I have not had meetings with the appropriate people. I meet with them when they ask for their input as to their thoughts and wishes."
Walker he expected very few schools to support the proposal, although the eastern Ivy League schools, who now only provide private and public education, would be in favor of it.
However, the proposal would not affect the number of coaches in football, which now can employ one head coach and as many as ten assistants.
"If we cut down on football and basketball," he said, "we are hurting our entire program. And that's what we have to be careful of."
The proposals would amend the NCAA Constitution and by-laws. Some of the amendments change just a few words. Some add a dozen paragraphs. But most are designed to save collegiate athletic programs money.
---
According to Athletic Director Clyde Walker and head track coach Bob Timmons, the effects of the convention will be far-reaching and long-standing.
Despite the threats of possible cuts to his sport, Timmons said he supported Walker in regard to the security of the football program.
BURGER
In the next three weeks, Walker, J Hammond McNish, faculty representative on the KU Athletic Board, and Chancellor Dykes will meet to discuss the convention.
"But if programs are brought to their lowest common denominator, and if participation is substituted for achievement, sports will be intramuralized.
"I hope that before the delegates ever get into the actualities of making decisions on each one of the amendments, each one of the keeps in mind the purpose of the NCAA."
I'm not critical of the idea that a special way to save money are definitely needed.
Walker has said that he opposed national legislation by the NCAA in areas affecting college sports.
On whether KU will vote from a position of self-interest or for the benefit of the NCAA as a whole, Walker said. "We have to be concerned for ourselves, but there would be certain things that would be good for collegiate athletics."
That purpose, he said, is to allow student-agers to have the opportunity to achieve their goals.
"The word is self-determination," he said. Each institution should have the right to decide what its faculty members are responsible for.
"If football is concerned about its future, so am I." said Timmons.
"To equalize the sports is wrong,"
"That destroys initiative
and innovation."
"The thing that concerns me most," areul of legislation the U.S. should reduce costs.
What worries Timmons most, however, is what he called the potential for overkill.
And Walker said that certain proposals to
change the spending might backfire and cause a cash crise.
The money schools saved on scholarships would be spent on recruiting, he said.
Timmons also said he opposed NCAA proposals that would put restrictions on college football.
"For the most part, our vote will be selfish," he said, however.
Dykes said that the meeting would result in a single institutional policy.
"Once we cut down on football scholarships from 40 to 35 a year, it costs us twice as much."
4 for $2.00
In contrast to Walker, Dykes said he was against making reductions in minor sports because it would be inconsistent with the law.
BURGER KING
"I'm opposed to any effort that would reduce the comprehensive nature of the program. I would prefer to see reductions made throughout the athletic program rather than singling out specific minor sports for reductions."
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DO YOU COMMUTE?
A carpool file matching students commuting from particular areas is available in the Student Senate office, 105B Kansas Union.
If you would like to take advantage of these services simply fill out the form below and include any information you feel is pertinent.
SIMILAR FILES ARE KEPT FOR STUDENTS SEEKING TUTORS AND ROOMMATES.
Name___ Phone.
If so,why not share the costs and driving with other commuting students?
Address___ Roommate ☐ Carpool ☐ Tutor ☐
Information
Bring to Student Senate office, Room 105B Kansas Union 864-3710
A Student Senate Service Financed with Student Activity Fees
Wednesday. Julv 23.1975
University Daily Kansan
3
Welfare roles keep increasing; no solution in sight
By JAMES EISELE
Kansas Staff Reporter
Welfare has been with us a long time but a record year may be in the making for 1975. Despite new ideas and government plans, there is still room to cut down on the increasing welfare rolls.
Welfare rolls during February and March were record highs and the number of welfare families headed by jobless fathers increased 26 per cent across the nation.
Total federal and state welfare expenditures in March were over $2 billion.
According to John Derrick, Douglas County welfare director, local welfare rolls have increased 2.6 per cent during April and May.
the rate of increase continues, the number of cases on welfare could increase 18.2 per cent in 1797.
Derrick said the local increase was mainly caused by jobless people who have come into Kansas from high unemployment areas.
The migrating people can't always find public assistance as a last resort.
Lawrence Austin, 1609 Haskell Ave., has used welfare as a recourse over the years. He said he had been on welfare in one form or another for most of his life. He has seen the welfare system from the inside and out, he said, and thinks it should be chaned.
"Welfare means farewell," he said. "That means farewell to ever getting back into society again. We have been bought by the system."
Since February, Austin has been the tenants' associate chairman of Edgewood Jr. High.
Edgewood Homes is a low-income federal housing development. His job, which will last one year, is financed by the WIN Program, a federal job training program.
Austin said he was paid $650 a month during his year of training but he probably wouldn't be able to find a job after his training period and would be back on there again. Austin said he would be happy if this happened because he liked his job.
"It's the most rewarding job I've had, just in advising people of their rights as people—their rights under the Constitution of the United States." he said.
"I'm so glad I'm part of the system. If a man can get one idea over to help people, just one idea to help the human race, to do them some good, that's all I'm after."
Another Lawrence resident, who refused to be identified, is training in the WIN Program while working with Penn House, a national organization that assists low income families.
She said that working in WIN had given her a lot of freedom, public and had increased her self-confidence.
The woman, a middle-aged wife with a disabled husband and two children, said she thought the program had increased her chances of finding employment in the future but she didn't know what kind of job she might find when her training was over.
"The first thing to remember is the WIN Program is part of a national federal agency. It's important to understand that we need to be able to say about these programs." Katz said.
Arthur Katz, professor of social welfare.
said the essential idea of the WIN Program was a sound one.
Katz said he worked with the WIN program in Kansas City, Mo. several years ago. The program is geared to train people who are considered peppermovable. he said.
Sometimes national programs aren't applicable to local economies, he said.
"In the final analysis, a job has to be produced," Katz said. "In a period of high unemployment, of say 10 per cent, it is very difficult for someone to have jobs when other people can't."
to sky motch the wrist Program:
That is, one of the biggest fallacies
in American politics.
The WIN Program is the tail end of the available employment, he said. Employers aren't looking for WIN referrals who have six months to one year of training when they can hire someone with two or more years of training.
"The problem may not necessarily be with the WIN Program, but rather a problem of the larger economic situation." Derrick wasn't as optimistic and had this
Derrick said there had been various welfare reform proposals designed to eliminate the chain reaction of generation after generation of families on welfare. But he had his doubts whether proposals such as the negative income tax, which would do
away with the entire HEW system and
subset of income, would
be the system any better.
Katz, however, said he favored a guaranteed adequate income but did not see it as worthwhile.
"The current welfare system, despite what its critics say, provides a recipient with a minimal, not an adequate, income," he said.
Citing a recent Princeton, N.J., experiment, Katz said that guaranteed incomes would not lower work productivity as some free enterprise economics predict. When people on guardance incomes were offered jobs, they decided to work he said.
President Ford recently suggested that the country might have to live with 6 to 8 per cent of unemployment. If that is the case, something like five million people will need an alternative form of income like public works or income guarantees, Katz said.
But people don't want to take the kind of jobs that don't lead to advancement, Katz tells. Especially when we have so much money on our own, American ideals like be what you want, to be.
"We must cut down on our rhetoric or say what we mean," he said. "If the economy worked perfectly then we wouldn't need a public assistance system."
One welfare recipient said welfare system worker worked a better relationship.
"No one can sit in an office and tell by an application form who needs welfare."
Derrick said the old system in which social counselors would visit welfare households was abolished in 1971 and was replaced by a 10 page application form.
people who have good jobs and are still on welfare, but the welfare people don't know
A 1972 state law allotted three persons to work in the Lawrence welfare office as welfare family counselors, he said, but now there is only one person in the welfare office who interviews applicants, and no one makes household visits anymore.
"Let's face it," Derrick said, "to a certain extent welfawe has become a way of life.
"Some families remain on welfare all their lives, some don't," he said. His parents, children and grandparents now live in welfare--that's the only thing they know."
Austin said that seven of his 12 children had left home and that five of them were on welfare. He said he couldn't relate to the middle class when he was younger and finally he ended up on welfare. Now his children are having the same problem, he said.
"All my children ever knew was waiting on a welfare check," he said.
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*Note: All books are in English!*
*Makes sense to use them.*
*2. For class preparation*
*3. For practice*
*“New Availabie of Western Civilization”
*“New Availabie of Western Civilization”
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prizes you see on popular hill equipment other than factory dumps or out-of-products, you can buy your own for less at the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIEFS. **bt**
HIGH PROTEIN horse meat dog food. 24-14 oz
$4.99, can see note. Metzner Salve 750 g.
(3.8 ounces)
Now fire merchandise close-outs, etc. New selling huge grocery stock from a Chicago supermarket with 34 locations, each 13 at checkout. Open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday-Monday. Merge its SalveGift card, $289, Vermont.
1972 Yamaha 600ce, red and white '700 or will
7-30
Call: 643-7450
Honeywell Pentax Spotmatic F w/ F1.4 lens. $200.
Kalip 633-8979.
**7-23**
Cook on out-Lot or坐盘 and parking-to the antique furniture and other furniture, antiques, antique furniture and other furniture, antiques, church pews, cantique crates, whisker barrels, lice,oca-cola cases, crock pots, plow hoppers, lice,oca-cola cases, crock pots, and vegetable. Watermelon $14 and up and vegetables. Cucumbers 5 for $2. Red and white home potato, potatoes a 10 lb. cold pop and beer, cherries, nectarines, lettuce, onions, cabbage, shells, harbor gourd, popcorn, assorted nuts, in shell, hermit, sorghum, popper, assorted nuts, to 9, 7 to 9, 8-315. Herb Allenbinder, ff
SALE: AR8a Speakers (Reg. $295) $28.50 l.
Acoustic Tube Set (Reg. $149) $12.50 l.
Rates $2 each. 1 A Table XA $89.50 l. 2 Packs $149.
Summer sale item. Also many good L-P 3.5mm
soundspeaker. & Recycled Sound. 13 k W x 7
upiants. $84-2047.
1966 Ramper Classic 6 cyl. automatic, new treads
70,000 miles. $450. Call 844-6907.
WAGON WHEEL 1401 Ohio Open 11 A.M.-Midnight and wiches. Delicatessen, Food
88 Dodge Coronet A.T. Many parts new, $480.
Call 642-1902.
66 Rambler convertible -automatic, excellent
68 Rambler needs some work. Must sell 241.
84-004-024
84-004-025
WV Burs. from 1964 to 1974, all colors—4 spores
Banking Availability
Jawahir Burs. 843-200-5000
Jawahir Burs. 843-200-5000
Central air units for sale. Immediate installation
Central air machines for Mobile Homes...
W 61h, 822-7700.
W 61h, 822-7700.
Yumaha 350 RSC 1972, 2000 Actual miles. Beau-
tiful condition. 46 Volvo B160 good for parts or re-
build; 46 Volvo B160 good for parts or re-
build.
Buy a 1974 WU Bur today. Balance of factory
warehouse is $35,000. Never tipped. Call 7-24
Jayhawk WU. V43-2200-834
Just arrived—shipment of Rabbits and Screwcrops
just for a test drive. Jaywinkvw 843-8210
www.jaywinkvw.com
Squareback Wagons. Choose from three, from 1868 to 1971. Jayhawk W. 843-8210. 7-24
roof. Jayhawk VW, 843-2210. 7-24
1974 Yamanaka Enduro 1250, one owner, 2800 miles
Jayhawk VW. WM-832-200.
7-24
Closetset of all 1974 Demo's and Rental cars, save
hundreds. Jawdack WW. 843-220-224
2,24
FB-14 Goodyear jacket; like new, New Wilson BN-524 Jauger Racket; Medium 4 5/8" Call Titm BN-524 Jauger
Pentax H31 F8 158 lens 1000 shooter. $70. Mint condition. 864-1858 day. Jack. 7-23
Double bed, frame, springs & mattress. Call 843- 6514 for 5 p.m.
Did you know that Webster's Mobile Homes has mobile homes for use at all times? Webster's Mobile Homes offers mobile homes for use at all times! Webster's Mobile Homes
Hang Glider, Bill Bennett Delta Wing 222B. Many extras. Call 841-5679
7-29
Waterbed for sale: King size, black fur lined
frame, and mattress. $50, 843-1912. 7-24
McIntosh C26-Prem and 2100 power amp.
Like new condition. Best offer. Call 811-6979-730
*
Must sell! 1722 Kuwaiti 250 Trabitake and 1874
Kuwaiti 328 Kuwaiti 296 Trabitake.
Call condition: Call Rufail or Lukay
Rufail or Lukay 841-812-7198.
Typewriter sale. We have just accepted, as traded from the library, a large quantity of Royal typewriter stock that were traded in. To avoid having to store them here, we will only accept strong Office Systems 1640 Vermont 888-755-2390 or Strong Office Systems 1640 Vermont 888-755-2390.
JAMES LIQUOR
Cold Beer & Chilled Wine
91th Street Center
(Next to 57th Wall!)
842.0732
Let Maupintur
Do The LEGWORK For You!
(NEVER an extra cost)
For An Aesthetic
$3.50 per Dozen
TACOS
1105 Massachusetts
Casa de Taco
SUA / Maupintour travel service
Bedroom furniture 2, dressers 2, tables and
desks to discuss. Call Frank Krause
2718 or 845-8186. 7-28
Make your Summer Vacation Reservations now
FOR RENT
843-9880
Free rental services. Up to the minute listings of
Lawrence, Lawrence.
Rental Exchange. 842-2500.
PHONE 843-1211 KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest—900 Mass
Johnson Rental Company, Studios, 1 bedroom, 2 bathrooms to KU Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan.
Two bedroom apartment all utilities paid, close
down. This fall, furnished or unfurnished.
843-999-001
Motorcycle Racer
Room- Kitchen privileges. One班 to campus.
Room- Also able, also pay rent reduction for
$30 per month.
WANTED
Rooms rooms, single, with or without cook-
ing facilities. Kitchen KU and NU,
no flooring. No oats. Phone 843-7567.
Extra nice rooms with private kitchens. One room has a private parking, utilities paid. Resident rent: 843-579-697
Apartments: 1, 2, and 4 bedrooms furnished
Bundles KU and near town. Phone 843-5767. fcff
JAYHAWKER TOWERS-2 bedroom, all utilities
bathroom, toilet, fridge, grill, parking,
laundry room, dryer, griddle.
Did you know that? 842-7700, Webster's Mobile Homes at Webster? 842-7700, Webster's Mobile Homes.
Two female roommates 18-24 years of exp in classroom
learning each one hour mandatory *f* counsel.
*h* each plus one hour mandatory *f* counsel.
New spacious apartment. Furnished, all electric.
Bedroom, entrance, air conditioned. 843-
1555. 843-1596.
For Rent: Ideal third floor apartment in private residence. 1 bedroom, 1 bathroom, 1 bed
Siasiacua house living-3 bedroom basement
fireplace, family room, gold-filled fellow,
One bedroom, $125 air conditioned apt. in 1920
and room of Tennessee, $125 air-453-8718 or
3804
743 Mass. 843-4366
ARMADJILLO
BEAD CO.
710 MASS.
Now Respond
10-5 p.m.
Beads,
All Kinds.
Silk
Turt.
Chain,
Lace, Leather.
Chokers.
Earrings
Indian Jewelry
50% off
Briman Leading Jewelers
·Fine jewelry
·Expert watch repair
Madura Indian Shop
For the Finest in Authentic, Handcrafted Indian Jewelry, Arts and Crafts
19 W, 9th
10:5-30 Daily
Thursdays ftl 8
Person to share large 3 bedroom duplex for fall
$73.33 per month. Call after 6:23,
842-127-207
Roommates wanted for apartment. Call Mark,
842-7989 after 5.
**Penale Females** 18-25 for $\frac{1}{4}$ hour experiment.
**Penale Males** 16-25 for $\frac{1}{4}$ hour experiment for a case of beer. Call 844-363-363. 6-5
Need female roommate beginning fall semester:
B43-2921 before Aug 1, or B43-8637 after Aug 1.
Roommate & place to live for now & fall. Upstairs on the second floor have own bedrooms close to campus. 841-265-3900.
Pay Hel Aug. Rent. Want to subsale fully furnished room during Mid August. Call 811-148-3092. after $390
Wanted: A female upperclass roommate to share
room with a female fall semester student.
After 7:30 p.m. 8:29
Monday, September 14
Wanted: Information Papers for English Comp.
Marine National Study Center, revision
revision of the National Marine
Research Council's revised revision
Female roommate wanted. Owned furnished room.
campus campus $33/month and electricity 7-28
843-7579
Female roommate for a 2 BR unit in 4 playrooms, private baths, and laundry space. Players must paint and jazz them. Rent to $75 and utilizes upstairs bedrooms.
Employment Opportunities
Permanent. Full time Legal Secretary for im- pany. Must be 21 or over. Confidentiality required. Must be able to take accurate short- term and long-term duties. Must salary: $45 to $53 depending on skills and experience. Two week paid vacation after termination. Interested in day through Friday. Interesting and challenging job with respect to the Douglas County Juvenile Court, 3rd floor, Douglas County for application. Equal Opportunity Employer.
The University of Kansas, office of Financial Aid is seeking a Bachelor assistant for the 75-76 degree and be admitted to graduate study at the University of Kansas. The student employment consisting of personal interaction with the University and Community employees and applicants should submit a resume and two referee letters. Benchard Financial Aid, 28 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, 209 N. Kansas Avenue, Kansas City, KS 64103. Equal Opportunity Employment / Affirmative Action.
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
HARDWARE
15 East 8th, 84-2364
12-5 Monday-Friday
10-5 Sat.
JEEP
IS YOUR CAR AS READY FOR
YOUR VACATION AS YOU ARE?
DON'S AUTO SERVICE
842-0753 900 New Jersey
THE ICE CO
WEEKLY BEER SALES
AND $7.60 KEIGS
ALL SUMMER LONG
HOME MADE ICE
CREAM
SUPPLIES
616
Vermont
**Photographic Models:** Earn $10/hour. Send name,
phone number, and photograph box.
7-29
www.photograph.com
NOTICE
Schumun Food Company hiring for all & fall
carp app in TJ's Mass. from 8:00 AM - 10:30 AM.
CLOSED JUNE 27TH.
CONT PLUS 10% - Stereo equipment. All major
instruments included. Items or packages:
Call Dave. Phone 812-359-6784.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT! Let us do your printing while you wait at the Quick Copy Center. **Made:** May 19, 2014 10pm copies-$5.51, 30copies-$6.00, 1,000copies=$7.00 want to business at the Quick Copy Center.
Executive-style gourmet parties planed, catered, decorated and coordinated. Specialized beautiful tailored private food. For detailed咨詢 visit www.ladycoffee.com.
PHOTOGRAPHY Shooting Gallery Specializing in Personalized Portraits in natural surroundings. Wedding, portfolios, and commercial photography students. 811-246-3900, www.birthday.com; 811-246-3900, www.birthday.com; 811-246-3900, www.birthday.com; 811-246-3900, www.birthday.com; 811-246-3900, www.birthday.com; 811-246-3900, www.birthday.com;
Flipper, Flower, salad, and potato $1.29 - 7-24
night night at Sirolin Stockade.
HOMOSEXUALITY PRESENTS PROBLEMS
CORRECTING Gay Liberation. In, Gatherings: 7:20 a.m.
and 3rd Monday of each month. Union office
offices, 468-8152 for referrals; 843-9298 for
referrals for socializing. 843-9298
TYPING
Typing in my home IBM iselect with plex type.
Using a printer, paper and more. Typing in Call. PnL 842-5799
IBM Selectic, pica or citis, reasonable, experien-
cial knowledge
862-9127
784-9128
John F. Walker 7-31
Experimented in typing thesis, research papers, and other documents (carbon ribbon), elite type C 913-574
Experienced typist—term papers, tissues, mule, mice. Mail: 843-555-3936, Mrs. Wright.
**THISIS BINDING——The Quick Copy Center**
For those who need to keep their service in fast and prices are reasonable, our Service is fast and prices are reasonable.
POTION PARLOR
Organic Bio-degradable Hair and Skin Care Products in Recycle-able Bottles
B19 Vermont 12-5
843-9708 Essence Oils Mon-Sat.
GAY COUNSELING & RAP
+ +
♂ ♀
for referrals
info. center 864.3506
or 842.7505
Penner's Cycle Barn
Norton Ducati
Moto Guzzi
Used Motorcycle
JULY CLEARANCE
71 Norton Commando
Very Clean $895^{00}
44 Norton charge
72 Norton Commando 995
71 Norton Commando
71 Kawasaki 500 Mach III $3950^{°}$
74 Kawasaki 350 dirt bike $6950^{°}$
Like New
Nelly Chandler 693
Norton chopper
Jardine headers $6950
Extended forks
on Hiway 10 585-1048
15 miles east of Lawrence
Mon.-Fri. 9:00-6:00
Sat. 9:00-3:00
Experienced in typing dissertations, theses. elec-
mics in Psych. Call Listle, 843-8088. Resumes:
7-31
FOUND
Found Nearest Trailridge Apartment--darting
hike through brick-and-mortar houses with brown markings, white cottons
and built-in baths. 861-432-5097.
Found White blitter about 16 yrs old Old Gray
Blitter about 10 yrs old Call Jane Marker at 2 p m.
877-553-9040
LOST
Found: LD. cards, for Janiece Loney, July 21 be-
Olivier Hall. M4: 822-7935.
Lost Prescription glasses; silver frames; black
glasses; blue banda case. Bundage 8-74,
864-4066, or 864-4066
SERVICES OFFERED
Lost: Tues. July 15, male slammes vcat. Vienna
Tue. July 24, male slammes vcat. Whisky's.
Released. Call 844-850-3289. **Rewards**
@call844-850-3289
MATH TUTORING COMPANY. Experienced instructional tutors in math for students 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23. Responssible calls. Call (800) 350-6500.
Wake up service available 28 July - August. Send an email to your name and number, with whitb of 10 on your P.O. box.
HELP WANTED
Occasional day labor, skilled and unskilled.
Leave name at 842-7287. Equal Opportunity. **tf**
Home Growin'
904 Vermont
SIRLOIN STOCKADE
1015 Iowa
11-9 Mon-Fri
10am-5pm
YAMAHA
CR-1000 RECEIVER
YAMAHA
CR 1000 RECEIVER
the
YP 800 TURNTABLE
GRAMO
PHONE
shop
the GRAMO PHONE shop YP-800 TURNABLE
at the rear of
KIEF'S DISCOUNT
RECORD AND STEREO
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
842-1544 SAVINGS AMOUNT BRAN STEREO COMPONENTS
4
Wednesdav. Julv23.1975
University Daily Kansan
Vietnamese family second to seek Lawrence refuge
By KELLY SCOTT Kansan Staff Reporter
A U.S. government job and contacts with former American coworkers were two advantages Chieu Duc Vinh had over the thousands of Vietnamese eager to leave Saigon after the fall of the Thien. government.
Vinh, former liaison coordinator for the Defense Attaché's Office in Saigon, left Vietnam on a U.S. C-411 plane en route to the U. protectorate of Guam and, beyond that, to the U. Marine base at Camp Pendleton in Southern California.
At Camp Pendleton, Vinh spoke long distance with Robert Guffin, an American citizen he worked with in the liaison office at Harvard University, former Lawrence Refugee Committee.
Working with the Rev Marion Allen, pastor of the First Baptist Church in Lawrence, Guffin gained interest of the Vinh group in Lawrence. They arrived Monday night.
The Vinh family is the second Vietnamese family to arrive in Lawrence. A week earlier, Ngoe Tho Nguen, his wife, Nghia, and their four children came to Lawrence under the sponsorship of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Siegert, 908 W. 20th Ter.
Vinh, his wife,Nguyen, his six children and his nephew,Hue, are living with John Boulton, assistant professor of wind and percussion, and his family at 1633 Indiana
Although the Lawrence Refuge Committee is actively seeking employment for Vinh and 18-year-old Hue, the family will be supported by private donations for the time being. Maura Piekalkiewicz, a member of the committee said yesterday.
A house at 73 Missouri St. has been rented for the Vinhs. Piekalkiewicz said.
Paul Brottman, associate professor of
Security at the University of Chicago,
security office yesterday to be registered
and to be issued a social security number.
Hue and he hopes to attend the Universi-
tion's annual Security Conference.
Vinh and his family left Saigon April 21. When he reported for work that day, Vinh said, his boss told all the workers in his section to bring their families and as little luggage as possible to the office imminent, where they would begin evacuating.
Vinh said he didn't plan to return to Vietnam until the United States and the new Vietnamese government establish friendly relations.
Vinh worked for the U.S. government in Saigon for 14 years. He said he thought of this country as his "second home," though he had never traveled here.
Lake at Camp Pendleton was bearable, Vinh said. His one complaint was that the cooks at the camp knew nothing about firearms and weapons. Their chop supe was horrible, he said.
Vinh was one of the few refugees who held a job at Pendleton. He worked for the Public Health Service operating in the camp, and had a job offer to stay.
His employment in Lawrence depends on local openings, he said.
"You know of any jobs?" he asked. In their temporary home with John and Carol Boulton, the six Vinh children have contact with the Bouldons' six children.
Mrs. Boulton said the children had picked up a little English in the time they had been
in their house, and had already begun answering the phone.
Pekalkiewicz said the children would attend the Pinkney Elementary School in the fall, where she said she hoped they receive supplementary help in English.
The Vinh and Nguyen families, are the start of what Piekalkiewicz said she hoped would be a substantial Vietnamese community in Lawrence.
The original intent of the Lawrence Refugee Committee was to bring in several families, but there are no immediate plans to sponsor additional families, she said.
She said the committee hoped to have the Vina settled before they brought in another faction.
Piekalkiewicz said the committee had received offers of financial support from the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, the First Church Christian Church and the First Baptist Church.
Piekalkiewicz said she had done extensive work with refugees from Eastern Europe, and had come to know the sense of bewilderment and loss refugees feel.
"We must help them," she said. "The fact of the matter is that there are people here, are they?"
Piekalkiewicz and her husband, Jarasol Piekalkiewicz, professor of political science, originally coordinated the group, but will leave for Poland in August. The Boultons will take over the positions of coordinators of the committee.
Other KU personnel involved in the committee are Brotsman; Edward Erazmus, associate professor of linguistics; Bobby Patton, professor of speech and drama; and Bonnie Patton, director of the Office of Affirmative Action.
By BRUCE SPENCE
Kensan Staff Reporter
As a result of three major U.S.-Soviet grain deals, grain exporters will soon be moving millions of tons of corn, wheat and barley to the Soviet Union, but local grain elevator operators aren't expecting much direct impact here.
Jink Faulker, manager of the Baldwin Grain Co. in Baldwin, said, "It won't be affecting the volume of our business as far as how many bushels we would receive here."
He said that farmers had been taught a lesson from the first U.S.-Soviet grain deal in 1972, which broke shortly after the end of World War II and all of their grain al. barn harvest time.
As a result, hair had to absorb lower prices for their grain while others cleaned up from the resulting soaring prices which the unexpected grain deal initiated,
Since then, farmers have been holding their grain for sale at a later date, he said.
"At least they hold what they don't really mean," he said, the immediate expense," Faulkner said.
This brought about a more orderly market system, he said.
Don Harris, manager of Farmers Elevator Co. of Edura, said that the recent grain deals had helped prices a little, but the increases hadn't been anything substantial.
Local farmers have expressed very little reaction to the grain deal, he said, with most of them considering the amounts in as to small to make much difference.
Grain deals' impact minimal
The three recent grain deals total 8.8 million metric tons of grain as compared to the 19 million metric tons involved in the 1972 U.S.-Soviet sale.
Before the 1972 grain deal, about 90 per cent of the grain was usually sold by harvest time, but since then, about one-half of the crop was grown in a wait-and-see attitude. Harris said.
The results of a survey assessing the disparity of workloads among state Civil Service clerical employees at the University of Georgia will be presented at the Conference and Sciences, will be distributed next week.
The survey was done by a subcommittee of the Steering Committee on Classified Appointments.
Clerical employes to get survey
One member, Charles Kiesler, professor of psychology, said the subcommittee studied classified appointments in order to improve services and to make recommendations on the upgrading of present classified clerical positions.
There will be an open meeting this afternoon at 3:30 in 4002 West Hall to give information about the project.
members an opportunity to comment and
delivered to clinical personnel, Kelsey J.
Brown, Medical Director.
The average pay may expire after occupancy of the office. If you are in a physical condition of particular offices.
The second deals with work processing,
and is mail sorting, typing, filing and
dunplugging.
The third section, people processing, includes reception and phone duties, meetings, student-related activities and personnel management.
The fourth section describes money processing, such as accounting.
The last section deals with miscellaneous duties.
The questionnaire asked employees to indicate which of these duties they performed and the approximate portion of their time spent on each duty.
"We would like to exhaust all possibilities of upgrading the positions, including a study of possible titles for staff other than ones currently in use," Kiesler said.
The basic problem is that there are complicated rules specifying how and when you can execute a rule.
Kiesler is also working on a second subcommittee to study past allocation of clerical employees to various departments, the number and by level of classification.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom--864-4810
Advertising--864-4358
Circulation--864-3048
Published at the University of Kansas
Bachelor's and holiday exemptions period. Second-
day holidays and exemptions period. Sub-
subscriptions by mail are $8 a semester or
$12 a semester, plus student activity,
sameday, paid through the student activity
Editor
Ward Harkavy
Associate Editor
Campus Editors
Peter Porteous
Kenn Louden
Glenn Mayer
Editor
Ward Harkavy
Jim Merrill
Assistant Business Managers ... Cindy Long,
Jerri Kadel
Business Manager
Jim Merrill
"Ever since the first Russian wheat deal, farmers in various wild, farmers have been holding—more crops."
A representative of the Farmers Cooperative Association of Lawrence said its sales didn't directly deal with any of the exporters involved in the grain deals and he had no idea whether any of the grain it sold involved in the U.S. Soviet transactions.
Local farmers aren't much affected by the grain deals and just sell their harvest according to the situation of the local market, the representative said.
Although the Agriculture Department had reported record harvests for this year, the three local grain operators said crop yields would be on par with last year's harvest.
Agriculture department officials have said that the Soviets may buy as much as 10 million metric tons of grain this year. Some industrial sources say the Soviet Union, a country of severe weather in its grain region, may purchase as much as 15 million metric tons.
Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz has said that 800 million bushels of wheat would be domestically consumed, with 1.4 billion acres of land and replenishment of depleted stockpiles.
Faulkner said, "We export more grain than we use in this country itself. So unless we have this export market to Russia, or Japan, or India, or wherever, we're just going to produce tables here in the United States, and with that, you're going to get really low prices."
Faulner said if export markets were cut off, farmers would probably go bankrupt because of the skyrocketing equipment and expense costs of recent years.
"The city folks think the farmer has a good deal, but he hasn't been getting nearly as much."
"The farmer wasn't making anything at all until the wheat deals" he said.
Fairaller said that even now with a better market brought on by the exports, farmers still make only about $100 per acre to pay for farminery, fertilizer, seed costs and expenses.
LOOKING FOR A NEW NEST?
HOME SWET HOME
See
Jayhawker Towers Apts.
2-bedroom apartments on
courtyard or unfinished
unfurnished or unfinished
utilities paid
swimming pool
or conditioned
on bus line
security guards
covered parking
bonded lock system
OFFICE OPEN DAILY
Monday-Friday til 5:30
Saturday til 4:00
1603 W.15th
[LREx]
Lawrence, Ks.
The University of Kansas Theatre
LANDMARKS OF THE AMERICAN THEATRE
Presents
Oklahoma!
Friday & Saturday
July 25 & 26 8:00 p.m.
Proceeds from ticket sales for Thursday evening's performance will go to the Lawrence Arts Center Donation $2.50 Any Student or Senior Citizen $1.50
BENEFIT PERFORMANCE, JULY 24, 8:00 p.m.
K. U. Students & Senior Citizens $1.50 Others $2.50
Don't miss Charlie Chaplin in Modern Times, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday Night at Woodruff Auditorium.
UNIVERSITY THEATRE MURPHY HALL 864-3982
KU
ku
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, July 24, 1975
Children's home seeks approval from county
No.167
See page 2
一
10
10
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Kool-Aid recession
SenEx challenges validity of Senate teaching report
Rusty Allen Mort's Kool-Aid stand suffered a slight recession yesterday afternoon as the clouds rolled in and the temperature started drooping.
By ALISON GWINN Kansan Staff Reporter
SenEx yesterday passed a resolution urging the Student Senate to submit to them a draft of the final report of the Commission before it is released.
"There are extremely uncomfortable and potentially dangerous things in this report," she said.
Zather said he thought the resolution might "jar the Student Senate to police its actions."
Adrienne Hyle, student member of SenEx, questioned whether the study shouldn't be done by a professional group, rather than by student senators. She said that senators had been unable to give in and that the commission should regard the commission and its work.
However, Dave Shapiro, research assistant for the commission, said Tuesday that inadequate selection, training and removal policies for assistant instructors and teaching assistants had resulted in some low quality teaching.
Robert Casad, professor of law, said the atmosphere of learning had been totally transformed.
"Money is the primary problem," Shapiro said. "There's no way we can expect qualified graduate students to come to KU. We have to be willing to pay for A.I.s. When we stop hiring graduate students with teaching ability, we retard the main
A telephone report from the state toxicology laboratory indicated that the body of Mrs. Thea Lynch Clark, an assistant instructor of English, had unbound morphine in the blood, J. A. Sanders, assistant county coroner, said yesterday.
Sanders said unbound hormone indicated an injection had taken place shortly before death. He said the report also indicated alcohol was in the blood.
He said the telephone report was only a partial report. The official cause of death will be determined later when the written report is received, he said.
priority of the University, which is to teach undergraduates."
Mrs. Clark's body was found July 12 in a pickup truck on a county road north of Lawrence. Sheriff's officers indicated that drug paraphernalia had been found in the
Morphine tied to A. I.'s death
Mrs. Clark was arrested June 10 after a friend called police because Mrs. Clark had passed out after an injection. Police obtained a warrant and arrested her after she was revived for possession of heroin and cocaine.
Shapiro said a balance between qualified and unqualified graduate students should be maintained.
"Some departments use these A.1. positions to subsidize graduate programs, so graduate students will teach, despite their qualifications," he said. "I'm not saying graduate students shouldn't be used, but there can't be a total subsidization."
Shapiro has concentrated his study in six departments, psychology, English history,
Western Civilization, business and math. The project began as a political plank on which Shapiro ran for Student Senate in the spring.
After conducting more than 25 hours of interviews and extensive research into the problem, Shapiro said, he wanted to see the project through to a final report, which he plans to submit to Chancellor Archie Dykes by the end of the summer.
Shapiro said he thought most problems with poor graduate student teaching assistants evolved out of the poor selection processes.
"Probably the number one priority should be an interview with the applicant," he said.
"Some kind of personal contact must be made."
Only one department which Shapiro studied, the Western Civilization department, requires a personal interview, Shapiro said. Many departments have no personal contact with the T.A.s and A.L.s before they are hired.
Tom Donaldson, senior instructor in the
See CLASSROOM QUALITY page 4
Minimum code inspection of city houses is clarified
By LYNN PEARSON Kansan Staff Reporter
But, Clark said, this procedure probably will be used in only one out of every 100
The city recently determined that it had authority to seek warrants for the authority to seek warrants.
This decision ended a dispute between Clark and city attorney Milton Allen. Allen had said that the city must show probable cause before seeking a warrant even in a designated inspection area. Clark had said the fact that a house was in the inspection area could have led to Clark's opinion was adopted by the city after several weeks of debate.
"Once we adopt the housing code that Commissioner Carl Mibec has been working on, we have to enforce it with all means available," Clark said. "That is a really difficult task." The district court order to enter a house in the designated inspection area."
Mibek's new housing code will be presented to the commission at next week's meeting and will probably be adopted within the next few weeks, Clark said.
"The primary reason for seeking
The only designated housing inspection area in the city is east of campus and has been occupied since 1972. To date about 150 of these houses have been brought within the city's code. Thirteen owners have resided there, no inspection has been made on their housing.
Radio club future sound for fall
By KELLY SCOTT
Kansas Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas Amateur Radio Club will resume operations this fall from its new headquarters in the Learned Hall addition, Richard K. Moore, professor of electrical engineering and trustee of the club, said yesterday.
The club was told in May that it would have to remove its equipment from its
present site in the Center for Research, Inc. (CRES) building on West Campus to make room for the Endowment Association of Southern California to renovate the building and move in October 1.
The radio club's equipment includes a 100-volt battery, power recently erected at the GRES building.
promise, Eric Hardman, Salina senior and president of the club, said.
The agreement between the radio club and the school of engineering was a com-
Hardman said that Martin Henry, director of property management for the Endowment Association, had at first told him to vacate the premises immediately.
SenEx discusses financial topics
"I wrote letters, had conversations with him, but I got nowhere," Hardman said. "I wasn't there."
By ALISON GWINN
The University of Kansas is the "leader in our own system, and fairly advanced national institution," said the Exigency Report, Gerhard Zuther, chairman of SenEx, said at the SenEx
He said that the national American Association of University Professors office's reaction to KU's Financial Exigency Report was sour, but said that they were possibly arguing from principle, since the report was fairly new in its field.
Zuther talked about a meeting he had with senate chairmen from other Kansas Regents Schools. Emporia Kansas State College, Kansas State University and Wichita State University were the other three schools represented.
In addition to the exigency report, the chairman at the meeting discussed salary increases in the first year of a three-year program aimed at 10 per cent salary increases for faculty
The Wichita State representative said he could probably get the 19 per cent increase,
Zuther said it occurred to all four
Zather talked about a regular Senate committee on salaries which exists at K-State. He said he thought the processes of that salary committee were flowing through the University of Kansas system, without being connected with governance.
chairman at the meeting that they didn't know legislators outside of their geographic regions and that they had to depend on the staff of the state office and colleagues to get hold of the legislators.
He suggested that the Planning and
career committee examine
possibilities of the organization.
As usual, Zuther said, a lot of proposals would dwindle upon the price of wheat.
People Breipohl, professor of electrical
people will believe is a major undertaking.
Will believe is a major undertaking.
Zuther also said that KU's decision on the Public Employer-Employee Relations Board (PERB) bearings would be the beacon that the people on the PERB board would follow.
At K-State, Zuther said, every faculty must fill out a slip each month saying how many days of annual vacation and how many days of sick leave he took.
Sick-leave for faculty members was also discussed at the meeting.
Zuther said he and the Wichita State representative argued strongly against that procedure, and he said that KU had more of an honor system.
He said the Chancellor's office was preparing a statement, which a faculty member would tell out after a certain deadline, years ago, and at what time that faculty member had worked, that gave his entitled sick student many days of sick leave he had used.
Zuther reported on a meeting with Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, in which the fact that the Financial Exigency Board had been involved in the faculty handbook was reiterated.
He also said the Faculty Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities committee wouldn't be able to act quickly enough to include the report on faculty tenure in the faculty handbook, which he said might be delayed.
SenEx members also discussed possible cover letters to committees concerning additions to the committee's charges for the fall. The SenEx members decided to send the charges to committee members before the University Council approves them.
Henry denied that he changed his mind and said that the club was welcome to keep its equipment in the CRES building until the arrival to begin renovation of the building.
Hardman said Henry had now modified his original directive and would allow the club to keep its equipment in the building until it found a place to move.
Moore said he didn't think there was any problem in making arrangements with the teachers.
He said the association was just interested in working out an arrangement so there wouldn't be any damage to the club's equipment while construction was going on.
The Endowment Association will occupy the entire building after it is remodeled.
Moving the radio club from the GRES building to Learned will be expensive and time-consuming. Hardman said, because he had attached antenna will have to be disarranged.
Hardman said Moore was in favor of moving the club because he thought the club would be more accessible to the main campus.
Moore said it hadn't been determined which rooms in Learned the club would occupy, but there was a firm agreement that they would move to Engineering that they would locate there.
"I agree with him on that part." Hardman said, where we are now is a better place.
The 25-member club serves a large number of students from foreign countries by making phone patches that enable them to speak with relatives, Hardman said.
There is space at Learned for the tower and antennae, Moore said.
The club wanted to remain in the GRES building, but the Endowment Association, which owns the building, was afraid that it would be a security couldn't be maintained, Hardman said.
warrants is for comprehensive code enforcement in the Hill area," Clark said. "No complaint is necessary in these houses, Probable cause is satisfied by the fact that it is within a comprehensive code enforcement area."
Clark said the city would focus on tenant occupied housing. This is a reasonable line to draw, he said, because when there is danger to an individual who lives in his own house it involves only himself.
But, Clark said, when it is a commercial setting with a third party endangered, the city must protect the safety of that individual through forced housing inspection. The emphasis on landlord-tenant situations is also a practical one. Clark said.
Inspection in the remainder of the city will be on a command basis, he said.
"Almost all the refusals for inspection from landlords rather than from individual tenants."
Cities must obtain warrants for force inspection because the Fourth Amendment
Contracts awarded for K-10 freeway
TOPEKA (AP)—Contracts totaling $7,025,951 for work on the K-10 freeway east of Lawrence were awarded yesterday by the Kansas Highway Commission.
The 7.3-mile, four-lane project will begin 2.5 miles east of Lawrence and extend east to connect with a freeway segment under construction in Johnson County.
One of the contracts awarded was a $362,150 contract for grading which went to Dartmouth College.
Bridge contracts went to L. G. Barcus and Sons Inc, Kane City, Kan., for four construction projects in Iowa, Minnesota, Iowa, $142,037 for two; Construction Contractors Inc., Shawnee Mission, $1,199,177 for five; and Wittower Construction Co., Oksaloa, $160,384 for one.
protects all persons against unreasonable search and seizure. Clark said.
When the housing inspector applies to the district court judge for an inspection warrant, Clark said, he must fill out an affidavit swearing that he is the duly sworn agent of the inspector is in a designated housing inspection area and that the owner has refused him entry.
"The them judge signs the warrant, which is effective immediately. The housing inspector can take the sheriff with him to gain entry if necessary," he said.
Clark said he thought the change of the housing inspection position from the public works department to the community development department was a good structural change in the administration of the housing inspection program.
The commission authorized city manager Infant Watson, to make the change at Tampa.
"There is a close relationship between minimum housing inspection and community development." Clark said. "Many of the housing rehabilitation projects loans and grants requested through community commitment are to bring a house up to code."
watson said that each of the housing rehabilitation projects in Lawrence neighborhoods must be certified in order to be in compliance with the housing code.
"This change will take away the police power emphasis of the inspection program and focus on the affirmative role of the community development project, he said.
Clark said he was especially pleased with the new position created Tuesday by the commission. The position will be filled by a law student who will begin working in August on a part-time basis with the housing inspection program.
"The law student will make sure that all the statutes are followed and the cases are crossed." Clark said he "will make certain that the statutes and ordinances are followed to the letter in the inspection."
Clark said that if the inspection procedures were followed accurately, there would be a much better chance of winning if the city had to go to court.
KU clerical survey to assess workloads
By BILL KATS
Classified clerical workers and faculty of the University of Kansas College of Liberal Arts and Sciences yesterday offered their suggestions for improving a draft of a fictional novel to assess workloads of the 84 full-time Civil Service clerical workers in the College.
The survey, which will be distributed personally to the clerical staff next week, is being initiated by a subcommittee of the steering committee on classified appointments of the College in hopes of improving services and making recommendations for the University Security Commission on the upgrading of positions. The survey isn't mandatory.
The subcommittee has decided that the findings should be kent anonymous.
However, Jim Feldstein, director of central personnel for the University, expressed some concern over how much of the findings should be kept anonymous.
He said that according to University counsel, any specific questions obtained from the questionnaire concerning the efficiency of supervisors and co-workers were legally open to access to those persons as a matter of due process.
This could be especially effective in influencing work conditions in offices
where only one classified worker is employed. he said.
However, Charles Kiesler, professor of psychology and member to the sub-committee of the ABA Research Group, be retrieval in such great detail because of the summarized nature of the results.
Kiesler said that Robert Cobb, Dean of the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences, guaranteed the anonymity of information from the survey.
"We'll burn the questionnaires if necesarvary." Kiesler said.
Disclosure of personal identity on the questionnaire is optional, but the University should protect those persons who do disclose their names. Kiesler said.
Kiesler said he would forward to the subcommittee a suggestion made by Feldstein that Cobb be the only person with knowledge of the plan to prevent unintended use of survey data.
Feldstein, whose office is responsible for classifications, assured the workers that he wouldn't use the survey to ask questions about the downgrading of jobs unless the individual worker asked that his specific situation be treated as such.
Kieler said that the survey's 24-page
the civil service office favored
impress the civil service office.
2
Thursday, July 24, 1975
University Daily Kansan
Children's home request passed
By MARK PENNINGTON
Kannan Staff Reporter
Villages, Inc., a non-profit group home for dependent and neglected children, has stepped over one more hurdle in its bid to build a community 41-acre tract of land south of Lawrence.
The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission yesterday passed a request by the group for a conditional permit to use the site as a new site of the original site atop Pleasant Ridge.
The last hurdle for the group will be the Douglas County Commission meeting on August 13. If the commissioners pass the proposal, they will win a race. However, if the commissioners receive a complaint signed by 20 percent of the owners who have land within 1,000 feet of the proposed site, a unanimous decision instead of a simple majority will be adopted.
Both county commissioners Arthur Heck and I. J. Stoneback reserved comment on how they would vote on the group's request. Mr. Heck, in bright light said he would support the request.
"I supported the program the first time around and I support it even more now," he said. "The program has found a nice site in our work and I believe it has a lot of merits."
The original plan was withdrawn in April in the face of heavy opposition from neighbors. The planning commission had unanimously approved the plan.
Lance Burr, Douglas County project director for Villages Inc., said the original site met with some criticism so it was changed to avoid further problems.
Burr said that the new site was very secluded so one could see the river from nearby.
"This is one of the most beautiful areas in Douglas County," Burr said. "We're asking permission to make a lot of young kids very happy."
Burr said the children that would be placed in the residences weren't juvenile delinquents but kids whose parents were not present. In other cases, illnesses, were unable to take care of them.
"In some cases these types of children are sent to the boys' industrial school simply because there is no other place to put them," Burr said. "These kids should be as social outcasts. Their only crime is not having parents that can take care of them."
Burr said the cottages would cost about $100,000 apiece.
"These cottages will be beautiful from an architectural standpoint," Burr said. "They'll be very well constructed and have fine landscaping. Nobody should worry about these cottages devaluing adjacent buildings, anything, the property value will increase."
However, Burr said the residences courts or a swimming pool for the children.
"There will be very few recreational opportunities for the kids," he said, "because we want them to use the same facilities as kids in town do. We want these kids to live as near the same type of life as any other kid."
W. M. Lucas Jr., commission member,
told Burr he was concerned with the type of sanitation system the cottages would use. Burr said the project would utilize a lagoon system instead of a regular septic tank.
"We have determined that' the lagoon system is what we want because it is economical and less trouble than the standard septic tank," he said.
Lacus was told that the waste seeping into the ground would be purified after flowing 150 feet. The nearest house to the proposed lagoon is 800 feet away.
Vern Dow, a consulting geologist for the Villages Inc., said about eight borings were made in the area of the lagoon and all were dry except one. This, he said, would indicate that there was no swelling through the soil and causing a pollution danger, it would sink into the hill.
"We feel this is a very stable area to construct the lagoon," he said. "We made far more drills than were necessary to provide a safe spot for the location of the lagoon."
Two or three members of the audience attending the meeting objected to the site plan for various reasons. One of the most vocal was William Jennings, a local farmer who has 400 acres that adjoins the Villages site.
Jennings said his main complaint was that the water from the lagoon would keep seeping into the cabin.
"They say the water won't seep through, but I know for a fact it will," he said. "I can show you places right now where ditches have been created in my fields from the last rainfall. It's coming down from the hill and that lagoon will just increase it."
Clinton bill goes to Senate floor
Lansan Staff Reporter
By THERESE MENDENHALL
A bill appropriating $10 million for projects like Clinton Parkway was reported out of the U.S. Senate Appropriations Committee Tuesday and will be considered by the Senate next week.
"It can be safely assumed that the bill will be approved by the Senate the same day it reaches the floor," said Bob Dowen, a legislative assistant for Senator Bob Dole, R-Kan.
The bill appropriates $4.19 billion for the Department of Transportation for fiscal year 1976, which began July 1. Local officials hope that $4.13 million of the $10 million provided for the construction of late airways will be allotted for Clinton Parkway.
After the President signs the bill, allotment of the funds will be the responsibility of the president. Werner Siems, director of public affairs for the highway administration, said the administration would establish criteria for distributing the funds after the bill became law.
After the bill passes the Senate it will be sent to a conference committee where differences between the House and Senate versions of the bill will be resolved. The committee will send the revised version to the President.
Werner said that Clinton Parkway's
priority over similar projects in other states, as established in the legislative history of the bill, would improve the parkway's chances for receiving the full amount requested for it. The parkway's priority was established as part of the bill's history in the House of Representatives when Rep. Larry Winn, R-Kan., addressed the House during a debate on the bill that way had been given priority when the appropriation was authorized in 1974.
Dowen said Kansas Senators Bob Dole and James Pearson would establish the
parkway's priority in the Senate by making a similar arrest to the Senate when the bill goes to trial.
Downen said Kansas Congressmen weren't sure whether the federal funding would be applicable to the right-of-way acquisition for the parkway, which was scheduled to begin in the fall of 1978. Werner said he thought since the parkway was open and available for use, it would be eligible for federal funding for right-of-way acquisition, too. Most projects eligible for the funding on one count are eligible on both counts, he said.
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We have never said that graduate students should be turned away from the classroom. We have no knowledge in their particular areas. We have said, however, that graduate students who have no experience in the classroom will help from their more senior colleagues.
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This is to respond to a letter from Bob Chovietti criticizing some of the work of the Commission on the Quality of Classroom Instruction. If you cut through the tacky innuendos and gross oversimplifications, Bob has raised two very serious pedagogical issues that have been debated for many years.
Teaching quality study defended
To the Kansan Editor:
There are several other issues which have been raised by others who haven't understood the work of the commission. These questions accuse the commission of being one-sided in education or teaching or even encouraging communication of obsolete materials.
Our emphasis has always been one of adjusting the balance between research and teaching, not doing one to the exclusion of the other. I sincerely believe that everyone recognizes fact that some of the great successes of tomorrow are graduate students today.
I have answered these objections by stating that the commission is composed of two members at the freshman-sophomore level, three at the junior-senior level and two who are members of the graduate school. It doesn't favor levels or disciplines.
-LETTER TO THE EDITOR-
Now to the two points that I believe Bob was tring to raise.
First, I think Bob was telling us that teaching is the communication of fact. To the commission, this is but a very small part of teaching, and to limit ones to this definition is indeed very narrow. I think that if Bob would step back for a moment and consider the great teachers they have had, then we can expect them to communicate facts, but that they also have had a significant effect on his values, morals and ethics in general.
A real teacher is one who will help the
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Distinguished professorships have consistently gone to top-notch scholars and researchers, usually to the exclusion of excellent teachers. There are exceptions, such as Dr. George, professor of philosophy, who won the HOPE award several years ago.
student discover facts, not just communicate them.
The other major issue that was raised concerns teaching versus research. There obviously has to be a balance between the two, and the commission is stating that we should be more excellent teachers and that we have enough excellent researchers.
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The questions the commission is raising do not concern the elimination of research, graduate education or anything of the like. But they do, in very general terms, demand a true commitment on the part of the University to improve classroom teaching.
We also must keep in mind that many of our excellent teachers also write books for them.
Hathaway's therapy suggested by Ford
WASHINGTON (AP)—Secretary of Interior Stanley K. Hathaway said he was tired and depressed and offered to resign last week, but President Ford encouraged him to seek medical care instead, a White House spokesman acknowledged yesterday.
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Hathaway, who has been in office less than a month, entered Bethesda Naval Hospital for psychiatric treatment eight days ago.
A White House spokesman said Hathaway met with Ford on July 15 and told the President that he was extremely tired, that he was suffering from mild depression and asked the president if perhaps he should leave.
There was no immediate indication how long Hathaway will be hospitalized, but a spokesman for the Interior Department was briefed that the secretary is expected to recover fully.
Ford told Hathaway that his first concern was for the secretary's health and sent him to Dr. William Lukash, the White House physician, who recommended that Hathaway be hospitalized, the spokesman said.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, July 24, 1975
3
Pill to have rival in hormone-emitting IUD
By ALICE DELEHANTY
Kansas Staff Reporter
Kansan Staff Reporter
An intrauterine birth control device developed at McColm Laboratories on West Campus, which will be as effective as oral contraceptives will be on the market by the end of this year. Takeru Higuchi, professor of chemistry, said yesterday.
Clinical studies conducted in Chicago, Mexico City and Hong Kong showed the device to be 98.5 per cent effective in preventing preemacryn. Hiuchi said.
Preliminary investigation and design of the device was done by Higuchi in conjunction with Alza Corporation, a private research corporation. Alza financed the device for about $1 million. Collim Laboratories. McColium later bought out Alza's local research center.
Higuchi, vice president of exploratory research for Alza from 1968 to 1972, developed the device during those three years.
The device, released under the trademark Progesterol, has already been approved and put in use in Canada and Germany and would be approved in the United States. Hunch said.
Unlike conventional IUD's, which act by irritating the uterine tissue, Progesteros acts through emission of progestagen hormones. These hormones affect uterine tissue so it won't accept sperm implantation. Hinuchi said.
Progesterone is more desirable than contraceptives because the hormonal agent
is delivered directly to where the action takes place, Higuchi said. Oral contraceptives and implanted or injected hormones, he said, all deliver the hormone to the system rather than directly to the target area.
The task of the researchers at McColllum was to determine the plastic material that would release the correct amount of the hormone.
Progesteros is a T-shaped plastic container which is inserted into the uterus, Hormone
"The Progestoset device involves a thermodynamic concept. As long as we have crystalline hormone in the package, this should not interfere with nature of the plastic barrier." Hirschi said.
"It certainly is a marked improvement over conventional IUD's," he said.
Higuchi said he anticipated that Pietroosert would be well received on the platform.
Since Progesteroset does affect uterine tissue characteristics, there is the possibility of breakthrough bleeding with its use. Breakthrough bleeding is uterine bleeding during the menstrual cycle at any time other than the period.
The marketed product is designed to release hormones for one year, but could be designed to work effectively for a two-year period, Higuiji said.
R. A. S. Schwegelw, a physician at Dr. W. Kramer, a nurse at Dr. Service wasn't in favor of intrauterine
Some of the groups Whompr has made donations to are the parent-teacher organizations at several schools, the University of Kansas Endowment Association, Penn House and the KU Rugby Club.
Although whitemper is primarily an environment which are not environmental groups but which help in environmental causes are likely candidates for financial support, Arly will probably be one of them.
"Whomp" is the sound made by a machine crushing cans and bottles. From that sound comes the name of a local environmental group, Whomper, Inc., which has been financing local community projects and is looking for more.
Currently, Whomper is sponsoring a girls' softball team, the Deerfield Whompers, and will hold a "Splash for Trash" day August 2. The team will use a private Lawrence Municipal Pool for each large grocery bag of clean, unlabeled cans to be used in the school cafeteria between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m., that day.
Whomper quells problems benefits local environment
Allen said his group was considering a small park by the Kaw River, but no plan.
"The problem with Whomper was that it fled the room and was guarded, confused enthusiasts," he said.
"We're a small organization with a small amount of revenue," he said.
By JACK FISCHER
Kansan Staff Reporter
Whomper, originally a University-funded organization, was plagued by debts and disorganization since its inception in 1971.
Large amounts of uncrushed, unsold metal cars began accumulating in March 1972 at the north end of Memorial Stadium, where the crusher was housed, Allen said. When the pile continued to grow because no buyers could be found for the recycled materials, the operation site was moved to bldg and Hampshire streets. This was done by the team of administrators, who didn't want people seeing the trash at commencement.
"It it wasn't thought out at all," Allen said. "The assumption was that if you had good motives, somebody would come along in a truck and pay money for it."
Other problems were evident before the center was moved. One was a lack of
Published at the University of Kansas
and is in preparation for its holidays and examination periods. Second-
day admission is free. Subscriptions by mail are $8 a semester, or
$1 a year. Student studentships are $3 a semester.
organization. The University Senate committee supervising Whomper was to report to the Senate monthly but met infrequently and apparently kept no minutes.
An unsuccessful attempt to raise money by selling Whomper T-shirts left the organization with a $1,000 debt to the endowment association.
Whomper is now a nonprofit corporation and has paid all past debts considered legitimate by the management, Arly Allen said.
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"The corporation was organized under the laws of the state of Kansas as a profit-making body, one of its objectives being to help create significant resources in support KU through the equity position held by the KU Endowment Association," H吉uchi said.
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"I do not have the data to make a comment on" he said.
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ters of national RELEASE BING.
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CLASSIFIED RATES
one three five
times times five
time time time
15 words or less .01 $1.50 $2.00 $2.50
Each additional word .01 .02 .03
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Wednesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be billed in person or by calling the UDX business office at 864-1538.
FOR SALE
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS - Nagaraigurud
The stereo components for less are the power amp,
the subwoofer, and the gain. The best benefit is
you can listen to both at the same time.
Western Civilization Notes—New on Sale!
*Note that Western Civilization!*
Makes sense to use them.
*For 2 class preparation*
*For 2 class preparation*
*“New Analysis of Western Civilization!*
*Availability of Western Civilization*!
Now fire merchandise close-outs, etc. New selling huge grocery stock from a Chicago supermarket at today's retail prices, less 1.3 at checkout and less 2.0 at other locations. Mayfair's Salvage Center, 628 Vermont.
HIGHLIGHT PROTEIN horse meat dog food. 24-14 oz
case, case no. discount. Meter GS
68 Vermont.
1972 Yamaha 600cc, red and white. $700 or will
call. Call 843-7450. 7-30
Come on out! Lots of shade and parking—to the kitchen, patio, or outside. A vintage antique furniture and other furniture, antiques collectables. Wooden products, nail kringles, 4 l. biscuit buckets, ammo boxes, apple boxes, baskets, plastic containers, useful kitchenware, useful furniture $10 and up. Large Zucchini squish, 15c each, 2 for $28. Beef by ib, or chicken by ib, 15c each, 4a lb. Cold pop and beer, grown potatoes, 14c a lb. Cold pop and beer, cherries, nectarines, lettuce, onion, cabbage, shell, burkey, soy gum, popcorn, assorted nuts, fresh country eggs, strawberry straw and almond. Open kitchenette with
SALE, AR8a Speakers (Reg. $295) $235.00
1 table chair 4 speakers
$2 each, $2 each A TABLE XA Table 1. Pilot 2.
Summer sale Hero! Also many good L'1's at $7
summer sale Hero! Also many good L'1's at $7
upstairs: B8-2047
Upstairs: B8-2047
Leaving town! Panasonic Quad unit-turnable.
3213, 4 speakers, earphones 7:00-12:44
3213
1966 Rambler Classic 6 cyl automatic, new tires,
miles. $450. Millage: 844-8907. 7-24
8" Dodge Cornet A.T. Many parts new. $480.
Call 842-1962.
66 Rambler convertible - automatic, excellent
66 Rambler convertible - predicts some work. Must
843-0624 7-24
WV Bugs, from 1964 to 1974, all colors—4 speed
bearings. Jayhawk WV 843-2200. 7-24
Jayhawk WV 843-2200. 7-24
Central air units for sale Immediate installation
Central air units for sale Mobile's Homeiles
W. 6th. 842-7700 7-244
Buy a 1974 VW Bug today. Balance of factory
warranty is $50,000. Cust: T-24
Jiahawk VW - 842-2300
Jiahawk VW - 842-2300
Just arrived—shipment of Rabbitts and Scrioelcros
come by for a test drive. Jawkw. WJW 843-220-
1607.
Squareback Wagons. Wagons from three, from 1888 to 1971. Jayhawk VW VMs 82-210. 7-24
1968 VW Bus, converted to camper; ice box. 7k4,
gas stove, Jayhawk W485-220-290
AUTOMOBILES
SIRLOIN STOCKADE
11. 9 AM
IS YOUR CAR AS READY FOR
YOUR VACATION AS YOU ARE?
DON'S AUTO SERVICE
900 New Jersey
If not, call—
1105 Massachusetts
TACOS
Casa de Taco
$3.50 per Dozen
1974 Vainilla Enduro 125, one owner, 3200 miles
Jayhawk WV 843-2200. 7-24
1972 Impaul Custom, Pec. Automat., air, vinyl
Jawhack, JWV, 843-2210
7-3#
Closeout of all 1974 Demo's and Rental cars, save
Jayhawk VW. VW. B45-2210. 7-24
1971 Capri, 4 speed. Air conditioned, low, 2-14
Jaywalk. JawkW 843-2210.
1970 Fontona T37 2 d r.,ht. auto, PS air, piw air,
Jawhack VJH 843.2200 7.34
1971 Datum L'h. Luller P.U, white, 4 speed,
Jayhawk WV 843-2200, 7-24
1680 Opel Kadett 2 dfr. standard, only $795.00
Jayhawk VW 843-2200. 7-24
Did you know that Webster's Mobile Homes have mobile homes for use at all times? Webster's mobile homes for use at all times! Webster's mobile homes for use at all times!
Higher Glider, Bill Bennett Delta Wing 222B. Many
extras. Call 843-6879.
7-29
Waterbed for sale: King size, black fur
frame, and mattes. $50. 843-1912
7-24
843-9880
Must sell 1725 Kuwaiti 250 Trilogue and 1794
Ukrainian 250 Trilogue. Contact call:
Condell Rocks or Lukely at 841-612-7632.
Melntoh C26 Pre-map and 2100 power. Like new condition. Best offer. Call 841-7093-7-30
Typewriter war. We have just accepted, as trade-
ers, the typewriter and typewriter
typewriters. All were in service up until
they were traded in. To avoid having "to store them
in their boxes," we sent them to Strong Office Systems 0400 Vernon 842-3169, Strong Office Systems 0400 Vernon 842-3169.
Bedroom furniture, bed. 2 dresser, tables and
lamps. Price open to call. Call Frank K.
453-690-7188. 288
Kineo & Camera Sale: Dual 1241 Twillburst, T20
Kineowool, 2022 amp. aump. Mintwood, C220 Two
Wooden, 2022 amp. aump. Wheaton, C220 Two
Free. Med. sized dog needs good home. Gentle
loving and houndsmug. 815-049-104. 7:29
Honeywell Penetra Spatitude w/ f1.8 lens $165.
Must sell fast. Call 843-3716. 7-29
Electric Electrici Praxis 48, almost new, retails at $15.10. Will pay for $25.00. Call 843-7483. at 31
FOR RENT
Johnson Rental Company. Studio, 1 bedroom, 1 bathroom. Located in KU Medical Center, Kansas City KU
Rental service up to the minute listings of
free rental offices in Lawrence, Lawrence
Rental Exchange. 842-255-3600.
Rooms - Kitchen privileges. One block to campus.
Bathrooms - Kitchen privileges. One block to campus.
842- 807- 826 or 842- 806-
Rooms furnished, single, with or without cooking facilities for men, borders KU and near Cairo.
Apartments: 1, 2, and 4 bedroom furnished.
BURKES KU and near town. Phone 834-757-678.
Extra rice rooms with private kitchens. One
room has a large parking, utilities,妒
Reasonable rent: 843-759-6028
JAYHAWKER TOWERS-2 - 2-bedroom, all utilities
JAYHAWKER TOWERS-2 - 2-bedroom, all utilities
PARKING W 300 W, parking, laundry
PARKING W 300 W, parking, laundry
Spacious country living - 3 bedroom basement
2 bedrooms, 1 bath. Great family room, family
place, family room, Gridd preferred
Wetlands, pool, tennis court, patio
New spacious apartment. Furnished, all electric heating and air conditioning, air conditioned. 7-28
1555 or 843-1199
Male Graduate Student wents some to share
mortgage apartment for coming year Call 731-6904
One bedroom, 3 room air conditioned apt in 1200
block of Tennessee. 2 air conts. 843-2718 or
843-2719.
Did you know that you can rent mobile homes at Webster? 827-7700, Webster's Mobile Home
WAGON WHEEL
1401 Ohio
Open 11 A.M.-Midnight
Sandwiches, Delicatessen, Foods
GAY COUNSELING
& RAP
for referrals
into center
or
864 3506
842 7505
WANTED
ARMADJILLO
BEAD CO.
710 MASS.
Now Reopened
10-$ p.m.
Beads,
Kinds,
Silver,
Turtq.
Chain,
Leather,
Chokers,
Earrings
Indian Jewelry
50% off
Two female roommates 18-24 for hour experiment with each other. The first one hour mandatory free counseling $16, plus each one hour mandatory free counseling $20.
Roommates wanted for apartment. Call Mark, 842-7498 after 5. 7-28
Female Subleaves 18-25 for $\frac{1}{4}$ hour experiment.
Male Subleaves 18-25 for $\frac{1}{4}$ hour experiment weekly for a case of bovine. Call 360-3032.
Need female roommate beginning fall semester
843-292-11 before Aug. 1, or 843-367-31
- 31
Pay Hel Aug. Rent. Want to subscribe full for-
mer, please contact us during Mid August. Call 841-1884 after 5:30 PM.
Madras Indian Shop
Wanted: Information, Papers for English Commun-
*International* Studies Center - 1807 excursion
*Independent Study Center*. 1807 excursion
NOTICE
Female roommate wanted. Own furnished room.
843-7579 $33/month and electricity. 7-28
843-7579 after a fee.
For the Finest in
Employment Opportunities
JAMES LIQUORS
Female massage for a 2 BR unit in a 4 plow room, plus bath and jazz. Rent $75 and utilize the room's facilities.
The University of Kansas, office of Financial Aid provides a student assistance for the 1952 school year. Applicants must be in graduate degree and be admitted to graduate study at the University of Kansas. Students must have completed student employment consisting of personal interviews with the University and Community employees and may also apply for the position if applicants should submit a resume and two re-entry resumes to the Financial Aid Office, 84 Strong Hall; University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas; prior to July 29, 1953, 7:30 p.m., Kansas State University's financial aid o
Permanent. Full time Legal Secretary for interiors or commercial law. Must be 21 or over, Confidentially required. Must be able to take accurate short term appointments. Must have salary: $45 to $50 depending on skills and experience. Will pay vacation after one year of continuous leave. Will travel day through Friday. Interesting and challenging work in a busy office. The Douglas County Juvenile Court, 3rd floor, Courhouse, for application, Ideal Opportunity.
Cold Beer & Chilled Wine
9th Street Center
(Next to 'Hole in The Wall')
Photographic Models: Earn $10/hr. Send name,
telephone number, and photograph to fox 2106,
300-749-8000.
COST PLUS 10%~Stainless equipment. All major
plumbing, electrical, and HVAC systems
(tenors or packages). Call Dave. Phone 852-
347-8600.
Authentic, Handcrafted
Schumm Food Company blowing for & now. Carry apples from: 8:00 AM A.M. ~ 10:30 fr. TFr. on third fr.
Indian Jewelry,
Penner's Cycle Barn
Norton Ducati
Moto Guzzi
Used Motorcycle
JULY CLEARANCE
Executive-style gourmet parties planned, catered. The girls worked hard to create a beautiful shared private pool. For details call 514-690-3787.
842-0722
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT! Let us do your printing while you wait at The Quick Copy Center. Copies cost $10,500; copies cost $4.50, 1,000 copies cost $13.99; want your business at the Quick Copy Center.
Arts and Crafts
71 Kawasaki 500 Mach III $^{5}395^{00}$
19 W. 9th
74 Kawasaki 350 dirt bike
Like New $695⁰⁰
72 Norton Commando '995°
71 Norton Commando
10-5:30 Daily
Civil Commando $895^{00}
Very Clean
44 Marine Corps Base
Thursdays'til 8
66 Norton chopper
Jardine headers
Extended forks $695^{00}$
15 miles east of Lawrence
on Hiway 10 585-1048
Mon.-Fri. 9:00-6:00
PHOTOGRAPHY Shooting Gallery Specializing in Personalized Portraits in natural surroundings, paintings and any artwork. Read more about photography. 811-243-96, 12-5 p.m. Tuesday to you. **tj**
Sat. 9:00-3:00
Fish Platter, fish salad, and potato $12-29-
Monday night at Sirlin Stockade.
HOMOSEXUALITY PRESENTS PROBLEMS
HOMESEXUALITY PRESENTS PROBLEMS
Grace Gay Liberation, the Gatherings, 7:30 a.m. and 10 midnight six each month. Office office hours: 8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
843-356-2000 for referrals; for socializing, 843-352-9200.
TYPING
Typing in my home IMH selective with pixelet type. In the image, IMH has type 3799, and map is M147. Call Piho, 842-7598.
IBM Sectricic, paper or cloth, reasonable, experi-
rent仪诊, illustrations, or maps. Joan Caller
= 842-9127
Experienced typist—term paper, proofs, thues, mime.
Designed and tested proofing, spelling
corrected 843, WM. Wr. Mail.
**References:**
Experienced in typing themes, research papers,
magazine articles and technical papers.
Technical (carbon ribbon), electronic call.
TUI 911401.
SERVICES OFFERED
THIS IS BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is
available for your business. We can copy
Our service is fast and accurate, are responsible
for your data recovery needs.
LOST
Experienced in typing dissertations, these tese-
rates. Psych. Cal Lesele, 843-858.
rates. Psych. Lesele, 843-858.
rates. Psych. Lesele, 843-858.
rates. Psych. Lesele, 843-858.
HELP WANTED
POTION PARLOR
MATH TUTORING Competent. experienced tutor.
MATLAB Programming 101 125 131 145 151 158 165 171 182 192 Reasonable rates Call
Occasional day job, skilled and unskilled.
Leave name at 842-728-1 Equal Opportunity **tf**
Wake-up service available July 28-August Send an email with name, number, and when to call P.O. Box 62813 Saskatoon, SK
Lost Prescription glasses; silver frames; black glasses in red handbags case. Reward: 84,725 or 864-400-1144.
Organic Bio-degradable Hair and Skin Care Products in Recycle-able Bottles
Loye: Sun July 20, 2012, male clinic cat. Viviette
Louis: Sat August 9, 2012, male clinic cat.
Loye: Sun August 8
Found Near Traitjade Apartments--daring
landings near the lake, with brown markings, white porch,
ball hall and brick fireplace.
819 Vermont
843-9708
Essence Oils Mon-Saf.
Found. Ld. Hall, for Janie Loney, July 21 7-28
older Oliver Ld. Call: 842-729-258
YAMAHA
CR-1000 RECEIVER
the GRAMO PHONE shop
YP-800 TURNTABLE
YAMAHA
CR 1000 RECEIVER
Let Maupintour
Do The LEGWORK For You!!
CR 1000 RECEIVER
the GRAMO PHONE shop YP-800 TURNTABLE
If You're Planning on FLYING.
Do The LEGWORK For You
(NEVER an extra cost)
at the rear of
KIEF'S DISCOUNT
RECORD AND STEREO
(NEVER an extra cost for Airline tickets)
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
842-1544 SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS
Make your
SUA / Maupintour
travel service
PHONE 843-1211
Summer Vacation
Reservations now
T
KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest-900 Mass
4
Thursday. July 24, 1975
University Daliv Kansan
Classroom quality . . .
From page 1
Western Civilization department, said, "It is been common in the past to have as many as 20 people on each floor."
He said a rather complete accounting on the part of the applicant concerning his academic interests and his experience with conducting classes was required, as was an interview that judged how well the person would fit into discussion sections.
Donaldson said that in teaching evaluation surveys, A.L.s and T.A.s didn't rank very far, if at all, below full faculty instructors.
"We turn down highly qualified people all the time," he said. "That doesn't mean we need to get some bad apples. But we like to think that we have highly qualified A.I.s."
"There's a big difference between what people think they should think of A.I.s and T.A.s and what they actually think," he said.
Students tend to rank A.I.S. and T.A.S. lower than faculty members on what they think is important.
The basic process for hiring instructors requires each applicant to submit a resume,历任课程教师证书, school, college transcripts, letters of recommendation and his graduate record.
Russell Bradt, professor of mathematics,
said, "There isn't too much more you can
Most departments rank the applicants each year on the basis of this information, before they try to hire graduate students to teach.
"There's a certain amount of risk. Some of the T.A.'s aren't so good, but then, some of them are."
Shapiro said, "One problem the department had is that it had to go down to the third or fourth person on its list before it got one acceptance."
The math department had to ask about 30 T.A. applicants to teach before it had the eight instructors it needed for basic math courses. They said they there wasn't enough money in it.
Bradt said he couldn't think of many cases when T.A.S already teaching quit because of financial reasons, but some might not accept positions for financial reasons. He estimated that about one-third of their applicants accept.
The University of Kansas pays a maximum salary of $3,400 to graduate students for a school year of teaching, a second amount to about $303 a month, Sharon said.
"We're right in the middle of other universities as to what we pay A.I.S and T.A.s, but we don't give enough benefits," he said. "A very important step would be tuition waivers. They would make the positions so much more attractive."
Denaldson said it was possible for a T.A. or A.L. to make $3,500 or 3,600 a year.
"One way of attracting more highly
qualified graduate students is by paying higher wages," he said. "But, 'I don't believe that A.l.s and T.A.s should be paid handsomely.'"
Shapro said that options to low-quality graduate student teaching could be found.
"When you get down to the person you ranked 30th, that's when you start investigating whether you should put classes in front of professors teachers lecture courses," he said.
Different departments have various methods of evaluating applicants. For example, a committee of nine faculty members who rotate onto a three-member committee to rank an applicant on the basis of a 500-word theme explaining why he wants to teach, etc.
Gerhard Zuther, professor of English, said the evaluation of applicants for A.I. positions in the English department was closely linked to their admission to graduate school, and was "fairly stringent."
Shapiro said a problem also existed with foreign T.A.S. and A.L.s.
An examination that tests English fluency is falsely used as a criterion for ability to read.
"It tells us whether you know the language, but it doesn't tell us if they can speak the language," he said. "If they can't speak it, they can't teach with it."
Sapiro's report will recommend that graduate students with language problems be hired, but as researchers rather than as teachers for their first year at KU.
Shapiro also said more on-going training of T.A.S. and A.L.S was needed.
"There's no real training unless a department is concerned enough to do so."
Zuther said that in the English department every A.I. without prior teaching experience was required to attend the class he would teach, while it was being taught by a professor. He is in turn visited by the professor while he is teaching.
English department A.I.s also have weekly meetings in which specific details of teaching are discussed, and an evaluation at the end of the year, when the professor
exchanges papers with the A.I. to compare grading standards, he said.
"If we find a serious deficiency, the person isn't reappointed," he said.
Bradt also said T.A.S and A.I.s in the math department meet regularly with
Some departments videoteed instructors while they are teaching class and criticize them.
Donaldson said that in the Western Civilization department, A.I.s were required to read all the books for both semesters of the course.
In addition, instructors meet at least one hour each week with specialists in the field from which the readings for that week are taken.
Western Civilization instructors may also participate in teaching workshop sessions. Shapiro said removal policies for instructors were non-existent.
"The math department representative we talked to said they hadn't removed anyone for 12 years," he said. "There needs to be a safety policy for the removal of instructors."
John Tolleson, associate dean of the School of Business, said his school's fundamental problem was that it was using too much money. It would be. He said the problem was financial.
"Roughly, you can do four times as much teaching with graduate teaching assistants than with starting full-time faculty members," Tolleson said.
He said another problem was the shortage of people with Ph.Ds.
"There have been times when we have been so short-tailed that there's been little rain."
He said there was no problem retaining qualified graduate students in teaching positions, but it was difficult to keep the extremely qualified people.
"They want to devote full time to studies and to their dissertations because of the low level of compensation and the cost in terms of delay in completing their programs," he
Shapecro he said would probably ask the Student Senate to petition Dykes to pass the law. "We'll take it," he said.
Music campers will jazz it up
catch the CAROUSALE
tuba ensemble which he described as sounding "like an elephant choir with
The Blue jazz ensemble is directed by Bill Hartmann.
Tryouts were held during the first week of the camp for positions in the jazz ensembles. Barnes said the top five trumpets, trombones, saxophones and rhythm players of each band comprised the ensemble. He and his fellow musicians had jazz ensembles had 20 members each.
Two jazz ensembles from the Midwestern Music and Art camp will present their third and final concert at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in Swarthout recital hall.
Barnes refused to reveal the numbers he said, and he said, is customary with jazz concerts.
James Barnes, director of the concert jazz ensemble, said the concert would consist of the two jazz bands performing four numbers each.
He said, however, that there might be a
catch the
CAROUSEL
DON'T BE CAUGHT IN LEFT FIELD
Home run on HALTER TOPS from $3.99
Third base steal on SHORTS from $4.99
Line drive on LONG DRESSES in the ball park of $20.00
Short stop on JEANS from $6.99
some prewashed
Bases loaded on SWIMWEAR from $9.99
carOusel
Selling something? Place a want ad. Call 864-4358.
carOusel
DO YOU COMMUTE?
If so,why not share the costs and driving with other commuting students?
A carpool file matching students commuting from particular areas is available in the Student Senate office, 105B Kansas Union.
SIMILAR FILES ARE KEPT FOR STUDENTS SEEKING TUTORS AND ROOMMATES.
If you would like to take advantage of these services simply fill out the form below and include any information you feel is pertinent.
Name___ Phone___
Address___ Roommate ☐ Carpool ☐ Tutor ☐
Information___
A Student Senate Service Financed with Student Activity Fees
Bring to Student Senate office, Room 105B Kansas Union 864-3710
LOOKING FOR
A NEW NEST?
See
Jayhawker Towers Apts.
OPEN HOUSE
STARTS SATURDAY
OFFICE OPEN DAILY
Monday-Thursday til 8:00
Friday, Saturday & Sunday til 5:00
1603 W. 15th
Lawrence, Ks.
HOME SWEET HOME
LRQ
SUNSHINE
.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
No.168
Dyche Hall's early history
Monday, July 28, 1975
See page 4
Street repairs tomorrow affect Zone I parking
Tomorrow, barring rain, portions of Mississippi St. near the University of Kansas will be closed for routine resurfacing, requiring changes in some parking patterns near campus.
Leonard Hoover, city street engineer, said last week that Mississippi St. would be closed from 9th St. to the area behind the Kansas Union, roughly parallel to 13th St.
This will eliminate parking tomorrow along Mississippi St., including Zone I. However, the intersection of 11th and 68th streets would be closed traffic, he said, providing access to Zone X.
Parkway funds pass the Senate, go to conference
Mike Thomas, director of KU security and parking, said persons with cars registered for Zone I should park in Zone X while Zone I is inaccessible.
The Department of Transportation Appropriations Bill, which provides $10 million for the construction of projects like Clinton Parkway, is being considered in a conference committee after being passed by an 82-1 vote in the Senate Friday.
The conference committee will resolve differences between the House and Senate versions of the bill and send the final version to the President within a week, Bob Dowden, a legislative assistant for Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., said last week.
COLLEGE SOCCER
PITCHING
If the President sign the bill, the new law will be administered by the Department of Transportation. Werner Siems, director of public affairs in the Federal Highway Administration, said last week that when administration officials distributed the funds, they would consider the priority given to Clinton Parkway by Congress.
Local officials are preparing for the public hearing on the project, which is to be Aug. 20. The results of the hearing are needed for the preparation of the final environmental impact study by the consulting firm, Finney and Turnedsee.
County Commissioner Pete Whitenight said he hoped that the study could be ready by April 15, 1976, and that the preliminary engineering could be finished by the fall of 1976. The next step in the project, purchase of right-of-way, is the first step that may be eligible for the federal funding now being considered.
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Sweating it out
rce Berner, catatcher for the Student Senate, takes a break to wipe his brow during the administration student softball game yesterday. The administration won the game.
Seven per cent refunds approved by Union board
By BILL KATS
Kansan Staff Reporter
A 7 per cent refund for Kansas Union Bookstore purchases was approved Saturday at a meeting of the University of Memorial Corporation Board of Directors.
In a budget report to the board, the Fiscal and Financial Affairs Committee recommended that $66,391.22 of $75,771.58 available for distribution for the second half of fiscal year 1975 be used to bookstore the year. The $80,380.36 will be reserved for capital improvements.
A total of $174,716.71 net bookstore income available for distribution in fiscal year 2018 is $359,088.44.
The funds approved by the board Saturday apply only to purchases made from January 1, 1953 to June 30, 1975 and from September 1, 1976 to December 31, 1976 will be able to collect refunds for one year.
Only cash sales where blue skips or cash receipts are given out are subject to the refunds, Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Union, said Saturday.
Frank Burke, director of the Union, said a substantial number of sales slips from Period 6 hadn't been redeemed. They will redeemable for another six months, he said.
In other business, the board received the results of an 18-month study by the Committee on Purpose and Long-Range Development (CPLRD).
The study makes recommendations and offers implementation guidelines for
various projects designed to improve the entire Union operation.
Receiving top priority in the study was the recommendation to construct a satellite union to anticipate University growth west and southwest of the main campus. The university is the closest host of Allen Field House and southeast of Jawahra Towers Apartments.
The estimated cost for the proposed 25,000 square foot structure is $1,700,000. Primary funding for the project would come from student fees.
The satellite union would provide eating facilities, lounges, a sales area for sundries, an information center, and a bookstore for books other than texts.
Other projects suggested by the CPLRD include modification of the board's policy prohibiting sale of cereal malt beverages in the Union. Also suggested is a centralized food center, expanded study areas, improved food services and a limited sundry counter.
In further business, the board accepted an addition to its bylaws that would allow expansion of board membership to insure a certain level of representation on the board. Donald Alderson, dean of men and chairman of the ad hoc committee that made the recommendations, presented the bylaws to the board.
Some of these projects have already been implemented, others are one to three year projects, Pat Wolfe, CDLRD's administrative assistant, said.
The addition to Article 1 of the bylaws seeks to assure that membership on the
Board of Directors is representative of the student body, faculty, staff and alumni. If a majority of the board decides that board membership is not representative of living groups and minorities, it could add as many additional persons to its membership.
There are no blacks, Chicanos,
or American Indians on the board.
The president of the board, Bail Salome,
nominated a special subcommittee to study
expansion of board membership and make
recommendations on its future before
the September board meeting.
M. Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum and instruction in the School of Education, was elected as president of the Academy of Education in 1984 to doctorate in education from KU in 1984.
The board also elected its officers and members of its executive committee.
The board also approved plans for a Kansas Union open house with SUA to celebrate the Union's 50th anniversary. The open house will take place August 20, 21 and 22, during enrollment week. Refreshments will be available.
Seven members were elected to the 13 member executive committee. Six members are ex-officio members. Elected were: Bob Grant, SUA treasurer; Jossner Jackson, Johnson City senior; Arno Knapper, associate professor of business; Rosselle Postma, SUA vice president; Mary Lou Rosenberg, SUA president; Katherine Springer, alummus; and Katherine Giele, assistant director of programs, Kansas Union.
StudEx adds drug rider
By CONNIE BRUCE
By Contributor
Kansas Staff Reporter
The April 30th decision to drop the $28 prescription drug ride was reaffirmed at a hearing on Monday.
Several people present said they had received many phone calls and letters on the subject.
During an extensive discussion, members reviewed the circumstances of the original decision and the numerous responses received opposing the decision.
eede Tassheff, chairman of the Student Rights Committee, said, "This is one issue since I've been in the Senate that we have no unanimous amount of personal feedback on."
Rick Butin, a member of the Student
HDFL appointments forthcoming
By STAN STENERSEN Kansan Staff Reporter
James A. Sherman, professor of human development, has been appointed acting chairman of the department of human development and family life, and Judith H. R. McCormick, professor of human development, has been appointed acting associate chairman.
The appointments have yet to be formally approved by Robert CObb, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, but it is Friday the approval would be forthcoming.
"I am delighted to accept the nominations," Cobb said. "The College office will ascend as quickly as possible to their nominations."
Sherman and LeBlanc were moninated for the positions by the HDFL' faculty. They will serve until the start of the 1976-77 school year.
The vacancy in the chairmanship was created when Frances Horowitz, the previous chairman, was named associate director of Liberal Arts and Sciences on July 16.
Sherman said Saturday that the department decided to name two persons so that the chairman's work could be divided. He and LeBlanc have too many duties in office to handle all of them to handle the job alone, he said.
Blanc said she and Sherman had been so busy in their first days on the job that they didn't yet met to decide how the woman's responsibilities would be divided.
A search committee to nominate a permanent chairman will be established in the fall. Sherman said the department decided not to look for a permanent chairman immediately because the beginning of the school year was too close to permit an ex-
"In my opinion, she was the best department chairman in the country. Following her is like following a hurricane; you simply can't do it," he said.
Sherman praised Horowitz's work as chairman.
Sherman said he would continue to encourage the independent work of faculty committees within the department, whose organizational structure he described as "a
Health Advisory Board, was present to explain the basis for the board's decision
Several questions were raised about the board's basis for its decision. Buttin said they considered cost, the needs of the overall student population and the board's definition of insurance as protection when disasters arise.
Terry Swainner, a member of the Student Senate culture committee, said the plan presented at the April 30th meeting was quickly pushed through the senate before it was realized that some people's needs were cut out of the plan.
See HDFL page 2
Schwanner, said that the drug rider probably benefited most of the older students and students with families and that these minorities had special concerns.
Only about 3,000 University of Kansas students purchase insurance. Hyle said.
Rolfs, student body president, said the question of who benefited most from the training program is the same.
The persons who benefit the most from the insurance plan are the persons who need the rider, and these persons may not make the rider eligible. The student Hylse, student member of SenEx, said,
Hyle said that when the health board made the initial decision to drop the drug rider, no graduate students were members of the hospital. That was because a health insurance policy holder.
Bruce Wuerz, StudEx chairman, said "I don't think the Senate was informed. Many times floor go through very quickly. It came off the floor and didn't go through
StudEx. I think the Senate rubber stamped it."
Werner suggested that the rider remain on the plan, and that a survey and thorough research be conducted next year to determine who really used the rider.
It was moved and seconded that the drug rider be reconsidered. After further discussion, retention of the rider was approved.
Another topic of discussion was a resolution passed by SenEx at its July 23 meeting, the resolution proposed that the final report of the Commission on the Constitution be examined by another legislative body before being released to the public.
"The concern is that something will be printed before the Senkx has a chance to finish."
The subject was discussed and it was agreed that no action could be taken until the student had completed the course.
Discussion of what action should be taken concerning Gary Wamlesley, associate professor of political science, who received complaints for missing a final last spring, resulted in a decision to write a letter of concern to the department chairman.
Bruce Woner suggested that a boycott begin in the fall to force the parking and security department to raise permit prices. He said that the college should encourage the collection of faculty tickets.
Discussion of Woner's proposal was deferred to future meetings.
Grain sales to Soviets likely to continue,prof says
By BRUCE SPENCE
BY BRUCCIENCE
Kansan Staff Reporter
Steady sales of U.S. feed grains to the Soviet Union appear likely to continue in the future. The importance of dependence on the grain transactions that will be beneficial to both countries, Roy Laird, professor of political science and Slavic and Soviet area studies, said last month.
Hannah sau ms studies and those of colleagues, including a study conducted by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, had projected that by 1985 the Soviets would have to import at least 50 million metric grain annually to meet their dietary needs.
Laird, an authority on Soviet agriculture, said the U.S. agricultural system needed the export grain market provided by U.S.-Soviet transactions and all indications of their use. The U.S. Soviets on imported grain "unless they went back to Stalinist ways and tightened belts."
LAIRD SAID that the Soviet's own authorities said the average annual consumption of meat for each person should be 82 kilograms or 160.4 pounds. However, the Soviets are producing only 52-53 kilograms a person, or two-thirds of what their own
doctors say is a minimum amount of meat necessary, he said.
Llaird said Brezhnev had been pouring an unprecedented amount of subsidies into the Soviet agricultural system in an effort to stimulate production. However, he said, the move probably wouldn't produce enough to satisfy demand.
Although they do get their protein from other sources, Laird said, livestock resources are seriously lacking because of feed problems.
Laird also said the Soviet farming system, which had stymied production as much as, if not more than, climate problems, had deprived the peasants of the kinds of incentives for production that the western farmer had.
"Basically, they have difficulties with moisture and warmth—they go together,"
"I JUST CAN'T" see any miracle that could produce enough grain to meet their needs in the foreseeable future." Laird said. Laird said the Soviets had two major obstacles that hindered agricultural production; the climate problems and the
the productivity of the American farmer," Laird said.
"EVEN IF THEY did all of the things they should do, they would not equal
Clifford Cox, Douglas County farmer, said American farmers were easy capable of producing far more grain than the nation could consume.
"This is especially true of wheat," he said. "People don't eat nearly as much bread as they used to and this greatly reduces wheat consumption."
Cox said there was a growing division between farmers and urban dwellers, created by fear that Soviet grain deals and exports would increase prices because higher prices in the United States.
FIRST, THE sales encourage farmers to plant more, thereby increasing the volume of food produced, which in the long run will increase the number of people average, the extra plantings this year have resulted in a lower grain market, Laird said, which, without foreign sales, could not meet demand.
Laird said contrary to consumer fears, the Soviet grain sales actually worked to reduce the cost of living in the United States in two ways.
Second, he said, U.S. balance of payments has increased significantly, largely because of lower interest rates.
"What the longshoremen and the city consumers must realize is that oil and other vital commodities, which we must import from abroad, would be even more expensive if we did not have grain export dollars to pay for such imports." Laird said.
In a very real sense, the U.S. is trading its repensilisable grain for oil and other needed fuel.
"We've got to have something to pay for our imports," said Laird, "and the one thing we produce better than anyone else, hands down. is food-in surpluses."
LAIRD SAID the U.S.-Soviet grain transactions were also important to the
"If there is any truth to the proposition that a 'fat' communist is less likely to go to war," said Laird "then we only serve peace by selling our grain to the Soviets."
He said he didn't accept the theory that detente would buy the Soviets time to solve their problems while the United States was in a state of pressure of economic and social problems.
"We are much stronger than that," Laird said and the Soviets are increasingly going to have to face up to the fact of being dependent on us for their food.
He said if the West could hold up, then any
large changes caused by long-run crises would be in the Soviet Union.
HE SAID ALTHOUGH the Soviet grain sales were very important, they shouldn't be taken out of the perspective of increasing ties to Japan, Western Europe and elsewhere.
Don Brethaupt, Rt. 1, who farmed 200 acres of wheat this year, said since the government program of paying farmers to idle farm land had been discontinued, the export markets provided an essential outlet for grain production.
*Prices have been holding steady for about the last two weeks and appear to have increased.
Breithaupt said prices hadn't been affected very much by this year's grain deals.
"We've got to have an export market," Breitmauth said. "If they stop, then we are in trouble, because our expenses have increased terrily in the last few years."
He said he hadn't paid much attention to the Russian deals and he won't sure how much they were worth. "I just had it in my mind that when the price of wheat got around $35, I would
Farmers are faced with such soaring costs that they have to hold their grain until a minimum price level is reached, or they cannot continue to farm, said Breitaupt.
He said farmers hadn't necessarily been waiting for new grain deals to appear. Since the first Russian wheat deal in 1972, he said the farmers stored their grain at harvest and waited.
ALTHOUGH THE GRAIN deals of the past several years have had a stabilizing effect on the market, Cox said, prices have still been erratic, although much less so in recent years. The market has said prices had generally only been slightly better since the Russian dollars began.
The agriculture department has predicted record harvests this year, which it said will prevent the soaring prices which resulted from the 1972 grain deal.
Alvin Harrell, Rt. 5, who farms about 300 acres of soybeans, milo, corn and wheat, in addition to running a dairy operation, said that the harvest would be how good the harvest would be this year.
However, area farmers may lose some of their uniform crops if the areas remain dry.
"If it doesn't rain soon, we're not going to have any," he said. "They're hurting now."
2
Monday, July 28, 1975
University Daily Kansan
NEWS DIGEST THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Charge filed on FBI deaths
WASHINGTON-JAMES Theodore Eagle, 19, who is being held in custody in Rapid City, S.D., was charged yesterday in connection with the deaths of two FBI agents on the Fine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota, the FBI announced. Eagle was one of four persons being sought by the two agents when they were
Eagle, leader of the FBI as being from the Wind River Indian reservation in Montana, is among those arrested. A police investigation plaintiff was filled in Nassau City before U.S. Magistrate James H. Wilson, the FBI said.
Eagle is the first person to be charged in the deaths of the agents, Jack R. Coler and Ronald A. Williams.
CIA's war finances checked
WASHINGTON—A Senate subcommittee is conducting a preliminary inquiry into allegations that the Central Intelligence Agency printed counterfeit American currency.
Howard J. Feldman, majority counsel for the Senate permanent subcommittee on investigators, said he and team members had been checking the allegations for years, since he was able to investigate them.
"We've just received allegations like that," he said. "We have no firm corerption."
Feldman said the subcommittee, headed by Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash., and checked with the CIA on the allegations that a said it could find no evidence of anything to attack him or put further kills on him.
Foreigners flee Angola
LUANDA, Angola—About 85 British and other West European citizens flew out of angola, an americans prepared to leave by boat to escape fighting between the two sides.
Meanwhile, there was a brief skirmish between Portuguese troops and the Movement for the Liberation of Angola after the guerrilla group wounded two Portuguese officers. Mortar fire was heard through the night in Luanda's shantytowns, and oil air fire raged near Launda Bay.
"I don't know when we will be back. It could be sometime before the country invades." I said, shrugging off the consultation and joined the group leaving for England aboard a Royal Air Force plane.
ANKARA — Turkish armed forces units haven’t entered any of the two dozen U.S. military installations in Turkey despite earlier government announcements that they have no intention to enter the country.
Turkish forces simply took down the American flag and posted sentries at the entrance gates, according to reports from Turkish journalists scattered across Europe.
A takeover plan was still in preparation and implementation will begin today, the sources said. They said the Turkish general staff, in charge of carrying out the government order, was drawing up a list of which Turkish units and commanders to assign to which base.
Ohio governor to testify
CLEVELAND—Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes takes the witness stand this week in a civil damage suit stemming from the killing of four students and the wounding of six victims in Ohio.
Rhodes, two senior military advisers and Kent's former president, Gobert
were scheduled to testify either today or Tuesday as the trial its enthralls 118.
The victims and their families have accused Rhodes of illegally using the police force to harass them. The students were gunned down by a guardmen the afternoon of May.
The plaintiffs complain that Rhodes, "by the sound and fury of his remarks," at a gun battle, surrendered to the troops a blank check to use a force without restraint to pull down demonstration.
Testimony opens Little trial
RALEIGH, N.C. — Testimony is expected to begin this afternoon in the trial of Joan Little, a black woman accused of murdering a white jailer.
Jury selection was completed last week. The panel includes seven whites and five blacks.
Prosecutors allege that Little murdered the jailer, Clarence Alligood, in attempting to escape nearly a year ago. Little has argued she killed Alligood with an arrow.
Feminists have made an issue of the case, arguing it should establish a woman's right to defend herself against rape.
The widespread publicity of the case has helped raise $20,000 needed by defense attorney Jerry Paul and his team of more than a dozen assistants.
HDFL . . .
From page 1
lot of people taking on responsibility." He said the chairman's role was one of coor-
diting, but the president could not do so.
The main projects facing the department are finding more space for the department's activities and developing a better undergraduate curriculum, Sherman said.
"The program here was built at the graduate level, and the undergraduate degree developed from it," he said. "We need to revamp the entire undergraduate development program to teach skills more directly related to the undergraduate degree."
Sherman received his Ph.D. from the University of Washington in 1964 and joined the University of Kansas faculty in 1966. In addition to his position as professor of human development, he is also a research associate in the Bureau of Child Research. His research interests are language development and behavior modification.
BlieLAN joined the KU faculty as an acting assistant professor in 1969. She is a graduate of the present, she is also the director of the Child Development Laboratory, a subsection of the department. Her research interests are investigative learning and instruction-following.
HEW used LSD in tests
WASHINGTON (AP)—The U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare gave LSD to 2,500 prisoners, mental patients and paid volunteers between 1948 and 1986 to determine whether it had any value, value, according to government sources.
Sources at HEW's National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), which conducted the government's "in-house" experiments, were able to identify anyone without his knowledge and consent.
The NIMH studies were performed for the most part on the biomedical research campus at the National Institutes of Health in suburban Bethesda. Md.
It wasn't explained how informed consent was obtained, however, from mental patients at Spring Grove State Hospital at Catonsville. Md.
Most were one-shot affairs, an NIMH spokesman said, meaning that volunteers, prisoners and mental patients were given more time to respond or to institutions after the effects were off.
An official NIMH spokesman confirmed basic details of the experiments but said exact figures weren't available immediately.
The purpose of the experiments was to determine whether there had any value in the use of the magnetically ill-defined input.
another said the experiments suggested that the same limited value in that particular alcohol.
Sources disagreed on the findings of the studies. One said they all bombed out but
The speckman said no follow-up of the SD research patients for possible signs of disease.
Ann Evans, director of the center, has said that many persons preferred arts and crafts to more serious art forms in their homes.
An unusual collection of woven textile pieces on display at the Lawrence Arts Center, 801 and Vermont streets, is clearly designed with new arts and crafts as articula form.
Kansan Classifieds Work For You!
The colors and textures are warmer, she said. In many cases, the crafted pieces are much less expensive than paintings or sculpture.
Textiles displayed as art forms
By LYNN PEARSON
BY LYNNE EARSON
Kansan Staff Reporter
The collection, which consists of about 20 pieces by local artisans, is dominated by a brown woven creation by Rudolph Kovaacs, assistant instructor of design.
It forms a large U-shaped loop that is draped by a long tubular shape forming leg-like appendages. The whole creation looks like an enormous headless ostrich.
Kovacs has five other pieces on display.
Of these, perhaps the most interesting is his
split tapestry, "Breakaway." The piece
comes from the confrontations of everyday
life from the confrontations of everyday
life.
REVIEW
It begins with about ten stripes woven in brown, neutral, olive and burnt orange. About midway through, Kovacs ends half of the stripes, tying them off and letting them dangle. The center stripes continue for another 12 inches.
Another exciting piece in the collection is beasal Selenaviasm, associate professor of botany at Boston University for large rectangle, stitched and quilled. The material is batiked in shades of greens, oranges and reds with circular cell flowers standing in relief against the background.
Pam Carvalho, a partner in Hand and Eye Shop, whose three pieces on display are done in quilted cotton, designed a large red, blue, or green dress. You can be hung on a wall or draped on a bed.
has triangular royal blue guesse flying in one wall, and rectangular background. All of it quilted wall hangings are done with meticulous attention to consistency in design and stitching.
Clothes aren't usually considered works of art, but Ann Schlager, a partner in Hand and Eye Shop, created a cape and dress ensemble and two woven tunics which are hung from the ceiling as part of the arts and crafts collection.
A bright orange woven hammock is an unusual addition to the art exhibit. Marllyn
F. Brown, president of the Lawrence Arts Commission and the hammock's creator, designed some interesting stitched pillows, also in orange, to place in the hammock.
A woven rug, a bedspread and seven
walls. A woven wall hangings
out the eighth.
The arts center is open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. The display will be on view until 12 noon.
It is a relaxing way to spend the 20 minutes it takes to tour the exhibit. All of the displays invite you to touch and feel the history and the weave of the various desims.
Info center a fount of knowledge
By ALISON GWINN
Kansas Staff Reporter
Kansan Staff Reporter
A square room, lined with cork and
marmoset rooms and posters, sits in
Strong Hall away from the
This is the Information Center, also known as 864-3506.
The center started as a volunteer-staffed rumor control center in 1970 to fill the need for a place of authority during times of campus unrest.
Located originally in space in the dean of women's office, the center was moved in the summer of 1970, when Chancellor E. R. Pitman made it to make it a formal part of the University.
The center continued to be a rumor control center through the student demonstrations of 1972, but since then rumors have changed.
"Now we're rumor control as far as sirens going down Jayhawk blvd. go. But now we have more access to the community type of information, the director of the Information Center, has said.
This information varies from recipes to library hours to how to recognize the bite of a brown recluse spider, and sometimes the faces of the person answering the phone.
The office has three main files. One catalogs current events, including conference materials and other materials that contains information on academic offices, including their open hours, their directors
The third file, and the one used most often, is the topical file, which contains general information on virtually everything about the University.
For example, the copying services file
During peak months, the Information Center receives about 10,000 calls. The very busiest time is August, during enrollment. For two weeks beginning with enrollment, over 7,000 calls are received. The center doubles its staff and someone sits out in the office to handle these calls. To guide confused freshmen during their first days at the University.
catalogs all the Xerox machines on the University, their locations and their costs.
Because there are so many different way to conceptualize topics, a card file, called flat roll-dex, fits in front of the telephone, or could be used under any names which they might be called.
"We try to be a real humanizing part of this system," Hogard said. "Any time you pass the buck, we'll pass the buck. We try to say, 'The buck stops here.' It's our responsibility to be courteous and nice. If we can't be really accessible, then we're not doing our job."
"When you’re busy, you need to be able to
in the flat roll-o-dex and go." Hoggard said.
Davis and Vernon said they thought state institutions should be used only as a hast resort for violators of juvenile penal codes. Community based halfway homes are more appropriate than single through their problems and in getting them back into the community, they said.
"It's so much more meaningful when someone calls in with a question about enrolment, and you can say, 'Well, I just went through,' Hoggard said. "It's very satisfying work, because it's instantly gratifying."
One must be a student to work at the center.
Local approach used by juvenile officers
Although the majority of the center's questions concern factual information such as building hours and show times, oc- cerations about bizarre rivals come in.
"Quite often, they provide comic relief,"
Increased contact with young people and a local halfway house are ways to reduce juvenile delinquency. Bob Davis, probation officer, said the Office of Juvenile Services, said Friday.
By JACK FISCHER
Kansan Staff Reporter
Davis and Vernon said they hoped meeting the young people in this way would make their office seem less remote and would encourage young people to come in if they had any problem they would like to discuss.
Lawrence has two such homes, one for boys and another for girls, Davis said, but they were designed primarily for children up to age 15. Older offenders are usually
Rather than send anyone away, Davis and his two colleagues, Larry Vernon and Jane Kreps, have initiated programs aimed at helping young person's troubles before they start.
"This is a people job," Davis said. "There's been a lot of bad information about Juvenile Services. We're faced with the drama of being the people who send you away."
Several times each week, someone from Juvenile Services goes to the local junior high schools and Lawrence High School to get acquainted with the young people and to help school administrators in any way possible, Davis said.
Juvenile services activities range from teaching students their legal rights and the process of the court system to individual counseling. Davis said.
housed in the city jail when no alternative can be found, he said.
the At Achievement Place homes the child is in an environment that more closely resembles a family than an institution. There are two house parents who work with the children to help them cope with their problems. The homes are run on a farm, so they receive points for the work they do and gain or lose privileges on that basis.
Achievement Place Inc., the non-profit organization which runs the two homes, has tentative plans for a third home for young people up to age 18.
Jon Tigner, who is presently running the boys' Achievement Place with his wife, Drenda, said no date had been set for opening the third home because of insufficient funds and a lack of trained people to operate it.
The children are permitted to go home on the weekends and check out on week days, provided they can be reached where they live. Parents must be evaluated by their parents and teachers.
Davis predicted there would be little support for the third home because the new county judicial building would have five cells to handle juvenile offenders.
Vernon, who is also the legal adviser for Juvenile Services, said that there was still much that should be changed in dealing with juvenile offenders and that some of the change should come from the state legislature.
State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, a member of that committee, agreed with Davis and Vernon that more local programs should be established for youthful offenders. He said the state should help fund them.
"The whole record of state institutions shows the chanches are great that once a kid is placed in one he or she will return more than once." Glover said.
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Sat. Sun. Matinee 2:30
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Race 100, House 143
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The Wind
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Daily 2:30, 7:30, 9:30
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Hillcrest
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Daily at 9:30 Only
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PG
Daily at 7:30, 9:30 Subtitled
Hillcrest
Vittorio De Sica's
A Brief Vacation
2:05, 7:35, 9:40 Subtitled
Hillcrest
Nonetheless, the center is equipped to field all sorts of abnormal queries.
For example, Hoggard said, if someone calls in wanting to know how to cook a roast or boil an egg, receptionists can refer to the "Joy of Cooking" cookbook.
Hoggard said, "although we don't really encourage those kinds of questions."
JAWS
PC
PG
WE DO BITTLE
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Daily: 2:00 / 7:30, VIA
Hillcrest
The center has an almanac, a zip code
external access card on manual on
writing files and assignments.
The center also has "Hoye Up To Date," the card used for last night nails from card players.
The Wind
And the Lion
Daily 2:30, 7:30, 9:30
Granada
Vittorio De Sica's
A Brief Vacation
2:05, 7:35, 9:40 Subtitled
Hillerstein
Vittorio De Sica's
A Brief
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2:05, 7:35, 9:40. Suffited
by M.D.
"Usually it's someone who says, 'I've got a straight flush and my buddy's got four-of-a-kind,' " Hoggard said, and they want the information center to say which hand beats his.
The center also has a road atlas, which is used when "someone wants to know the distance between here and Peoria or the best route somewhere." Howard said
Frequently, the center is used to settle disagreements or bets.
Once, two men called from New Jersey, saying they had a bet going about whether John Hadl and Gale Sayers ever played in the same backfield. As it turned out, the two players were a year apart, never played together in the same backfield, but played together when taking one summer practice. The question then for the center was 'Who won the bet?'
Another frequent bet concerns the naming of the seven dwarfs.
"There's one people always forget— Sleepy," Hoggard said.
If someone calls in at night with a stumper of a question, and all possible sources have closed down under for the evening, the question is written down under a section on the bulletin board labeled, "What questions do people come in the next morning must then trick up answer and call the person back, if the question can wait.
In addition to answering perfunctory, ordinary calls, which Hoggard said composed the majority of the center's questions, information center also handles crisis calls.
"If it's a crisis call, we will take the other lines off the hook, but that happens very infrequently," Hoggard said. We're not really set up to be a crisis center."
When women call in with problem pregnancy or rage victim support calls, the center has a problem pregnancy network to call. This network is comprised of people knowledgeable on birth control, abortion and pregnancy counseling.
With a problem pregnancy, the caller is asked to hold the line while the person at the information center locates someone in the network who can talk to her. With rape victims, the caller goes to see the rape victim immediately, or calls the victim on the telephone.
For other crisis calls, the center uses the resources of two people from the Psychology department, usually a graduate student and all of the other work in the University Counseling Center.
Receptionists at the center keep
tabulation of the number, time and types of phone calls they receive. Hoeard said.
These figures are tabulated for each month, to see what areas need work
"The system is changing all the time," she said.
Very few information centers exist at other universities, she said, and the ones that do exist grew from rumor control centers.
"Many of them died on the vine, because they didn't change with the time," Hogard said. "We started out as a very radical situation, and we had to change to survive."
Hoggard said the Information Center was responsible to the Office of Student Affairs,
"D. Balrour is very supportive of us. He
takes care of the people and just 'hang out'
here," she said.
William Balfour is vice chancellor for student affairs.
Hoggard said the center received very few obscene phone calls.
"I think that has to do with the staff we have," she said. "They can take the initiative to do things. When they're on the phone, they know they're the information center."
She also attributed the center's success to the anonymity of the service, which never wavered. (See "The Center.")
Hoggard said she told the babysitter to return to the house, and she would handle the situation by getting in touch with Mrs. Fambrough at the stadium.
Hoggard recalled an instance on a Saturday afternoon during the fall one year, when Coach Dan Fambrigha's baby sister came and locked herself out of Fambrigha's house.
"That's the kind of thing that's really rewarding to do," she said.
The center publishes both the Student Handbook and the People's Yellow Pages. "No one is in a better position to do so," he said.
The handbook is mailed to all new students and distributed at previews and duels.
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Transcendental Meditation Brain Wave Synchrony
Synchrony of Electrical Activity of the Brain
MEDITATOR TIMING TRANSFER
NOMEDITATOR DURING REST
MEDITATOR DURING TM SHOWING LARGE
BETA SPINDLE CORRELATED AROUND ALL LEADS
Transcendental meditation synchronizes electrical waves in the left hand, bringing about concordance of these movements with findings of increased intelligence, increased learning ability, and in some cases, may be interpreted as implying functional integration of the analytically oriented hemisphere with the synthetic and spatial skills of the right hemisphere coordination of mind and body.
First Reference: Jean-Paul Banquet, "EEG and Meditation," Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology 33 (1972): 454.
Second Reference: Jean-Paul Banquet, "Spectral Analysis of the EEG in Meditation," op. cit. 35 (1973) 143-151.
Find Out More About TM
FREE PUBLIC LECTURE TODAY AND TOMORROW
July 28 & 29, Parlor A, Kansas Union, 7:30 p.m.
Student International Meditation Society 842-1225
University Daily Kansan
Monday, July 28, 1975
1
You know it before you walk around the corner of the building—that metallic chunka-chunka-chunka," the spray of the wind. That damn sprinkler is at it again.
Water they doing to our campus?
The Buildings and Grounds Department,
in a Kansas mood, is using its prairie style
for its landscaping.
COMMENT
tall as a five-year-old and the arc of its stream carries about as far as a five-year-old's voice. Its impudence, however, is small. It is a five-year-old with a sackful of bottle rockets.
I watched it again the other day between wacce and Flint halls as it imperiously slid off the balcony, onto another. The wind was kinder than on days when the water carried all the way from Jayhawk Boulevard to Flint Hall, but the weather kept its shoes and drawings curious just the same.
see the sprinkler as "them," those forces
in our self-sustained observation in our
own self-sustained system.
It's easy to use the sprinkler. Few of us
like wet shoes or detorts. It's also easy to
In our drier moments, however, perhaps there is more we can learn from it. In some respects, Buildings and Grounds has a badge of American life that reflects all us.
Buildings and Grounds would probably prefer not to get us wet, but there is little
And so water streams down some cracks in the wall, where shoots out of the spring pipe wash walls and occasionally to knock down tree limbs. But it also soaks into the soil and keeps the grass
Consider the problem: to water the grass in an area criss-crossed by concrete sidewalks and dotted with trees. To handle it in a fuzzy, detailed manner would require equipment and tools. Who will pay for it and who will pay for all the people needed to keep moving everything around or to stand there with a hose and water in the corners? Why not simply水 everything in one big swoop—the trees, the sidewalks, the hedges, the irrigation pipes of 1974 or the people? You're bound to get what needs to be watered if you do.
Sports fields ready in fall
By CONNIE BRUCE
Kansan Staff Reportel
Playing fields at 23rd and Iowa streets for a variety of sports should be ready for use soon after school starts this fall, Harold Blitch, grounds supervisor, has said.
The playing fields consist of five football
houses, a hockey field, a soccer场 and a
basketball court.
Although the present fields are roughly
divided, some students are using
them already.
Alton Thomas, University planner, said he originally laid out the placement of parking lots and playing fields. A contractor was supposed to upgrade the fields, he said, but the job was given to the department of parks and Grounds because of a lack of funds.
Bitch said Buildings and Grounds began upgrading the fields in late May.
The fields have been reseeded and fertilized, he said, but the recent lack of rain has hurt the initially good germination. The field in a cold hoola can also be perked for use, he said.
Work began today to clear ground for a 360- by 62-foot parking lot west of the school that will be central to all of the fields, he said.
Bitch said people often indiscriminately扎 their arms on playing fields, making fists and grenades.
A 300-foot fence will be constructed between the fields and the school to discourage people from driving across them. Blitch said.
Construction of the main parking lot, additional seeding in the fall, patching grass that didn't survive the summer and then planting in goal posts remain to be done. Biltch said.
Dave Shapiro, chairman of the Sports Committee, said the Recreational Services office would like to use School No. 6, occupied by the department of entomology, for equipment storage, a concessions area and restroom facilities.
The ruby field, on the east side of the playing field area, will have to be moved over. Blitz said, because it is too close to the highway.
Ed Rollfs, body president, said $45,000 was allocated for recreational
Shapiro said $2,000 of this amount was used for uprating the 23rd and 4lower playing field.
Piano quartet to play for Chamber Series
Four renowned musical groups will come
for the 28th season of the Chamber Music
Society.
The Concord String Quartet will play at the third concert January 28. The quartet
The series will open October 15 with the Eastman Quartet, the only professional touring piano quartet in the United States. The group is composed of Frank Glazer, piano; Francis Tursi, piano; Millard Woollett, piano; and Robert Menzies. All four are members of the art faculty at the Eastman School of Music at the University of Rochester in New York.
All four members are graduates of the Moscow Conservatory and have studied with the Borodin Quarter. Members are: Alexander Arenenkow, violin; Sergei Pistchugin, violin; Michael Geller, viola; and Dmitri Ferschmann, cello.
The Glinka Quartet will appear at KU Nov. 3. This group was begin in 1967 and has toured England, Europe and the Soviet Union. In 1969 they won first prize at the International quartet Competition in Liege, Belgium.
was begun in 1971 by Mark Sokol, first violinist. in 1972 they won the Walter Numburgh Chamber Music Award and, as a result, pianist and composer George Rochus "3" for them. They have recorded for Vox Turnabout, Nouschus and GRI Records.
Last year they began a three-year residency at Dartmouth College. In addition to Sokol, the quartet is made up of Andrew Jennings, second violin; John Kochanowski, violin; and Norman Fischer, cello.
The last concert will be presented by the Sofia Solists, who were members of the Sofia Orchestra when Vassil Kazandiev organized them as a chamber orchestra, in 1962. The original 13 players are still members of the group, which consists of seven violins, three violas, two flutes, and three cellos. They have toured Russia and Japan. They concerts a year in western Europe. They will play here February 2.
Tickets for the concerts will go on sale in August.
LOOKING FOR A NEW NEST?
HOME SHOW HOME
Jayhawker Towers Apts.
OFFICE OPEN DAILY
Monday-Thursday til 8
Friday til 5:30
Saturday and Sunday til 4
OPEN HOUSE
LRE
1603 W. 15th
Lawrence, Ks.
They can do. They are told to keep the grass
in their yard within their budget.
Mission accomplishment.
The sprinkler isn't too different from us. We form assumptions, theories and stereotypes about the world for convenience' sake. Our configurations capture our preferences but despite our best intentions, they also distort the people and events that don't fit.
We try to correct the distortions, but often little can be done. There are limits to time, intelligence, patience, effort and money. Too bad, but mission accomplished.
communication, in which exaggeration too often becomes the norm. To sell a product, you scream; or if you don't scream, you scream. You can also sell a political candidate, you simplify.
The sprinkler captures many sides of our
The sprinkler's overkill shows up in our policy of national defense as well as in the tactics of the Vietnam war that made this statement so much an ironic expression of our national bewilderment: "In order to liberate the village, we had to destroy it."
Published at the University of Kansas weekdays during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kn. 60043. Subscriptions by mail are @ 8 a.m. or $1 a.year. Student subscriptions are $1.35 a semester, paid through www.ku.edu.
The sprinkler isn't always "them"; it it's us. Think about it; the next time it is the us, too.
See
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
—Stan Stenersen
Associate Editor
Campaign Manager
Int. Kenneth Leahy, Porter Portus
Copy Editors
Cathy Bens, Richard Paxson, Kayla Busher,
Kathryn Stocker
KANSAN WANT ADS
Assistant Business Managers
Department Manager
Advertising Manager
News Advisor
Business Manager
Other Manager
Susanne Shaw
Melissa Ross
Helen Ross
Business Manager Jim Merrill
Accommodations, good services, and employee
care. Req's Bach deg or equiv in CS,
CLS or related, natural language LEARN,
BING MEMORY, or foreign语 LEARN.
Apply by August 15th.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one time three times five times
15 words or less . $1.30 $2.00 $2.50
Each additional word . . 01 .02 .03
Editor
Ward Harkavv
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Thursday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the URK business office at 864-1558.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prizes you see on your lift equipment other than factory damages or close-out products, the company will accept orders from the GRAHAMPHONE SHOP at KIFFS
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Salet
Make sense out of Western Civilization
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
available at now town Cri Cres stores
tf
HIGH PROTEIN horse meat dog food 24-14 oz
case, no discount. Merget Salva
$68 Vermont
Now fire merchandise close-outs, etc. now sww
huge grocery stock from a Chicago supermarket,
and have it displayed on a checkerboard.
Open 9 am-5 pm. Closed Sunday. Mettler
's Salvage Center, 628 Vermont. C98 Vermont.
1972 Yamaha 600cc, red and white. $700 or
weekly. Call 843-7450. 7-30
Come on out! Lots of shade and parking—to the front yard, in the backyard, or a vintage antique furniture and other furniture, antiques, antiques, antiques. Choose the church pew, catahoula erates, whisky barrel, 10 bucket bowls, amnesia boxes, apple bokeh, of other useful items. Quark 9 fruits and vegetables, cheese, chocolate, cucumbers 5 for 20, red and white home-grown potatoes, 16 a lb ib cold pop and beer cherries, nutcracker, lettuce, apples, cabbage, cherries, nutcracker, lettuce, apples, cabbage, in shell, bayberry, sorghum, popcorn, assorted nuts, 9 to 9, 7 to 9, 842-3159. Herb Albertsen, t
Hglanger, Bill. Benefit Delta Wing 222B. Many
extras. Call 843-6879
7-29
Must sell. 1972 Kawasaki 250 Trailbike and 1974 Kawasaki 300 Trailbike.
Condition: Call Ruckus or Leland at 841-634-7534.
McIntosh C26 Pre-amp and 2100 power amp.
Like new condition. Best offer. Call 841-979-3-70
***
Typewriter service: We have just accepted, as trade-
ers, all of the typewriters and typewriter
lawyers. All were in service up until they
were traded in. To avoid having to store them
on a desk, we have moved to a large,
Strong Office Systems. I郡 4048 Vermont, 83216.
Bedroom furniture: bed 2 dressers, tables and
cabinets to discuss Call for交谈. **2178**
or **843-8186**. **7-25**
Honeywell Pentax Spotmatic w/ f1.8 lens. $165.
must call cell (434) 8271, 3718
Stereo & Camera Sale: Dual 1214 TURNSTABLE $80.
Dual Battery Charger: Dual 814 TURNSTABLE $80.
Lens Reflex W/80mm f8.5, 842-494lf. 7-31
Free. Med. sized dog needs good home. Gentle.
loving and housebroken. 842-049-1
7-29
Electric Olivetti Pavolta 48, almost new, retails at $15.00, will pay for $25.00, Call 843-8685.
1969 Fairline 2 dr. Auto, PS, V8, Jayhawk VW
443-2210.
WAGON WHEEL 1401 Ohio
1971 RKR Tdrr, 29,000 miles--maroon, Jayhawk
945-821-210
7-31
Sandwiches, Delicatessen, Foods
1015 Iowa 11.9 Mon.-Fri.
11.10 Sat.-Sun.
1973 Duster, Auto, Air, PS 25,000 miles, one
Javakhw V.马永 843-2120 7-31
Open 11 A.M.-Midnight
SIRLOIN STOCKADE
Briman
Leading Jewelers
• Fine jewelry
• Expert watch repair
743 Mass. 843-4366
Just arrived—shipment of Rabbitts and Scroccoli.
come by for a test drive. Jahwah VW 838-2210.
www.jahwah.vw.com
Closeout of all 1974 Demo's and Rental cars, 7-31
hundreds, Jawky HAWK, W44-821-20
1968 Opel Kadett 2 dr. Standard only $758.00
lwkd, WWK-148, VWK-137, 7.33
Buy a 1974 VW Bur today. Balance of factory inventory. Never Tipped, Call Now. Jawdow VW. Jawdow VW.
VW Bug, from 1964 to 1974, all colors—4 speed
Bug, from 1964 to 1974, all colors—4 speed
Jayawk. VW Bug, 84-220. 7-31
1972 Impala Custom, Pee. Automatic, ar, virg
7:31 Wah, HWJ 834-2103
1921 Capti, 4 speed. Air conditioned, red, low hum.
Jaywalk, JAWK, AWK-42210
1968 VM, Bus, converted to camper, ice box, bax,
gas stove, Jawkavw J Hawkavw 843,220-798
Men's new Selene 10-speed. Shimano brakes and
electric brake system must sell as
$25 or best offer. Call 843-2352.
74 Vega Kammack for AC and tape deck
Excellent condition 14,000 miles. $425-648-$480
1973) HONDA 175 w/2 helmets, builders 6400,
8100; mast 1137. IIDM 842, 823-250. Keeping 7-31
COST PLUS 195
If they sell you CINEMAS only cheap
All空调s incl. Shade and Cover
All furnaces incl. Shade
THORENS TD161C was $230 will $139
TD161C was $230 will $139
GARRAD G 23 was $109 will $99
GARRAD G 42M was $92 will $49
MURGACRD 025 was $72 will $32
DUAL 1230 was $380 will $204
PHILIPS 1235 was $240 will $140
RECES
MANZANT 2270 was $600 will $375
HD1000 4000 was $600 will $375
PIONER 4000 was $400 will $229
KENWOOD 6400 was $450 will $329
SANSUIU XH 3000 was $450 will $235
SANSUIU XH 3000 was $450 will $235
HARMAN KARDON 3200 was $290 will $149
SHREW HOO 3200 was $290 will $219
SHREW HOO 3200 was $290 will $219
TAPE RECES
TEAC 3605 was $300 will $290
TEAC 3608 was $300 will $290
TEAC 3208 was $300 will $290
TECNICS 292 was $210 will $155
MISCELLANE
AUDIO TEAC AT152 was $65 will $14
AUDIO TEAC AT152 was $65 will $14
ADC SLM was $100 will $36
ADC MESSIE M 75 was $25 will $10
ADC MESSIE M 75 was $25 will $10
KENWOOD 6200 was $440 will $275
ULTIALINEAR 100 was $100 will $46
AUDIO VOX ID408 was $100 will $99
PIONER TP800 was $155 will $19
KOSP R004 aaa was $36 just the pretty one we can't get to the phone leave a message, we'll
FOR RENT
Johnson Rental Company, Shaded, 1 bedroom, 2 bathrooms to KU Medical Center, Kansas City, KS)
Two bedroom apartment, all utilities paid, close to campus. This fall, furnished or unfurnished. 81-493-7600.
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of
Lakewood, Lawrence, Lawrence. Rental
Exchange. 842-250-6960.
Rooms - Kitchen privileges. One block to campus
at 184-507-8261 or 848-8665.
Bedrooms at 184-507-8261 or 848-8665.
JAYHAWKER TOWERS 2 - bedroom, all utilities
BROTHERTON BATHS 3 - bedroom, all utilities
JAYHAWKER TOWERS 10 - bedroom, all utilities
WILLIAMSON BATHS 10 * W154 - 699, laundry
* W154 - 699, laundry
Rooms furnished, single, with or without cook-
ing facilities. Room 862 is Ku and nu-
neutral. No pets. Phone 843-7677.
Apartments: 1, 2, and 4 bedroom furnished
BORDERS KU and near town. Phone 843-7567. fcff
www.halcon.org
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RIVALS
THE CREWEL
CUPROARD
15 East 81st 841-2656
12-5 Monday-Friday 10-5 Sat.
--on Hiway 10 585-1048
5
Home Growin'
904 Vermont
GAY COUNSELING & RAP
to referral:
into.center 864-3506
or 842-7505
ARMADJILLO
BEAD CO.
710 MASS.
Now Reopened
10-5 p.m.
Beads,
Of Kinds,
Silver
Turtl,
Chain,
Lover's
Chokers,
Earrings
Indian Jewelry
50% off
Extra nice room with private kitchen. One
room is fully furnished, parking, all
replacement rests. 843-9579. **tf**
Male Graduate wants someone to share
Middle apartment for coming year Call 7-311
0044
OPEN HOUSE-HAUSER Tower WKs 100. 18 Wk
Mn. Thurs-18 f. Pri. 5 l. 30; Sat. and Sun.
Saturday only.
Single or double rooms. Share bath, kitchen
and/or laundry. Phone 843-8290 9:00 to 5:30
843-1459 after 8:30.
WANTED
Roommates wanted for apartment. Call Mark,
842-7498 after 5.
Two female roommates 18-25 for hour experiment
with an empty cellar. $11 each month mandatory free coupons
$11 each month mandatory free coupons
$11 each month mandatory free coupons
Formal Subjects 18-25 for $1 \frac{1}{2}$ hour experiment
of a case of beer. Call 846-3633 8-5-8
Need female roommate beginning fall semester
84-292-1 first August, 1, or 84-367-161
-31
Wanted: A female upperclass roommate to share
room with a friend for fall semester. 7:29
After 7:00 p.m. 7:29
Female roommate wanted. Own furnished room.
campus campus $3/month and electricity 7-28
843-729-500
Wanted: Information Paper for English Composition in the University of Pennsylvania Center 1607 excursion materials. National Interdisciplinary Studies Center 1607 excursion materials.
1 Need I Roommate to share Towers? $129.00 per
share. Call Mike at 841-7600.
9:00 p.m - 7:31
tuesday
Female roommate wanted. Owned furniture room.
Campus campus $53/month and electricity 7-29
843-7579
Upperspaltership or graduate woman to share parturient information. Good at supplying CALL 843-259-3000.
NOTICE
Executive-style gourmet parties planned, catered, decorated and hosted beautiful shared private pool. For details call 416-879-3042.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT! Let us do your printing while you wait at The Quick Copy Center. 838 Mass. 841-4000 100 copies=$51. 100 business cards $65. 100 want of business at The Quick Copy Center. 97
PHOTOGRAPHY Shooting Gallery Specializing in Personalized Portraits in natural surroundings. Weddings, portfolios, and commercial photography students. 811-249-3230, biquestrump.com, 811-249-3230, 12:3 p.m. Tues.-Sat, tf
"GAY" TRANSCENDS "HOMOSEXUAL" Lawrence Gay Liberation, Inc. Gathered: 7:30 t 10am 14B UNB, Box 244, Lawn/Calpeting: 84-356 for referrals to socializing. 84-3529
Leaving town nale -Starting now until everything
is done- cooks, cleans, books. 842-313. 7-30
kitchen ideas, records.
TYPING
Tying in my home IMD select with pixet size, 340x210. In the paper, and mpet paper, calling Call Pen, 842-7799.
IBM Selective, pica or elite, reasonable, experienced, these discussions. Call Joan McNamara 865-9127
Experienced in typing thesis, research papers,
proposals, and manuscripts. Mail type:
carbon (carbon ribbon), letter call: 912-534-7060.
Madras Indian Shop
For the Finest in Authentic, Handcrafted Indian Jewelry, Arts and Crafts
19 W. 9th
10:5-30 Daily
Thursdays '11/8
THE ICE CO.
THAT
WEEKLY BEER SALES
AND $2.60 KEGS
ALL SUMMER LONG
HOME MADE ICE
CREAM ..
SUPPLIES
616 Vermont
Experienced typist—term papers, thesis.
Education: 21st century, spiced speech,
843-854-8354, Mrs. Wright.
THEISI HINDING - The Quick Copy Center is our one-stop solution for fast and price repairs, emergency services and insurance.
*Typing-faist, accurate, reasonable rates. Close to*
*cups. 842-5907 anytime.* **7-30**
Experienced in typing dissertations, theses, etc.
In Psych. Call Leste, 843-8588. Requests.
(209) 716-2920.
Employment Opportunities
Schumann Food Company hiring for new **w** fall
**a** week. Applicants must have bachelor's degree from 8:00 am AM; 9:30
am PM, mon thru friday.
Permanent, Full time Legal Secretary for immediate opening in the Douglass County Juvenile Court, which will be closed until the quired. Must be able to take accurate short-hand rules of court bailings; accurately typing a latex report and experience Two week paid vacation after completing a day through Friday. Interested and challenging applicants. 3rd floor, Courthouse, for application. Excellent Opportunity in Douglass County Juvenile Court, 3rd floor, Courthouse, for application.
Photographic Models: Earn $10/hr. Send name
number, quater, and photograph box.
Lawrence 287-356-8494
FOUND
Found *Near* Trailside Apartments—daring
beaches in New York with brown marks, white col-
ors, and sandy beaches.
Found. I.D. cards, for Jancee Loney, July 21 be-der Olive Hail. Call B6-827-295.
FOUND: Maramelde kitten, white flea collar, 7-30
union, 7-22. Call 843-4515. 7-30
FOUND: Anamble. Black & White. Male Kitten
Tuesday; Barker, 4 months. Age 84-85 cm.
300 Male.
HELP WANTED
Occasional day labor, skilled and unskilled,
Leave name at 842-728. Excellent Opportunity.
LOST
Part-time church secretary. Good typist and *a*bll
member. Send resume to Church Secretary, 1029 W. Jerdon St.
Position available - Planning Coordinator, Doug
Brown, Jr. - 10% salary $30 per month. College graduate
starting salary $250 per month. Grant writing and community development. Doug Brown, Jr. - Counsellor, Couned Doug County
Lawyers, Inc.
Lost, Sunday. 25th day. 9男 slainmese cat Viechny
Joyes at 864-491 and 842-114 after 5. 7-31
Joyes at 864-491 or 842-114 after 5.
LOST. Gold Bulova with expansion band.
612-893-864 or 684-553-4 reward. 7-31
SERVICES OFFERED
MATH TUTORING. Competent, experienced tutor
11, 15, 16, 17, 18, 21, 122, 123. Reasonable rate. Call
(914) 225-4100.
Need child care care to KU? Yellow Brick Road
Marmor, attention all day. 12 hours of
morning; afternoon; late night.
800-645-1234. www.yellowbrickroad.com
Truck
IS YOUR CAR AS READY FOR
YOUR VACATION AS YOU ARE?
DON'S AUTO SERVICE
842-0753 900 New Jersey
Penner's Cycle Barn Norton Ducati Moto Guzzi
Used Motorcycle JULY CLEARANCE
71 Kawasaki 500 Mach III *$3950°*
74 Kawasaki 530 dirt bike *$6950°*
Like New
4 Kawasaki 350D HPI Bike
Like New $695^\infty$
72 Norton Commando $995^{00}$
72 Norton Commando 993
71 Norton Commando 1905⁺
71 Norton Commando Very Clean $895^{00}$
66 Norton chopper
Jardine headers
Extended forks
$695^{00}$
15 miles east of Lawrence
Mon.-Fri. 9:00-6:00
Sat. 9:00-3:00
4
Monday, July 28, 1975
University Dally Kansan
Natural history museum exhibits KU's early days
By DAVID BARCLAY
Vancouver Staff Democrat
To pass the time before the University of Kansas opened in 1866, Francis Huntington Snow, one of the three original patrons of the museum, said that Snow shot were the beginning of a collection that is now the fourth largest museum of natural history owned by a university in North America.
Lewis Lindsay Dyce accompanied Snow on many of his early expeditions. Dyce came to the University broke in 1877 and camped where Dyche Hall now stands. During his first months as a student he supported himself by hunting.
By the time Dyche graduated and joined the faculty in 1884, Snow had given KU botanical, zoological and geological collections second in America only to those at Harvard. Dyche was enlarging his own collections of stuffed birds and mammals.
Dyche first earned national fame in 1893 when he displayed over 100 large stuffed animals at the Chicago World's Fair. Unlike other museum collections at that time, Dyche's stuffed animals were positioned in natural lifelike positions as a backdrop depicting animal habitats.
In 1894 and 1896 Dyche traveled to Greenland, where he collected specimens of polar bear, walrus, and caribou. On this expedition he won international recognition when he rescued the stranded arctic explorer. Commander Robert E. Peary.
Dyche traveled throughout Kansas and across the United States, lecturing and engaging with students.
He was so well known by 1897 that when the state legislature cut the salaries of KU's faculty, Dyche was the only one exempted. He did not accept any assistance persuade the legislature to allocate money to build a special natural history museum for KU's growing collection, then stored in old Snow Hall across from Watson Library and donated dollars was appropriated in 1901.
The exterior of the museum, described as Venetian romanesque by the architect, was modeled after the Cathedral of Saint-James in France. The entrance of the museum showed the most obvious resemblance. Its columns and archways were inspired by the cloister of the cathedral. The stones used to build the cathedral, which were married near Lawrence.
The carvings of beasts, birds and other creatures on its columns were intended to illustrate the building's purpose. The carved figures served at the site by two Italian craftsmen.
According to one account of the museum's staff, Fred Piclet, were allowed to carry one
of the gargoyles. It was a feathered creature which stood on a skull with its wings outspread and is said to be the original representation of the Jayhawk. It was taken down in 1962 to make way for a new addition.
The names of six men who have made outstanding contributions to science—Huxley, Darwin, Audubon, Cope, Agassiz, and Grey—were printed on the walls of the museum and, until recently, were covered by vines.
Audubon and Grey's names were covered up to the museum when it completed in 1925.
"It must be covered providence that the vines never covered Darwin's name," Alfred E. Johnson, curator of the museum, said recently.
The building is a national historic landmark.
KU banners and embloms covered the museum's uncompleted interior in 1902 for the inauguration of Chancellor Frank Strong and the evening dinner that followed. In 1909 Dyche was granted leave from the University to become state fish and game manager, and next little time in L.A. during the next few years, and Charles D. Bunker assumed much of the responsibility for the collections of recent vertebrates in the museum.
Bunker, a self-taught naturalist, apparently had an extraordinary ability to motivate his students. "Bunker's boys," as his students have come to be called, included Alexander Whetmore, secretary of the Smithsonian Institution; Remington Hibbard, professor of history at National Museum; William Henry Burt, a mammalologist at the University of California at Berkeley; and Claude Hibbard, a famous paleontologist.
In about 1914 Bunker discovered the dermestid method of cleaning skeletons. The method, now universally used, took its name from the brownish-gray dermestid beetle that feeds on the flesh of decaying plant tissues and was simply placed in a sealed container with the beetles after its skin or feathers have been removed. An active colony can completely strip a medium-sized bird in two days without damaging delicate bone structure. In 1938 the Bunker discovered, skeletons had to be boiled and scraped and were frequently damaged.
When Dyche died in 1915 of heart disease, rather than from complications of a gila monster bite as was at first suspected, the museum was named Dyche Hall.
Dyche went on 23 expeditions during his years at KU and collected 35 antelopes, 14 baffaluses, 10 grizzly and polar bears, 14 musk oxen, 17 penguins, 16 sealers, 48 elk, 40 moose, 10 lynxes, 10 warters, 7
caribou and 5 Greenland reindeer for the museum
Dyche justified collecting the large mammals, some of which were nearing extinction, by the very fact that they were endangered species. He thought that rare animals should be displayed in museums and used for research.
On November 30, 1932, the museum was closed by the Board of Regents after the state fire marshall declared it unsafe. The inside of the building was torn out and replaced in 1938, but its interior wasn't completed until June 6, 1941.
During this restoration period, the museum's collections were placed in storage around the campus, and specimens rapidly deteriorated. Rats shredded the labels on the bones stored under the stadium. Dust and moisture damaged other
THE CINEMAS
Dyche Hall
specimens. Responding to these losses, Governor Walter A. Huxman signed a bill allocating $55,000 in emergency funds to rebuild the inside of the museum.
When Dyche was opened again in 1941, the museum's main attraction was a landscape panorama of the largest single group of mounted animals on display in the world. More than half of the 200 mammals in the display were the same ones that Dyche had acquired years earlier. In another, again, they were placed in a realistic reproduction of their natural surroundings.
It took S. T. Dickenson, the museum's staff artist and a one-time davileville set painter, 13 months to paint the 500-foot backdroom.
During the summer of 1942, the School of
Fine Art's painting and drawing department, located in Strong Hall, was moved to the third floor of the museum. The move was made when the University admitted 500 students in 1967. It was insisted that housing and classes be centralized and leased the west wing and entire top floor of Strong Hall, the only building large enough and safe enough for military barracks. The art department was moved in by the faculty and classrooms which followed.
According to Karsan records, a pair of great horned owls nested under the northeast eaves of Dyce from about 1941 to 1950. The owls and their young were closely related to other owls in the ethnology department, and several scientific papers were written about the owls.
A fire in the tower of Dyche Hall in December 1949 destroyed $3,500 worth of small animal skeletons and specimen boxes. Firemen said that during the fire, members of the museum staff were in the smoke-filled tower room pleading with the museum to donate valuable skeletons and specimens. The fire was quickly controlled.
Under the direction of E. R. Hall in the 1950's, the panorama underwent additional modification. A 15 by 20 foot tropical display, requiring thousands of handmade leaves and hundreds of flowers, stems and foliage, to create a natural Vera Cruz, Mexico, were made to collect specimens, and research data and to take photographs for the exhibit.
When the tropical exhibit was completed, the older part of the panorama looked tacky by comparison and had to be improved. he animals were arranged in a sequence of eight panels on the northern side and an acrylic board on the northern tip of Alaska to a tropical life zone in Central America. Dickenson repainted the background of the panorama and George Young modernized the foreground. The sod for the great plains sections was dug in 1952 and then covered with a curator of the museum, painted cranes and weese on the ceiling of the panorama.
"I climbed up there like Michelangelo," Mengel said. "The ceiling is a dome and I had to distort everything to make it come out right."
Work on the panoorama continues. Dusting the animals and touch-up painting are part of routine maintenance. Smaller animals in the exhibit are occasionally replaced.
The museum has five major divisions: birds, mammals, fossils, and amphibians.
The division of paleontology is on the second floor of Dyche, herpetology and ichthyology are on the fourth floor, and the mammals and mammalogy are on the seventh floor.
Describing what the public sees as only the tip of a super iceberg, Meng said that
less than one tenth of one per cent of the museum's collection is on display.
The museum contains more than 4.5 million specimens.
Excluding the fossils, he said, the skin and skeletal collections and collections preserved with alcohol must be kept away from light, moisture, dust and insects.
Mengel said that the bird skin and skeletal specimens in the museum number over 10,000.
"The whole idea of building a skeletal collection started here," Mengel said. "We have the second most prominent bird skeletal collection in the world. We are the only museum in the world that has co-organized fossil bird remains with skeletal remains."
As visitors enter the museum on the floor, they face the panorama of North America.
The fossilized remains of amphibians.
reptiles, birds and mammals are displayed on the third floor.
Seventeen skull casts showing the upper jaw of a human, sculptured dioramaes of Java man, Peking man, Naanderthal man and Cro-Magnon man in their natural habitats are also on the skeleton.
An American Indian exhibit and the horse Comanche, the sole survivor found on the battlefield by the relief troops after Custer's last stand, are also on the fifth floor.
A large fur collection, dating back to Danee, is kept in cold storage on the seventh floor.
Collections of live snakes, stuffed birds and a live honeybee hive are on the sixth floor. On rare occasions visitors can observe lakes lay their eggs or bear liver young.
Between 75,000 and 100,000 visitors come to the museum each year.
Satellites could help monitor water quality
By BRAD JONES Kansan Staff Reporter
Satellites could help determine the quality of water in Kansas reservoirs, Harold Yarger, a research associate at the Geological Survey, said Friday.
Yarger, in conjunction with the National Aeronautic and Space Administration (NASA) for photogrammetry experiments determined that other photography orbiting satellites could help scientists determine the turbidity and silt content of water samples. By analyzing water summers from the reservoirs
NASA granted the use of two satellites: Skylab, which was used in the recent Apollo-Soyuz space mission, and the Earth Resources Technical Satellite (ERTS).
Although Skylab does not function unless occupied by astronauts, STM transmits information to Skylab.
Varger said that the density of solids in the water was measured by the strength of the strain.
For Yarger's experiment, the satellites traveled over eastern Kansas and were programmed to activate special sensors which would track their movement below onto special computer tape
The tapes were later fed into a video camera computer which arranged the data
The brighter the reflection is, the clearer
the water will be underneath the surface, he
looks better.
From the negatives, Yarger said, the waters depths of slits and rocks could be deeper, could be deeper.
"Although a great deal of information can be gathered by studying the black and white negatives," he said, "we are able to analyze the tapes in special computers for a better understanding of what the pictures are supposed to tell us."
ERTS is equipped with a multispectral scanner (MSS) which takes pictures in four different wavelengths covering 100 square miles of land. The Skylab takes photographs in 10 narrower wavelength bands of a somewhat larger area.
I rarger than that because of the narrower wavelength detectors in Skype, it was more efficient.
Although it has not been determined how the information could be used in a practical sense, Yarger said, the immediate purpose of the information for Kansans would be to help fish hatcheries decide when the water in spawning ponds contain too much silk and oil. If too much silk or oil was said, can generate disease and cause retarded growth in fish.
Yarger said that the new process would aid in the management of fresh water resources by serving as an early warning system in controlling the formation of silt.
NASA became interested in the project to see whether inland water supplies could be monitored and to establish the practical usefulness of satellites to the public.
The General Electric Corporation, which is in the forefront of development equip ment to analyze the computer tapes and photographs, is also involved in monitoring the Cheapeake Bay and Potomac River, Yarger said.
Movie explores mental poverty
By IAN KENNETH LOUDEN
The late Italian director Vittorio De Sica knew much about pain and poverty. De Sica, who died early this year, also knew much about love and beauty. In his book *Love and Beauty* (1978) the *Bicycle Thief*, "Shoeshine", "Two Women" and "The Garden of the Finiz
Physical pain can be a blessing for the mental poverty of his environment.
REVIEW
Continis." De Sica showed the good and bad sides of it in Italy.
In his final film, "A Brief Vacation," De
his once again reveals much about his
ship.
Clara, played by Florinda Bolkan,
discover that she has tuberculosis and
Clara, the main character in "A Brief Vacation," was born in the poor southern part of Atlanta and grew up live in industrial Milan with her crippled insensitive Italian lover, lazy housemate and new child.
must leave her factory job and her family.
She is happy to leave both.
She goes to a resort in the Alps to take a cure. Although Clara, who is poor, must depend upon Italy's national health plan, the women she befriends are very rich.
But wealth is only one contrast. Clara loves the resort because it is the first time in her life she has had time to think and evaluate herself. She is happy to endure the pain of a lung aliment just to get away from the mental poverty of her limited environment. The rich women, however, want to return to their carefree lives.
Clara is recognized as being strong. "She looks so human," one woman says.
Her new friends depend upon her. One, a singer who strongly resembles the late Jane Craig, has been married to die. She tells Clara to appreciate life while she can. Another friend, a rich model, gives expensive clothes to Clara and depends on her for intermittent交介 with her rich married boyfriend.
Clara even experiences a much too brief affair. She says that for the first time in her life she had to deal with cancer.
Yet, Clara must return home. Her mother-in-law wants her factory pay check. Her husband lusts after her body. And her children need her love. She is a newly
awakened round peg returning to a stifling societal square hole.
Like most of De Sica's films, "A Brief Vacation", is romantic and realistic. It is the realism, however, that marks the ending and thus dominates the film.
The ending of "A Brief Vacation" seems cruel, unfair. Clara has realized her potential. She isn't any longer the quiet stolid Calabrian who has always been dominated by her family. She is a feeling, intelligent woman with a strength that was envied by other women in the clinic. But if she returns to return home is a curse, not a blessing.
While on a bus *Clara* takes one last dreamy look at the resort clinic where she spent her brief vacation. The viewer is angry, and a question is raised. Which is worse? To live in mental poverty all one's life and never know happiness or to exert control over it, you return to poverty—a poverty that is mental as well as physical?
As the movie ends, Clara loses sight of the clinic. She leaves behind a man's love, the nurse. So much is missing in the future. The nurse is solemnly and alone. The film grows dark. So does Clara's future.
Bengal
803 MASS. IN THE CASBAH
But only Clara can answer that question.
Only Claria will know because she must
know what is being said.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Living under Amin
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, July 29, 1975
See page 3
No.169
Full accreditation given to KU by regional agency
BY ALISON GWINN
Kansan Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas' full accreditation to the doctoral level has been renewed by the North Central Association of Medical Schools. The executive vice chancellor, said yesterday.
Accreditation at the doctoral level is the highest accreditation the North Central Association has received.
The last time the University was reopened, a review that time, a review was scheduled for five years later, to see whether KU had solved some of the problems that the association was trying to resolve.
The longest period between reviews is ten years. KU hasn't been scheduled for another review, but a progress report must be submitted to the association by May 1, 801, detailing progress in areas for which association expressed concern, Shankel said.
After that progress report, a review should be scheduled, he said.
The association said KU still had too
many small graduate programs and inadequate classroom, research and office space, particularly for the natural sciences, social sciences and the School of Business.
The association also said KU had an inadequate number of support services, including maintenance support, include secretaries, technicians, mechanical shops, computer and library facilities, and grounds personnel. The library was one of the association's most important assets.
The association also cited strengths it found at KU.
It commented on the high quality of students and faculty, and complimented KU's concern for teaching research and service.
The association said the KU administration, after several changes, was dismissed. In 2016, the KU was complimented on developments it has made in institutional planning and efforts it has made to coordinate the Lawrence and Kansas City campuses, he
that have been built since the last report or are being built now to ease the need for
KU was also commended for buildings
The association also complimented KU for ending the proliferation of new academic programs occurring in the 1960's, Shankel said.
An evaluation committee visited the University in February, wrote a report and sent the report to the University. The University sent back corrections and feedback; the report was then given to the association's executive board by the review for approval.
The final accreditation came after a meeting last Wednesday between the North Central Association and several KU administrators.
Loop quarrel intensifies
By LYNN PEARSON
A battle has begun that could decide the fate of the Haskell Loop, a road that would connect downtown Lawrence with the airport and that would cut through east Lawrence.
Opponents of the loop have been circling a petition house-to-house since last October.
Kyle Andregg, director of the community development office, said Sunday that he and his staff "suggested that it would be beneficial to come up with a plan" to come to Tuesday's public hearing.
Proponents of the loop, including the city's Community Development office and several East Lawrence Improvement Association members, have been talking to those in east Lawrence who want the loop and to Chamber of Commerce members.
Commissioner Carl Mibek, who lives in east Lawrence, said that he hadn't been involved in gathering signatures for a petition opposing the loop. He said he didn't
But, Andregg said, it is illegal to use government funds to foster community support on controversial projects. He said his office couldn't spend community development funds for flyers or mallers' support of a project like Haskell Loop.
Council for elderly to add 3rd minibus
The Douglas County Council on Aging will receive its third minibus in two to six months, Carl Boughten, executive director of the council, said Sunday.
The council began regular bus trans- forstation for the edgars on August 14, 1973.
Boughten said the new bus would be equipped with a hydraulic lift and would be
Revenue sharing and the Douglas County Commission provided the funds for the bus.
Boughton said that the two buses now in operation hadn't been able to accommodate them.
"We have had to refuse from 3 to 5 people every day," he said.
He estimated that the two buses gave rides to 85 people a day.
As in the pass, bus fare will be 25 cents for those who can pay.
sign the petition with Barbara Williams, all of the petitioners, presented it to him.
"I'm leaving it to the people here in the neighborhood," Miteck said. "My vote will be made on the basis of what the people want."
Mark Kapplan, 1032 New York, Richard McCormack, 1034 New York, Ann Dyntz, 1135 New York and Willett, 1035 Delaware, have been working for over a week gathering signatures for the petition against the ban.
As of yesterday, the group had about 150 signatures opposing the construction of the building.
Commissioner Marine Argeranger said the commission could purchase a Kellop loop to a boat, and give it tough tugging.
Two commissioners, Barkley Clark and Fred Pence, have said they were in favor of the two. Other mibee and Donald Blins, have said they were against it. This year's candidates are Mikaela Argersinger, unless one of the other commissioners unexpectedly changes his vote.
Opponents of the loop had a meeting Sunday night to organize their arguments and to decide what each would say in their presentation at tonight's hearing. Willits
Tom Patchen, chairman of the East Lawrence Improvement Association's housing rehabilitation committee, said that he met with the community at the meeting to support the loop project.
"We've gone through two years of listening and working with the city on this project," he said. "We supported all the projects we conducted and we're on record as supporting it."
The association voted 24 to 6 last fall to endorse the project.
"I've been in business in east Lawrence for 30 years and nothing has been done here," he said. "I'm just as much con-
flicted with people improving themselves as anybody."
"With the city garage being built in far east Lawrence, we're going to need a road that gets those big trucks off our streets and away from New York School."
Patchen, who doesn't live in east Lawrence, owns Patchen factories & Industrial Parks.
Patched see the community had to think ahead. If the city didn't build the Haskell Loop now, he said it would have to build it in the next five or ten years, because of the city's growth and the spread of industry in the east Lawrence area.
The school is at 938 New York. The loop will run by it near Ninth Street.
However, Wells said the loop would be between her children and New York School District.
Kaplan said that the road wasn't needed in traffic problem on the residential street.
Patchet said the home owners in east Lawrence would benefit the most from the loop's construction. He said that it would allow residents access to downtown and to Sixth Street.
However, Kaplan said that the homeowners were the ones who would be hurt the most because of increased traffic in their neighborhood brought by the loop. Expansion of industry, Kaplan said, will follow the loop's construction.
Kaplan and his group are opposed to industrial growth in east Lawrence.
But Patchen and his group want industrial growth in east Lawrence.
"It doesn't make sense to take good land and open space for industry when we've got space available in town," Patchen said.
One of the petitioners' grievances has been the elimination of the east Lawrence park which would be directly in the path of the loop.
Supporters and opponents will present their arguments at tonight's meeting and the city commission will have to soon decide whether the Haskell Loop will be built.
BREAKFAST OF
CHAMPIONS
Wicket swing
Hsibwrhyo Sanyal, Calcutta graduate student, strikes at a ball during a cricket game last week on a Robinson innermural field. Sanyal's attack is as strike as it is not limited to the ball.
Highway agency to chisel down cost of bypass
The original plan for the bypass, which will connect K-10 and U. 24-40, was scrapped last month because the estimated construction cost had nearly doubled.
New possibilities for the construction of a bypass east of Lawrence will be planned by the State Highway Commission as a result of having it had with local officials yesterday.
State Highway Engineer John McNeal said last night that the highway commission would prepare proposals for the construction of a less expensive road. He said the department's staff would propose proposals could be ready to be considered by Lawrence officials and residents.
City Commissioner Carl Mibek, who attended the meeting, said the cost estimate for the bypass had risen from $27 million in 1973 to about $50 million year. He said the highway commission would propose cities that would cost about $20 million.
The original plan provided for a four-lane divided highway, including a four-lane bridge across the Kansas River. McNeal said other possibilities were a four-lane highway built on a right-of-way wide enough to allow for future expansion to four lanes.
He said the highway commission's proposals would be adequate to carry the traffic loads projected for the next 10 to 15 years.
The source of funding for the road will be decided after a plan is chosen, McNeal said. He said if federal funds were to be used, federal standards would have to be met.
"We would intend, if at all possible, to come up with a plan that would be elizable
See 59 BYPASS page 2
Turkey takes control of American bases
ANKARA (AP)—Turkish military commanders moved in Monday and took control of five U.S. bases concerned primarily with intelligence gathering, a campaign by the security spokesman announced. He said 20 more installations would be taken over Tuesday.
In Washington, a U.S. State Department American military activities in Turkey has suspended but said the Turkish government but not asked for the removal of U.S. personnel.
The takeover is in reprisal for the refusal of the U.S. House of Representatives to ease an arms embargo imposed against Turkey after its invasion of Cyprus. Three major bases have been affected. They are: The Israeli naval base at Sipon, on the coast of the Black Sea, and Princilin, near the town of Diyarbakır in southeastern Turkey.
Committee okavs oil profits tax
WASHINGTON (AP) - Anticipating that all oil-price controls will and in five weeks, the Senate Finance Committee approved legislation yesterday to soak up wind oil price
By a 10-2 vote, the committee agreed to an excess-profits tax. Chairman Russell B. Long, D.L.A., said he hopes Congress will pass legislation that would start a month-long vacation on Saturday.
The committee will try to determine today how the billions to be taxed away
from oil companies will be rebated to U.S. consumers.
Under the committee's proposal, the government would tax away 90 per cent of the profit accruing to the oil companies after the removal of price controls. However, the companies could avoid a portion of the tax by reinvesting a share of the windfall in the search for more oil and gas.
Congressional tax experts estimate that if price controls expire as scheduled on Aug.
31, the oil industry stands to gain $18 billion in unexpected income.
The first $1 billion would go to the states in mineral taxes. Under a complex formula in the committee plan, the federal government would receive about $12.6 billion in 1976. The oil industry would be expected to escape the financial strain by establishing the windfall in energy development.
The amount of oil subject to the windfall tax would decline by 1.4 per cent a month.
The Finance Committee staff estimates
that during the six years the tax would be in effect, the government would collect enough tax from the oil industry to finance a rebate of $612.99 for every person in the United States.
In rushing committee action on the windfall-profit taxes, Long is assuming that President Ford and Congress will be unable to avoid differences over energy policy this week.
If Leng is correct, price controls will
expire while Congress is on vacation. The
Sale goers seek bargains as Knights sought Grail
By KEN STONE
Substitute the Knights of the Round Table for little old ladies and the Holy Grail for the super bargain and you may begin to understand the reasons for the popularity of that peculiarly American phenomenon known as the garage sale.
In the days of King Arthur, knights would sally forth in their endless quest for the Grail, a cup or dish supposedly used by Christ at the Last Supper.
A tour of Lawrence yard and garage sales over the weekend revealed that there were as many objects of pursuit as there were objects, and even a bargain here and there.
Today, legions of little ladies, hopeful newlyweds and entire families comb the countryside every weekend for another adventure of possession: the super burglar.
rockers going for $50. There were miles of lines hung with clothes of all kinds: children's clothes, baby clothes and everything from girdles to formal attire.
There were cups and saucers selling for nickels and dimes and new-looking antique
There was even a 26-year-old coconut head painted black with red and yellow feathers for hair and white sea shells for eyes and teeth.
There were books. There was furniture.
There was a $00 air conditioner and a $5
refrigerator.
Theersa Guitierrez, 2007 Kentucky St. said Saturday she was holding her garage door shut.
Two veteran garage sale goers holding their own sale, Ruben and Zara Marchoski, 1924 Kentucky St., said they had bought most of their furniture at a garage sale.
"I guess you can find what you're looking for it you look hard enough," she said.
Mrs. Marchoski said that in the course of their search for furniture last summer, they had a lot of sales and that at one they found a man who hobby was making pine wood fur-
Mrs. Marchoski said, "We had just gotten married and were preparing to furnish a house. We came to Lawrence with what was in our car.
"We started one weekend and looked for what we wanted. A lot of times you can find things cheaper. And a lot of times you can find services."
While Mrs. Marshocki was talking, a station wagon drove by, slowed down and pulled away.
"We contracted with him to make two
a coffee and an end table for $50." the
salesman
"Usually, we see some cars go by and just look," she said.
Another car drove by and pulled into the drive way. An elderly woman cheerfully greeted the Marchoski and proceeded to examine the contents of the porch.
"I just dropped by," she said. "I was just looking for little knackknacks. You know,
it's fun. I just buy whatever catches my fancy."
Shc `'aft when nothing did.`
Mrs. Marchiowski said the woman was typical of garage sausage hunters. Many people ate the sausages themselves.
"They always think that there's something better at the next one," she said. "I don't know."
Some garage sale goers can't resist buying something, however.
The garage sale at 20 Saturday Guadalhati lasted from Thursday until Saturday and was a day's worth of sales.
Mary Ann Willems, another Ousadh participant of Thursday's sale, which took in more than $200, said, "It was packed all day. We had 75 to 100 people at least."
She attributed part of the success of the garage sale to the six cardboard stions.
Vivian Freeman, a participant in a three-family garage sale at 2006 Oudahl St., said, "the reason I don't go to (to garage sales) is because I buy too much."
"Last year we cleared $700," Willms said.
For some items, mainly tattered clothes,
Williams had a "free box."
posted around the neighborhood which announced the sale in phosphorescent paint. Another reason was her practice of marking down items that weren't selling.
"We have a box for stuff we too embarrassed to put a price on," she said. "One lady last year took the stuff out of the box and the stuff on the ground and took the box."
Three other women, holding another three-family garage sale at 1719 Kasold
It's really amazing how well underwear sells," she said. "My mother-in-law's girdle comes in a pair."
Although her garage sale sold items as diverse as bike rakes (? "Yesterday," I sold a bike and a chair, but not for it!) and recycled jeans ("They really go well"), Willems said underwear turned out to be one of the most valuable.
Drive, said they were amazed by the success of their little-advertised garage sale.
Melym Brenn, 1821 Kasol Drive, said, "I just thought you have cars and cars with me."
But she wasn't dissatisfied when they didn't appear.
"This is our first garage sale," she said.
"Westarted at 17:30 and well over 100 people have stopped by. We've made $300 combined."
Brenn also noted, referring to her children, that "The kids are amazing.
"Anything they've gotten for Christmas, if they're tired of it, they'll sell real cheap, for a dime or a quarter. But if it's something they want to sell, they'll want to sell it for half price, for like $2."
A dime can buy a lot at a garage sale, a woman at the Gutterze sale said.
"You can buy a perfectly good shirt for that guy you want. Now, I know, get all my husband's shirts this way."
2
Tuesday, July 29, 1975
University Daily Kansan
NEWS DIGEST THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Voting rights bill passed
WASHINGTON—Congress completed and sent to President Ford yesterday a bill extending key legislation of the Rights Act of 1965 for more seven years to provide billing information.
Winning Congress's final approval in the House by a vote of 346-56, the bill extends special enforcement of voting rights in seven Southern states and portions of
It also extends the act for the first time to cover areas in 24 states where Spanish and Asian languages and Indian and Alaskan dialects are spoken by large groups.
The bill requires that bilingual information and, in some cases, federal enforcement officers be aware of areas where less than 50 per cent of those registered to vote in 1972.
Jury studies Gurney charge
TAMPA—a jury, advised by the judge that "good motive alone is not a defense," began念讼案件 of bribery conspiracy charges against former Sen. Edward W. Anderson.
Gurney, a 61-year-old Republican and the first incumbent senator in 50 years to be indicted, is charged with conspiracy in a fund-raising plot, bribery, accepting unlawful compensation and four counts of lying to the federal grand jury which indicted him a year ago.
Lansing prison use debated
TOPEKA—Gov. Robert F. Bennett said he didn't think the state could afford "the luxury of abandoning the state nentient性 at lansing."
Bennett said, however, that it might be necessary to limit use of the Lansing institution.
Bennett was asked for his views after Kansas Secretary of Corrections Robert Raines said last week that he thought the state might be better off if it closed the jail. Mr. Raines said in a statement that he
Raines said he thought the state had gotten its money out of the Lansing institution, which he said was constructed in 1864.
Limits set on aid to Peru
WASHINGTON - The United States has placed sharp restrictions on military aid to Pakistan, allowing a congressionally imposed ban on arms to aid it. The informs sources across the region.
The goal, according to informants, is to avoid creating a power imbalance between the two South American countries.
One example of the new policy was the administration's reported rejection of a pervian request to purchase a missile system. The type of system was not seen.
Washington is said to have rejected outright or delayed decisions on other Peruvian requests for advanced war material.
A man arrested in a drug last month pleaded guilty yesterday in Douglas County Court to misdemeanor charge of misuse of drugs deemed to be a year in the Douglas County Jail.
Drug offender given a one-year sentence
The man, Floyd L. Matthews, 29, 743 Ash St. was arrested along with two other men on June 16 in the culmination of an investigation by Frances Kennedy, special attorney who worked as an undercover agent to gather evidence for the arrests.
Matthews' arrest came only eight days after he had served a weekend in jail and was released on a year's probation for a previous conviction on the same charge. He had been arrested for the earlier violation in April.
"Matthews" attorney, Jerry Donnelly, asked Douglas County Court Judge Mike Elwell not to jail Matthews because he had been forced for the first time in nine months.
Donnelly also said that the county attorney had known the second arrest would be made when Matthews pleaded guilty on June 5 to charges from the first arrest.
David Berkowitz, Douglas County attorney, said that he did know the second officer was on duty.
Bicentennial status sought for campus
A University of Kansas application for designation as a Bicentennial Campus has been received by the Kansas Bicentennial Commission.
The application, containing about 18 projects, was forwarded yesterday to the University of Missouri Administration in Kansas City, Mo. It may arrive in Washington for final consideration at the administration's Aug. 8 meeting, the administrative officer, said yesterday.
The application makes no request for funds, only for recognition.
W. Stitt Robinson, chairman of the KU Bicentennial Committee said funds might be requested later for a proposed tour by the symphonic band that would retrace the last swing through the Midwest of John Phillip Sousa's band.
Veterans at the University of Kansas can turn to for any help they might need.
An office of Veterans' Services has been established within the Office of Admissions and Records to advise and counsel veterans and to organize and coordinate veterans' services on campus. There are approximately 1,200 veterans on campus.
New office created to serve vets
William M. Balfour, vice charger for student affairs, said Friday the new office would replace one for the office of the move was a consolidation, because previously both the Office of Admissions and Records and the Men's Office dealt with veteran students.
revealed it when Matthias made his first plea because the investigation was in progress.
which will be located in 118 Strong Hall. He will be assisted by Eliz Edmondson, who has been handling veterans' services in the admissions office.
James R. Henry, assistant registrar, has been made director of the veterans' office.
Henry, who has worked in the registrar's office since 1967, has a military background. He enlisted in the U.S. Navy in 1982 and served as a naval aviator, personnel officer and public information officer. He was an air intelligence officer in Vietnam and was a senior intelligence officer in Afghanistan Homecoming (Vietnam POW return). He presently holds the rank of lieutenant commander in the U.S. Naval Reserve.
Henry received a B.S. and M.S. in
athletics, but he expects to
complete his D.E. fall, the DG.
Ellwell told Matthews that he couldn't believe his stipulation in agreeing to help someone get marijuana when he was arrested. It is true, but for the same charge in an earlier case,
He said he saw his new role as a liaison
between campus veterans and the administration. He said he would coordinate his functions with those of the existing veterans' services on campus.
Two other representatives, employees of the two administration offices in Carrud-Toft 8, will handle problems veterans might encounter in dealing with war-related injuries, such as a shrapnel injury. BILL Bjllgkks
One of the two other men arrested in the June 16 raid, Leonard E. Jarrett, 30, 625 Elm St., was charged with selling THC and buying a hearing in county court is set for August 14.
The student organization, Campus Veterans, is in the Kansas Union and is a service organization which supplies students information on legislation and internship opportunities before tutoring service. The organization is partly funded by the Student Senate.
Peter Thompson, professor of painting
and design, associate dean of the School of Fine Arts.
chairman is named early this fall, Moeser said.
The appointment, which will go into effect February 15, is for the School of Fine Arts, Mosser, dean of the School of Fine Arts, Saturday. Thompson will replace John McKay on Monday this month to full授课. Teaching
Henry said the three groups working together should be a valuable asset to the bank.
Thompson will be the primary budget officer for the School of Fine Arts, Moser said. He will coordinate research, and work with Moser and Don Scheid, associate dean, in matters relating to the school as a whole.
Fine Arts associate dean named
Thompson has been chairman of the department of painting and sculpture and the art department of the
The third man was arrested in Badwin on a charge of selling cocaine but the charge was dropped when a chemical analysis showed that the allegedly sold wasn't an illegal substance.
Thompson received a B.F.A. degree from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1963 and an M.F.A. degree from Yale in 1965. He moined the KU faculty as an instructor of drawing and painting in 1965. He became an assistant professor in 1968 and an associate professor in 1971.
Although he will coordinate some matters in the division of visual arts, Thompson will work more extensively in other areas, Moeser said.
Kennedy's primary job in the county attorney's office is to investigate bad check fraud. He also directs emergency Job Program funds from the federal government, but Berkowitz said at the time of the arrests that there weren't any job description restrictions on the checks.
Local officials attending yesterday's meeting included City Manager Buford Walters, city commissioner Wilden, all city and county commissioners, County Attorney David Berkowitz, State Sen.arden Booth, R.I., former McClancy, director of county zoning and planning.
Thompson will continue to teach in the department of painting and sculpture and maintain his own painting studio, Moeser said.
for federal aid," he said. "But federal standards are quite high. We might decide to consider a plan that would eliminate the possibility of federal funding."
McNeal said representatives of the highway commission would hold a meeting with Lawrence officials and citizens within the next few months.
59 Bypass . . .
From page 1
Published at the University of Kansas
and is used for the holidays and examination periods. Second-
subscriptions by mail are $1 a semester or
$3 a semester, payable to the student activity
semester, paid through the student activity
semester.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Editor Ward Harkavy
Associate Editor Pete Porteus
Campus Editors Ian Kenneth Louden,
Copy Editors Cary Benz Richard Paxon,
Kathy Steereh, Tom Weisham
Photo Editor
Business Manager
Assistant Business Managers ... Cindy Long, Jr.
Jerald Kanel
Promotions Manager ... Dane Spencer
Advertising Manager ... Gary Burch
LOOKING FOR
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HOME SWEET HOME
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Kennedy's undercover status was nearly ruined in May when police caught two women in possession of marijuana in the Bronx. Both officers had received it from Kennedy.
Berkwitz said one of the women had given the marien to Kennedy but later asked for it back. Berkwitz asked police at the time the women were picked up to be patient about the matter so Kennedy could cover and continue her investigation.
Berkwitz said after the arrests that Kennedy would probably not be used as a weapon, again, but that his office would continue to investigate drug traffic by using other agents.
LRX
Cigarette ads to be the target of FTC action
Lawrence, Ks.
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Federal Trade Commission has voted to seek civil penalties against six cigarette companies for alleged inadequacies in advertising of the dangers of smoking, an FTC commissioner said Saturday.
Commissioner Mayo J. Thompson said the FTC voted 4 to ask the justice department to proceeding against the six companies. Thompson said each violation of FTC orders is subject to a penalty of $10,000 a day. The court at the discretion of the courts, he said.
ON CAMPUS
PAUL J. WOLFE, director of the University of Kansas Computation Center, has been elected vice chairman of the Special Interest Group for University Computer Centers, a nationwide subgroup of the American Computing Machinery and research computing center of academic and research computing center directors and management personnel.
RAYMONT GOETZ, professor of law, has been made chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Kansas Public Employee Retirement System in Topeka. The board is a representative organization of retirement funds for all state, country, city and school district employs.
G. BALEY PRICE, the emeritus E. B. Stouffer Distinguished Professor of Mathematics, has returned from a two-week International Conference on mathematics in Karachi and Lahore, one of the persons invited from the United States. The National Science Foundation sponsored his trip.
RICHARD K. MOORE, Black and Veatch Distinguished Professor of Electrical Engineering at the University, will represent the National Academy of Sciences-National Research Council at a general assembly of the International Union of Sciences in Lima, Peru in August. Moore will speak on remote sensing of land and sea.
ROBERT C. BEARSE, professor of physics and astronomy, will become associate dean of research administration on a part-time basis Aug. 16.
A $ 800,000 MANPOWER EDUCATION
years the preamplification summer enrich-
ing activities.
ment program for minority and disadvantaged students entering the University of Kansas School of Medicine. The program began in 1972. Of the 41 previous participants, all have graduated or are progressing on schedule. The 1975 students with physicians included seven black students and two white students have ever graduated in one class before.
Before coming to the University in 1969, Bearse worked in experimental low energy nuclear physics at the Argonne National Laboratory.
THE 1989 NOVEL PRIZE WINNER in chemistry, Sir Derek Barton, will open the Edward E. Smissman Memorial Lecture Series Jan. 19-21. Barton is Hofmann of organic chemistry at the Imperial College of Science and Technology in London.
THOMAS M. STIDHAM will become assistant director of bands and assistant director of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp in August.
EDWARD WILLIAMS, professor of music, will become the chairman of the music history department in August, during Milton Steinhardt, who has retired.
STANLEY T. ROLFE, Ross H. Forney professor of civil engineering, has assumed the chairmanship of the department of civil engineering.
At the same time, the Army said its inspector general has been ordered to check on what it called "some possible adverse information" about Dr. Van M. Sim, who has headed drug testing programs for 19 years.
Army suspends drug experiments
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Army on Monday suspended testing chemical compounds with human volunteers at its Edgewood, Md., arsenal.
The Army didn't give any details on the训进。and Army spokesman, refused to elaborate.
It said that 36 military volunteers now at Edgewood to participate in planned tests of a drone would have been needed.
In a statement, the Army said temporary suspension of the program for testing chemical compounds on human volunteers at Edgewood Arsenal "will permit the tests to be conducted the facts connected with the test programs, which were initiated in the 1980s."
The inspector general was ordered to report to Acting Secretary of the Army Fortran and Augustine. The Army said he would attend if any, would be announced after that.
The spotlight recently was focusu testing of chemicals on humans at Edgewood by publicity given to such tests as the ones with the drug LSD conducted with 568 officers and enlisted men between 1966 and 1967.
The Army said it wasn't experimenting with LSD any longer.
Sim, who defended the testing program at a Pentagon news conference last week, said he and his organization were awaiting approval from the Army surgeon general before conducting further experiments using a number of other drugs.
No experiments are under way pending this approval, Sim said.
Augustine's action suspends any such further tests.
At his news conference on July 23, Sim, who is chief of the medical research division at the biomedical laboratory at Edgewood, said the LSD experiments were necessary in the study of a variety of potential poisons for Army and civilian populations. Researchers were interested in methods of detection and treatment, he said.
Cash paid for your Books Bring them to Kansas Union Bookstore Thursday-Friday July 31-Aug. 1
Tuesday, July 29, 1975
University Dally Kansan
3
Sporting conduct is part of game—it's only cricket
By MARCY CAMPBELL Kansas Staff Reporter
Cricket, that British game of leisure, has been revived at the University of Kansas by a group of foreign students from the West Indies and India. Fifteen to twenty students play every Sunday afternoon on the fields near Robinson Gymnasium.
1967, Amrendra Singh, New Delhi graduate student and organizer of the group, said Sunday. The cricket team was active until 1971, when the team captain and previous organizer graduated. Singh said the team fell apart and hadn't been reorganized until last March, when several Indian students got together to form a team
Singh's group has practiced all summer with used equipment, most of which belonged to the 1971 KU team. Singh said his team had been forced to replace the old worn bats, pads and balls they were practicing with. The team submitted a request for $300 to the Student
Senate last spring to help pay for the needed equipment, but the request was denied. Equipment has been purchased from personal contributions this summer.
"We must educate ourselves," said L. E. James Helay, assistant director of KU students. "We need to think we will have to prove we are sincere about playing before we will receive any funding from the Student Senate. That is important." After afternoon—and that for the enjoyment."
Enjoyment is perhaps an understatement: the temperature last Sunday was close to 100 degrees. The cricket players paid no mind to the sun, however.
Cricket may seem an unusual game to the American spectator because it has little in common with baseball. The batter or "Striker;" in cricket is similar to a baseball ball when it is thrown near him. However, from this point on, the game is different.
An average quality bat cost about $32,
whereas a good bat will cost from $39 to $45,
Helyar said. He estimated that the team
had $18 in the gloves and $20 in the cost
$20 to $30, gloves are $15 a pair, and
balls cost from $6 to $9. Helyar said the balls
the most expensive item because
according to the rules, a new ball must be
two inches in diameter and two are
in two innings in each cricket game.
A new ball is essential because it bounces more evenly and predictably, Singh said. An old ball is dangerous because it is unpredictable.
fibers. It must also be oiled with linseed oil to mature it. Without this processing process, the fibers will shrink and become coarse.
Helyar said the team must buy all its equipment from either Canada or India because the United States doesn't sell cricket equipment. He said the equipment from India costs about one-third as much as that from Canada.
Singh has been trying to get the pitching area leveled out because that makes the team better. Singh said the department has been unwilling to level any area of the field east of Robinson gymnasium because they want the grass to grow to the height needed for sports as football and baseball, he said.
Singh, who would like to get intercollegiate competition started this fall, said it would be dangerous and emphasize to invite a team to an unprepared field.
Modern cricket has developed from a crudie game played in 12th century England. The first real cricket club to be established was the Hambleton Club. In 1787, the first real Cricket club formed and had been named as the authority on cricket affairs since that time.
Today professional cricket clubs are as numerous in England and the countries under English influence as baseball clubs are in the United States. Professional matches last four or five days and the scores run to over 1000 points.
Helyar said that in England, between innings, boys came out of the pavilions or dugouts with trays of fresh lime juice or lemons and the team took a break. Cricket mistakes caused by players' playful mistakes on the "break in breath" caused by the breath, he said.
H. S. Mann, Ludhiana, India, graduate student, a team member, said children in cricket-leaved countries asked for cricket bats, balls and gloves as an American child would ask for baseball equipment on his birthday.
"Cricket is a game of chance," Mann said. "Sometimes the best batters get out right away and the lesser batters just keep on batting."
Cricet is a liberated sport, too. Women's cricket club classics are very prominent in cricket campuses.
"Cricket is not a game of strength," he said, "but one of timing and judgment."
After all, such a display of emotion just isn't cricket.
Fights are rare in cricket matches, as it is a "gentleman's game," he said.
Prof describes life under Idi Amin Dada
By ALISON GWINN
Kansan Staff Reporter
Four weeks of teaching journalism seminars in Uganda left Del Brinkman, dean of the School of Journalism, with the last week's news that didn't last too long as Uganda's president.
But Amin's recent command to execute British journalist Denis Hills has focused public attention on a leader who has not only published anti-Ahmadinejad writings but laws in his east African country.
Brinkman taught journalism in Uganda in August of 1972 as part of a multi-national journalism project sponsored by the state department.
The director of the project knew Brinkman and suggested him for the seminar in
At the time his name was suggested,
Brinkman knew little about the country, he said, but he read and studied information about the country and decided it might be interesting. The geographic description of the country made it sound beautiful.
When Brinkman arrived at the airport in
luck when the man who greeted him, "I
didn't. I was happy."
The Ugandans were very tense and "brain was throwing his power around," Pauline said.
Right before Brinkman left for Washington, D.C. to be briefed on the country, Amin ordered the expulsion of 50,000 Ugandan Asians. The expulsion was as a move to return the economic control of the country to Africans, Brinkman said.
"I think that was part of the reason why he felt he could act more powerful," Brinkman said.
The United States had changed ambassadors shortly before Brinkman arrived. The former ambassador was a "big, athletic-looking black man" and the new man was white and small in stature, he said.
"It was a very unyears feeling," he said.
"I press freedom because we shouldn't press freedom because we wasn't amused."
Brinkman said he concentrated his seminar teaching on what could be done with journalism within the conditions of the country.
Brinkman's first week in Uganda was spent in Kampala, the capital city, teaching a small seminar that dealt with various ministry of information jobs.
Brinkman helped his students "a mixed bag of persons." They worked for newspapers, Radio Uganda, some companies and the ministry of information.
Frequently, Ugandan mass media were filled with governmental propaganda, he said, and in some cases, it was almost dictated by Amin.
Every afternoon at 5, Amin would come
along with me to help the people into a
french. Brinkman was there.
Amin capitalized on the opinion, prevalent in Uganda, that the country had been exploited by outsiders, Brinkman said. On this issue, the masses responded him.
"Most of them are scared, I think," he said. "Amin is an uneducated man and a dangerous man. I really think he has mental problems."
Psychologists who have studied Amin
form after hail called his behavior
offensive, and he went to the clinic.
Educated Ugandans, who rarely discussed the country's political situation, obeyed Amin totally out of fear, Brinkman said, but no attempts were made to oust him.
'He'd say something one day and change his mind the next day.' Briekan said.
For example, Amin banned teenagers' dances, and announced that men would bow and women would kneel before him before stating their business.
"if you opposed him, you would be found floating in the Nile." Brinkman said.
He also changed his mind about the exilation of Asian Ugandans several times. The recent death of an Indian
"It was kind of frightening." Brinkman said. "I was told not to leave my hotel room at night, I'm sure that I was being watched by my seminars were being watched."
Because of this hidden control, Brinkman didn't learn freedom on the press.
Career diplomats sent their families
career diplomas to the hundred of persons would
disappear.
Because of increased rumors of killings, Brinkman's hosts, the American Embassy and the U.S. Information Service, talked of sending him home early. He stayed in to avoid calling attention to the increasing nervousness of Americans there, he said.
While Brinkman was in Uganda, film crews from five different countries, including those from ABC-TV and CBS-TV, covered stories from the country.
Since then, the United States has cut off diplomatic relations with Uganda and only a few Americans, who don't represent the States in any official capacity, remain.
Quantrill first came to Kansas when he was 20. The son of an Ohio school teacher, Quantrill grew up in Kettering year before leaving for Salk Lake City. When he returned to Kansas, Quantrill made his home in Lawrence and began taking jackjack under the name of Charles Hart.
"Stories about Uganda were on the nightly news," Brinkman said. "A great deal of world attention was focused on the country."
The overall feeling toward the United States was generally favorable during his stay in the country, Brinkman said, but the feeling is unfavorable now.
"The relationship has just deteriorated, not because of the people, but because of us."
Quantrill's raid a shock to sleeping prairie town
When the smoke had lifted and the horses were out of sight, 180 persons were dead, and all but one building on Massachusetts had been carried out by Quantrill's Raiders.
It was August 21, 123 years ago, when the William Clark Lawrence, up on down upon the
However, educated Ugandans, many of whom studied in the United States, view Americans favorably, unlike the uneducated masses, he said.
By G. DAIVD ROWLAND
It was probably a day like any other. The people of Lawrence were peacefully sleeping, and the wind beat the hot and humid prairie of Kansas. Every once in a while the flaker of a lone oil lamp could be seen above the many trees bordering the woods of Sussex Street skyline. The year was 1863.
What the 1,200 people of Lawrence didn't know would be lying a bit more hardwrithic.
After the law became wise to his shady blackjack dealings Quantrill fled to Missouri where he began his looting and killing as a colonel in the Confederate army.
When threats of Quantillis' return to Lawrence were circulated, spies were sent to infiltrate the band of ruffians. They sent out letters warning the town, "when the moon was full."
Three weeks later as Quantrill rode through the town he was heard to say, "You were expecting me earlier, weren't you? But I have caught you napping now."
All was made ready and the town was holding fast, but Quantrill didn't come. He had heard of the preparations and decided to wait.
When the raiders left, members of the town began the tedious job of cleaning up the church. It took them streets and sidewalks, and friends began sifting through the cinders for relatives and friends. The Methodist Episcopal Church was constructed of walnut and burals malls were constructed of walnut and burals malls.
The military command in Kansas City, Kan, had told the people of Lawrence there was no need for cannons and troops to be sent from Leavenworth because they were not in danger. One week after the nine troops arrived to help reconstruct the town.
Quantrill went on to become a notorious legendary figure in Civil War history and allowed the tactics of John Brown, an adulterer, rebel, until his death on June 5, 1865.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and equipment
that are provided by the BING BING
class or other optional LEASE
BING BING class.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one three five
times times five
15 words or less $1.20 $2.00 $2.50
Each additional word .01 .02 .03
AD DEADLINES
to run:
Monday 5 p.m.
Tuesday 4 p.m.
Wednesday 4 p.m.
Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three weeks. Those calls can be placed in person or by calling the UDR business office +86-4435-8358.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS— regardless of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment, factory dums or close-out products, you will purchase the KFZ at the GRAMPOHION SHOP at KIFTS
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
Make sense out of Western Civilization
2) For class preparation
3) For exam preparation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Available now at Town Clerk Stores.
Now fire merchandise close-outs, etc. now featuring huge grocery stock from a Chicago supermarket that presents them at checked stores 9 am and 6 pm, Closed Mondays. Mettler's Salvage Center, 628 Vermont.
HORSE BOTTOM horse meat dog food. 24-14 x
658 No vermont. The Vermont. Meteor Salzwasser.
658 Vermont.
1972 Yamaha 600cc, red and white. $70 or less
. Call: 843-7450. 7-30
Come on out! Lots of shade and parking—to the backyard, in the garden, and antique furniture and other furniture. antiques, collectables. Wooden products. mail kegs. juice boxes. jars. wooden ammo boxes. wood bowls. coarse cloths. ammo boxes and thousands of other useful items. junk. fruits and vegetables. rakes. 15-cup, 20-cup, 25-cup, 35-cup, 15c, 2c for 2, 25
Must sell. 1972 Kawasaki 250 Trailbike and 1974 Honda 250 Trailbike. Call Condition. Call Rolf or Lj敷 for a $814 - $1,623 fee.
McInlton C28 Pre-amp and 2100 power amp.
Like new condition. Best Offer. Call 619-6479-730
***
Typewriter sale: We have just accepted, as trade-
ers, all of the typesetting equipment and typewriters. All were in service up until they were traded. So we avoid having to store them away. We have stored them near Rock Strong Office Systems 140 Vermont 823-360-7580.
Stereo & Camera Store & Dual 1241 Turtable, $80.
Stereo & Camera Store & Dual 1241 Turtable, $80.
Lens Reflex W/80mm (28.8 mm. 84-325) - 7-31
Honeywell Pentax Spotmatic w/ f1.8 lens. $165.
must sell fast. #435-3716. 7-29
owner, jayhawk WV 843-2100 7-31
driver 2 dr. e, Auto PS, V5, Jayhawk WV 843-2100
Electric Ilios Flexi-48, almost new, retails at $115.00, will set for $249.00. Call 643-785-7-31
***
***
***
Just arrived—shipment of Rabbitts and Scroolers
come by for a drive. Jaywark JVW 84-22-390
Jaywark JVW 84-22-390
1971 TWR Rdtr. 20,900 miles-maroon, Jayhawk
943.821-2210 7-31
Free. Med. sized dog needs good home. Gentle
and housebroken. 842-0149. 7-29
Closeout of all 1974 Demo's and Rental cars. save
hundreds, Jawky WAW V 843-231. 7-31
1973 Duster, Air, Auto, PZ, 25,000 miles, 7-31
Aircraft, Jayhawk W4, 843-2210
Buy a 1974 WB Bug today. Balance of factory
warehouse, never listed. Never tipped. Call Nail
Jayhawk WB 843-222-6000
Jayhawk WB 843-222-6000
JAMES LIQUOR
Cold Beer & Chilled Wine
9th Street Center
(Next to Hole in the Wall)
JAMES LIQUORS
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CARD
15 East Eastham
12-5 Monday-Friday
10-5 Sat.
POTION PARLOK
842-0722
Organic Bio-degradable Hair and Skin Care Products in Recycle-able Bottles
819 Vermont
819 Vermont 12-3
843-9708 Essence Oils Mon-Sat.
1986 Opel Kadett 2 kdt. standard, only $795.00.
Jayhawk VW. 843-2200. 7-31
VW Burg, from 1894 to 1974, all colors—4 speed
Burg, from 1906 to 2005, all colors—4 speed
Jayhawk VW, 843-2200. 7-31
192. Impala Custom, Pee, Automatic, arv, irv
roah Jyhavk WYV 843-2210
7-31
1971 Capri, 4 speed. Air conditioned, low, red mileage. Jayhawk WAV, 843-2210.
1968 WW Bus, converted to camper, ice box,
basket, gas bus, Jayhawk WW 845-220-7300
Men's new Skeine 10-speed Shimano brakes and
24-speed Shimano brakes. $79 or best offer
$89 or best offer Call 843-533-8331
Nice room size, bureau, baskets, plants, everything sold but cheaply. Am going to save 7-31
843-529-3690
74 Vega Karmack for ac, AC and tape deck
Excelent condition, 14,000 m³, $275, 843-$496, $
$105,000.
1973) HONDA 175 w/2 helmets, bar shield, 460 mm $14.95 117-485 Keep tying to the floor. Keep tying to the floor. Keep tying to the floor.
If they sell it, we sell it, only cheap. All turbines include base cover and Shure all turbines include base cover and Shure
THORENS TDMSC 10 was $230 will $139
GARRAD 62 was $109 will $109
GARRAD 62 was $109 will $109
MIRACORD 770H was $370 will $178
MIRACORD 770H was $370 will $178
BR41 400 was $102 will $52
BR41 400 was $102 will $52
LENCO 810 was $340 will $149
PHILIPS 321 was $149 will $149
**MALAYSIA RECEIVERS** was $300 will $300
MANZANT 2015 was $300 will $300
MANZANT 2015 was $300 will $300
KNWOOD 6400 was $350 will $129
KNWOOD 6400 was $350 will $129
SANSU IQR 3500 was $350 will $299
HARMAN KARDON 3200 was $350 will $149
HARMAN KARDON 3200 was $350 will $149
SHERWOOD 7210 was $300 will $219
**TAPE RECORDERS** was $300 will $300
TEAC 3005 was $70 will $155
TEAC 33008 was $70 will $155
TECHNICS 823 was $70 will $155
**MISCELLANEOUS** was $25 will $28
AUDIO TECH AT13E was $65 will $28
AUDIO TECH AT11B was $65 will $28
ADC SLM was $10 will $36
SHURE M 75 was $25 will $10
SHURE M 75 was $25 will $10
KENWOOD 6200 was $24 will $27
ULTRAINAR E 100 was $10 will $46
ULTRAINAR E 100 was $10 will $46
AVOID VOX ID400 was $10 will $99
AVOID VOX ID400 was $10 will $99
KOSS RVI was $25 will $20
KOSS RVI was $25 will $20
With prices like these we’ve been pretty busy.
With价钱 like these we've been pretty busy.
If you call CAL, DAVE. 842-659-7131
- 7:31
Car of your dream. 1973 VW Super Beetle, ex-
condition. Extras. $1999. Call ever.
842-786-7286
WANTED
Two female romannates 18-24 for hour experiment
with a dose of 0.15 mg/kg per dose.
$11 hqp. One hour mandatory free counts
of 30 mg/kg. One hour mandatory free counts
of 30 mg/kg.
Female Submit 18-25 for ½ hour experiment.
Payment is $1 plus the weekly office fee.
Phone: 643-863-7500.
Nerd female routine beginning the fall semester.
843-2921 first before Aug. 1, or 843-1687 first
843-2921 first before Aug. 1, or 843-1687 first
Wanted: A female upperclass roommate to share
room with a female fall semester student.
After 7.09 p.m. 7-29
Female roommate for a 2 BR unit in 4 bick rooms.
Prefer 3 bedrooms, kitchen and jazz. Rent is $75 and utility
is $100.
Wanted: Information:Papers for English Companion
Major Natural Research Centre, 1987 residency
in the National Natural Research Centre
Ultrasound cardiology or graduate woman to share
Upper-arm transplant. Good态度 in plants Call 843-2529 7-31
Need I Roommate to share Towers. $129.00 per
share. Call Mike at 841-680-7311
temporarily
Female roommate wanted for 2-bedroom apartm-
ture. Have Dog and Cat Call Lee ANI-
SEE
Female roommate wanted. Owned furniture room,
campus $3/month and electricity 843-729-780
FOR RENT
Help Girl out of a home from A 3-10 until
season end. Help New York City New
house住炉 845-997-404 after 8
6:00 am.
Free rental service Up to the minute listings in Lawrence in Lawrence. Lawrentt Real Estate. 842-250-3771. Real estate.com
WAGON WHEEL 1401 Ohio
Sandwiches, Delicatessen, Foods
If You're Planning on FLYING
Le Magnifique
Do The LEGWORK For You!!
Do The LEGWORK For You.
(NEVER an extra cost
for Airline tickets)
Johnson Rental Company, Studios 1, bedroom 2,
and studio 3 are located in KU Medical Center, Kansas City, Kansas.
Two bedroom apartment, all utilities paid, close
care of occupant. This fall furnished, or if
furnished 843-693
Rooms - Kitchen privileges. One block to campus.
Baths - Kitchen privileges. One block to campus.
bath- 842-507 or 842-606.
Rooms furnished, single, with or without cooking facilities. KU and NU rooms. No pets. Phone 883-2410.
Apartments, 1, 2, and 4 bedrooms furnished
BEDROWS KU and 4 bedrooms
Phone 845-767-1667
JAYAWAKER TOWERS - 2 bedroom, all allitions
500 sq. ft., 3 bathrooms, parking
1693 W. 48th St., 429-359, laurie.
1693 W. 48th St., 429-359, laurie.
Extra nice rooms with private kitchen. One room has a parking, other 3d Reasonable rent 343-5679
Male. Graduate Student wants someone to share
apartment for coming year Call 8044
0094 7-31
OPEN HOUSE - Jaywalker House 103 W. 15th
Thursday, 11 Hrs. 4 Fri. $10.30, Sat and Sun.
220 W. 7th St.
NOTICE
Single or double rooms. Share bath, kitchen.
Single room. Phone 843-7620 9:00 to 7:30,
843-1459 after 8:30.
Executive-style gourmet parties planned, catered.
Executive dinner party. Beautiful beautiful private pool. For detail calls.
800-531-7644. www.megalodge.com
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT Let us do the math.
$149.00 x 2.5 = $397.50
$397.50 - $84.00 = $313.50
1,000 canes = $13.99 We want you to buy them!
$13.99 x 1,000 = $13,990
COST PLUS 16%~Stereo equipment. All major
handles have power or packaging. Call Dave. Phone
812-350-7998.
"GAY" TRANSCENDS "HOMOSXUAL" Lawrence Gay Liberation, Inc. Geneva, Switzerland 842 DUB Union, Box 234, Lawrens RAP/ Consulting 843-3566 for referrals for socializing. 843-3529
TYPING
PHOTOGRAPHY Shooting Galfera Specializing in film and photography. Reqs: MFA or equivalent. We talk about anything and anyone you see on our website. Contact us at info@galfera.com.
Leaving town sale..Starting now until every week.
Kitchen items, records, books. #82-3131. 7-56
Experimented in typing thesis, research paper,
dissertation, etc. In the same manner typewriter
(caption rhinoh), elite type. Call 914-230-5100.
IBM Solicitic, pler or else, reasonable, exper-
843-919-7312 Call Jean Carrier 843-919-7312
Experienced typist—term papers, tissues, misc.
Essentials: typist, proofreader. Spelling,
spelling errors 43-83.
Typing in my home IMV electronic with pica typemark. The paper is a late-1979 paper, and may be typed. Call Fail, 848-7529.
THISIS BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is
the primary tool for providing access to our
Our service is fast and prices are reasonable.
Experienced in typing dissertations, theses, etc.
In Psych. Col Lestile, 843-8058. Reasonable rates.
Typing—a fast, accurate, reasonable rates. Close to campus. 842-5679 anytime. 7-30
HELP WANTED
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Part-time church secretary. Good typist and abilit-
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HARDWARE AND COMMUNICATIONS ANALYSIS consulting, mini-computer applications consulting. Experience with electronic technician roles in the telecommunications, e-gage programming, and parts specification and development of telecommunication systems. Power communications network equipment and networking or computer science with emphasis in experience in applicable areas will be considered for promotion. Formed resume to David I. Nordlund, University of Kansas Computation Center, P.O. Box 1520, Lawrence, KS 66043. 15 yrs. An equal opportunity employer. Woman in position offered.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS INTRAFARE-OFFICE MANAGER-A- part-time job from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., two days a week for the job, and maintain a membership program filing system, memo, and agenda (3). to type all IFC correspondence with the interfaire officers (3) to perform other reasonable officer dutie
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Schumann Food Company hiring for all & fall
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4
Tuesday, July 29, 1975
University Daily Kansan
SNIP!
PRICKLY SPIRULAS INFLATIONATIOS
PRICKLY SPIRULAS INFLATIONATIOS
Press is fickle on Solzhenitsyn
The press has a lot to say about Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn these days, most of it negative. I guess it takes a rebuff from the Secretary and the President to get into the news.
Of course Solzenytisnw was in the news quite a bit during the first months of 1974. That was when he was a great liberal hero and a champion of freedom of speech.
Unfortunately, a bomb soon exploded. Solienthynn wrote "A Letter to the Soviet Union" on June 14, 1938, in many of his feelings about freedom. For example, he said that the Soviet Union could never be a democracy and that the Russian government could be ruled by an authoritarian government.
Later, Solzhenytis also said that the Western democracies were suffering from the collapse of economic and internal weaknesses. He criticized the free press and was especially critical of U.S.
handling of the Pentagon Papers trial.
No, Solzhenitsyn wasn't the great liberal hero that the press had led everyone to believe. The press had either been fooled or else they were mistaken. They had created a media hero who really wasn't what they had expected.
Yet for some reason most people have only recently discovered that Solzenhitmus
COMMENT
is to the right of Barry Goldwater. After the publication of "A Letter to the Soviet Leaders," the press avoided him. Apparently he wasn't too eager to publicize its mistake.
Now-over one year after his release-
Solzentzient in the news again. The press,
**
which so happily made him a media hero, is becoming more critical and examining its subject more carefully.
Unfortunately, there is so much confusion about Solzhenshyn's political and ideological beliefs that it will probably take years to break them down and classify
In the meantime, he will be good for copy for the press.
The press seems to be able to create a media hero, use him when it wants, and give him the best of it.
Schoenitynsyn never should have been labeled a great symbol of freedom. The press should have investigated his ideas more carefully. It is a relief to see a more liberal press. Sometimes coming just a little late. Let's hope the press isn't too eager to create more media heroes.
—Ian Kenneth Louden
Herzog has faith in Royals and himself
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) —Whitie Herzog said yesterday he is well aware of one thing, "It can't be that to win ball games."
"That's a good start," said Herzog. "I couldn't ask for much more. We've had super pitching, both from the starters and the bullpen.
Herrz, who became manager of the Kansas City Royals, last Thursday, was referring to the four victories his team has won in its first four games under his management.
Herzog said that the Royals were not an old club. He said the club had a good blend of young players and veterans like Harmon Killebrue, Cookie Rojas and Vadis Pinson.
"This club has an abundance of talent, and my job is to make them believe just how good they are and to put the best nine men on the field every day," he said. This talent can be used every day. We have a good line-up, a strong bench and a good defensive club."
BASEBALL STANDINGS
By The Associated Press American League
W L W L Pet
Boston 40 60 60 75
Baltimore 51 68 315 9
New York 50 68 485 15
Milwaukee 50 55 485 15
Detroit 50 55 485 15
Cleveland 50 55 485 15
Oakland 65 37 637 — 10%
Kansas City 54 47 839
Chicago 54 47 650
Texas 47 56 656
California 46 56 452 184
Alabama 46 58 412
Cleveland 7. Baltimore 5. 10 images
Boston 7. Milwaukee 6
Chicago 9. Minneapolis 9. Kansas City 8
Colage 5. California 2
Cleveland 5. California 2
National League East
W W L Pet. GB
Pittsburgh 68 14 47
Philadelphia 68 44 39
Baltimore 52 30 29
St. Louis 50 30 200
Chicago 50 30 114
Miami 50 30 10
New York 50 30 114
West Chester 67 34 50 850 ---
Los Angeles 67 34 50 850 ---
San Francisco 51 34 50 850 ---
San Diego 49 34 50 476 18 ---
Alaska 49 34 50 476 18 ---
Atlanta 49 34 50 431 24 ---
Chicago 4, Montreal 2
Boston 4, Philadelphia 5
Pittsburgh 5, Chicago 1
San Francisco 5
San Diego 2, Houston 0
Herzog doesn't hesitate to tell anyone what's on his mind, and right now, one thing that's on his mind is the American League West Division pennant race. Second-place Kansas City at the Oakland A's by 9% in the Nets' night game with the Minnesota Titans.
The Kansan's ad number is 864-4358.
"Somewhere along the line, Oakland has to have a little slump. They've played super, better than I thought they would without Catfish Hunter."
"Our immediate goal is to get back in this race," Herzog said. "I haven't given up on this year even though we'll need a lot of help from the team." He added that he and not worry about what Oakland does.
"It will be a 35-man effort," Herzag said.
"I'm not afraid to go to the bench or to the bullpen. If I don't like what I see in a player, I'm going to tell him.
Herszal said that the Royals would use a five-man pitching rotation "during the dog days of August." The wolf will be Marty Pattin, Steve Busby, Al Fitzmorris, Dennis Bollard, and Daniel Splittorff, who will be inserted, during the absence of the injured Nelson Biles.
"I want to be very honest with the players. I don't agree with the theory that a
County documents moved to Spencer
Their destination is the Kansas Collection at Spencer. George Griffin, curator, said yesterday the transfer of records from several county offices would be done in stages, adding he wasn't sure how long the project would take.
The transfer of old Douglas County records to Spencer Research Library began yesterday with removal of commissioner's journals stored in the county's office.
The transfer primarily will involve records dating from the 1850s to the first part of this century. The material will be used for research. It will be stored under controlled temperature and humidity conditions. These conditions are more appropriate than the county offices and the court where some of the records have been kept.
manger can win 20 games a year, but a
manager can certainly lose 20 games a year
(the manager can never win).
The journals include the minutes of commission meetings.
"I have one main goal to get into the World Series and win it."
Herzog, who is brash at times, has confidence in himself. That confidence was bolstered by the late GI Hodges the night of the New York Mets won the World Series in 1969.
Microflims of most of the records will remain in county offices.
Mets Manager Hodges told Herzog, who was then director of player development for the club, "We could never have done it." Everything you told me has been right."
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seay, a long jumper, and Guinn, a high jumper, competed in meets in Finland and Sweden. Steeplechaser Kent McDonald later joined the American team to compete in the U.S.-U.S.S.R. dual meet and at meets in Czechoslovakia and Durham, N.C.
Danny Syele and Keith Guinn, University of Kansas track athletes, found several surprises on the U.S. track team's tour of Europe this summer.
After completion of the tour two weekends ago, which was sponsored by the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) and lasted one month, Seay and McDonald came home to Lawrence and Guinn returned to his Shawnee Mission home.
But Seyah had been invited to jump in a 40-
nation, pre-Olympic meet at Montreal on the
weekend, and there he saw what he
thought was one of the most amazing sights
of the summer.
The amazing event was the winning jump a 24-year-old Yugoslavian athlete named Dimitri Pazin.
By KEN STONE
Kansan Staff Reporter
Seay placed third in his event with a jump of 26 feet, which was a good performance considering the length of his season. Seay was second and started the start of the indoor season last January.
KU track athletes busy in Europe
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Seay, who holds the KU school record of 26-8. was impressed.
The Wind And The Lion
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"That was quite a jump," he said. "It was pretty surirising."
Stekie's leap was only one of the surprises that KU track men encountered this
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In the Soviet Union, Guinn discovered what Russian soda nasted like.
"They served carbonated water that tasted like Alka Saltzer or some kind of bubble gum juice," Guinn recalled. "When I got up to work, everyone stormed for the Coke machine."
Vittorio De Sica's A Brief Vacation
Seay said he gained eight pounds in the one Union because his diet consisted of *bread*.
Hillcrest
Seay said that partly as a result of his unusual diet, his performance suffered in the U.S.-U.S.R. dual meet. He placed fourth with aump of 25-5.
Seay said he thought the Russian meet officials cheated him out of a victory.
After being "wined and dined" by the Soviets in Kiev and taken to the national headquarters, team the night before the meet. Seay arrives at the stadium having slept only five hours on time.
winter warming up for the long jump
competition, Seay and the other American
jumper, Arnie Robinson, were told to stand
in the crowd and wait for their introduction.
Seay said they stood there for 20 minutes and meanwhile it began to rain.
Having finally been introduced, Seay started to take his practice runs.
Seay had taken two perfunctory practice runs when a Russian official approached him and asked to stop. Normally, Seey is taking one perfunctory practice runs and several practice jumps.
When competition began, Seay sought some help from the American coaches. But as the coaches approached the long jump area, some Russian soldiers blocked their path and told the coaches that they weren't allowed to talk to Seay.
Then the worst thing happened.
"I finally got warmed up by my second jump in the finals and they called the jump a foul," Seay said. "It felt like 23-8 or 20-4 whether I wouldn't let me see what the mark was."
Seyy said that he had tried to check the evidence that Russian officials had blocked his way, and he was very pleased.
By checking the board, Seay said, he would have been able to determine whether his jump was from behind the board—a trick that Russians say is what the Russian officials claimed.
A jump of 28-3 would have won the event, Seay said, and would have handed the Soviet winner, Valerie Podluzhnii, his first defeat in two and a half years.
Seay speculated that the Russian officials purposefully prevented him from winning the
He said one new position, a personnel officer, had been assigned to the Classified Personnel section to assist in the operation of existing civil service positions.
Nicher said James Feldstein, director of
would be the director of the new
office.
Feldstein was appointed director of Labor Relations in January 1974. Before coming to the University, he was personel manager for the Macy's stores in the Kansas City metropolitan area for four years. He is a native of Minneapolis, Min., and holds master's degrees in theology and philosophy.
Personnel offices on campus will be consolidated into one central organization, Keith Nitcher, vice chancellor for business affairs, said last week.
While Seay was suffering from the rulings of what he thought were biased meet officials and a diet of bread and carbonated water, Guinn, who will be a junior this fall, was feeling the effects of tendonitis in the left knee.
meet to protect the record of Podluchynh
entitled the best bumper in the world last year.
After jumping only 64% in Kiev, however, a doctor told Guinn to take some aspirin for the pain. For some reason, the knee problem then began to clear up.
During the first three meets of the tour, which were the World University Games in Helsinki, a meet in Stockholm and the Kiev meeting in Moscow has sent him from placing higher than fourth.
Offices that will be combined are Classified Personnel Services, Labor Relations, Unclassified Payroll and Staff Benefits. Nitcher said all present employees in those offices would continue in their present duties.
At a meet the next week in Prague, Guinn placed second with a jump of 7-3/4.
At the United States-Western Germany-African meet at Durham, N.C. July 18, Guinnie leaped 7-1 for second, his best performance when he had equaled his best, hurdle of 26.
Because of his return to form, and as a result of the confidence that international competition had given him, Guinn said he was looking forward to the Pan American Games trials to be held in three weeks at Eugene, Ore.
Guinn will be joined by Seay, who was the winner of the Stockholm and Durham long jump events, and McDonald, another spring graduate, who qualified for the European qualifier by placing second in the AAU championship with a school steeplechase record of 8:28.8.
The Pan Am Games will be held in late
October, 1968 the 106th Olympic
Games in Mexico City.
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Forer challenges report on sanitation department
By STANSTENERSEN
Norman Forer, associate professor of social welfare, last night gave to the City Commission a 60-page report answering statements made about the Sanitation Department and suggesting ways in which the department's performance could be improved.
Among Forer's recommendations were the following:
Support for an increase of 25 per cent in city garbage collection rates. The increase has been requested by City Manager Buford Watson.
-Rejection of a proposal to turn over the cell trash collection to private contractor.
- Modification of the "incentive system," under which employees are encouraged to complete their routes as quickly as possible. Modifications should attempt to provide
both good service for residents and safe working conditions for the employees.
- Strengthening of supervision within the department and establishment of clear standards of what constitutes good performance by trash collection crews.
- Support for the city manager's request of cost of living increase for sanitary workers.
contractor. The Commission will consider the matter in August.
The controversy surrounding the Sanitation Department is confusing to many people. They may give up trying to make sense of such apparent inconsistencies as payment of overtime to employees who only work part of their regular 40-hour week.
The confusion may be overcome if one understands the sanitation workers' schedules. Crews that pick up trash work 10-hour days. They are given collections routes that must be completed, and they are told that if they finish the route early, they may leave and still collect ten hours' pay. They call the "incentive system."
The number of workers and trucks isn't enough to do six days of trash collection in a 40-hour work week, however. At present, only about one-third of homes from homes and once a day from businesses
Therefore, additional routes are established and employees volunteer to work an extra day or two on the routes. Because they have already worked four 10-hour shifts, they are paid overtime for the additional routes.
and other facilities that can't store all the trash they produce.
The McKinney Report criticized these practices and suggested that the city could save money if it found a way to change the collection system. The Forer Report in turn criticized a number of the statements in the McKinney Report as misleading. The disagreements can be summarized as follows:
WAGES. The McKinney Report noted that the average employee in the Sanitation Department earned $11,847. The Forer Report said the figure was incorrect and misleading. It said the gross average income was actually $8,048 for all workers and considerably less for many.
Laborers, who make up 60 per cent of the work force, average $7,428 with overtime, $6,024 without. Drivers, who make up 28 per cent of the work force, average $7,373 without. Supervisors and other support personnel average $13,312.
"The typical" sanitation worker, more accurately, is a candidate for the federal food stamp program, even given his sub-committee of overtime work," the Forer report said.
It also said that a sanitation worker earning the department's startakehome pay of $234 a month would do at least as well or better if he were a welfare client. TIME ON THE JOB. The McKinney Report said employees were completing their routes in about half the assigned time. The Forer Report said the actual figure was
closer to two-thirds of a normal work week,
or 28.6 hours.
The McKinney Report, it said, didn't take into account that the crews don't take coffee breaks allowed by the city, often begin the day with a cup of coffee and wash trucks after they have clocked out. OVERTIME. The McKinney Report suggested that ways be found to cut overtime payments because the regular work was being performed in so short a time.
The Forer Report said in reply that under the present system, overtime couldn't be given to employees homes and once-a-day pickup for businesses were continued. The city would have to decide whether the cost of men and women preferred to paying overtime, it said.
THE INCENTIVE SYSTEM. The See FORER page A.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
sunny day
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
No.170
Wednesday, July 30, 1975
BILLIARD IN THE FIELD
Kansas also canine capital
cable installation and minit fill-in and paving work remain before the section of Nalmith between Crescent Dr. and 18th St.
Finishina the job
See page 2
Southwestern Bell contractors search for cable outlets near the nearly completed tunnel under Ninshi Drive. New utility
240 student stadium seats go to Athletic Corporation
By JACK McNEELY
This fall the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation (KUAC) will get 240 more usable seats in the student section of Memorial Stadium than it had last fall.
The Athletic Seating Board, which regulates seating in the student section, reached a compromise yesterday on a rule that early this summer for 824 more inclusive seats.
At the start of the board meeting Doug Messer, assistant athletic director and a member of the board, reduced the KUAC request from 524 more usable seats to 336.
Messer said yesterday he had reduced the request, which would have taken about a third of the seats used by seniors on the 50-yard line, because discussions with student members of the board had convinced him the original request wasn't a good option.
LAST YEAR KUAC used 624 seats in the first 15 rows of the student section between the 20- and 56-yard lines. Most of the seats were in the first 12 rows.
Opposition fails to squelch Loop
The Haskell Loop will be built.
By LYNN PEARSON
Kansan Staff Reporter
After an extremely emotional public hearing that lasted more than three hours, the Lawrence City Commission voted四 to one last night to continue land acquisition on Pennsylvania Street and in other areas of east Lawrence to build the Haskell Loop.
The commission, at the insistence of Commissioner Donald Binns, added a stipulation to the Haskell plan. The stipulation was that no truck traffic be
Safety controls for laser use issued by FDA
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Food and Drug Administration issued yesterday the first federal safety standards protecting workers and workers from laser radiation injuries.
The FDA said a 1973 study of laser use found "serious deficiencies in safety practices and in products" in schools and businesses.
Lasers concentrate and amplify light frequencies. Their use is increasing in schools, grocery stores, hospitals and industry.
Small units used in schools and grocery check-out lines are generally not considered dangerous, the FDA said, but industrial beams have a hole through heavy steel beams in seconds.
Excessive laser radiation can cause severe eye and skin burns.
About 30,000 lasers are used in college and school classrooms for science demon-
ing experiments.
The standard establishes four classes of lasers, depending upon their power, which ranges from a microscopic beam to one several inches in diameter.
The standards go into effect July 31, 1978. After that date, all lasers manufacturers must bear warning labels stating their compliance with the FDA performance standards.
The more powerful lasers must have fail-safe safety interlocks, visible or audible signals when the unit is one, and key-operated switches. Lasers used for delicate applications such as eye surgery must have a way to measure the radiation that they emit.
allowed on Haskell Avenue until the Loop was completed.
The ultimate plan is to arc the Haskell Loop from 11th Street to 23rd Street to provide easier access from 23rd Street to points north.
The decision wasn't an easy one to make. Much argument was presented on both sides of the issue, and much of it was emotionally charged.
Marl Beke, the only commissioner who voted against the Loop, said that only one person who lived in east Lawrence made a favorable statement about the loop at the meeting. That person was Ed Downs, vice president of Lawrence Improvement Association.
Downs said the Loop would further progress in east Lawrence. He said people would adjust to the noise and the traffic that would result from traffic on the Loop.
Sherry Ward, 946 Pennsylvania St., said that her family had been paying for their house for 24 years and that her father-in-law should have to readjust to a new neighborhood.
If the city has trouble finding housing for 27 families who will have to be relocated, he said, it can easily move the entire house to another location.
A. R. Bailey, 1120 Oregon St., asked the commissioners whether they had considered that the persons who are being taken away from them are the taxes or unkempt on newer, property.
"A! 57, it's not easy to pick up and start all over, especially when you don't want to."
Though the East Lawrence Improvement Association voted to endorse the loop last fall, she said, the association didn't really reflect the views of the entire neighborhood.
"These poor people can't stand too much of this," he said. "They are on fixed incomes. Their homes over here are modest, but it's the best they can afford."
Wilms said the Haskell Loop would attack traffic to the neighborhood rather than use it for a residential area.
"This petition with 244 names on it does reflect opposition to the Loop in the neighborhood."
Barbara Willits, 1265 Delaware St. presented the commission with a petition that opposed the Loop, which was signed by 240 persons in east Lawrence.
When Commissioner Fred Pence questioned the credibility of the petition, he said that Mr. Trump had no evidence.
as smart as anybody else, they know whether to out their name on a petition."
Pence asked whether the petitioners had pressured east Lawrence residents into buying the property.
Al Hack, president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, gave the commissioners copies of a prepared statement endorsing the Loop.
Hack said the Loop is an important part of the arterial street system in Lawrence. At present, there is no street connecting north and south in Lawrence that runs north and south in east Lawrence.
Johanna Kollmorgen, representing the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission, supported Hack's statement. The report also outlined outlet for commercial and industrial traffic.
Tom Patchen, chairman of the East Lawrence Improvement Association housing rehabilitation committee, said the association and east Lawrence residents had to look to those in authority for expertise in planning.
"We have no knowledge and no way of doing this kind of planning," he said. "We took the advice of Oblinger-Smith on the Haskell Loop."
Mark Kaplan, 1032 New York St., said the Loop was a way of getting rid of traffic in west Lawrence and funneling it into East Lawrence.
Oblinger-Smith, Inc., was the city's planning consultant for the Loop.
Mibee said that the community development funds were supposed to help east Lawrence, and that the people of east Lawrence should be considered.
"My house is going to be a block from Haskell Loop and, believe me, I'd rather see that baseball diamond than that street," he said.
"All of the commissioners have spent a lot of time at neighborhood association meetings," he said. "And I do think that we are able to honest reflection of community feelings."
"I Lawrence isn't that big a city," he said,
"I still believe that the city could spend that
money."
The East Lawrence Recreation Center will lose its baseball diamond. Haskell Loop will run directly over the diamond area at 11th and Delaware streets.
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (AP)—The United States and 15 other nations of the Organization of American States voted last night to lift mandatory economic and political sanctions they had imposed 11 years ago against Communist Cuba.
Mayor Barkley Clark said the commission had had input from the neigh-
"The road is a natural planning tool," Clark said. "It does make sense to buffer the residential from the industrial areas. It lets you get traffic off the residential streets."
OAS lifts Cuban embargo
U. S. approval of the resolution doesn't necessarily mean that Washington is ready to remove its unilateral embargo of Castro's regime. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger has said the embargo is being studied.
Clark said the commission had listened to residents of east Lawrence and had heard stories of people who died in the fire.
Some persons were happy, and others cried.
Chile, Uruguay and Paraguay opposed
the accession, and Brazil and Nicaragua
obstained.
The commission voted to build Haskell Loop.
The resolution passed 16 to 3. There were two abstentions. The resolution allows individual OAS members to resume relations with Fidel Castro's government.
The move required a two-thirds majority
"Today is a day of liberation for the Americas," he said.
of the 21 voting members but received two votes more than was necessary. Supporters had gained 15 pledges of yes votes before the special meeting convened and then Guatemala announced it also would approve.
The sanctions were decreed in the Rio de Janeiro mutual defense treaty when some OAS countries accused Castro of exporting revolution.
Mexico refused to abide by the sanctions and in the past few years eight other OAS members reversed their stands and refused to continue trade relations with Castro's government.
Mexican Foreign Minister Emilio Rabaza, who was a leader of the campaign to drop the sanctions, was jubilant after the vote.
But seats in the first seven rows of the stadium are bad seats. The view is obstructed and the seats aren't high enough to give spectators a good view of the field.
So of the 624 seats KUAC had last year,
only 28 were usable.
KUAC uses seats in the student section for high school recruits and for the families and friends of students.
Messer said high school recruits hadn't been getting good seats in the stadium. That has been hurting the recruiting program, he said.
"We're not trying to ramrod anything," he said. "We just have a problem. We want to lay out our problem and let the board look at it."
The proposal drew sharp criticism from StudEx, which passed a petition to the University administration that strongly condemned KUAC.
TEDDE TASHEFF, chairman of the board, said, "I want to see the students get as many seats as they can, and yet I understand the official corporation's problem."
KUAC's first proposal, submitted early this summer, was to take about a third of the seats used by seniors on the 65-year line. The 182 seats (812 usable seats instead of the 282 it had).
DAVE SHAPIRO, member of the seating board and an author of the petition, said at yesterday's meeting that the petition had been based on a lack of information and that it wouldn't have been written if he had known more about KUAC.
For example, Shapiro said, one item in the petition charged that KUAC was trying to keep the United States from partnering with the Kansas Union so that KUAC would get more profit at the expense of the Union,
That charge shouldn't have been made, Shanro said.
Before last year, the Union took a percentage of the gross revenue from concessions sales at athletic events, Shapiro said.
LAST YEAR THE contract was renegotiated so that the Union took 30 per
cent of the net profit, he said. Partly as a result of the renegotiation, the Union took more money from athletic concessions last year than it ever had before, he said.
The Union and KUAC recently finished negotiating this year's athletic concessions contract. The Union will again take 30 per cent of the net profit.
Shapiro said StudEx should have taken its opposition to the KUAC seating proposal directly to Athletic Director Clyde Walker instead of passing a petition to the University administration that condemned KUAC.
AT THE SEATING board meeting Shapiro proposed the compromise that was adopted. It gives KUAC good seats for high school, while it does not sit among the areas in which are among the best in the stadium.
The compromise, as amended and passed unanimously by the board, gives KUCA 624 seats between the 20-yard lines, mostly in rows seven to 12.
Messer asked for 624 good seats—seats higher than row seven and between the 10
"FTS NOTHING I can't live with," she said. "I want to compromise patient." I wish I had more knowledge of the treatment.
He got 528 good seats and 96 bad ones. But he didn't know in front of the KU Band, which was calling him to pick up.
Messer said that he might distribute earplugs to the people who had to sit in front of her.
In other business the board agreed to let KUAC continue selling spouse tickets to children of KU students. A spouse ticket costs $14. A student ticket costs $10.
The board will meet Aug. 19 to examine the priorities of seating for freshmen, juniors, seniors, graduate students, law students and KU Med Center students.
THE BOARD also will decide what to do with 272 seats that have become available for the next season.
The seats formerly were given to athletes in sports other than football. A recent NCAA ruling prohibits schools from giving free tickets to athletes who aren't on the team for that sport.
Nigerian government overthrown in coup
LAGOS, Nigeria (AP)—Gen Yakubu Gowon, who ruled oil-rich Nigeria for nine years and crushed the Blairan revolt, was shot by a bloodless coup, Radio Nigeria reported.
It was reported this morning that the new leader of Nigeria is Brig. Gen. Muritala Rufal Mohammed, who helped bring Gowon to power.
Gowon was in Kampala, Uganda, attending a summit meeting of the Organization of African Unity when fellow army officers ousted him as leader of black Africa's wealthiest and mostly populous nation.
The coup was announced yesterday in a radio broadcast by Col. Joseph Garba, commander of the elite brigade, which Garba is considered a friend of Gowon.
Garba said there had been no bloodshed, and that a dusk-to-dawn curfew had been ordered and that violators could be shot. The coup was accomplished so quickly and quietly that many Nigerians left their homes for work without being aware of it.
In Kampala, Gowan, a 40-year-old,
moderate with broad support in Africa,
addressed an OAU session Monday night
when he met with the head when an
aide advised him of the coup.
"I have a clear conscience. There is nothing to worry about," the general said.
He then left for his hotel room. He reportedly looked calm.
Diplomats said the coup apparently was organized by a group of colonels and majors following months of military dissension and student unrest in Nigeria.
In his broadcast, Garba ordered workers at public utilities, hospitals, ports and communications to go to their jobs and be summarily dealt with. A public order will be summarily dealt with.
Troops closed the Lagos airport, sealed off the borders and shut down most means of communication. There were no reports of violence.
Gowan came to power in an army coup in July 1966 and became Nigeria's strongest ruler since the country gained its independence from Britain in 1960.
Pressure was building for a return to citizen rule and there were continual trials.
Diplomatic sources said Gowon was trying to assess the situation in Nigeria and had not ruled out the possibility of attempting to return to power. Other sources reported that military commanders at home to determine whether he retained any support.
Diplomats also said Gowon had suspected that members of his military government were plotting to incarceration and had taken action in the movement of his family to London before leaving Nigeria.
2
Wednesday, July 30, 1975
University Daily Kausan
NEWS DIGEST THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Senate approves pay hike
WASHINGTON—The Senate voted yesterday to give all members of Congress, federal judges and judicial clays the right federal executives automatic
The pay increase was sent to the House by a 87-29 roll-call vote as an amendment to an unrelated bill requiring the Postal Service to comply with the Occupational Health Act.
The raise would be the same as that to be granted later this year to all federal employees.
The amendment was defended as an act of justice for members of Congress who have not had a pay raise since March 1969. A Congressman's annual salary now is
President Ford said the pay raise was necessary to meet what he called a critical problem in recruitment and retention of senior executives and judges. He has said he would recommend a 5 per cent cost-of-living raise this year. The actual increase in the cost of living during the past year was about 8.8 per cent.
Rock Island seeks loan O.K.
CHICAGO—Rock Island Lines asked for court permission to borrow $2.6 million to prevent what it described as a deterioration of the railroad's services.
Nicholas G. Mancow, a lawyer who represents Rock Island Trustee William M. Gibbons, said the railroad had enough money to operate, but needed more money to pay off its debts.
Manso said Judge Frank J. McGarr of U.S. District Court would probably order a hearing in September on the request that the railroad had hoped the U.S. Government had done so.
Court approval is needed because the railroad has filed for financial reorganization.
Venezuela oil takeover likely
CARACAS–Venezuela, the United States' second largest foreign oil supplier, is expected to complete its takeover of foreign oil holdings, most of which are in Venezuela.
The Chamber of Deputies, Venezuela's lower house, approved the bill and expected to begin debate today. Industry Monday night. Venezuela's Senate was expected to begin debate today.
Subsidiaries of Exxon, Shell, Gulf, Mohli, Sun and Texaco, with assets unofficially estimated at $1.1 billion, would be affected.
Venezuela intends to continue supplying oil to its regular customers through a new state company Petrolecu Venezolanos Petroven, according to govern-
The United States buys 1.4 million barrels a day of crude oil and refined products from Venezuela. Only Canada exports more to the United States, providing 5.9 per cent of U.S. consumption, compared to 5.4 per cent from Venezuela, according to figures from the American Petroleum Institute and from the U.S. Bureau of Mines.
If the wheat fails, we can go to the dogs
MANHATTAN (AP)—Kansas, long known as the nation's champion producer of wheat, has another first-place record to bowl about.
The Sunflower State is "the undisputed leader in commercial dog production," said Kansas State University Extension officials.
About $10 million worth of dogs from
the United States reported across
the nation, KSU reported today.
The state has about 1,425 federally-licensed kennels for breeding and selling dogs wholesale. Eighty per cent of the state's dogs are in Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri, and Iowa.
Dog traffic through the airports of the four states has become a multi-million dollar business as hundreds of puppies are flown each day from Kansas City Influenza Center. The million was paid in 1974 to fly Kansas cities other cities and several foreign countries.
"Kansas has taken the leadership in dog training for several reasons," said Dr. Marvin Samulson, assistant professor of small animal medicine. "It's healthy environment has plenty of fresh air and is relatively free of mosquitoes and parasites."
Also, its central location gives Kansas processors access to markets on both sides.
K-State recently had five regional dog production meetings across the state. These were the first statewide educational programs for the dog industry.
The meetings, which revealed the popularity of raising dogs for profit in Kansas, outlined the requirements for controlled facilities for puppy production.
More than 500 persons attended the meetings, and it was found that most commercial dog production is a supplemental source of income for small farmers whose wives now sell puppies instead of eggs.
Mrs. Jim Clawson of Randall, who operates a 301-bitch kennel with her husband, told K-Station Extension Officials that the fight there was fun and profit in dog raiding.
"It's good therapy," Mrs. Clawson said. "I used to be a beautician but reached the point where instead of fixing people's hair, I was ready to pull it out. Now whenever I get frustrated, I just go talk to the dogs. They lick my hand and seem to say thank you."
Bid on hospital $2 million less than expected
By MARK PENNINGTON Kansan Staff Reporter
The latest estimate for construction of Lawrence Memorial Hospital's expansion from 168 beds to 204 beds is $9,785,242. This includes guaranteed maximum costs of or construction items and $170,000 for ancillary, which are unforeseen expenses.
The construction estimate, which includes $300,000 for demolition of part of the current hospital and remodeling of the 1969 building, will be estimated by an estimate made at the end of design development in April. It is about $2.7 million less than the architect's estimate, made a
The April estimate of $11.865 million in
investment costs of $700,000 from previous
$200,000 from previous investments.
Don Lenz, hospital administrator, said yesterday that the reduction was partly because of a better estimate of how much new equipment would cost and because more equipment from the old hospital could be used in the new one.
The new cost figures have left the hospital trustees with some extra money, Lenz said, and they are considering the purchase of additional items such as pneumatic tubing, vinyl wall covering, an additional elevator, a screen around the water cooling tower, a screen for heating and concrete, rather than asphalt, for curbs and guttering in the parking zones.
The guaranteed maximum cost reflects only the base bids, the additional items and unforeseen construction manager costs. These will be valid for 60 days, during which time the hospital must complete bond and contract arrangements.
A few cost factors, such as the construction manager's fee and special condition items, like pick-up trucks and portable toilets, aren't covered in the maximum cost because they were agreed upon at an earlier date.
The hospital's trustees learned last week that a U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare loan to finance the building costs of the hospital interest rates will be about double the amount they had expected. The loan has risen from $2 million to $4.25 million.
That is one third of the anticipated industrial revenue bond issue of $12.655 million that is being planned to finance the project.
Officials expect to obtain a 6.5 per cent interest rate on the HEW-backed bonds, although they anticipate about a 9 per cent interest rate on the remainder of the bond issue. This was higher than previous estimates.
Two local firms, Huxtable and Associates, Lawrence, and Hamm Asphall Co. Perry, are among several contractors who will work for the hospital's expansion project.
Huttable and Associates will do plumbing, sewerage and electrical work. Harmn Asphalt Co. will do the asphalting for the parking zones.
HEW will review the bidders and their contracts.
The contractors will sign with McBco Planning and Development Co. and McCarthy Bros, Construction Co., both of St. Louis. The two firms will serve as the construction managing team for the project.
Election commission shovels slush funds
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Federal Election Commission adopted a new regulation yesterday that would virtually stop the requirement for congressmen maintain in their offices.
The commission approved the regulation in a 6-0 vote.
The regulation now goes to Congress which had 30 days to consider it. Unless a majority of Congress rejects it, the regulation will become effective automatically.
The research team has received a renewal grant of $102,168 from the National Institute of Health to finance the second year of the three-year project.
For those parents there may still be hope. A University of Kansas research team is working on reactions to foods, in an effort to create meals using nutritious food that children like.
And most have probably wondered why children seem to prefer nutritious junk food.
Todd Risley, professor of human development, is principal investigator for the Erin Ember Herbier-Jackson assistant professor and graduate development, supervises daily operation of it.
Consultants for the project are two nutritionists: Marie Cross, associate professor of human development, and Norge Jorome, associate professor of humancology and community health at the University of Kansas Medical Center
"We know a lot about what nutrients children need, but we don't know very much about eating and the factors influencing eating." Hertford-Jackson said yesterday.
As psychologists, she said, they are interested in behavior—why children will accept certain foods and not others. Their conclusion, based on conclusions contrary to certain beliefs,
"For instance," she said, "we're finding in
measles very nutritious foods children eat.
She cited mashed yams and yogurt as examples. The idea is to identify more of
Most parents at one time or another have struggled to get their children to eat something they didn't want to eat, telling them all the while, "It's good for you."
She said the KU researchers have set up shop at the Lawrence Day Care Center, a nonprofit preschool located in the Meadowbrook apartment complex. There they study eating habits of 20 children who are 1-3 years old.
"We're working with toddlers because they're making the transition from brittle-racked hands to soft-feet."
VISTA couple gets acquainted with Lawrence
Jim and Olivia Hillman, husband and wife VISTA employee from Eureka, Calif., have been in Lawrence just over a week and are in the process of certain problems of the Lawrence-area poor.
One of the biggest problems, Mrs. Hillman said recently, was the long lapse between the time a person files for welfare and the time he receives the first check.
"In California," she said, "it is much easier to get welfare assistance. They don't have to go to a welfare system waiting like you do here. And in California there is no need for separate assistance agencies like Penn House and Ballard. It's all built right into the welfare system."
Jim said he and his wife spent their first year with the agency, a community agencies like Headquarters.
"Basically I think we've been trying to familiarize us with all the people we'll be working with," he said. "We've been introduced to the local power structure."
He said that when they hadn't been attending meetings with local officials, he and his wife had been working with elderly people in north and east Lawrence.
"We want to make sure that they know what services are available to them in the city."
"When a person is confined to his house when the officer or the therapist for him is in touch with the rest of the people."
Olivia said that besides becoming acquainted with the area people, they also learned to speak English.
“In Eureka, which is in northern California, it's almost 70 degrees now,” she said. “We're having a tough time adjusting heat here, but it gets better every day.”
Near capacity crowd expected for dorms
This Fall's occupancy in University residence halls is expected to increase slightly over last year's, filling the halls with students. Wilson, director of housing, said yesterday.
He said accidents, medical problems and other circumstances could somewhat reason his decision.
The number of housing contracts received is already approaching 90 per cent of last year's total.
He said he expected 96 to 88 per cent of the hearings, and those expected by the beginner to the fall semester.
Caryl Smith, associate dean of women, and the principal of more than one school and then waited until clinic.
*One hundred per cent is hard to get*
*someone really wants gets some no-show at the last minute.*
Wilson said the increased demand for residence hall contracts possibly could be attributed to increased enrollment or inflation problems.
"I would like to think that we're doing a job and giving better food service," he said.
mer's end to make a decision, which resulted in a few cancellations.
Smith said that the scholarship halls were already filled, and that Stouffer Place was one of the many.
Last year, in addition to scattered empty residence hall spaces, one floor in McColum Hall and almost an entire floor in Templin Hall was empty. Smith said.
Contracts can be cancelled up to July 25 with virtually no penalty. Wilson said.
Wilson said students could cancel their contracts, with penalties assessed accrued to the student.
c o u p o n :
KU food team studies kid stuff
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said. "This is a good age to work with,
because he hasn't already formed strong
habits."
LRE
Lawrence, Ks.
During the first year, the researchers did what they called "descriptive research," by presenting certain foods to the youngsters and observing their behavior.
The next step in the experiment was to vary the characteristics of the food in some way, such as serving the food at different temperatures.
"There was no difference in the children's acceptance," she said. "This has interesting implications for the energy crisis."
The youngsters seem to prefer canned vegetables to frozen ones, so the researchers are trying to determine whether it is the consistency or the taste that makes the vegetables better. They are doing this is to cook the frozen vegetables longer and rate their acceptance.
a milk preference study already had been
completed. Nonfat dry milk, liquid skin
collagen, and a protein supplement,
sued, said. No preference was given.
"Therefore," Risley said, "we recommend nonfat dry milk for children because they accept its taste, it is less expensive and it provides the convenience of being mixed by the glass and served at room temperature."
She said the researchers found that children didn't care whether notfat dry milk was served at room temperature or cold.
( )
The KU Interfraternity Council (IFC), is seeking an Office Manager - a part time job from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., five days a week for the 1975-76 school year.
The conclusion about milk is an example of what the researchers are trying to account for.
Herbert-Jackson said that when the tests were completed the research team hoped to develop a package to disseminate to day care centers and parents. This package would recommend ways to help youngsters develop desired eating habits.
JOB ANNOUNCEMENT
Responsibilities:
(1) To keep and maintain a membership program filing system.
(2) To label, fold and mail the IFC newsletter and memo.
(3) To type all IFC correspondence with fraternities, University administrators and national fraternity officers.
(4) To perform other reasonable services as are requested by the officers of the IFC and which are reasonably necessary to carry out the programs of the IFC.
Qualifications:
(1) A typing proficiency of 50 words per minute is required.
(2) Previous secretarial experience would be helpful.
(3) Applicant should be cheerful, dependable, hard working and willing to learn.
Please submit all applications to the Interfraternity Council President, 119-B Kansas Union, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas, 66045, before August 8.
Applications may be picked up in the IFC office.
The IFC is an equal opportunity, affirmative action employer. Men and women of all races are encouraged to apply.
Out they go at drastic reductions!
TRANSFER SALE
(Thursday, Friday, Saturday)
We combed all our other stores from corner to corner, rack to rack, and transferred all exciting summer fashions from our Kansas City Shops to our Lawrence Shop at enormous savings.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, July 30, 1975
1
3
Council active for elderly
By DAVID BARCLAY
By DAVID BARCLAY
Kansas State Reporter
In the past few years, the Planning Council on Services for the Aging, which began in 1972, has emerged as the primary planning, coordinating and transportation agency for the elderly in Lawrence and Douglas County.
Carl Boughten, executive director of the council, said yesterday that the group's programs included minibus transportation, bus rentals and recreational activities for persons over 60.
Within the next six months, the council will add its third bus to the minibus transportation program, which now serves 85 persons each day.
Boughten said that the lunch plan served an average of 65 persons daily. Four Lawrence locations serve the meals: Babcock Place and the Baptist Campus Church, two weekly; and the Ballard Community Center, three times a week.
The council's health screening program, carried out by the Visiting Nurses Association, is countywide. The nurses measure blood pressure, take blood counts in a clinical analysis, heart, hearing and vision checks for 28 cents each or $1 for four or more tests.
The health tests are given in Lawrence every Wednesday at Babcock Place, in Lecompton on the first Tuesday of each month, in Baldwin on the second Thursday
of each month and in Eudora on the third Tuesday.
Marvel Jackson, Babcock's representative to the council, said that recreational activities that accompany the meals were essential to specific needs of the elderly at each site.
The invitation requested that proposals be submitted by private developers for the construction or "substantial rehabilitation" by families or occupancy by families or elderly persons.
Such projects, as specified by Section 8 of the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1974, would be subject to HUD regulation and would be eligible for a regular operational subsidy in the amount of the difference between the fair market rate for equipment being paid by its tenant. Each tenant would pay 28 per cent of his income for rent.
Other programs try to counter the loneliness of the aged. Ring-a-Day volunteers call on about 45 aged Lawrence citizens almost daily to check on them, remind them of medication times and just to talk.
A letter requesting that the city commission study the implementation of a licensing procedure for roof repairmen will be sent to City Manager Buford Watson this week by the Consumer Affairs Association (CAA).
The letter received by the county commissioners office said the invitation had been accepted.
Carol Boone, director of the CAA, said yesterday that she would make a motion tonight at a meeting of the CAA Board of Directors to send the letter.
Proposals for the creation of new federally assisted Section 8 housing projects in Douglas County will be accepted by the Topeka office of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the department announced this week.
She said the center was placing families in temporary quarters such as motels, Centerbury House and Headquarters. Other centers helped by helped by the Salvation Army, she said.
Doris Kaiser, executive director of the Lawrence Housing Authority, said she and members of her board of directors agreed that a new project was needed for the elderly in Lawrence. The Lawrence Housing Authority operates the city's two public housing projects: Edgewood Homes, a general occupancy facility at Babcock Place, a project for the elderly.
Anne Thomas, chairman of the Ring-a-Day steering committee, said that on several occasions the volunteers had to be stocked in stock by reminding elderly persons to eat.
The county commissioners' office received an announcement of the invitation service.
At least eight complaints against several local roof repairmasters lodged with the offices of the CAA and the Douglas County attorney Department, and sent to the request for a licensing procedure.
"I think the commission will be favorable towards it," Boone said.
In addition to Boone, Assistant County Attorney Mike Malone and several local officials have been telling people they have said they supported such a procedure. They said the measure would protect the consumer by promising a higher quality of repair work and putting more oversight over it.
The county recently received its first Community Development Fund allotment from HUD, which was $225,000 for fiscal year 1975.
Bibliana Steele, assistant director of Ballard Community Center, a local social service organization, said the lack of funding in assisting in Lawrence was "settable desperate."
Some 57 aged persons receive special diets as well as regular meals through the Meals on Wheels program, started in 1970. Volunteers prepare regular meals. The special diets are prepared at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
HUD to accept housing projects for county soon
"I don't see why it can't be incorporated into the building code. It seems silly that they don't go one step further and have a license or regulation."
Because the inspection was arranged when there was no provision in the building code the necessitated such an inspection, Boone asked why the building inspector's office hadn't been doing roof inspections all along.
capitalized and speech therapy. Home health aids and care do, dry laundry, clean clothes of kids.
Susan Petfish, executive director of the Visiting Nurses Association, created in 1969 as a part of the county health department, said that the health department reached 200 different people and made 4,800 trips to the hospitals where persons in the first six months of 1975.
"If they have the knowledge to check out
they can't can't they get the regulatory
power?" Boo.
Roy Sturtidge, city building inspector, said roofers would have to be licensed to have a worthwhile provision in the building code relating to roofing standards.
A recent incident involving the inadequate work of a local roof repairman prompted Boone to make the formal request for a licensing procedure, she said.
"They said it was a very unprofessional job," Boone said.
By THERESE MENDENHALL
KAREN AND JOHN
Coleman said a private developer might want to start a Section 8 project because the government subsidy would make opening a business difficult and could be a comparable commercial development.
The Douglas County Health Department provides intermittent care for the home-visited.
The Douglas County chapter of the American Association of Retired Persons was created in 1878 to enable its members to become active in society. Holmes, president of the organization, said
The city building inspector's office was called, and a check of the roof was made.
The attempt by the CAA to seek a licensing ordinance is favored by Strutridge.
"But we can't come down on anybody's head unless there's a licensing ordinance."
"We can go out and tell you whether it’s a good job or bad," Stuartidge said, "and we need to do that."
Assistant City Manager Mike Wilden said that the letter would be considered at next week's meeting of the city commission to decide whether the city manager early enough Friday.
Boean said she thought her motion before the board would be approved.
The association schedules monthly guest lecturers for its 270 members. It also provides training in audio-reader program at the University of Kansas and counsels the elderly on their income taxes. Five of the lecturers receive an income tax training in Kansas City, Kan.
"I imagine they could put some fire under somebody and move in that direction," he said.
Ernest Coleman, Douglas County federal funds consultant, said Section 8 didn't authorize funding for the creation of housing projects, but specified that the projects had to be initiated by private developers.
The letter to Watson, stating the request for a licensing procedure, would include a statement of the problem, a list of examples of recent complaints against roof repairmen and a reference to a suggestion made to Boone by the Topeka League of Municipalities to incorporate a roofing provision in the Lawrence building code.
The licensing request would then be referred to the staff of the city manager's office for study and the drafting of an ordinance, Wilden said.
Patti Armbrister, codirector of the Lawrence Public Library's home service, said the library is now delivering books to children in need and providing four nursing homes and at Bakee Place.
"I think they (the commission) will strongly consider it if it's legitimate," he said. "In this case it might be a legitimate request."
THE BEST FROM HOLLYWOOD!
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
MOVIE MARQUEE
By KEN STONE
Korean Staff Reporter
Those wanting books can either request a specific book or suggest a general topic area, she said. The librarians will select their books.
"WALKING TALL" Part 2
"LOVE and DEATH"
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The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three months. These ad费 can be paid in person or via the DKR business office at 861-4358.
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Jayhawk WV 853-220-8290, 7-31
Closeout of all 1974 Demo's and Rental cars, save
Jayhawk, Wax-843-2210 7-31
Buy a 1974 VW BUt today. Balance of factory stock, New Selection, New Note. Call Now 212-368-5500
Quietest bed, bureau, baskets, plants, every
size sell cheaply. Am going to leave
843-329-599
843-329-599
Men's new Skine 10-speed. Shimano brakes and
men's new Schwinn 20-speed. must sell $15.
men's new Schwinn 443-853. must sell $25.
1968 WB Sun, converted to camper, ice box,
gas stove, gasoline. Jayhawk WB 843-220-229.
1680 Opel Kadett 2 dr. Standard only $75,93
Jawakvv, JWK-843-2290
7:43
1972 Impala Custom, Pc. Automatic, air, vitr
Jaywalk. Wash 843-821-200 7-31
1971 Capri, 4 speed. Air conditioned, red, low
mileage. Jaywalk 843-821-200 7-31
74 Vega Kannamack for AC and tape deck
Excellent condition, 14,000 miles, 823-649-640
www.vgekannamack.com
1973) HONDA 175 w/2 helmet, bar, shield 4-71
1973) HONDA 115 w/137. HONDA 842-320. Keep trying. 7-31
* * *
THORENS TD165C was $230 now $139
TREVON D427 was $209 now $199
GARRAD 62 was $199 now $199
GARRAD 62 was $199 now $199
MIRACROD 730H was $370 now $179
MIRACROD 625 was $370 now $199
MIRACROD 625 was $370 now $199
DUAL 129P was $300 now $204
DUAL 129P was $300 now $204
PHILIPS 512 was $300 now $249
PHILIPS 512 was $300 now $249
RECEE R58 * ***
MARIANZT 2015 was $250 now $199
PIONANTZ 2015 was $250 now $199
PIONANTZ 2015 was $250 now $199
TECNICSN 6500 was $350 now $239
TECNICSN 6500 was $350 now $239
SANSUI QRX 3000 was $450 now $235
SANSUI QRX 3000 was $450 now $235
SONI 0636 A was $210 now $199
SONI 0636 A was $210 now $199
TAFE RECORDERS * ***
TEAC 4065 was $209 now $199
TEAC 3300S was $209 now $199
TEAC 3300S was $209 now $199
TECHNICS 623 was $700 now $150
TECHNICS 623 was $700 now $150
MISCELLI was $65 now $28
AUDIO TEACH 417E was $65 now $28
AUDIO TEACH 417E was $65 now $28
ADC SLM was $100 now $19
ADC SLM was $100 now $19
SHURE M 75 was $240 now $10
SHURE M 75 was $240 now $10
KENWO 6200 was $450 now $275
KENWO 6200 was $450 now $275
UTELINEAR N 90 was $100 now $19
UTELINEAR N 90 was $100 now $19
AUOO VOX ID400 was $155 now $109
AUOO VOX ID400 was $155 now $109
KOSH H11 was $155 now $109
With picture for these two units, pretty
With prices like these we've been pretty busy.
With prices like these we've been pretty busy.
Call CALL DAVE. 842-569-7131
Call CALL DAVE. 842-569-7131
Car of your dream. 1973 VW Super Beetle booth.
Condition. Extras. $1999. Call 631-828-7266
1973 Yamaha 700 oil cooler, windscreen, well-maintained tasting bike, $900 or best offer, #5241
COLOR TV 18' RCA, $120. Yamaha 75-71
with case 75, Single bed 128, 742-758.
WANTED
Two female roommates 18-25 for hour experiment
19-30 for hour mandatory free volumetric hourly mandatory free volumetric hourly
Cell Phone 684-5533
Female roommate for a 2 BR unit in a 4 bays apartment, with shower and jarz. It is $75 and jazr.
Nurd female nurse beginning the fall semester
that begin 83-291 before Aug. 1, or 84-1638 after
Aug. 1, 7-31
Female Formals 18-25 for $1 up hour experiment
Payment is in $1 plus entry into a weekly letter
card. No phone calls.
The Bureau of Child Research Language Project (BCRLP) has offered a 3 or 4-year-old children in its afternoon session for the first six weeks of the Ment-Thurs beginning Sep. 15. Both normal and special education students can apply. Call Ann Riegel, 864-870-9252, ann.riegel@bcrlp.org, 864-870-9252
Helgiirl out of a home from Aug 3-10 until Gisela's house hit a fire. 643-9874 after a house house hit a fire. 643-9874 after a house house hit a fire. 643-9874 after a house house hit a fire. 643-9874 after a house house hit a fire. 643-9874 after a house house hit a fire. 643-9874 after a house house hit a fire. 643-9874 after a house house hit a fire. 643-9874 after a house house hit a fire.
Recommise wanted for a bedroom, partially furnished and approximately $80 per room. Call Kell at 625-736-9140 or re.compile('^
female roommate wanted for 2-bedroom ag-
ement. Have Dog and Dog 718
1088 Have Dog and Dog 718
Female housemate wanted—must be non-moker
and not a student student member
nurse 424-722, Kiley 424-912,
31-31
Wanted-room in house or studio apartment
or will stay in Carolyn, 842-653 and
842-7590.
FOR RENT
Cold Beer & Chilled Wine
4th Street Center
(Next to 'Hole in the Wall')
842 0233
JAMES LIQUORS
842-0722
Free rental service. Up to the minute littings of
Lawrence, Lawrence. Rental Exchange: 842-250-3600.
Johnson Rental Company, Studios, 1 bedroom, 2 bathrooms to KU Medical Center, Kansas City, Kansas.
Two bedroom apartment, all utilities paid, close to campus, this fall, furnished or unfurnished. 843-929-0331
*women:* Kitchen privileges. One block to campus.
*men:* Rent reduction rent reduction.
482-907-6051 or 482-906-606.
Rooms furnished, single with or without cook-
ing facilities. Available KU andNU
rooms. Nm phones. Phone 843-5267
Apartments, 1, 2, and 4 bedrooms furnished
Borders KU and near town. Phone 843-5767, fc
JAYHAWKER TOWERS-2, bedroom, all utilities
TOWER-1, bedroom, parking, laundry
TOWER-0, bedroom, parking, laundry
1030 W. MAIN ST., parking
Extra nice rooms with private kitchens. One block from Union. Private parking, utilities off the street.
Male Graduate Student wants someone to share
mortgage apartment for coming year Call 822-594-
8304
OPEN HOUSE-Thursday Kowers, 1063 w.
Munth.-Tuesday 8, Fri. 9, Thurs. 5(30), Sat. and Sun.
Single or double room. Share bath, kitchen.
Single room. Phone 843-6722 90 to 50.
Single room. Phone 843-6722 90 to 50.
Single room. Phone 843-6722 90 to 50.
NOTICE
COST PLUS 10% - Stereo equipment. All major
models include 4-channel receiver or
items or packages. Call Dave. Phone 852-293-7666.
Executive-style gourmet parties planned, catered,
dressed up for a private event. Beautiful blinded private pool. For detail calls: 412-693-5010.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT! Let us do your printing while you wait at the Quick Copy Centr
100 copies, $81, 100 copies, $51, 500 copies, $81, 100 copies, $51, 500 copies, business at the Quick Copy Centr.
**PHOTOGRAPHY** Shooting Gallery Specializing in Personalized Portraits in natural surroundings. Wedding, portfolios, and commercial photography. 812-249-0500, briar.412.249.0500, www.briar.412.249.0500. ift
"GAY" TRANSCNDS "HOMOSEXUAL" Lawrence Gay Liberation, Inc. Gathering; 7:30 to 9:15 p.m. U.S.A. (Saturday) BUID Union, Box 242, Lawrence RAP / Counseling 843-506-9568 for referral; socializing. 843-502-9528
Leaving town tale: Starting until everything
is done in the kitchen. 842-311-301
kitchen items, records, books. 842-311-302
HELP WANTED
Occasional day labor, skilled and unskilled
Leave name at 842-7287. Equal Opportunity. tf
Part-time church secretary. Good typist and abilit-
ity. Send resume to Church Secretary, 1899 W. I. Church.
Secretary, 1899 W. I. Church.
Position available-Thaming Coordinator, Doug
Foster, MD. 20% salary $32 per month. College graduate
savings $189 per year. Provide grant writing, and community development. Applicant must have a Bachelor's in County Drug Abuse Counsel. Doug County Drug Abuse Counsel.
BOMBER JET
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HARDWARE AND COMMUNICATIONS ANALYST: responsibilities include data communication systems installation. Experience with electronic technician equipment, computer programming, and parts specification and assembly of computer network equipment, and power point communications network equipment, and support for computer or science department in nering or computer science with emphasis in experience in applicable areas will be considered an appropriate position. Forward resume to David L. Nordland, University of Kansas Computation Center P.O. Box 16489, Lawrence, KS 67503. 195 An equal opportunity employer. Women may apply without regard to gender.
YAMAHA
CR 1000 RECEIVER
Typing in my house IBM SELECT with pica type.
Printing on paper, and印纸. Typing in Call. RM-82799
Experimented in trying these, research papers, and online databases, have identified a ceramic (carbon ribbon), elite (type C123
IBM Selectic, pica or cia, reasonable, expert-
ist, illustrations. Clss Book 7-31
849-9127
KU Union—The Malls-Hillcrest-900 Mass
Experienced typid—term paper, papers, milie.
Experienced typid—letter spelling, spellied
correctly. 843-8553, Mr. Wright.
Experienced in tying dissertations, these theme-
in Psych. Call Leslie, 843-858-9088. Headers:
7-31
YAMAHA
Reservations now.
THEISIS HUNDING - The Quick Copy Center is a small, well-established provider of our services in fast and easy ways. Our services are reasonable, and you can be assured of delivery.
Typing-fast, accurate, reasonable rates. Close to
companion. 842-5907 anytime. 7-30
PHONE 843-1211
at the rear of
KIEF'S DISCOUNT
RECORD AND STEREO
❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️
the
GRAMO PHONE
YP-800 TURNTABLE
shop
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MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
842-1544 SAVINGS ON LONDON BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS
ARMADJILLO
BEAD CO.
710 MASS.
Now Reopened
10-5 p.m.
Beads,
Woodinds,
Silver,
Turq,
Chain,
Luxury,
Chokers,
Earrings
Indian Jewelry
50% off
Briman
Leading Jewelers
• Fine jewelry
• Expert watch repair
743 Mass. 843-4366
Employment Opportunities
Permanent. Full time Legal Secretary for information. Must be 21 or over. Confidence level - required. Must be able to take accurate short-term leave. Must have ability to work with Salary. $450 to $525 depending on skills and experience. Two week paid vacation after completing the program. Day through Friday. Interacting and challenging students. Resume to the Douglas County Juvenile Court, 3rd floor, Courthouse, for application. Equal Opportunity.
Schumann Food Company hitting for & fall
at 9am from 8:90 AM to 6:45 AM,
dinon then Fri.
FOUND
LOST
Women's gold watch on sale near Hillcrest Shopping Center. 842-9768.
Female German Shepherd 6 mos old. Red collar.
He was shot in front of Strong 10am
in 3 p.m.
FOUND Maramelde kiteen, white flea collar, 7-30
union, 7:22. Call 845-451-55. 7-30
FOUND Amable Black & White Male Kiteen
near and near, 4 months old, 843-867-971
www.amablekites.com
LOST. Gold Bulova watch with expansion band.
642-88390 or 864-3543. Reward. 7-31
Lost Sunday, July 20 and male skijamee cat. Vicetiny
Joyes at 864-491, 864-412 after 5. **7-31**
Joyes at 864-491, 864-412 after 5. **7-31**
Locate in the vicinity of KU Stadium, hearken back
Lost at 8134 N. Eighth Street, Suite 206,
Buffalo, NY 14220. Knowledge of
Buffalo's 8134 N. Eighth Street, Suite 206,
Buffalo, NY 14220. Knowledge of
Buffalo's 8134 N. Eighth Street, Suite 206,
Buffalo, NY 14220. Knowledge of
MATH TUTORING Competent. experienced tutor.
TUTORING Competent. experienced tutor.
116, 118, 121, 122, Reasonable rate. Call
(703) 549-4866.
Need child care care to KU7 Yellow Brick Road
Morning, afternoon, or all day. Age 18+. Fee:
Merritt, morning, or all day. Age 18+. Fee:
Merritt, morning, or all day. Age 18+. Fee:
WAGON WHEEL
1401 Ohio
Open 11 A.M.-Midnight
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CUP-BOARD
12.5 Madison Friday
10.5 Sat.
TACOS
$3.50 per Dexen
Casa de Taco
1105 Massachusetts 843-9880
GAY COUNSELING
& RAP
for referrals
info. counselor
864-3506
842-7503
POTION PARLOR
Organic Bio-degradable Hair and Skin Care Products in Recycle-able Bottles
819 Vermont 843-9708 Essence Oils Mon-Sat.
4
Wednesdav. Julv 30.1975
University Daily Kansan
Forer ...
From page 1
McKinney Report made no definite recommendation that the incentive system be abolished, but it suggested that something be done to cut down the amount
The Forer Report also expressed dissatisfaction with the incentive program, but for different reasons. The program was tied only to speed, it said, not to the quality of driving. The program said "a 'fair day's work' be more closely determined, and that truck drivers and
supervisors monitor the performance of the crews.
RATE INCREASES. The McKinney Report said that no increase in garbage rates was necessary. Better management requires an increase to eliminate the need for an increase, it said.
The Forer Report said the McKinney Report didn't show how increased efficiency would translate into specific savings. But for instance, if she could save money by becoming more efficient, the amount saved couldn't be firmly determined.
The Forer Report recommended against cutting the number of weekly garbage pickups to save money. The proposed increase seemed justified, it said, because Lawrence's rate was lower than that of other cities in the area.
"Even given the Lawrence City Manager's request for a 25 per cent increase in rates, the increase (at $3.125 a month) would still make it the lowest rate for the most comprehensive service," the Forer Report said.
★ ★ ★
in rereading my report, I felt somewhat saddened that such a report need be written in the first place. No issues of substance emerged; certainly none of the kind that inflame the civic fiber and make one want to beat down the door to Buford Watson's office. (He'll write you in and serve coffee.)
I found no evidence of those scandallous truths on journalistic reputations are built: no evidence of anyone growing fat sucking the public udder, no idiots pouring water in the gas tanks or dropping wrenches in the gears, no laffers snoring in the shade of the trucks or shooting cramps in the garage job, no drunks punching time cards upside down, no careless, spendhrift purchase orders (There are 82 cents on the dozen), no rats spreading plague out of uncollected trash cans, no citizens having seizures because of uncorrected complaints, no impassioned workers plotting rebellion, no sadistic supervisors flaying the wage slaves with barbed绳, no slippery-fingered or flannel-tongued administrators blowing smoke in the public eye, no public money thrown down rat holes by the fiscally irresponsible (as if rats needed money), no hurtive calls to stock brokers or bookies during coffee breaks (for those few who take coffee breaks), no passing the buck when someone was stealing your property not the whole back), no collapsing organizational structure having a domino effect throughout the city, no payola or ripoffs, no venality, cuphidity, improbity, rascality, duplicity or any other Iscarotic quality that scorches the Sunday morning soul. Not much-hunk, although some occasion panky.
Editor's note: The following statement is an appendix to the Forer Report. He titled it, "A Personal Indulgence."
What emerged in this study, simply, was a group of local folks, supervisors and workers, trying to earn a modest living and at the same time perform a service that was hard, dirty, hazardous and thankless. None of them, when they were growing up, planned on becoming garbage men. Yet here they were, grappling with those petty yet complex inefficiencies, inequities, miscalculations and misconceptions that are the legacy of all modern productive units, and witnessing that pettiness being portrayed to the public as something approaching a capital offense. It's enough to turn any ordinary garbage collector into a philosopher.
Through all the nit-pickiness of charges and innuendo, I ponder what it must be like to be a city manager. I suddenly realize that he either had to be a maschist or possess a sainted sense of humor. I know that I couldn't survive on such a job: nits drive me buggy.
While the storm churns around them, the employees keep on working, not particularly happy, but in no a panic either, knowing that when the situation can improve and should improve, if'll never be perfect. In the final analysis, the job demands at bargain rates too. That should be some comfort to even the bitter cynic.
For those who might have been awaiting this report in anticipation of some startling news, the news is that there's no news, and perhaps that's the best news of all. God's in His heaven, all's right with the world. (At least it's not all that bad because the Lawrence淀命 Damment it.) If decided to destroy the department, and probably now we'll find dogs in the sanitary landfill, hauled there by the overtime crews, foot stamps in their pocket's. It's not likely he'll surface in the forseeable future.
ACCIDENTS. The accident rate in the department was extremely high, according to the FOER Report. A sample of 50 per cent of the workers showed that none of them were uninjured during a year and that most several injuries during that time, it said.
Injuries were accepted as an occupational act of life, the report said, and many accuse employers of negligence.
juries included "cuts not requiring stitches, bruises, heat exhaustion (a common injury), carbon monoxide poisoning (also known as coughing), trucks, dogs, and muscle strains."
Ferea said yesterday that his study snowed that charges against the depart- ment of the U.S. embassy in Libya.
*Perhaps the Kansas can arrange to Prof. McKinsey and I throw marshmallow at him.*
Forer said the best solution to the problems in the Sanitation Department was to encourage cooperation between workers and officials in arriving at workable solutions.
By The Associated Press American League
BASEBALL STANDINGS
W L W. L. Pet. OB
Boston 51 41 209 8
Baltimore 53 48 209 8
Columbus 51 48 209 8
Milwaukee 51 53 400 11
Detroit 51 53 400 11
Cleveland 51 48 401 15
MKinney said he hadn't had a chance to study the Fereport Report and would wait to see if it was ready.
Oakland 65 35 47 431
Kansas City 65 35 47 431
Tampa 50 50 11 8/9
Texas 48 58 462 17/8
California 48 58 462 17/8
Milwaukee 44 44 32 21
Tuesday's Results
Baltimore 7, Tuesday 7
Baltimore 12, Wednesday 8
Milwaukee 4, Boston 0
New York City 6, Miami 2
Cleveland 5, Miami 2
California 4, Chicago 7
National League
W L W L Pet. NC
Pittsburgh 59 48 3473 216
Philadelphia 59 44 373 16
St. Louis 51 41 300 11
St. Louis 51 41 300 11
Chicago 51 58 403 12
Michigan 51 58 403 12
| | West |
| :--- | :--- |
| unicast | 67 54 37 644 | — |
| Los Angeles | 37 51 31 135 | — |
| San Francisco | 37 51 31 135 | — |
| San Diego | 49 55 402 18 | — |
| Atlanta | 49 55 402 18 | — |
| Miami | 37 68 340 | — |
Chicago 4, Montreal 3
St. Louis 5, New York 3-11
Philadelphia 6, Cleveland 3
Pittsburgh 5, Pittsburgh 1
San Francisco 6, Cleveland 2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom--864-4810
Advertising--864-4358
Circulation--864-3048
Published at the University of Kannas weekdays during the academic year, all materials are free to use under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license or $15 per page, submissions by mail are e-mailed to kannas@uak.edu.
Editor
Ward Harkavy
Associate Editor
Campaigns
Ian Kenenth Faxon, Porter Porsche
Copy Editors
Cathy Bersh, Richard Faxon, Kyle Buchert,
Copy Editors
Business Manager Jim Merrill
Assistant Business Managers
Promotions Manager
Associating Manager
Cludy Long, Jerril Kernel
Bake The Foods
Gary Burch
FINALLY!
The full-length film, THE LEARNING TREE, written and directed by Kansan Gordon Parks and produced by Warner Brothers-Seven Arts has arrived. Originally scheduled to be shown in connection with Dr. David Katzman's lecture on "The Black Experience in Kansas," the film had to be postponed when it did not arrive. It is now scheduled to be shown in SWARTHOUT RECITAL HALL on THURSDAY, JULY 31 at 7:00 p.m.
ADMISSION IS FREE!
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE
LANDMARKS OF THE AMERICAN THEATRE
LOOKING FOR A NEW NEST?
HOME SWEET HOME
Jayhawker Towers on campus 1603 W.15th Lawrence, Ks.
COME NEST WITH US!
Cash
paid for your
Books
Bring them to
Kansas
Union Bookstore
Thursday-Friday
July 31-Aug. 1
T
B
After home,
nearby off you
your ch
A ski trip
surround
the pro-
his way
trails t
water's
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of a m
turnoff.
SNOW
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
West Campus has experienced rapid growth
No. 171
Thursday, July 31, 1975
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
See page 3.
A
The child is playing with a small object.
I'll just stick with the plain text.
The boy is squatting on a grassy surface, focused on something in his hands. He has a curious expression on his face, and his mouth is slightly open as if he is about to speak or interact with someone. The background is blurred, suggesting that the focus is on him.
ALEXANDRA
The trouble with gum
An old piece of stick gum found in his father's glue compartment presented problems for Jacob Hogan, son of Mike
Hogan, assistant instruct in English. Jack was trying to keep himself occupied during his father's intruder football game
Report denies radiation dangers
By JACK McNEELY
Kansas Staff Reporter
BURLINGTON-A massive document is on display in the Coffey County Courthouse here. It is currently an object of intensive scrutiny, and is likely to become an object of fierce debate before the end of August.
The document is an environmental report from the staff of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC). It assesses the expected environmental effects of a request by two utilities for a license to build a nuclear power plant along Wolf Creek, about three miles from the John Redmond Dam near Burlington.
The NRC staff report concludes that radioactive material released from the plant during normal operating conditions will have a significant effect on surrounding land and wildlife.
Several groups in Kansas who oppose the proposal to build the nuclear plant are studying the NRC staff report. They have received August of file objections to the report.
The report is the position of the NRC staff and will be used as the staff's testimony at hearings before the NRC's licensing board, or prior to the NRC granting on granting a license to build on
"No significant environmental impacts are anticipated within 50 miles from normal operations releases of radioactive materials," the report says.
A spokesman for Kansas Gas and Electric Co. of Wichita said the amount of continuous, low-level radiation leaked from the plant during a year would be about the same that would be emitted from the bodies of two persons who laid on the bodies for a year.
Two of the Kansas groups who oppose the power plant have received permission from the NRC to intervene in the licensing process. They did so in October or November in Burlington.
The two groups are the Mid-America Coalition for Energy Alternatives (MACRE) of San Juan, Man, and the Wolf C nuclear Opposition, Inc. Diane Testin,试耐ier,skookman, for
MACEA, echoed the words of other groups throughout the country who have opposed nuclear plants when she said the NRC licensing hearings were a farce.
MACEA will try to stop construction of the plant by appearing at the hearings, but expect it loses, because the NRC won't issue cases for issues or issues against the hearings. Testmeter says.
The NRC won't allow discussion of the safety of nuclear power and the possibility of a disastrous accident resulting from human error or sabotage, nor will it allow discussion of the social implications of nuclear power plants, she said.
Included in a discussion of the social implications would be a discussion of the effects of creating a massive security force to handle transportation and storage of nuclear fuel and nuclear waste, according to Tegmeirt. It would also include a
discussion of the effects of concentrating capital by opting for nuclear power, which centralizes power production, instead of decentralizing power production, she said.
The NRC will permit discussion only on such issues as whether the utilities can pay for the nuclear plant, have filled out all the requirements and have chosen a suitable site, she said.
John Goffman, a scientist formerly with the Atomic Energy Commission and now a critic of nuclear power, said, "The only thing a citizen can do is to make sure the nuclear weapons which it drew up in the first place. It's judge, fox and chicken coop rolled into one."
A spokesman for Kansas Gas and Electric Co. said the licensing hearings gave citizens an adequate opportunity to present their opposition to nuclear plants.
Walker calm on Title IX
By KEN STONE
Although many university athletic directors are worried about TITLE IX, Clyde Walker, University of Kansas athletic director, is taking a calm view of its provisions for bidding sex discrimination in athletics.
"There was nothing new and different at the University of Kansas on July 21 because Congress passed 'Title IX guidelines'," she said. "I don't see any reasons for nantic."
However, Marian Washington, assistant athletic director for women's intercollegiate athletics, is concerned that Title IX opened the possibility that male athletes may be playing on the KU women's volleyball team this fall.
WASHINGTON SAID, "If they are not given a team, they have right to try on."
TITLE IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, which became law on July 21, contains a provision that would require schools to offer equal opportunities in athletics.
Therefore, if a man decides he wants to compete on an intercollege or club level, and doesn't have the opportunity to play on a team, he has the right to try out for the women's team.
One factor that the Department of Health, Education and Welfare will consider in planning their activities is that are provided is, in the words of HEW, "whether the selection of sports and levels of competition effectively accommodate the needs and abilities of members of both sexes."
JACK ISGUR, women's volleyball coach,
for the team last year, but all were cured.
"Most of them didn't have the skill." lagar said. "But I had one that almost made the job."
Washington said she was concerned that other Kansas women's volleyball teams might refuse to play KU if it had any male players.
national tournament five of the past six years, Washington said, and the team has a good chance of qualifying for championship play this year.
If men were playing on KU's team, the team's chances for competing in state and regional competition might be jeopardized, she said.
WASHINGTON ALSO said she would talk to a legal adviser of the Association for Knoxville Athletics for Women about KU's response to an opposing team that had a male player.
More important than the question of men playing on the women's volleyball team, however, is the issue of athletic scholarships.
The Title IX regulation on this topic is precise, since Patton Patton, director of the Title IX program.
KU's volleyball team has competed in the
In discussing the topic, Patton referred to the official wording of the regulation:
"To the extent that a recipient (scholar, awards athletic scholarships or grants-in-aid, it must provide reasonable opportunities for such awards for members of the student body, for the number of students participating in intercollegiate or intercollegiate athletics."
Washington said scholarships would have to be given on a percentage basis.
FOR EXAMPLE, SHE said, if 50 per cent of a group of 300 male athletes received scholarships and there were 200 women and 200 men women would have to receive financial aid.
"I don't have the resources that the men have, but I have people on our staff that are willing to pitch in," she said. "We are trying to generate our money ourselves."
To satisfy this requirement, Washington said she was initiating a fund-raising campaign.
Walker, who said he hadn't given much attention to TITLE IX because of what he called higher priorities, said, "I don't think my problem in this thing except finances.
"If it was ever interpreted that TITLE IX required equal scholarships and equal financial aid, then it would be true."
the future. When you talk about equal facilities we already have inadequate facilities for men. Where does the money come from?"
HEW has denied that Title IX requires equal expenditures for women's athletic opportunities would be determined by examining factors as comparable facilities, schedules, supplies and whether the sports selected meet the interests and abilities of both sexes.
WALKER SAID, "We can certainly live with the statement of equal opportunity. I think we have to do what we can within our resources."
If a school hasn't discriminated against members of one sex in the past, the school may not have to operate separate athletic teams, she said.
"The amount of change required is proportional to the amount of discrimination that has existed in the past," she said. "The school may preclude teams for both sexes if the school has always provided opportunities for both sexes."
Patton said that the worries about KU's compliance with some TIX provisions must be addressed.
Consequently, Title IX regulations require an institutional self-study to determine whether schools comply with the regulations.
PATTON SAID he had been given the responsibility of overseeing KU's self-evaluation, but that Del Shankel, executive director, would have the ultimate authority on how the organization should be run.
Since the self-evaluation will range through every sector of the University, Patton urged that KU faculty and staff closely study Title IX.
*It's important that every member of the University community take the two or three bells at the start.*
The self-evaluation must be completed by July 21, 1978.
By STAN STENERSEN
Second sanitation report criticized
"Basically, we're talking about the same thing—management-level problems in the
Although two recent reports on the Lawrence Sanitation Department are sometimes at odds with each other, city officials should be able to use them to make decisions. They are in the department, Ross McKinney, the author of one of the reports, said yesterday.
Study could reduce clinic's cost
By STAN STENERSEN
University officials decided yesterday to proceed with a study to change part of the fireproofing for the new clinical facility at the KU Medical Center.
Max Lucas, assistant to the chancellor, said the decision was reached after it was determined that hospitals with construction similar to the clinical facility had installed safe but less expensive fire protection systems. A five-man delegation traveled to Washington, D.C., and Dayton, Ohio, earlier this week to study the hospitals.
Questions about the fireproofing have centered on protection for the spaces between the ceiling of one level and the floor of the next. These spaces contain wiring, lighting and other mechanical equipment. In the clinical facility, these spaces are seven feet high.
systems were installed inside the spaces to cool them in the event of a fire, but additional fireproofing inside the spaces wasn't necessary.
Plans for the clinical facility call for fireproofing of the steel framework inside each of the spaces. if a new system of fire protection can be developed, the University won't have to fireproof the framework, Lucas said.
Lucas said the two hospitals that were studied used enough fireproofing material in the floors and ceilings to form a barrier between the floors and ceilings. Sprinkler
"It's not simply a question of taking the fireproofing off and putting in sprinklers," he said. "I need it."
Today's paper is the last issue of the Kanasan for the summer session. The special back-to-school issue will be available during fall enrollment, Aug. 20. Regular publication will resume Tuesday, Aug. 26.
LAST ISSUE
department," McKinney said. "I hope the City Commission will read both reports and not get entangled in minor details. What is needed is some kind of common program of improvement."
package to make sure all the materials and systems meet effective standards."
If a new system can be developed, Lucas said, it could save $2 million to $3 million in sales.
McKinney, professor of civil engineering,
sent his report to city officials in June.
A second report, written by Norman Forer,
associate professor of social welfare, was
given to the City Commission Monday night.
Administrators are considering the change as part of an effort to cut the building's costs. Construction bids on the project exceed the architect's estimate by $4.5 million and the available funds by $9 million.
Lucas said a decision to change the fire protection system depended in part on whether the savings would offset increased costs from delays caused by replanning the system. An initial evaluation by state archetypes is expected by the end of August, he said.
Architects are also reviewing plans for the building to determine whether other changes can be made, Lucas said. However, so far no changes have been found that will save as much money as the fireproofing changes would save, he said.
"The facility is so big, though, that if something repeats itself enough and you save a few dollars each time, it adds up," Lucas said.
Forer's report found fault with some of McKinney's data and conclusions. McKinney said he was disappointed in his findings, but he expected it to be more comprehensive.
"When I talked with Prof. Forer earlier this summer, he told me his report would be a comprehensive study. "McKenny said." I was surprised that he gave me a really great rebuttal of my report."
McKinsey said his own data for such things as employees' earnings were taken from the city's annual report. If he made any errors in reporting this information, he may have they probably stemmed from a misunderstanding of the figures in the report.
McKinsey found fault with some conclusions of the Forer report. He said sufficient data were not offered to justify the increase in garbage collection rates.
McKinney said the two reports viewed the Sanitation Department from different perspectives. He called the major problems in the department "people problems." But, he said his perspective made it difficult to identify and overcome the eyes of the sanitation workers.
Forer, who has been advising the sanitation workers since mid-May, wrote
McKinney said he hoped publication of the two reports would call the public's attention to problems in the department and increase the chances for effective solutions.
McKinney said he was willing to work with Forer and anyone else who wanted to improve the service of the sanitation department, and the employees' working conditions.
his report as part of a project to involve the KU Community Services Center and the sanitation workers in talks with city officials. McKinney, who has advised the sanitation department in the past on waste management, wrote his report as an "interested citizen."
In his report, Forer announced an unexpected change of plans. He said that he had hoped to write a second longer, more comprehensive report but that the second report wouldn't be issued because of his teaching commitments in the fall.
"Scheduling and staffing for a project of this size aren't adequate to keep it up at press time." "However, the dean told us he supported the project as a legitimate function of the school."
Ernst was unavailable for comment.
Forer said the sanitation workers would continue to receive help from the University Community Services Center. In addition, studies already begun on the department's incentive system and on a more efficient packaging system will continue, he said.
Bathers in the buff grin and bare it at local lake
By JAIN PENNER Kansan Staff Reporter
After a hard day at class, it's nice to go home, take off your shoes and relax. At home, you can also however, you can take off your shoes, shirt, pants and the rest of your clothes as well.
A skinny-dipper's paradise, Lake Henry lies at the bottom of a steep hill, completely surrounded by trees. To reach the water, the prospective skinny-diper must work down slowly down the narrow, rocky trails that wind through the trees to the water's edge.
Because of its proximity to Lawrence and because it affords a unique opportunity to enjoy nature on our campus, the lake has great water clarity. Kansas students. On a hot day, there often
The lake is west of Lawrence on Highway 24-40, at the end of the gravel road six-tenths of a mile beyond the Clinton Reservoir turnoff.
COMMENT
are cars lined up for a quarter of a mile along the roadside.
taking advantage of the opportunity to get an all-over tan. Nude sunbathers are sprawled out along the shoreline and in the clearings among the trees.
Should an unsuspecting person stop at the lake for a swim, he might think he had intruded on the private grounds of a mutist swimmer, most of them floating on rafts, swimmers, most of them floating on rafts,
"I'd always wanted to get up enough
skipping, a skim-dipping, and I finally
did," she said.
Although the bathers at Leke Henry are all sizes and shapes, they all have something in common—they have nothing on.
One woman, who asked not to be identified, said she had gone to Lake Henry out of town.
She said she was embarrassed slightly and self-conscious the first time, but enlightened when she had taught her
"Now I'm not embarrassed at all," she said.
Since her first visit, she said, she has been to the lake seven or eight times.
Another skimmy-dipper he enjoyed the lake because no one was bothered by what she did.
The thought of grimming and baring it in front of a bunch of strangers may seem embarrassing to some people. However, when everyone else around you, male and female, skinny and fat, is naked, mutidity ceases to be shocking.
"Everyone's out here to have a good time, but not to get an眼 and act like an ass."
A naked woman walking down Iowa street would get lots of stares, quite a few others.
In reality, however, the water is filled with men and women, playing with a Frisbee, dunking one another and having a good time. The shoreline spectators include not only girl watchers, but several women surveying the male physiques.
It might seem like the women swimming at Lake Henry would be victims of men who came to the lake for one reason: to sit on the women's binoculars and get a free peep show.
But at Lake Henry, nudity seems to blend naturally with the wilderness.
Skimny-dipping is popular with college students all over the country, although not everyone likes it.
One of California's most popular nude
beaches, Black Beach in San Diego, had a
numerous number of visitors.
Memorial Day this year, despite temperatures in the low 60s.
Texas had a lot of problems this spring controlling nudity on its public beaches, especially on holidays, when crowds of college students flocked there.
Skimny-dipping is an age-old activity. Pioneers crossing the plains in the 1800s could shed their clothes and seek relief from the heat. Skimny-dippers often take relief from the crowded, chlorinated, volcanic waters, where all they can get is a two-tone tunic.
As the word is passed around, more and more people are beginning to drive a few extra miles down the dusty gravel road to where they work. And their inhibitions along with their clothes
2
Thursday, July 31, 1975
University Daily Kansan
NEWS DIGEST THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Little may take witness stand
RALEIGH, N.C.-C. an attorney for Joan Little said yesterday that the 21-year-old dress man was asking the witness to stand defend herself against charges that she
Defense attorney Marvin Miller's statement was the first indication that Little might testify on her own behalf.
The defense also filed a motion asking that defense counsel Morris Dees be reinstated. The defense argued that the removal of Dees deprived the defendant of
The motion states that Dees was assigned as chief counsel for the examination of evidence and the interviewing of witnesses and that he is needed for Little's case.
On Tuesday, Judge Hamilton Hobgob barred Dees, an attorney with the Southern Foody Law Center from the courtroom after a witness accused him of
U.S. policy on Cuba may alter
WASHINGTON—The State Department said it was prepared to open discussions with the U.S. trade embargo against the Communist-ruled island.
Spokesman Robert Anderson said the United States welcomed the action on Tuesday of the Organization of American States which permitted member nations to establish trade and diplomatic relations with Cuba. He said it removed a contentious issue from inter-American relations.
U. S. trade with Cuba is prohibited under legislation passed three years before the 2014 OAS embargo. Anderson said the appeal of the U.S. embargo would be a negative for the U.S. trade policy.
Turkey aid embargo continues
WASHINGTON - Senate leaders failed in an initial effort to break the impasse on restoring U.S. military aid to Turkey.
They hoped to win approval for a vote late on a compromise amendment identical to the one which the House rejected by 17 votes last week. The amendment, which was unanimously approved, would
House Republican leader John J. Rhodes said there was a fairly good chance the House would revert its stand if the measure could be brought up for a new vote.
More cigarette limits asked
WASHINGTON - The Ford administration, submitting the ninth government report on the health to Congress, has asked for a ban on tar- and high-nitric-cotton blouses.
Caspar W. Weinberger, secretary of health, education and welfare, said new scientific research had affirmed that cigarette smoking was a serious public health problem and a major contributor to deaths from cancer and heart and lung diseases.
"It toll in illness and premature death is needless and preventable," he said in letters to Congress last week accompanying the latest report, which has been misleading.
Academies may become coed
WASHINGTON — A compromise $3.1-billion weapons bill that will open military academies to women next year passed the House but headed for opposition in the Senate.
Senate Budget Committee chairman Edmund S. Muskie, D-Maine, said he would urge the Senate to reject both the weapon and lunch bill because they are not in line with federal law.
The bill specifically makes women eligible for admission to West Point, Annapolis and the Air Force Academy starting in 1976.
House-Senate conferences said training at the academies should be “essentially for men and women and that they should have no separate training system.”
WASHINGTON—The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) said it no longer requires LSD studies in humans, although it conducted or funded LSD studies with volunteers for two decades.
In its first official account of LSD research using humans, NIHM said it conducted 27 LSD projects involving about 1,300 volunteers between 1953 and 1968.
Many of the volunteers were patients at the Lexington, Ky. Addiction Research Center, the agency said.
NMIH also said it funded 20 outside LSD studies with humans between 1953 and 1974, which cost more than $2 million.
"Available information shows that participants were briefed on the drug and possible effects, and participated on a voluntary basis," an institute report said.
Reactor research supported
WASHINGTON—The United States shouldn't abandon its controversial $10.7 billion program to develop the nuclear breeder reactor, the General Accounting Office said.
But in a report to be delivered to Congress today, the GAO said a decision on approving commercial use of breeders to generate electricity should be withheld
That much time is needed for more research on the breeder to determine its safety and effectiveness, the GAO said.
waders—short for liquid metal fast breeder reactor—are atomic reactors that produce electrons in the presence of an external principal source of electric energy by the next century, the GAO report concluded.
Texas town's integration easy
RICHARDSON, Tex.-While many school districts across the nation are standing with integration problems, white children here are standing in line to attend.
On July 15, U.S. District Judge William Taylor gave school officials in Richardson and Blackhawk to all-black Hamilton Park Elementary neighborhoods to all-black Hampton Park Elementary schools.
School officials had asked for an opportunity to seek volunteer transfers as an alternative to forced busing.
They say, while children signed up to attend Hamilton Park, but there was room on the other 13 are on a waiting list. The school will have 292 black pupils, officials said.
Election ordered for Senate seat
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Senate's long, often bitter battle over the contested New Hampshire seat ended yesterday with a pitch to settle it by a special runoff election.
The Senate voted 71 to 21 to declare the seat vacant as Aug. 8, opening the way for a runoff, which new Hampshire authorities are expected to conduct Sept. 9.
Shortly before the vote, John A. Durkin, the democratic candidate, walked across the Senate chamber and shook hands with his Republican opponent. Louis W. Wwman.
Adoption of the resolution declaring the seat vacant was a victory for Wyman and the Senate's Republican minority. The House agreed to settle the dispute by a runoff.
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Robert E. Morris, president and chairman of Velsicol, said, "How can there be any imminent hazard if chlordane and heptachlor have been used for over 25 years with no evidence of cancer, or when used properly, any other danger to man?"
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Environmental Protection Agency yesterday announced a ban on further production and sale of two pesticides suspected of causing cancer. The pesticides are widely used in homes and gardens and on farms.
EPA administrator Russell E. Train said yesterday his intention was to temporarily suspend almost all uses of the two pesticides, chlordane and heptachlor. The EPA is proposing a plethonion of procedures to obtain a permanent ban, which may take another 18 months.
In Chicago, Velcalol Chemical Corp., the sole producer of heptachlor, announced its
Between now and then, Train told a news conference, about 38 million pounds of the two pesticides would enter the environment, posing an imminent hazard to human health, if production weren't suspended now.
Two pesticides called carcinogens by EPA
Train said the hearing could be concluded and a final decision reached by the end of this year, early enough to stop large-scale production and distribution before the 1976 growing season if the suspension was maintained.
Manufacturers of the pesticides have the right to an expended life, they would receive
good thru Sunday 2515 W. 6th
If anyone makes chlordane and heptachlor products in the meantime, Train said, he risks getting stuck with them, because the suspension order would forbid the sale of products formulated after July 29, the date the notice was signed.
Under the suspension notice, Train said, only one use would be permitted: burial of the pesticides around building foundations to control termites.
Train's notice said more than 40 per cent of the pesticides was used around homes. Most of the remainder is used in agriculture, primarily on corn.
Train said products containing chlordane or heptachlor must be so labeled and be tested.
He said the best way to dispose of them was probably through normal use of the products, since it was difficult to dispose of releasing them to the environment.
He urged homeowners and others to avoid dumping chlordane or heptachlor down drains, toilets or anywhere the pesticides could reach water supplies.
Small quantities—less than five pounds or one gallon—may be wrapped in several layers of paper and placed in trash containers or may be buried at least 18 inches deep in places where they will not get into water supplies, the EPA advised.
Larger quantities can be taken to landfill
easily designated for disposal of hazardous
materials.
After reading the article on Joao Alves da Costa (Kansas, July 22), I was thoroughly disgusted with the lack of information provided about this man.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR Story disgusts reader
To the Kansan editor:
Contrary to the impression left by the Kansan, his book isn't only about school it is a book lib. scorrites and fraternities. I
Having myself just returned from Portugal, I promised Joao that I would send him some flowers. He muses it a great deal and wants to know how it has changed since he was here. One thing that I will certainly write is that the Kansan has not changed. It is still as in appearance.
Sandra Ward Lawrence junior
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A damage suit filed against Louis Frydman, associate professor of social welfare, by a Topeka psychiatrist in connection with District Court was dismissed June 30.
The suit, which sought $400,000 in damages and an injunction, was filed last September by Donald Rinsley, director of his section at Topeka State Hospital.
Hillcrest Shopping Center
Suit against prof dismissed
Frank Burge, director of the Kansas Union, and the Union reservations secretary will occupy the former school relations office for about a month while the Union makes some administrative changes, Burge said last week.
Rinsley had alleged that Frydman caused interference with his work and a breach in a doctor-patient relationship. He also alleged that his professional reputation had been damaged and that Frydman had false statements to legislative committees and that Frydman had contacted parents of children at the hospital and criticized hospital actions.
Jeanne Gorman, assistant director of admissions and records, who formerly occupied the office, will attend law school this fall.
Union offices will relocate
Pam Byer will work half-time as an assistant director of admissions and
The title of the Office of School Relations, which Gil Dyck, dean of admissions and records, had existed in name only for two years, will no longer exist.
Byer's office will be in the office of admissions and records in Strong Hall.
records and half-time as an assistant to the dean at Nunemaker Center. She will assume some of Gorman's former duties, including the organization of summer orientation. She also may make some visits to schools.
ON CAMPUS
THE KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE is providing to all University secretaries a chance to learn more about the bookstore at an informal free lunchee. Because of the large number of potential participants, two dates, Aug. 13 and Aug. 14, have been scheduled. All interested persons should call the basement at 864-464 by Aug. 8. BOBERT REED.
A COURSE, "Introduction to Jazz," has been added to the fall schedule. It will be 1:30 to 2:20 p.m. MWF in 330 Murphy Hall. Richard Wright, station director of KANU, will teach the class. The course was left out of the fall timetable.
ROBERT BRYAN, Lawrence graduate
student, has received a Fulbright-Hays
travel award at the University of Tulsa in
the University of Tulsa
Dyck expects enrollment increase
Two hundred to three hundred more freshmen are expected to enroll this fall enrolled last fall, Dyl Gryck, dean of admissions and records, said yesterday.
The estimated increase is based on the percentage of applicants during the past five years who actually enrolled, he said. About 4,000 freshmen have been admitted for fall, Dyck said, but only about 3,100 are expected to enroll.
One reason for the increase is the effort by Chancellor Archie R. Dykes and other people to promote the University of Kansas, he said. Another reason may be that the economic situation is encouraging more students to attend Kansas schools, he said.
of Engineering have increased tremendously, Dyck said. The school received about his more applications this year than for forty of them were from transfer students.
Dyck said enrollment at KU declined after the Kansas University burned in spring of 1970, but enrollment had been increasing for the past two years.
"Students are finding KU more attractive than other places," Dyck said.
"We had it pretty hard there for about three years," he said. "Our image has improved so we are getting our figure back up."
He said the summer orientation program attendance was much larger than it had before.
Dyck said the enrollment figure for the Kansas City campus wasn't expected to change.
Last fall, 20,182 students were enrolled on
the university's campus. The students were
enrolled on the King City Campus.
Applications for admission to the School
The projected enrollment increase is really a guess, he said.
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"You really don't know until people show up at enrollment," he said.
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JOB ANNOUNCEMENT
The KU Interfraternity Council (IFC), is seeking an Office Manager - a part time job from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., five days a week for the 1975-76 school year.
Responsibilities:
(1) To keep and maintain a membership program filing system.
(2) To label, fold and mail the IFC newsletter and memo.
(3) To type all IFC correspondence with fraternities, University administrators and national fraternity officers.
(4) To perform other reasonable services as are requested by the officers of the IFC and which are reasonably necessary to carry out the programs of the IFC.
Qualifications:
(1) A typing proficiency of 50 words per minute is required.
(2) Previous secretarial experience would be helpful.
(3) Applicant should be cheerful, dependable, hard working and willing to learn.
Please submit all applications to the
Interfraternity Council President, 119-B Kansas Union, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66045, before August 8.
Applications may be picked up in the IFC office.
The IFC is an equal opportunity, affirmative action employer. Men and women of all races are encouraged to apply.
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University Dally Kansan
Thursday, July 31. 1975
3
1. Port send
as. He
know.
2. One
at the as in-
urd
junior
West Campus houses science and research facilities
By KELLY SCOTT
Many people don't know it, but an integral part of the University of Kansas is far from Jayhawk Boulevard, the acknowledged heart of campus.
This isolated group of buildings is situated in the fields west of Iowa Street between 15th and 23rd streets and constitutes the facility of KU's scientific and research facilities.
The area is called West Campus, and is land owned by or purchased from the Kansas University Endowment Association.
The association began accumulating the land in 1941 with the purchase of the Bisonte farm, a tract just west of wiwe. Some of the tract was bequeathed to the University of Michigan, but now more than 800 acres, according to Todd Sevourn, director of the association.
Seymour said the land had been collected with the intention of using it for future development.
Raymond Nichols Hall in West Campus houses the Space Technology Center, where a substantial amount of research for the mission is conducted and Space Administration is conducted.
The Center for Research, Inc., (CRINC)
building will become headquarters for the association in October, when CRINC moves to a three-office suite on the third floor of Raymond Nichols Hall.
The CRINC building is owned by the association, but has been used by CRINC shirt
"It will cut maintenance and utility costs for the center." he said.
CRINC is the office that coordinates all research that is done on campus but funded elsewhere.
Bill Barr, projects director for CRINC,
said the move into the space technology
building was wise, since most of CRINC's
research is done there.
It hasn't dropped off, he said, but the banding had rattled a plateau.
Barr said one reason CRINC would be able to move from a whole building to a suite of offices was that current research funding wasn't increasing.
Raymond Moore Hall, named for a late professor of geology, contains the State Geological Survey. William Hambleton, professor of geology, directs the survey.
The survey is a University program in that it receives its funds from the state as part of the KU budget, but it is not a classroom teaching facility.
But an unanswered question plagues the now grown children of the 100,000 survivors of the holocaust—will they inherit the radiation diseases of their parents?
The doubt and anxiety which linger over Hiroshima cloud the lives of nearly all its 830,000 inhabitants, most of whom had been hit by a bomb dropped by the atomic bomb explosion in 1945.
A long-term study by the newly created joint United States-Japan Radiation Effects Research Foundation will attempt to give the answer.
HIROSHIMA (AP)-Thirty years after its destruction by an American atom bomb, Hiroshima is a prospering commercial center dedicated to peace.
As the successor to the American-backed Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission, which has operated in Hiroshima since 1947, the foundation plans to continue the quest into the deadly effects of nuclear radiation well into the 21st century.
The relationship of the West Campus buildings to the classroom teaching function of the University is vague. Although the space technology building is technically a University building, it contains no classrooms.
Despite this hurking concern, life goes on with vigor.
Death estimates of the Hiroshima bomb vary. The Japanese say 200,000 died. Americans estimate a more conservative 80,000.
funded by a $1.8 million NASA grant and
$254,000 from the state.
The State Biological Survey is located between Moore Hall and the McColm and pharmaceutical laboratories. Adjacent Quisset huts, farm houses and mobile homes have been converted into extensions of these buildings to handle the overflow
Perhaps its most distinguishing feature is the statue of the mythological figure lcarsus.
ficars用man-made man wings to fly, but to his death when he flee too close to the ship.
Research and its role at the University has been continually debated. Edward Zeller, professor of physics and astronomy, said he would equal to teaching as a university function.
Skeptics have looked askance at the suitability of the statue at the door of a building that is primarily devoted to research on extraterrestrial subjects.
"If he could fly high enough to melt the stuff, that's damn good experience," he said.
Hiroshima flourishes 30 years after bomb
Barr, also director of the center, said the value stands for man's willingness to悟. The center, in New York, has 100 volunteers.
BASEBALL STANDINGS
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Boston | 51 | 49 | 8.7 | 68 |
| Baltimore | 52 | 49 | 11.5 | 88 |
| New York | 52 | 49 | 11.5 | 88 |
| Milwaukee | 52 | 33 | 48.8 | 104 |
| Cleveland | 52 | 33 | 48.8 | 104 |
| Detroit | 46 | 37 | 10.4 | 14 |
By The Associated Press
American League
Football
National League
Oakland West 66 38 47 633 ---
Kansas City Chicago 58 34 47 634 --%
Texas 48 37 57 467 18 %
California 48 39 57 463 21
Missouri 47 38 57 463 21
East Wint. EW L Pct. GB
Pittsburgh 85 45 19
Philadelphia 59 40 37%
Boston 53 39 26%
St. Louis 53 31 30%
Chicago 51 37 11%
Morton Park 51 37 12
West Cincinnati 68 51 348 Los Angeles 68 57 619 Los Angeles San Francisco 68 51 348 San Diego 49 56 467 Atlanta 49 56 463 Houston 45 38 309
Milwaukee 6, Boston 7
Cleveland 3, Baltimore 1
Chicago 5, Pittsburgh
Kansas City 4, Minneapolis 4
California 5, Chicago 4
New York 6
Scientists at the geological survey investigate soil content, suitability of certain regions for the growing of crops and the ability to handle certain weather conditions.
Montreal 6, Calgary
Los Angeles 8, Atlanta 2
Denver 9, Chicago 1
Clostalton 6, San Francisco 1
St. Louis 5, New York 2
Philadelphia 7, Miami 1
The survey employs faculty members to conduct research that aids the agricultural sector.
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Barr said he thought the statue, a gift from the Phillips Petroleum Company, was a more artistic addition to the building than "a space needle or something."
More is also a consulting engineer for NASA on the space shuttle design, which Moore calls the "wave of the future for NASA."
Like the space technology center, researchers at McColum laboratories conduct privately funded research, yet retain their titles as faculty members.
Also located on the West Campus south of Moore Hall are McColum lab offices, and the North Campus research office.
An energetic team, led by Hiroshima's first postwar mayor, the late Shino Hamai, set about raising the city from the ashes. Absored in their task, they had little time to hate but enough time to visualize their goal as the peace capital of the world.
The Remote Science Laboratory, located in a technology building, is the largest laboratory in the US.
Richard K. Moore, professor of electrical engineering and former director of the lab, has refined for use on SEASAT the radar scatterometer, or Radcat used on Skylab.
The lab often uses airplanes or space craft, Holzman said. Scientists at the Remote Sensing Lab developed an instrument for the 1973 SkyLab spacecraft that will also be aboard SEASAT, a satellite that measures data about the surface of oceans.
Hiroshima today is an example of how well they succeeded. The population in 1944, the year before the cataclysm, was 336,838. It plummeted to 138,518 by November 1945, and it fell to 74,250 by the end of radiation. By 1955, it had climbed to 374,793 and 10 years ago it was 524,588.
The city now is a flourishing regional center dotted with skyscrapers, high-rise apartment buildings, wide avenues, parks, new schools and a half billion-dollar industrial park development in the western suburbs.
Holtzman estimated that the RSL handled between $700,000 and $800,000 of research funding.
The sleek-high speed trains of the new Tokidai line now reduce travel time between Hiroshima and Tokyo to five hours, bringing an influx of tourists who mingle with the crowds in the covered shopping arcades, the department stores and the proliferation of new restaurants, bars, coffee shops and markets.
Inflation and recession have hit Hiroshima, with layoffs at the big Mitsubishi shipbuilding yards and the Toyo Kogyo auto industry that the economy is on the upwing.
the center of Hiroshima is its peace park, Heiwa Koen. The park holds a museum which records the horrors of the bomb, a cenotaph with the names of the dead and the stark skeleton of the atomic dome, the old industry promotion hall.
The state supports the lab only to the extent that it encourages research, Holtzman said. Most work is done with private subsidies, he said.
The park, with its monument to the thousands of child victims, its eternal flame, its shade trees and rose gardens, is a symbol of peace.
GREEN PLANTS
BEST SELECTION IN TOWN
The Garden Center and Greenhouse
4 blocks East of Mass. on 15th 843-2004
THE BEST FROM FILMWOOD!
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
MOVIE MARQUEE
"WALKING TALL" Part 2
"JAWS"
The space technology building was
"LOVE and DEATH"
Granada
NOCI - August 1, 2018
Daily
2:30, 7:30, 9:30
PC
Hillcrest
Eve. 7:30, 9:45
Sat. Sun. Mat. 2:05
Hillcrest Eva. 7:40, 9:35
Sat. Sun. Mat. 2:10
"WIND And The LION"
one time three times five times
15 words or less $1.50 $2.00 $2.50
Each additional word 01 02 03
"NIGHT MOVES"
Accommodation, good, services and emplyment
Administration of accounts
Clerk/Administrator CLERK
CLASSIFIED CLIENT CLENT
LEASE BIRDGING
LEASE MARKETING
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
Hillcrest
Eve. at 7:30, 9:40
Sat. Sat. Mat. 2:00
Sunset SHOWTIME IS 9:00 R
WEEKDAYS ON LOCAL TERMS
CLASSIFIED RATES
"WHITE LINE FEVER"
Varsity
Eve. 7:30 & 9:20
Saf.Sun.Mat. 2:30 PG
Mail: john.dowd@varsity.edu
_Plus—"Buster & Billie"
ERRORS
KANSAN WANT ADS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the URK business office at 864-555.
1973 Duster, Air. Auto, Air PS, 25,000 miles, one
day, Jayhawk WM 843-2210, 7-31
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
Electric LiVite Optix Prox-48, almost new, retail at $15.00, will pay for $25.00. Call 843-731-8711.
FOR SALE
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.- regardless of any prizes you see on popular hill equipment other than factory doors or smoke out products, you may select from the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KEIFS. if
Fallate 2 dr., Auto, PS, V8, Jayhawk WV.
843-2210.
Stereo & Camera Sale: Dial 1241 1219 Tularem $80
Dial 1241 1219 C220 Tularem $75
Lens Reflex W 80mm f/8.2 f/84-925
Lens Reflex W 80mm f/8.2 f/84-925
**Western Civilization Notes—New On Sale**
1. What do we call a civilization?
2. Make sense to use them.
3. For class preparation
4. “New Analysis of Western Civilization”
5. How did the colonizers influence Western Civilization?
Now fire merchandise closets on campus. New lighting will be installed at all buildings on campus. Guests 9 a.m., 1 p.m., and 2 p.m.Closed Sunday, March 18.
1971 RD Tbdr, 29,000 miles—maroon, Jayhawk
WV. 843-2210. 7-31
HIGH PROTEIN牛 meat dog food 24-14 oz
684 Vermeil, no discount Merget Saliva
685 Vermeil
Come on out-Lots of林边 and parking-to the antique furniture and other furniture, antique furniture, antique furniture and other furniture, antique
Just arrived—shipment of Fabrics and Sercocrocs,
come by for a test drive. Jaywaw JWM 843-210-6
107-401-9500
Buy a 1974 WU Burg today. Balance of factory
buyer is $52,000. Never listed. Tail-
jayhawk WU B43-8209. Call 7-31
Closeout of all 1974 Demo's and Rental cars, save
hundreds, Jayhawk WY. 843-220-110
7-31
Queen size bed, bureau, hatchings, plants, every-
thing set but cheaply. Am going to storage,
7-31
1972 Impala Custom, Pee, Automatic, air, iriv
Jawfock, YAWK hw. 843-2210. 7-51
1968 Opel Kad-1d 21; d Standard, only $795.00.
Jayawk VW 84; d 232-800. 7-31
WV Bugs, from 1964 to 1974, all colors—4 speed or antifreeze for $58.99; Bank Financing for $30.99; Credit Union fees for $24.99.
74 Vega Karmack for ac and tape deck
Excellent condition 14,000 miles. $835-$450
Mint Condition 12,000 miles. $600-$375
Sale: Antiques, furniture, new sofa, clothes
books, records 1024, furniture, August - July
28, 2017
Meni's new Seline 10-speed Shimano brakes and
new Brake Pedal must sell $125 or be
$125 or best offer. Call 843-223-6920.
POTION PARLOR
Organic Bio-degradable Hair and Skin Care Products in Recycle-able Bottles
car
819 vermont
843-9708 Essence Oils Mon-Sat.
IS YOUR CAR AS READY FOR
YOUR VACATION AS YOU ARE?
188 WV bus, converted to ampier ice box
189 WV bus, converted to ampier ice box
190 HONDA 200 w 2 wrench, shield 400
191 HONDA 300 w 2 wrench, shield 400
If not, call—
DON'S AUTO SERVICE
900 New Jersey
I ' * * * * * * * * * COST PLUS 10% * * * * * * * * * *
I ' * * * * * * * * * TURNABLES * * * * * * * * * *
All furnitures must be Furniture and Shore
All furnitures must be Furniture and Shore
THORENS TD165C was $230 how $139
THERMES TD165C was $230 how $139
GARRAD 62 was $109 how $139
GARRAD 62 was $109 how $139
MACROAD 7270H was $270 how $179
MACROAD 7270H was $270 how $179
BSR 4310 was $240 how $140
DUAL 1280 was $340 how $140
DUAL 1280 was $340 how $140
PHILIPS 212 was $240 how $140
RECEI was $240 how $140
MANZANT 2270 was $600 how $275
PIONER 6006 was $290 how $229
PIONER 6006 was $290 how $229
TECHNICS 7300 was $330 how $249
TECHNICS 7300 was $330 how $249
SANSU QIKR 3000 was $250 how $253
SANSU QIKR 3000 was $250 how $253
SONI 6036 A was $200 how $199
SONI 6036 A was $200 how $199
SHERIDAN A1 was $200 how $219
TAKEMORE RECIPE was $200 how $219
TAKEMORE RECIPE was $200 how $219
TAKEMORE RECIPE was $200 how $219
TAKEMORE RECIPE was $200 how $219
TACR TECHNICS 423 was $200 how $289
TACR TECHNICS 423 was $200 how $289
TACR TECHNICS 423 was $200 how $289
TACR TECHNICS 423 was $200 how $289
TRUSCLARE ANLLOUSK was $145 how $21
TRUSCLARE ANLLOUSK was $145 how $21
TRUSCLARE ANLLOUSK was $145 how $21
TRUSCLARE ANLLOUSK was $145 how $21
TRUSCLARE ANLLOUSK was $145 how $21
SS-AMT 423 was $268 how $279
SS-AMT 423 was $268 how $279
AIRL 200 was $405 how $329
AIRL 200 was $405 how $329
PIONER 7900 was $150 how $199
PIONER 7900 was $150 how $199
GOSS PRO 4aa was $56 how $56
With prices like these we have pretty buy. If you call ME, CALL DAVE. 847-6088
Car of your dreams 193 VW Super Belle, exe-
ture. Condition Extra $1999 Call 7-31
842-7266
1973 Yamaha 500 oil cooler, widcreeen, well
serviced touring kit. $960 best offer $149
at www.eyedream.com
COLOR TV, 18" RCA. $120. Yamaha 75 guitar with case, $75. BCA. $242. baf-725. 7-31
1971 Capir, 4 speed. Air conditioned, low
lake rate. Jawahir Yawk. HM-843. 221-31
7-531
Thorens 7495 TD16C Turntable for sale. JIU 843-
7.31
***
WANTED
Nest female roostmate beginning the fall semester.
B43-2921 before Aug. 1, or B43-8687 after Aug.
1. Need I Roommate to share Towers $129.00 per
share. Call Mike at 841-860-7381
0:00 p.m. 0:30 p.m.
Upperclassman or graduate woman to share
Upset classmate. Good atmosphere of
plans. Call 843-250-9178.
Female roommate wanked for 2-bedroom apartment
Female roommate wanked for 2-bedroom apartment
The Bureau of Child Research Language Project (BCRLP) conducts a survey of 3 or 4-year-old children in its afternoon session. Mon-Tue's beginning Sept. 15. Both normal and special education teachers Ann Riegel (Wa-6479) and Wendy McKenzie (Wa-6479).
Roommate wanted for 1 bedroom, partially furnished with furniture. Roommates required proximately $60 per month. Call Rock at (855) 427-3000.
Student assistants needed immediately at Nuneen Center. Student assistants for temporary positions in the student housing residence in area year round or those able to work in a basic new app base, Garcia, 664-4223
7-31
Female female wanted-must be non-smoker
student student need-required 7-31
Phone 842-7211, keey trying
Wanted—room in or house or apartment,
under $75, or will share Carolyn, B423-835, or
B423-836.
FOR RENT
Apartments: 1, 2, and 4 bedrooms furnished.
Borkens KU and near town. Phone 843-7567, fcff
ARMADIJLO
BEAD CO.
710 MASS.
Now Reopened
10.5 p.m.
Beads,
Hand Linds,
Silver
Turq.
Laina,
Leather,
Chokers,
Earrings
Indian Jewelry
50% off
Free rental service Up to the minute listings of
Lawrence, Lawrence, Lawrence
Rental Exchange. 842-2500.
Two bedroom apartment, all utilities paid, close to campus. This fall furniture or un- furnished. 843-999-8439
Johnson Berial Company, Studios 1, bedroom 2,
Auditorium 3, Kobe University Medical Center, Kobe City, Gtpa.
www.johnsonberial.com
Rouses furnished, single with or without cook-
ing equipment. KU and KU and no
Nope. No pets. Phone 843-2679
Rosenbanks-Kitchen privileges. One block to campus.
Rooms: 847-207 or 842-865.
Labor: 842-207 or 842-865.
Extra nice rooms with private kitchens. One
room has a full parking, abilities.
Reasonable rent: 843-579-7600
NOTICE
Male Graduate Student wants some to share
Middle apartment for coming year Call 731-6904
TYPING
OPEN HOUSE - Jajuhaher Towers 103, W 15th.
*Mon., Thurs. 8-11, Fri. 5-10, Sat. and Sun.*
COST PLUS 180* Stereo Cabinet All Music
CDs, Audio Cassette, CD Players,
items or packages. Call Dave. Phone:
812-456-7890.
Executive-style gourmet parties planned, catered,
and decorated with custom décor. For details call
beautiful shaped private pool. For details call
Experienced in typing thesis, research papers,
booklets, and articles. Req. MS or equivalent.
typewriter (carbon ribbon), elite type C915
and C930.
IRM Selective, pica or elite, reasonable, experience with dissentations, these. Call Joan Moeen.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT! Let in do your work.
PRINT $1,000.00. Please enter your name.
PRINT $4,100.00. Billing $1.00. We want you to
printer $4,100.00.
PRINT $25,000.00. We want you to
printer $25,000.00.
Experienced typist—term paper, sheets, mime,
spelling, spell check, sending spelled, spell
corrected. 843-535, Mrs. Wright
PHOTOGRAPHY Shooting Gallery Specializing in Personalized Portraits in natural surroundings. Weddings, portfolios, and commercial photographer you can hire at 812-249-3200,
Typing in my home IHM solvent with pix type
chromatography paper, and my text
typing. Call Pam, 842-3790
TITIES BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is a service that provides our services in fast and prices are reasonable. Our customers can receive the following:
"GAY" TRANSCENDS "HOMOSEXUAL"
Lawrence Gay Liberation, Inc. Gathered: 7:30 t and third Monday of each month Union office
house #64-356 for socializing. 843-925-843-356 for socializing. 843-925-843-356
Experienced in typing disclosures, theses, etc.
Pych. Goch: Psych. 843-858, 868-891
7-31
HELP WANTED
Occasional day labor, skilled and unskilled.
Leave name at 842-7287. Equal Opportunity. If
If You're Planning on FLYING,
Do the Maupuit捞
Do The Wake Up Your!
(NEVER An extra cost
for airline tickets)
JAMES LIQUORS
Cold Beer & Chilled Wine
91th Street Center
(Next to 'Hole in the Wall')
842-7022
TACOS
$3.50 per Dozen
Casa de Taco
1105 Massachusetts 843-9880
SUA / Maupintour travel service
Summer Vacation
Make your
Reservations now.
PHONE 843-1211
KU Union—The Malls-Hillcrest-900 Mass
Part-time church secretary. Good typist and abilit-
y to read and write. Send reaing mails to:
Church Secretary, 829 W.印第安斯堡, MN 55106.
Employment Opportunities
HARDWARE AND COMMUNICATIONS ANALYST responsibility includes data communication and system design, building Experience with electronic technician guidance, guage programming, and parts specification and installation of computer hardware and computer communications network equipment and support. Knowledge of the operating or computer science with emphasis in networking or computer science will be considered an apt degree. This is a full-time unqualified position at the University of Kansas Computation Center, P.O. Box 1508, Lawrence, KS 67502. 195. An equal opportunity employer. Women are encouraged to apply.
Permanent, Full time Legal Secretary for immediate opening in 21 or over. Conditionality required. Must be able to take accurate short-term planning and be able to make sure: Salary $45 to $52 depending on skills and experience. Two week paid vacation after the end of the year. Day travel from Friday. Interesting and challenging job with a long day. Requires Bachelor's degree from The Douglas County Juvenile Court, 3rd floor, for application. Equal Opportunity Employer.
LOST
LOST. Gold Bulbo watch with expansion band.
842-92380 or 864-3543. Reward. 7-31
FOUND
Last Sunday, July 21st,男士 slamme visceral *Vicentry*
*Boris*, age 69, by 842-891, after 842-891 afters he
Joyes at 846-891, or 842-114 after b.
Lost in the vicinity of KU Stadium, black lab
Bruce McGraw has a white coat cip-31
843-4442. Reward
Fernale German Shepherd 6 moss, red collar.
Fernale German Shepherd 28 in front of Strong 31,
842-888-309 on 3 p.m.
Women's gold watch on Iowa near Hillcrest Shopping Center. 842-926-981
7-31
SERVICES OFFERED
MATH TUTORING. Competent. experienced librarian.
SAT MATH TEACHER. Competent. experienced librarian.
153, 156, 161, 162, 121, 122. Reasonable rates. Call
(800) 743-4911.
Need child care close to KU? Yellow Brick Read
Marmal, morning, afternoon, or all day. 6-9
Marmal, morning, afternoon, or all day. 6-9
WAGON WHEEL 1401 Ohio
Open 11 A.M.-Midnight Sandwiches, Delicatessen, Foods
O O
GAY COUNSELING & RAP
for referrals
into center
864 3506
864 2505
YAMAHA
CR-1000 RECEIVER
the GRAMO PHONE shop YP.800 TURNTABLE
at the rear of KIEF'S DISCOUNT
RECORD AND STEREO
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
842-1544 SAVINGS ON AMOUNT BRAND
SUPER JOURNALS
4
Thursday, July 31, 1975
University Daily Kansan
A PROJECT OF EGYPTIAN ENGINEERS
WORK UNDER CONSTRUCTION BY THE STATE OF ISRAEL
'a sign of progress'
Kansan editor's farewell wishes
I'm sure that most students are glad, as we are glad, to be finishing the summer session, even if it means more time outside under that brutally hot sun we'd have lately.
I hate closing editorials, and not necessarily because this is the last issue of the Kansan.
Anyway, the reason that I hate closing editorsials is that they all say the same things. We have enjoyed working on the paper this summer. We have dedicated
COMMENT
ourselves totally to doing the best job possible. We have profited from this experience and we hope that you have, too.
Those are the things that are usually mentioned in closing editors. And, though they are true, there is no adequate way to say them.
Having said what was obligatory, I now offer the following wishes for the coming day.
—that the administration, from Archie Dykes to Clyde Walker, realizes that sports are for ordinary students as well as for those on our campus. In addition, the University of Kansas has inadequate sports facilities for 20,000 students and rectifying that situation should
be a primary goal of the administration. Sports are for participants, not only
that President Ford asks his daughter Susan to return to Washington so that she can continue making decisions about our economy. I can't believe that a president could be responsible for Ford's actions in the past year.
—that the Israelis and Arabs somehow can live together peacefully. A continuation of what seems to be their mutual aggression pact can only exacerbate our country's poor financial condition. I don't want to see American soldiers over there, either.
—— that Indira Gandhi regains her senses and restores civil liberties and freedom of the masses.
—that people get off their dumps, turn the TV off and read, watch movies, tour galleries, visit zoo and go skinny-dipping, or watch TV is fine, but please don't overdo it.
—that students begin to see that while they are living in Lawrence, even if it may be for only part of the year, it is their city, too. Many decisions made by the Lawrence City Commission and other local government bodies profoundly affect the lives of KU students. Don't isolate yourself from the rest of the community.
and, finally, that we don't return to the rah-rah days like those before a student rebellion of the late '60s and early '70s. I was attending KU then and I wallowed in the ferment of those times. Many of the things that happened then were stupid and crazy; and they were educational. Let's try to establish a balance between the crazziness of those times and the increasingly cautious and stifling mood of the 1975 KU campus.
Thanks for reading our paper this summer.
—Ward Harkavy
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas weekdays during the academic year except on Sundays and examination days. Second class postage payable. Kansan, Kansan. School address is $12 a day. Student subscriptions are $1.35 a semester, paid through the student subscription fee.
Editor
Ward Waryk
Business Manager
Jim Merrill
The Rooks County Record in Stockton published an editorial in a recent edition that warns readers not to bearhearting to those readers who complain about mistakes in the newspaper.
Maid wanted: good pay, love in
"REV. A. J. JONES HAS a color TV set
that can be used with your cell phone.
Mrs. Donnelley who lives with him chews
The situation involves the placement of a classified advertisement:
Med Center budget cuts studied
Possible solutions to cutbacks in the 1975
78 operating budget of the KU Medical
Center will be discussed by Chancellor
Archie R. Dykes and Med Center officials
today, Russell Mills, associate vice chancellor of the Med Center, said yesterday.
The Med Center lost $691,000 in federal grants under the Health Manpower program, which supported health education programs. Mills said.
Of that amount, $450,228 in capitation grants was lost. The grants were based on the number of students who enrolled and graduated.
The Med Center had calculated the amount of money received in capitation grants based on a formula used last year, he said, and expected to receive an increase in funds because of increased enrollment. The grants ranging from $39 to $8.33 a student.
The center calculated that it would receive $1,701,208 in capitation grants, and
learned early this month that it would receive only 1,250,982, Mills said.
The center also requested the renewal of a competitive project grant for curriculum, which it didn't receive, he said.
For programs such as the Health Manpower program, the legislature must pass authorization and then appropriate funds. This is because this of a lack of time, Mills said.
The program was to be funded at the fiscal 1974 level or at a level suggested by President Gerald R. Ford, whichever was lower. Mills said. Ford suggested a cut.
Almost all of the capitation funds are spent directly for faculty salaries, Mills
The cut may affect salaries, depending on budget priorities, he said.
One possible solution to the fund cut would not to fill faculty positions which become vacant.
New Nigerian head explains coup
LAGOS, Nigeria (AP)—Nigeria's new head of state, Brig. Murali Rufai Mohammed, told his countrymen yesterday that ousted ruler Gen. Yakubu Gowon was allowing the nation to drift into "bloodshed and chaos."
Mohammed, 38, promised in a 15-minute nationwide broadcast that the armed forces would make an effort to build a strong and resilient America with "a new sense of direction."
Mohammed charged that after forces led by Gowon overcame Białafran secessionist rebels five years ago, the "affairs of state in Kashmir" were "widely reported," suitation, indiscipline and even neglect."
He said Gowon had become virtually inaccessible, advice was often ignored and "the leadership either by design or by chance," he added. "I feel the feelings and yearnings of the people."
"the nation was thus being plunged into inexorable chaos," he said. "The thought of further bloodshed for whatever reasons must be revolting to our people."
Mohammed said that 'once conditions within Nigeria return to normal, Gowen and his family would be free to return to their work' and said they 'were using" with their personal safety guaranteed.
National Peace Council and a Federal Executive Council.
He said that the new government would comprise a Free Military Council, a
Mohammed said the Free Military Council will be made up of him; Col. Joseph Garba, who announced the coup on Lagos radio; and the newly named top military commanders, including the army chief of staff, Brie. Y. T.丹uma.
After one day of deserted streets and shuttered shops, with all but essential workers ordered to take the day off, Lagos returned to its usual exurban chao. The only signs that something might be amiss were the soldiers guarding strategic locations such as the airport, radio station and key ministries.
"As a Nigerian, I am prepared to serve my country in any capacity which my country may consider appropriate." Gowon said. The university is in the Ugandan capital of Kampala.
Gowan was in Uganda attending an African summit when he learned Tuesday that he had been topled. He pledged "all my loyalty" to the new government. He urged Nigerians to give the new government the same support they had given him.
With 60 million people and substantial oil reserves, Nigeria is black Africa's largest and wealthiest country. It produces about 1.56 million barrels of oil a day. More than that goes to the United States providing about 5 per cent of total U.S. needs.
Next day: We regret any embarrassment caused to Father Jones by an error in an advertisement yesterday. It should have read: "Rev. A. J. Jones has a color TV set for sale cheap. Tel. 628-1313 and ask for Mrs. Donnelley who lives with him after 7 p.m."
Next day: Father Jones informs us that he has received annoying telephone calls because of an incorrect advertisement in yesterday's paper. It should have read: "Rev. A. J. Jones has a color TV set for sale. Cheap. Tel. 628-1313 after 7 p.m., and ask for Mrs. Donnelley who loves with him."
next day: "Please take notice that I, the Rev. A. J. Jones, have no color TV set for sale. I have smashed it. Don't telen. 628-1313 any more. I have not been carrying on with Mrs. Donnelley. A Mrs. Donnelley was until yesterday my housekeeper."
Next day: *Wanted* - housekeeper.
Today: *Give* - pay, love in. Rev. A. J.
Jones, Tec. 628-1351.
The editor committed suicide.
MEN-WOMEN
Join the people who've joined the Army.
Young people are joining the Army for a lot of good reasons.
if you qualify, guaranteed training in your choice of majors in arts, administration, construction, and many others.
Europe, Korea, Alaska,
Panama, Hawaii, and
most anywhere in the con-
continental United States.
For pay and benefits.
You can earn college credits while serving in the Army. With the Army pay-up to 75% of your tuition.
Start at $34.10 a month (before deductions) with a raise to $38.40 in lieu of $40 a week, meals, housing, medical and dental care, and 30 paid vacation every year.
And some are joining for a chance to serve their Country.
Call Army Opportunities 843-0465
RENT FURNITURE
ONE OF AMERICA'S LEADING FURNITURE RENTAL COMPANIES
Special student packages
20,000 square feet of quality furnishings
Complete three-room group for as little as $1 per day
Rent by the piece or by the room
Rent by the piece or by the room
We also rent office furniture
Option to buy
Short or long-term leases
See our ready-to-move-in model at the Meadowbrook Apartments. Office located 3 blocks west of Iowa on 15th and north on Crestline to T101 Winsor Place. 842-4200
Furniture Rental
CORT
9200 Marshall Drive Lenexa, Kansas 66215 (1) 888-0100
LOOKING FOR A NEW NEST?
HOME SWEET HOME
COME NEST WITH US!
Jayhawker Towers on campus 1603 W.15th Lawrence, Ks.